impyla
Python client for HiveServer2 implementations (e.g., Impala, Hive) for
distributed query engines.
For higher-level Impala functionality, including a Pandas-like interface over
distributed data sets, see the Ibis project.
Features
-
HiveServer2 compliant; works with Impala and Hive, including nested data
-
Fully DB API 2.0 (PEP 249)-compliant Python client (similar to
sqlite or MySQL clients) supporting Python 2.6+ and Python 3.3+.
-
Works with Kerberos, LDAP, SSL
-
SQLAlchemy connector
-
Converter to pandas DataFrame
, allowing easy integration into the
Python data stack (including scikit-learn and
matplotlib); but see the Ibis project for a richer
experience
Dependencies
Required:
-
Python 2.7+ or 3.5+
-
six
, bitarray
-
thrift==0.16.0
-
thrift_sasl==0.4.3
Optional:
-
kerberos>=1.3.0
for Kerberos over HTTP support. This also requires Kerberos libraries
to be installed on your system - see System Kerberos
-
pandas
for conversion to DataFrame
objects; but see the Ibis project instead
-
sqlalchemy
for the SQLAlchemy engine
-
pytest
for running tests; unittest2
for testing on Python 2.6
System Kerberos
Different systems require different packages to be installed to enable Kerberos support in
Impyla. Some examples of how to install the packages on different distributions follow.
Ubuntu:
apt-get install libkrb5-dev krb5-user
RHEL/CentOS:
yum install krb5-libs krb5-devel krb5-server krb5-workstation
Installation
Install the latest release with pip
:
pip install impyla
For the latest (dev) version, install directly from the repo:
pip install git+https://github.com/cloudera/impyla.git
or clone the repo:
git clone https://github.com/cloudera/impyla.git
cd impyla
python setup.py install
Running the tests
impyla uses the pytest toolchain, and depends on the following
environment variables:
export IMPYLA_TEST_HOST=your.impalad.com
export IMPYLA_TEST_PORT=21050
export IMPYLA_TEST_AUTH_MECH=NOSASL
To run the maximal set of tests, run
cd path/to/impyla
py.test --connect impala
Leave out the --connect
option to skip tests for DB API compliance.
Usage
Impyla implements the Python DB API v2.0 (PEP 249) database interface
(refer to it for API details):
from impala.dbapi import connect
conn = connect(host='my.host.com', port=21050)
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute('SELECT * FROM mytable LIMIT 100')
print cursor.description
results = cursor.fetchall()
The Cursor
object also exposes the iterator interface, which is buffered
(controlled by cursor.arraysize
):
cursor.execute('SELECT * FROM mytable LIMIT 100')
for row in cursor:
print(row)
Furthermore the Cursor
object returns you information about the columns
returned in the query. This is useful to export your data as a csv file.
import csv
cursor.execute('SELECT * FROM mytable LIMIT 100')
columns = [datum[0] for datum in cursor.description]
targetfile = '/tmp/foo.csv'
with open(targetfile, 'w', newline='') as outcsv:
writer = csv.writer(outcsv, delimiter=',', quotechar='"', quoting=csv.QUOTE_ALL, lineterminator='\n')
writer.writerow(columns)
for row in cursor:
writer.writerow(row)
You can also get back a pandas DataFrame object
from impala.util import as_pandas
df = as_pandas(cur)
How do I contribute code?
You need to first sign and return an
ICLA
and
CCLA
before we can accept and redistribute your contribution. Once these are submitted you are
free to start contributing to impyla. Submit these to CLA@cloudera.com.
Find
We use Github issues to track bugs for this project. Find an issue that you would like to
work on (or file one if you have discovered a new issue!). If no-one is working on it,
assign it to yourself only if you intend to work on it shortly.
It's a good idea to discuss your intended approach on the issue. You are much more
likely to have your patch reviewed and committed if you've already got buy-in from the
impyla community before you start.
Fix
Now start coding! As you are writing your patch, please keep the following things in mind:
First, please include tests with your patch. If your patch adds a feature or fixes a bug
and does not include tests, it will generally not be accepted. If you are unsure how to
write tests for a particular component, please ask on the issue for guidance.
Second, please keep your patch narrowly targeted to the problem described by the issue.
It's better for everyone if we maintain discipline about the scope of each patch. In
general, if you find a bug while working on a specific feature, file a issue for the bug,
check if you can assign it to yourself and fix it independently of the feature. This helps
us to differentiate between bug fixes and features and allows us to build stable
maintenance releases.
Finally, please write a good, clear commit message, with a short, descriptive title and
a message that is exactly long enough to explain what the problem was, and how it was
fixed.
Please create a pull request on github with your patch.