Hive ODBC Driver

These instructions are for the Hive ODBC driver available in Hive for HiveServer1.
There is no ODBC driver available for HiveServer2 as part of Apache Hive. There are third party ODBC drivers available from different vendors, and most of them seem to be free.

HiveServer was removed from Hive releases starting with Hive 1.0.0. See HIVE-6977 . Please switch over to HiveServer2.

Introduction

The Hive ODBC Driver is a software library that implements the Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) API standard for the Hive database management system, enabling ODBC compliant applications to interact seamlessly (ideally) with Hive through a standard interface. This driver will NOT be built as a part of the typical Hive build process and will need to be compiled and built separately according to the instructions below.

Suggested Reading

This guide assumes you are already familiar with the following:

Software Requirements

The following software components are needed for the successful compilation and operation of the Hive ODBC driver:

Driver Architecture

Internally, the Hive ODBC Driver contains two separate components: Hive client, and the unixODBC API wrapper.

Building and Setting Up ODBC Components

NOTE: Hive client needs to be built and installed before the unixODBC API wrapper can compile successfully.

Hive Client Build/Setup

In order to build and install the Hive client:

  1. Checkout and setup the latest version of Apache Hive from the Subversion or Git source code repository. For more details, see Getting Started with Hive. From this point onwards, the path to the Hive root directory will be referred to as HIVE_SRC_ROOT.

    Using a tarball source release

    If you are compiling against source code contained in the tarball release package then HIVE_SRC_ROOT refers to the 'src' subdirectory.

    The ODBC driver is broken on trunk!

    Currently the C++ Thrift client library that the ODBC driver depends on will not build on trunk. This issue is being tracked in HIVE-4433 . If you are using trunk prior to release 0.12 check the status of this ticket before proceeding. Also see HIVE-4492 .

  2. Build the Hive client by running the following command from HIVE_SRC_ROOT. This will compile and copy the libraries and header files to HIVE_SRC_ROOT/build/odbc/. Please keep in mind that all paths should be fully specified (no relative paths). If you encounter an "undefined reference to vtables" error, make sure that you have specified the absolute path for thrift.home.

     $ ant compile-cpp -Dthrift.home=<THRIFT_HOME>
     

    MVN:

    $ cd odbc
    $ mvn compile -Podbc,hadoop-1 -Dthrift.home=/usr/local -Dboost.home=/usr/local
     

You can optionally force Hive client to compile into a non-native bit architecture by specifying the additional parameter (assuming you have the proper compilation libraries):

 $ ant compile-cpp -Dthrift.home=<THRIFT_HOME> -Dword.size=<32 or 64>
 
  1. You can verify the entire Hive compilation by running the Hive test suite from HIVE_SRC_ROOT. Specifying the argument '-Dthrift.home=<THRIFT_HOME>' will enable the tests for the Hive client. If you do NOT specify thrift.home, the Hive client tests will not be run and will just return successful.

     $ ant test -Dthrift.home=<THRIFT_HOME>
     

    MVN:

    $ cd odbc
    $ mvn test -Podbc,hadoop-1 -Dthrift.home=/usr/local -Dboost.home=/usr/local
     

    You can specifically execute the Hive client tests by running the above command from HIVE_SRC_ROOT/odbc/. NOTE: Hive client tests require that a local Hive Server be operating on port 10000.

  2. To install the Hive client libraries onto your machine, run the following command from HIVE_SRC_ROOT/odbc/. NOTE: The install path defaults to /usr/local. While there is no current way to change this default directory from the ant build process, a manual install may be performed by skipping the command below and copying out the contents of HIVE_SRC_ROOT/build/odbc/lib and HIVE_SRC_ROOT/build/odbc/include into their local file system counterparts.

     $ sudo ant install -Dthrift.home=<THRIFT_HOME>
     

    NOTE: The compiled static library, libhiveclient.a, requires linking with stdc++ as well as thrift libraries to function properly.
    NOTE: Currently, there is no way to specify non-system library and header directories to the unixODBC build process. Thus, the Hive client libraries and headers MUST be installed to a default system location in order for the unixODBC build process to detect these files. This issue may be remedied in the future.

unixODBC API Wrapper Build/Setup

After you have built and installed the Hive client, you can now install the unixODBC API wrapper:

  1. In the unixODBC root directory, run the following command:

     $ ./configure --enable-gui=no --prefix=<unixODBC_INSTALL_DIR>
     

    If you encounter the the errors: "redefinition of 'struct _hist_entry'" or "previous declaration of 'add_history' was here" then re-execute the configure with the following command:

     $ ./configure --enable-gui=no --enable-readline=no --prefix=<unixODBC_INSTALL_DIR>
     

    To force the compilation of the unixODBC API wrapper into a non-native bit architecture, modify the CC and CXX environment variables to include the appropriate flags. For example:

     $ CC="gcc -m32" CXX="g++ -m32" ./configure --enable-gui=no --enable-readline=no --prefix=<unixODBC_INSTALL_DIR>
     
  2. Compile the unixODBC API wrapper with the following:

     $ make
     

    If you want to completely install unixODBC and all related drivers, run the following from the unixODBC root directory:

      $ sudo make install
      

    If your system complains about undefined symbols during unixODBC testing (such as with isql or odbcinst) after installation, try running ldconfig to update your dynamic linker's runtime libraries.
    If you only want to obtain the Hive ODBC driver shared object library:

  3. After compilation, the driver will be located at <unixODBC_BUILD_DIR>/Drivers/hive/.libs/libodbchive.so.1.0.0.
    This may be copied to any other location as desired. Keep in mind that the Hive ODBC driver has a dependency on the Hive client shared object library: libhiveclient.so and libthrift.so.0.
    You can manually install the unixODBC API wrapper by doing the following:

      $ cp <unixODBC_BUILD_DIR>/Drivers/hive/.libs/libodbchive.so.1.0.0 <SYSTEM_INSTALL_DIR>
      $ cd <SYSTEM_INSTALL_DIR>
      $ ln -s libodbchive.so.1.0.0 libodbchive.so
      $ ldconfig
      

Connecting the Driver to a Driver Manager

This portion assumes that you have already built and installed both the Hive client and the unixODBC API wrapper shared libraries on the current machine. To connect the Hive ODBC driver to a previously installed Driver Manager (such as the one provided by unixODBC or a separate application):

  1. Locate the odbc.ini file associated with the Driver Manager (DM).
    1. If you are installing the driver on the system DM, then you can run the following command to print the locations of DM configuration files.

        $ odbcinst -j
        unixODBC 2.2.14
        DRIVERS............: /usr/local/etc/odbcinst.ini
        SYSTEM DATA SOURCES: /usr/local/etc/odbc.ini
        FILE DATA SOURCES..: /usr/local/etc/ODBCDataSources
        USER DATA SOURCES..: /home/ehwang/.odbc.ini
        SQLULEN Size.......: 8
        SQLLEN Size........: 8
        SQLSETPOSIROW Size.: 8
        
    2. If you are installing the driver on an application DM, then you have to help yourself on this one . Hint: try looking in the installation directory of your application.
      • Keep in mind that an application's DM can exist simultaneously with the system DM and will likely use its own configuration files, such as odbc.ini.
      • Also, note that some applications do not have their own DMs and simply use the system DM.
  2. Add the following section to the DM's corresponding odbc.ini:

     [Hive]
     Driver = <path_to_libodbchive.so>
     Description = Hive Driver v1
     DATABASE = default
     HOST = <Hive_server_address>
     PORT = <Hive_server_port>
     FRAMED = 0
     

Testing with ISQL

Once you have installed the necessary Hive ODBC libraries and added a Hive entry in your system's default odbc.ini, you will be able to interactively test the driver with isql:

$ isql -v Hive

If your system does not have isql, you can obtain it by installing the entirety of unixODBC. If you encounter an error saying that the shared libraries cannot be opened by isql, use the ldd tool to ensure that all dynamic library dependencies are resolved and use the file tool to ensure that isql and all necessary libraries are compiled into the same architecture (32 or 64 bit).

Build libodbchive.so for 3rd Party Driver Manager

If you want to build libodbchive.so for other Driver Manager (for example, MicroStrategy uses DataDirect ODBC libraries which contains its own Driver Manager), you need to configure and build libodbchive.so against that Driver Manager (libodbc.so and libodbcinst.so).

If you have the 3rd party Driver Manager installed, the easiest way to do that is to find the installation directory containing libodbc.so and libodbcinst.so, and set that directory to LD_LIBRARY_PATH. Then you need to run configure and make for the Hive ODBC driver. After you get the libodbchive.so, make sure the 3rd party application can access the dynamic library libodbchive.so, libthrift.so and libhiveclient.so (through LD_LIBRARY_PATH or ldconfig).

If you build libodbchive.so for the 3rd party Driver Manager, isql may not work with the same set of .so files. So you may need to compile a different libodbchive.so for each Driver Manager.

Troubleshooting

Current Status

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