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  • License
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Repository Details

Go driver for Apache Hive

GoHive

Build Status Coverage Status

GoHive is a driver for Hive and the Spark Distributed SQL Engine in go that supports connection mechanisms KERBEROS(Gssapi Sasl), NONE(Plain Sasl), LDAP, CUSTOM and NOSASL, both for binary and HTTP transport, with and without SSL. The kerberos mechanism will pick a different authentication level depending on hive.server2.thrift.sasl.qop.

Installation

GoHive can be installed with:

go get github.com/beltran/gohive

To add kerberos support GoHive requires header files to build against the GSSAPI C library. They can be installed with:

  • Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install libkrb5-dev
  • MacOS: brew install homebrew/dupes/heimdal --without-x11
  • Debian: yum install -y krb5-devel

Then:

go get -tags kerberos github.com/beltran/gohive

Quickstart

    connection, errConn := gohive.Connect("hs2.example.com", 10000, "KERBEROS", configuration)
    if errConn != nil {
        log.Fatal(errConn)
    }
    cursor := connection.Cursor()

    cursor.Exec(ctx, "INSERT INTO myTable VALUES(1, '1'), (2, '2'), (3, '3'), (4, '4')")
    if cursor.Err != nil {
        log.Fatal(cursor.Err)
    }

    cursor.Exec(ctx, "SELECT * FROM myTable")
    if cursor.Err != nil {
        log.Fatal(cursor.Err)
    }

    var i int32
    var s string
    for cursor.HasMore(ctx) {
        cursor.FetchOne(ctx, &i, &s)
        if cursor.Err != nil {
            log.Fatal(cursor.Err)
        }
        log.Println(i, s)
    }

    cursor.Close()
    connection.Close()

cursor.HasMore may query Hive for more rows if not all of them have been received. Once the row is read is discarded from memory so as long as the fetch size is not too big there's no limit to how much data can be queried.

Supported connections

Connect with Sasl kerberos:

configuration := NewConnectConfiguration()
configuration.Service = "hive"
// Previously kinit should have done: kinit -kt ./secret.keytab hive/[email protected]
connection, errConn := Connect("hs2.example.com", 10000, "KERBEROS", configuration)

This implies setting in hive-site.xml:

  • hive.server2.authentication = KERBEROS
  • hive.server2.authentication.kerberos.principal = hive/[email protected]
  • hive.server2.authentication.kerberos.keytab = path/to/keytab.keytab

Connnect using Plain Sasl:

configuration := NewConnectConfiguration()
// If it's not set it will be picked up from the logged user
configuration.Username = "myUsername"
// This may not be necessary
configuration.Password = "myPassword"
connection, errConn := Connect("hs2.example.com", 10000, "NONE", configuration)

This implies setting in hive-site.xml:

  • hive.server2.authentication = NONE

Connnect using No Sasl:

connection, errConn := Connect("hs2.example.com", 10000, "NOSASL", NewConnectConfiguration())

This implies setting in hive-site.xml:

  • hive.server2.authentication = NOSASL

Connect using Http transport mode

Binary transport mode is supported for this three options(PLAIN, KERBEROS and NOSASL). Http transport is supported for PLAIN and KERBEROS:

configuration := NewConnectConfiguration()
configuration.HttpPath = "cliservice" // this is the default path in Hive configuration.
configuration.TransportMode = "http"
configuration.Service = "hive"

connection, errConn := Connect("hs2.example.com", 10000, "KERBEROS", configuration)

This implies setting in hive-site.xml:

  • hive.server2.authentication = KERBEROS, or NONE
  • hive.server2.transport.mode = http
  • hive.server2.thrift.http.port = 10001

Zookeeper

A connection can be made using zookeeper:

connection, errConn := ConnectZookeeper("zk1.example.com:2181,zk2.example.com:2181", "NONE", configuration)

The last two parameters determine how the connection to Hive will be made once the Hive hosts are retrieved from zookeeper.

NULL values

For example if a NULL value is in a row, the following operations would put 0 into i:

var i int32
cursor.FetchOne(context.Background(), &i)

To differentiate between these two values (NULL and 0) the following will set i to nil or *i to 0:

var i *int32 = new(int32)
cursor.FetchOne(context.Background(), &i)

which will produce the same result as:

var i *int32
cursor.FetchOne(context.Background(), &i)

Alternatively, using the rowmap API, m := cursor.RowMap(context.Background()), m would be map[string]interface{}{"table_name.column_name": nil} for a NULL value. It will return a map where the keys are table_name.column_name. This works fine with Hive but using Spark Thirft SQL server table_name is not present and the keys are column_name and it can lead to problems if two tables have the same column name so the FetchOne API should be used in this case.

Running tests

Tests can be run with:

./scripts/integration

This uses dhive and it will start two docker instances with Hive and Kerberos. kinit, klist, kdestroy have to be installed locally. hs2.example.com will have to be an alias for 127.0.0.1 in /etc/hosts. The krb5 configuration file should be created with bash scripts/create_krbconf.sh. Overall the steps used in the travis CI can be followed.