spark-instrumented-optimizer/sql
Yin Huai 5f0b30e59c [SQL] Code cleanup.
I added an unnecessary line of code in 13531dd97c.

My bad. Let's delete it.

Author: Yin Huai <yhuai@databricks.com>

Closes #4482 from yhuai/unnecessaryCode and squashes the following commits:

3645af0 [Yin Huai] Code cleanup.
2015-02-09 16:20:42 -08:00
..
catalyst [SPARK-5675][SQL] XyzType companion object should subclass XyzType 2015-02-09 14:51:46 -08:00
core [SQL] Add some missing DataFrame functions. 2015-02-09 16:02:56 -08:00
hive [SQL] Code cleanup. 2015-02-09 16:20:42 -08:00
hive-thriftserver [SPARK-5097][SQL] DataFrame 2015-01-27 16:08:24 -08:00
README.md [SQL][HiveConsole][DOC] HiveConsole correct hiveconsole imports 2015-02-06 12:41:28 -08:00

Spark SQL

This module provides support for executing relational queries expressed in either SQL or a LINQ-like Scala DSL.

Spark SQL is broken up into four subprojects:

  • Catalyst (sql/catalyst) - An implementation-agnostic framework for manipulating trees of relational operators and expressions.
  • Execution (sql/core) - A query planner / execution engine for translating Catalysts logical query plans into Spark RDDs. This component also includes a new public interface, SQLContext, that allows users to execute SQL or LINQ statements against existing RDDs and Parquet files.
  • Hive Support (sql/hive) - Includes an extension of SQLContext called HiveContext that allows users to write queries using a subset of HiveQL and access data from a Hive Metastore using Hive SerDes. There are also wrappers that allows users to run queries that include Hive UDFs, UDAFs, and UDTFs.
  • HiveServer and CLI support (sql/hive-thriftserver) - Includes support for the SQL CLI (bin/spark-sql) and a HiveServer2 (for JDBC/ODBC) compatible server.

Other dependencies for developers

In order to create new hive test cases , you will need to set several environmental variables.

export HIVE_HOME="<path to>/hive/build/dist"
export HIVE_DEV_HOME="<path to>/hive/"
export HADOOP_HOME="<path to>/hadoop-1.0.4"

Using the console

An interactive scala console can be invoked by running build/sbt hive/console. From here you can execute queries with HiveQl and manipulate DataFrame by using DSL.

catalyst$ build/sbt hive/console

[info] Starting scala interpreter...
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.analysis._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.dsl._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.errors._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.expressions._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.plans.logical._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.rules._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.util._
import org.apache.spark.sql.Dsl._
import org.apache.spark.sql.execution
import org.apache.spark.sql.hive._
import org.apache.spark.sql.hive.test.TestHive._
import org.apache.spark.sql.types._
import org.apache.spark.sql.parquet.ParquetTestData
Type in expressions to have them evaluated.
Type :help for more information.

scala> val query = sql("SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM src) a")
query: org.apache.spark.sql.DataFrame = org.apache.spark.sql.DataFrame@74448eed

Query results are DataFrames and can be operated as such.

scala> query.collect()
res2: Array[org.apache.spark.sql.Row] = Array([238,val_238], [86,val_86], [311,val_311], [27,val_27]...

You can also build further queries on top of these DataFrames using the query DSL.

scala> query.where('key > 30).select(avg('key)).collect()
res3: Array[org.apache.spark.sql.Row] = Array([274.79025423728814])