1

I am using the Python Apache Hive client (https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/Hive/HiveClient#HiveClient-Python) to run queries on a Shark server.

The probelm is when I run the queries normally in the Shark CLI I get a full set of results but when I use the Hive Python client it only returns 100 rows. There is no limit on my select query.

Shark CLI:

[localhost:10000] shark> SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table;
46831

Python:

import sys
from hive_service import ThriftHive
from hive_service.ttypes import HiveServerException
from thrift import Thrift
from thrift.transport import TSocket
from thrift.transport import TTransport
from thrift.protocol import TBinaryProtocol

try:
    transport = TSocket.TSocket('localhost', 10000)
    transport = TTransport.TBufferedTransport(transport)
    protocol = TBinaryProtocol.TBinaryProtocol(transport)

    client = ThriftHive.Client(protocol)
    transport.open()

    client.execute("SELECT * from table")
    hdata = client.fetchAll()
    transport.close()
    ....

In [97]: len(hdata)
Out[97]: 100

Strangely, when I run COUNT(*) in the Python code I get:

In [104]: hdata
Out[104]: ['46831']

Is there a settings file or variable that I can access to unlock this limit?

1 Answer 1

1

The limit of 100 rows is set in the underlying Driver, look for private int maxRows = 100;.

The maxRows are set on the driver to the desired value if you use the fetchN() method:

public List<String> fetchN(int numRows) 

A possible workaround could involve first getting the total number of rows, then calling fetchN(). But you may run into trouble if the returned data involve a potentially huge number of rows. For that reason, it seems a much better idea, to fetch and process the data in chunks. For comparison, here's what the CLI does:

do {
  results = client.fetchN(LINES_TO_FETCH);
  for (String line : results) {
    out.println(line);
  }
} while (results.size() == LINES_TO_FETCH);

where LINES_TO_FETCH = 40. But that's more or less an arbitrary value, which you can tweak in your code depending on your particular needs.

3
  • Do you mean that maxRows is set on the fetchAll() method? Feb 12, 2014 at 8:44
  • @greenAfrican: Yes, exactly. If you follow the second link, you will find the appropriate call to driver.setMaxRows(numRows); in fetchN()
    – JensG
    Feb 12, 2014 at 13:59
  • Thanks. Solved this using a temporary cached table and then run the COUNT on it and then a fetchN(count_var). Thanks. Feb 12, 2014 at 14:08

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.