I'm connecting Hive use pyhs2. But the Hive server required Kerberos authentication. Anyone knows how to convert the JDBC string to pyhs2 parameter? Like:
jdbc:hive2://biclient2.server.163.org:10000/default;principal=hive/[email protected]?mapred.job.queue.name=default
2 Answers
I think it will be something like this:
pyhs2.connect(host='biclient2.server.163.org',
port=10000,
authMechanism="KERBEROS",
password="something",
user='[email protected]')
I'm also doing the same, I still not succeed, but at least having a meaningful errorcode: (Server hive/[email protected] not found in Kerberos database)
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I'm succeed use what you said, and add a
configuration
parameter like:conn_config = {'krb_host': 'app-20.photo.163.org', 'krb_service': 'hive'}
– leeyiwMay 13, 2015 at 6:50 -
From standpoint of security, in Kerberos authentication username/password should be taken from an active Kerberos ticket or from a keytab. See @pele88 answer below which goes with the former option.– TagarSep 26, 2016 at 14:29
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1plus one, but pyhs2 is no longer maintained stackoverflow.com/a/38666630/470583– TagarSep 26, 2016 at 22:29
This connection string will work as long as the user running the script has a valid kerberos ticket:
import pyhs2
with pyhs2.connect(host='biclient2.server.163.org',
port=10000,
authMechanism="KERBEROS") as conn:
with conn.cursor() as cur:
print cur.getDatabases()
Username, password and any other configuration parameters are not passed through the KDC.
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plus one, but pyhs2 is no longer maintained stackoverflow.com/a/38666630/470583– TagarSep 26, 2016 at 22:28
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@Ruslan Yes I'm aware but couldn't get any alternatives working with a kerberised cluster - I've tried both Impyla and PyHive. Have you?– pele88Sep 27, 2016 at 8:19