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Hive🔗

Iceberg supports reading and writing Iceberg tables through Hive by using a StorageHandler.

Feature support🔗

The following features matrix illustrates the support for different features across Hive releases for Iceberg tables -

Feature support Hive 2 / 3 Hive 4
SQL create table ✔️ ✔️
SQL create table as select (CTAS) ✔️ ✔️
SQL create table like table (CTLT) ✔️ ✔️
SQL drop table ✔️ ✔️
SQL insert into ✔️ ✔️
SQL insert overwrite ✔️ ✔️
SQL delete from ✔️
SQL update ✔️
SQL merge into ✔️
Branches and tags ✔️

Iceberg compatibility with Hive 2.x and Hive 3.1.2/3 supports the following features:

  • Creating a table
  • Dropping a table
  • Reading a table
  • Inserting into a table (INSERT INTO)

Warning

DML operations work only with MapReduce execution engine.

Hive supports the following additional features with Hive version 4.0.0 and above:

  • Creating an Iceberg identity-partitioned table
  • Creating an Iceberg table with any partition spec, including the various transforms supported by Iceberg
  • Creating a table from an existing table (CTAS table)
  • Altering a table while keeping Iceberg and Hive schemas in sync
  • Altering the partition schema (updating columns)
  • Altering the partition schema by specifying partition transforms
  • Truncating a table / partition, dropping a partition.
  • Migrating tables in Avro, Parquet, or ORC (Non-ACID) format to Iceberg
  • Reading the schema of a table.
  • Querying Iceberg metadata tables.
  • Time travel applications.
  • Inserting into a table / partition (INSERT INTO).
  • Inserting data overwriting existing data (INSERT OVERWRITE) in a table / partition.
  • Copy-on-write support for delete, update and merge queries, CRUD support for Iceberg V1 tables.
  • Altering a table with expiring snapshots.
  • Create a table like an existing table (CTLT table)
  • Support adding parquet compression type via Table properties Compression types
  • Altering a table metadata location.
  • Supporting table rollback.
  • Honors sort orders on existing tables when writing a table Sort orders specification
  • Creating, writing to and dropping an Iceberg branch / tag.
  • Allowing expire snapshots by Snapshot ID, by time range, by retention of last N snapshots and using table properties.
  • Set current snapshot using snapshot ID for an Iceberg table.
  • Support for renaming an Iceberg table.
  • Altering a table to convert to an Iceberg table.
  • Fast forwarding, cherry-picking commit to an Iceberg branch.
  • Creating a branch from an Iceberg tag.
  • Set current snapshot using branch/tag for an Iceberg table.
  • Delete orphan files for an Iceberg table.
  • Allow full table compaction of Iceberg tables.
  • Support of showing partition information for Iceberg tables (SHOW PARTITIONS).

Warning

DML operations work only with Tez execution engine.

Enabling Iceberg support in Hive🔗

Hive 4 comes with hive-iceberg that ships Iceberg, so no additional downloads or jars are needed. For older versions of Hive a runtime jar has to be added.

Hive 4.0.0🔗

Hive 4.0.0 comes with the Iceberg 1.4.3 included.

Hive 4.0.0-beta-1🔗

Hive 4.0.0-beta-1 comes with the Iceberg 1.3.0 included.

Hive 4.0.0-alpha-2🔗

Hive 4.0.0-alpha-2 comes with the Iceberg 0.14.1 included.

Hive 4.0.0-alpha-1🔗

Hive 4.0.0-alpha-1 comes with the Iceberg 0.13.1 included.

Hive 2.3.x, Hive 3.1.x🔗

In order to use Hive 2.3.x or Hive 3.1.x, you must load the Iceberg-Hive runtime jar and enable Iceberg support, either globally or for an individual table using a table property.

Loading runtime jar🔗

To enable Iceberg support in Hive, the HiveIcebergStorageHandler and supporting classes need to be made available on Hive's classpath. These are provided by the iceberg-hive-runtime jar file. For example, if using the Hive shell, this can be achieved by issuing a statement like so:

add jar /path/to/iceberg-hive-runtime.jar;

There are many others ways to achieve this including adding the jar file to Hive's auxiliary classpath so it is available by default. Please refer to Hive's documentation for more information.

Enabling support🔗

If the Iceberg storage handler is not in Hive's classpath, then Hive cannot load or update the metadata for an Iceberg table when the storage handler is set. To avoid the appearance of broken tables in Hive, Iceberg will not add the storage handler to a table unless Hive support is enabled. The storage handler is kept in sync (added or removed) every time Hive engine support for the table is updated, i.e. turned on or off in the table properties. There are two ways to enable Hive support: globally in Hadoop Configuration and per-table using a table property.

Hadoop configuration🔗

To enable Hive support globally for an application, set iceberg.engine.hive.enabled=true in its Hadoop configuration. For example, setting this in the hive-site.xml loaded by Spark will enable the storage handler for all tables created by Spark.

Danger

Starting with Apache Iceberg 0.11.0, when using Hive with Tez you also have to disable vectorization (hive.vectorized.execution.enabled=false).

Table property configuration🔗

Alternatively, the property engine.hive.enabled can be set to true and added to the table properties when creating the Iceberg table. Here is an example of doing it programmatically:

Catalog catalog=...;
    Map<String, String> tableProperties=Maps.newHashMap();
    tableProperties.put(TableProperties.ENGINE_HIVE_ENABLED,"true"); // engine.hive.enabled=true
    catalog.createTable(tableId,schema,spec,tableProperties);

The table level configuration overrides the global Hadoop configuration.

Hive on Tez configuration🔗

To use the Tez engine on Hive 3.1.2 or later, Tez needs to be upgraded to >= 0.10.1 which contains a necessary fix TEZ-4248.

To use the Tez engine on Hive 2.3.x, you will need to manually build Tez from the branch-0.9 branch due to a backwards incompatibility issue with Tez 0.10.1.

In both cases, you will also need to set the following property in the tez-site.xml configuration file: tez.mrreader.config.update.properties=hive.io.file.readcolumn.names,hive.io.file.readcolumn.ids.

Catalog Management🔗

Global Hive catalog🔗

From the Hive engine's perspective, there is only one global data catalog that is defined in the Hadoop configuration in the runtime environment. In contrast, Iceberg supports multiple different data catalog types such as Hive, Hadoop, AWS Glue, or custom catalog implementations. Iceberg also allows loading a table directly based on its path in the file system. Those tables do not belong to any catalog. Users might want to read these cross-catalog and path-based tables through the Hive engine for use cases like join.

To support this, a table in the Hive metastore can represent three different ways of loading an Iceberg table, depending on the table's iceberg.catalog property:

  1. The table will be loaded using a HiveCatalog that corresponds to the metastore configured in the Hive environment if no iceberg.catalog is set
  2. The table will be loaded using a custom catalog if iceberg.catalog is set to a catalog name (see below)
  3. The table can be loaded directly using the table's root location if iceberg.catalog is set to location_based_table

For cases 2 and 3 above, users can create an overlay of an Iceberg table in the Hive metastore, so that different table types can work together in the same Hive environment. See CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE and CREATE TABLE for more details.

Custom Iceberg catalogs🔗

To globally register different catalogs, set the following Hadoop configurations:

Config Key Description
iceberg.catalog.<catalog_name>.type type of catalog: hive, hadoop, or left unset if using a custom catalog
iceberg.catalog.<catalog_name>.catalog-impl catalog implementation, must not be null if type is empty
iceberg.catalog.<catalog_name>.<key> any config key and value pairs for the catalog

Here are some examples using Hive CLI:

Register a HiveCatalog called another_hive:

SET iceberg.catalog.another_hive.type=hive;
SET iceberg.catalog.another_hive.uri=thrift://example.com:9083;
SET iceberg.catalog.another_hive.clients=10;
SET iceberg.catalog.another_hive.warehouse=hdfs://example.com:8020/warehouse;

Register a HadoopCatalog called hadoop:

SET iceberg.catalog.hadoop.type=hadoop;
SET iceberg.catalog.hadoop.warehouse=hdfs://example.com:8020/warehouse;

Register an AWS GlueCatalog called glue:

SET iceberg.catalog.glue.type=glue;
SET iceberg.catalog.glue.warehouse=s3://my-bucket/my/key/prefix;
SET iceberg.catalog.glue.lock.table=myGlueLockTable;

DDL Commands🔗

Not all the features below are supported with Hive 2.3.x and Hive 3.1.x. Please refer to the Feature support paragraph for further details.

One generally applicable difference is that Hive 4.0.0-alpha-1 provides the possibility to use STORED BY ICEBERG instead of the old STORED BY 'org.apache.iceberg.mr.hive.HiveIcebergStorageHandler'

CREATE TABLE🔗

Non partitioned tables🔗

The Hive CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE command creates an Iceberg table when you specify the storage handler as follows:

CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE x (i int) STORED BY ICEBERG;

If you want to create external tables using CREATE TABLE, configure the MetaStoreMetadataTransformer on the cluster, and CREATE TABLE commands are transformed to create external tables. For example:

CREATE TABLE x (i int) STORED BY ICEBERG;

You can specify the default file format (Avro, Parquet, ORC) at the time of the table creation. The default is Parquet:

CREATE TABLE x (i int) STORED BY ICEBERG STORED AS ORC;

Partitioned tables🔗

You can create Iceberg partitioned tables using a command familiar to those who create non-Iceberg tables:

CREATE TABLE x (i int) PARTITIONED BY (j int) STORED BY ICEBERG;

Info

The resulting table does not create partitions in HMS, but instead, converts partition data into Iceberg identity partitions.

Use the DESCRIBE command to get information about the Iceberg identity partitions:

DESCRIBE x;
The result is:

col_name data_type comment
i int
j int
NULL NULL
# Partition Transform Information NULL NULL
# col_name transform_type NULL
j IDENTITY NULL

You can create Iceberg partitions using the following Iceberg partition specification syntax (supported only from Hive 4.0.0-alpha-1):

CREATE TABLE x (i int, ts timestamp) PARTITIONED BY SPEC (month(ts), bucket(2, i)) STORED AS ICEBERG;
DESCRIBE x;
The result is:

col_name data_type comment
i int
ts timestamp
NULL NULL
# Partition Transform Information NULL NULL
# col_name transform_type NULL
ts MONTH NULL
i BUCKET[2] NULL

The supported transformations for Hive are the same as for Spark: * years(ts): partition by year * months(ts): partition by month * days(ts) or date(ts): equivalent to dateint partitioning * hours(ts) or date_hour(ts): equivalent to dateint and hour partitioning * bucket(N, col): partition by hashed value mod N buckets * truncate(L, col): partition by value truncated to L - Strings are truncated to the given length - Integers and longs truncate to bins: truncate(10, i) produces partitions 0, 10, 20, 30,

Info

The resulting table does not create partitions in HMS, but instead, converts partition data into Iceberg partitions.

CREATE TABLE AS SELECT🔗

CREATE TABLE AS SELECT operation resembles the native Hive operation with a single important difference. The Iceberg table and the corresponding Hive table are created at the beginning of the query execution. The data is inserted / committed when the query finishes. So for a transient period the table already exists but contains no data.

CREATE TABLE target PARTITIONED BY SPEC (year(year_field), identity_field) STORED BY ICEBERG AS
    SELECT * FROM source;

CREATE TABLE LIKE TABLE🔗

CREATE TABLE target LIKE source STORED BY ICEBERG;

CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE overlaying an existing Iceberg table🔗

The CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE command is used to overlay a Hive table "on top of" an existing Iceberg table. Iceberg tables are created using either a Catalog, or an implementation of the Tables interface, and Hive needs to be configured accordingly to operate on these different types of table.

Hive catalog tables🔗

As described before, tables created by the HiveCatalog with Hive engine feature enabled are directly visible by the Hive engine, so there is no need to create an overlay.

Custom catalog tables🔗

For a table in a registered catalog, specify the catalog name in the statement using table property iceberg.catalog. For example, the SQL below creates an overlay for a table in a hadoop type catalog named hadoop_cat:

SET
iceberg.catalog.hadoop_cat.type=hadoop;
SET
iceberg.catalog.hadoop_cat.warehouse=hdfs://example.com:8020/hadoop_cat;

CREATE
EXTERNAL TABLE database_a.table_a
STORED BY 'org.apache.iceberg.mr.hive.HiveIcebergStorageHandler'
TBLPROPERTIES ('iceberg.catalog'='hadoop_cat');

When iceberg.catalog is missing from both table properties and the global Hadoop configuration, HiveCatalog will be used as default.

Path-based Hadoop tables🔗

Iceberg tables created using HadoopTables are stored entirely in a directory in a filesystem like HDFS. These tables are considered to have no catalog. To indicate that, set iceberg.catalog property to location_based_table. For example:

CREATE
EXTERNAL TABLE table_a 
STORED BY 'org.apache.iceberg.mr.hive.HiveIcebergStorageHandler' 
LOCATION 'hdfs://some_bucket/some_path/table_a'
TBLPROPERTIES ('iceberg.catalog'='location_based_table');

CREATE TABLE overlaying an existing Iceberg table🔗

You can also create a new table that is managed by a custom catalog. For example, the following code creates a table in a custom Hadoop catalog:

SET
iceberg.catalog.hadoop_cat.type=hadoop;
SET
iceberg.catalog.hadoop_cat.warehouse=hdfs://example.com:8020/hadoop_cat;

CREATE TABLE database_a.table_a
(
    id   bigint,
    name string
) PARTITIONED BY (
  dept string
) STORED BY 'org.apache.iceberg.mr.hive.HiveIcebergStorageHandler'
TBLPROPERTIES ('iceberg.catalog'='hadoop_cat');

Danger

If the table to create already exists in the custom catalog, this will create a managed overlay table. This means technically you can omit the EXTERNAL keyword when creating an overlay table. However, this is not recommended because creating managed overlay tables could pose a risk to the shared data files in case of accidental drop table commands from the Hive side, which would unintentionally remove all the data in the table.

ALTER TABLE🔗

Table properties🔗

For HiveCatalog tables the Iceberg table properties and the Hive table properties stored in HMS are kept in sync.

Info

IMPORTANT: This feature is not available for other Catalog implementations.

ALTER TABLE t SET TBLPROPERTIES('...'='...');

Schema evolution🔗

The Hive table schema is kept in sync with the Iceberg table. If an outside source (Impala/Spark/Java API/etc) changes the schema, the Hive table immediately reflects the changes. You alter the table schema using Hive commands:

  • Rename a table

    ALTER TABLE orders RENAME TO renamed_orders;
    

  • Add a column

    ALTER TABLE orders ADD COLUMNS (nickname string);
    

  • Rename a column
    ALTER TABLE orders CHANGE COLUMN item fruit string;
    
  • Reorder columns
    ALTER TABLE orders CHANGE COLUMN quantity quantity int AFTER price;
    
  • Change a column type - only if the Iceberg defined the column type change as safe
    ALTER TABLE orders CHANGE COLUMN price price long;
    
  • Drop column by using REPLACE COLUMN to remove the old column
    ALTER TABLE orders REPLACE COLUMNS (remaining string);
    

Info

Note, that dropping columns is only thing REPLACE COLUMNS can be used for i.e. if columns are specified out-of-order an error will be thrown signalling this limitation.

Partition evolution🔗

You change the partitioning schema using the following commands: * Change the partitioning schema to new identity partitions:

ALTER TABLE default.customers SET PARTITION SPEC (last_name);
* Alternatively, provide a partition specification:
ALTER TABLE order SET PARTITION SPEC (month(ts));

Table migration🔗

You can migrate Avro / Parquet / ORC external tables to Iceberg tables using the following command:

ALTER TABLE t SET TBLPROPERTIES ('storage_handler'='org.apache.iceberg.mr.hive.HiveIcebergStorageHandler');
During the migration the data files are not changed, only the appropriate Iceberg metadata files are created. After the migration, handle the table as a normal Iceberg table.

Drop partitions🔗

You can drop partitions based on a single / multiple partition specification using the following commands:

ALTER TABLE orders DROP PARTITION (buy_date == '2023-01-01', market_price > 1000), PARTITION (buy_date == '2024-01-01', market_price <= 2000);
The partition specification supports only identity-partition columns. Transform columns in partition specification are not supported.

Branches and tags🔗

ALTER TABLE ... CREATE BRANCH

Branches can be created via the CREATE BRANCH statement with the following options:

  • Create a branch using default properties.
  • Create a branch at a specific snapshot ID.
  • Create a branch using system time.
  • Create a branch with a specified number of snapshot retentions.
  • Create a branch using specific tag.
-- CREATE branch1 with default properties.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE BRANCH branch1;

-- CREATE branch1 at a specific snapshot ID.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE BRANCH branch1 FOR SYSTEM_VERSION AS OF 3369973735913135680;

-- CREATE branch1 using system time.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE BRANCH branch1 FOR SYSTEM_TIME AS OF '2023-09-16 09:46:38.939 Etc/UTC';

-- CREATE branch1 with a specified number of snapshot retentions.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE BRANCH branch1 FOR SYSTEM_VERSION AS OF 3369973735913135680 WITH SNAPSHOT RETENTION 5 SNAPSHOTS;

-- CREATE branch1 using a specific tag.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE BRANCH branch1 FOR TAG AS OF tag1;

ALTER TABLE ... CREATE TAG

Tags can be created via the CREATE TAG statement with the following options:

  • Create a tag using default properties.
  • Create a tag at a specific snapshot ID.
  • Create a tag using system time.
-- CREATE tag1 with default properties.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE TAG tag1;

-- CREATE tag1 at a specific snapshot ID.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE TAG tag1 FOR SYSTEM_VERSION AS OF 3369973735913135680;

-- CREATE tag1 using system time.
ALTER TABLE test CREATE TAG tag1 FOR SYSTEM_TIME AS OF '2023-09-16 09:46:38.939 Etc/UTC';

ALTER TABLE ... DROP BRANCH

Branches can be dropped via the DROP BRANCH statement with the following options:

  • Do not fail if the branch does not exist with IF EXISTS
-- DROP branch1
ALTER TABLE test DROP BRANCH branch1;

-- DROP branch1 IF EXISTS
ALTER TABLE test DROP BRANCH IF EXISTS branch1;

ALTER TABLE ... DROP TAG

Tags can be dropped via the DROP TAG statement with the following options:

  • Do not fail if the tag does not exist with IF EXISTS
-- DROP tag1
ALTER TABLE test DROP TAG tag1;

-- DROP tag1 IF EXISTS
ALTER TABLE test DROP TAG IF EXISTS tag1;

ALTER TABLE ... EXECUTE FAST-FORWARD

An iceberg branch which is an ancestor of another branch can be fast-forwarded to the state of the other branch.

-- This fast-forwards the branch1 to the state of main branch of the Iceberg table.
ALTER table test EXECUTE FAST-FORWARD 'branch1' 'main';

-- This fast-forwards the branch1 to the state of branch2.
ALTER table test EXECUTE FAST-FORWARD 'branch1' 'branch2';

ALTER TABLE ... EXECUTE CHERRY-PICK🔗

Cherry-pick of a snapshot requires the ID of the snapshot. Cherry-pick of snapshots as of now is supported only on the main branch of an Iceberg table.

 ALTER table test EXECUTE CHERRY-PICK 8602659039622823857;

TRUNCATE TABLE🔗

The following command truncates the Iceberg table:

TRUNCATE TABLE t;

TRUNCATE TABLE ... PARTITION🔗

The following command truncates the partition in an Iceberg table:

TRUNCATE TABLE orders PARTITION (customer_id = 1, first_name = 'John');
The partition specification supports only identity-partition columns. Transform columns in partition specification are not supported.

DROP TABLE🔗

Tables can be dropped using the DROP TABLE command:

DROP TABLE [IF EXISTS] table_name [PURGE];

METADATA LOCATION🔗

The metadata location (snapshot location) only can be changed if the new path contains the exact same metadata json. It can be done only after migrating the table to Iceberg, the two operation cannot be done in one step.

ALTER TABLE t set TBLPROPERTIES ('metadata_location'='<path>/hivemetadata/00003-a1ada2b8-fc86-4b5b-8c91-400b6b46d0f2.metadata.json');

DML Commands🔗

SELECT🔗

Select statements work the same on Iceberg tables in Hive. You will see the Iceberg benefits over Hive in compilation and execution:

  • No file system listings - especially important on blob stores, like S3
  • No partition listing from the Metastore
  • Advanced partition filtering - the partition keys are not needed in the queries when they could be calculated
  • Could handle higher number of partitions than normal Hive tables

Here are the features highlights for Iceberg Hive read support:

  1. Predicate pushdown: Pushdown of the Hive SQL WHERE clause has been implemented so that these filters are used at the Iceberg TableScan level as well as by the Parquet and ORC Readers.
  2. Column projection: Columns from the Hive SQL SELECT clause are projected down to the Iceberg readers to reduce the number of columns read.
  3. Hive query engines:
  4. With Hive 2.3.x, 3.1.x both the MapReduce and Tez query execution engines are supported.
  5. With Hive 4.0.0-alpha-1 Tez query execution engine is supported.

Some of the advanced / little used optimizations are not yet implemented for Iceberg tables, so you should check your individual queries. Also currently the statistics stored in the MetaStore are used for query planning. This is something we are planning to improve in the future.

Hive 4 supports select operations on branches which also work similar to the table level select operations. However, the branch must be provided as follows -

-- Branches should be specified as <database_name>.<table_name>.branch_<branch_name>
SELECT * FROM default.test.branch_branch1;

INSERT INTO🔗

Hive supports the standard single-table INSERT INTO operation:

INSERT INTO table_a
VALUES ('a', 1);
INSERT INTO table_a
SELECT...;

Multi-table insert is also supported, but it will not be atomic. Commits occur one table at a time. Partial changes will be visible during the commit process and failures can leave partial changes committed. Changes within a single table will remain atomic.

Insert-into operations on branches also work similar to the table level select operations. However, the branch must be provided as follows -

-- Branches should be specified as <database_name>.<table_name>.branch_<branch_name>
INSERT INTO default.test.branch_branch1
VALUES ('a', 1);
INSERT INTO default.test.branch_branch1
SELECT...;

Here is an example of inserting into multiple tables at once in Hive SQL:

FROM customers
   INSERT INTO target1 SELECT customer_id, first_name
   INSERT INTO target2 SELECT last_name, customer_id;

INSERT INTO ... PARTITION🔗

Hive 4 supports partition-level INSERT INTO operation:

INSERT INTO table_a PARTITION (customer_id = 1, first_name = 'John')
VALUES (1,2);
INSERT INTO table_a PARTITION (customer_id = 1, first_name = 'John')
SELECT...;
The partition specification supports only identity-partition columns. Transform columns in partition specification are not supported.

INSERT OVERWRITE🔗

INSERT OVERWRITE can replace data in the table with the result of a query. Overwrites are atomic operations for Iceberg tables. For nonpartitioned tables the content of the table is always removed. For partitioned tables the partitions that have rows produced by the SELECT query will be replaced.

INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE target SELECT * FROM source;

INSERT OVERWRITE ... PARTITION🔗

Hive 4 supports partition-level INSERT OVERWRITE operation:

INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE target PARTITION (customer_id = 1, first_name = 'John') SELECT * FROM source;
The partition specification supports only identity-partition columns. Transform columns in partition specification are not supported.

DELETE FROM🔗

Hive 4 supports DELETE FROM queries to remove data from tables.

Delete queries accept a filter to match rows to delete.

DELETE FROM target WHERE id > 1 AND id < 10;

DELETE FROM target WHERE id IN (SELECT id FROM source);

DELETE FROM target WHERE id IN (SELECT min(customer_id) FROM source);
If the delete filter matches entire partitions of the table, Iceberg will perform a metadata-only delete. If the filter matches individual rows of a table, then Iceberg will rewrite only the affected data files.

UPDATE🔗

Hive 4 supports UPDATE queries which accept a filter to match rows to update.

UPDATE target SET first_name = 'Raj' WHERE id > 1 AND id < 10;

UPDATE target SET first_name = 'Raj' WHERE id IN (SELECT id FROM source);

UPDATE target SET first_name = 'Raj' WHERE id IN (SELECT min(customer_id) FROM source);
For more complex row-level updates based on incoming data, see the section on MERGE INTO.

MERGE INTO🔗

Hive 4 added support for MERGE INTO queries that can express row-level updates.

MERGE INTO updates a table, called the target table, using a set of updates from another query, called the source. The update for a row in the target table is found using the ON clause that is like a join condition.

MERGE INTO target AS t        -- a target table
USING source s                -- the source updates
ON t.id = s.id                -- condition to find updates for target rows
WHEN ...                      -- updates

Updates to rows in the target table are listed using WHEN MATCHED ... THEN .... Multiple MATCHED clauses can be added with conditions that determine when each match should be applied. The first matching expression is used.

WHEN MATCHED AND s.op = 'delete' THEN DELETE
WHEN MATCHED AND t.count IS NULL AND s.op = 'increment' THEN UPDATE SET t.count = 0
WHEN MATCHED AND s.op = 'increment' THEN UPDATE SET t.count = t.count + 1

Source rows (updates) that do not match can be inserted:

WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN INSERT VALUES (s.a, s.b, s.c)
Only one record in the source data can update any given row of the target table, or else an error will be thrown.

QUERYING METADATA TABLES🔗

Hive supports querying of the Iceberg Metadata tables. The tables could be used as normal Hive tables, so it is possible to use projections / joins / filters / etc. To reference a metadata table the full name of the table should be used, like: ...

Currently the following metadata tables are available in Hive:

  • all_data_files
  • all_delete_files
  • all_entries all_files
  • all_manifests
  • data_files
  • delete_files
  • entries
  • files
  • manifests
  • metadata_log_entries
  • partitions
  • refs
  • snapshots
SELECT * FROM default.table_a.files;

TIMETRAVEL🔗

Hive supports snapshot id based and time base timetravel queries. For these views it is possible to use projections / joins / filters / etc. The function is available with the following syntax:

SELECT * FROM table_a FOR SYSTEM_TIME AS OF '2021-08-09 10:35:57';
SELECT * FROM table_a FOR SYSTEM_VERSION AS OF 1234567;

You can expire snapshots of an Iceberg table using an ALTER TABLE query from Hive. You should periodically expire snapshots to delete data files that is no longer needed, and reduce the size of table metadata.

Each write to an Iceberg table from Hive creates a new snapshot, or version, of a table. Snapshots can be used for time-travel queries, or the table can be rolled back to any valid snapshot. Snapshots accumulate until they are expired by the expire_snapshots operation. Enter a query to expire snapshots having the following timestamp: 2021-12-09 05:39:18.689000000

ALTER TABLE test_table EXECUTE expire_snapshots('2021-12-09 05:39:18.689000000');

Type compatibility🔗

Hive and Iceberg support different set of types. Iceberg can perform type conversion automatically, but not for all combinations, so you may want to understand the type conversion in Iceberg in prior to design the types of columns in your tables. You can enable auto-conversion through Hadoop configuration (not enabled by default):

Config key Default Description
iceberg.mr.schema.auto.conversion false if Hive should perform type auto-conversion

Hive type to Iceberg type🔗

This type conversion table describes how Hive types are converted to the Iceberg types. The conversion applies on both creating Iceberg table and writing to Iceberg table via Hive.

Hive Iceberg Notes
boolean boolean
short integer auto-conversion
byte integer auto-conversion
integer integer
long long
float float
double double
date date
timestamp timestamp without timezone
timestamplocaltz timestamp with timezone Hive 3 only
interval_year_month not supported
interval_day_time not supported
char string auto-conversion
varchar string auto-conversion
string string
binary binary
decimal decimal
struct struct
list list
map map
union not supported

Table rollback🔗

Rolling back iceberg table's data to the state at an older table snapshot.

Rollback to the last snapshot before a specific timestamp

ALTER TABLE ice_t EXECUTE ROLLBACK('2022-05-12 00:00:00')

Rollback to a specific snapshot ID

ALTER TABLE ice_t EXECUTE ROLLBACK(1111);

Compaction🔗

Hive 4 supports full table compaction of Iceberg tables using the following commands: * Using the ALTER TABLE ... COMPACT syntax * Using the OPTIMIZE TABLE ... REWRITE DATA syntax

-- Using the ALTER TABLE ... COMPACT syntax
ALTER TABLE t COMPACT 'major';

-- Using the OPTIMIZE TABLE ... REWRITE DATA syntax
OPTIMIZE TABLE t REWRITE DATA;
Both these syntax have the same effect of performing full table compaction on an Iceberg table.