STRING data type
A data type used in CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE
statements.
Syntax:
In the column definition of a CREATE TABLE and
ALTER TABLE statements:
column_name STRINGLength:
If you need to manipulate string values with precise or
maximum lengths, in Impala 2.0 and higher you can declare columns as
VARCHAR(max_length) or
CHAR(length), but for best
performance use STRING where practical.
Take the following considerations for STRING
lengths:
-
The hard limit on the size of a
STRINGand the total size of a row is 2 GB.If a query tries to process or create a string larger than this limit, it will return an error to the user.
-
The limit is 1 GB on
STRINGwhen writing to Parquet files. - Queries operating on strings with 32 KB or less will work reliably and will not cause significant performance or memory problems (unless you have very complex queries, very many columns, etc.)
- Performance and memory consumption may degrade with strings larger than 32 KB.
- The row size, i.e. the total size of all string and other columns, is subject to lower
limits at various points in query execution that support spill-to-disk. A few examples for
lower row size limits are:
- Rows coming from the right side of any hash join
- Rows coming from either side of a hash join that spills to disk
- Rows being sorted by the
SORToperator without a limit - Rows in a grouping aggregation
The max row size is configurable on a per-query basis with the
MAX_ROW_SIZEquery option. Rows up toMAX_ROW_SIZE(which defaults to 512 KB) can always be processed in the above cases. Rows larger thanMAX_ROW_SIZEare processed on a best-effort basis.
Character sets:
For full support in all Impala subsystems, restrict string values to the ASCII character set. Although some UTF-8 character data can be stored in Impala and retrieved through queries, UTF-8 strings containing non-ASCII characters are not guaranteed to work properly in combination with many SQL aspects, including but not limited to:
- String manipulation functions.
- Comparison operators.
-
The
ORDER BYclause. - Values in partition key columns.
For any national language aspects such as collation order or interpreting extended ASCII variants such as ISO-8859-1 or ISO-8859-2 encodings, Impala does not include such metadata with the table definition. If you need to sort, manipulate, or display data depending on those national language characteristics of string data, use logic on the application side.
Conversions:
-
Impala does not automatically convert
STRINGto any numeric type. Impala does automatically convertSTRINGtoTIMESTAMPif the value matches one of the acceptedTIMESTAMPformats. -
You can use
CAST()to convertSTRINGvalues toTINYINT,SMALLINT,INT,BIGINT,FLOAT,DOUBLE, orTIMESTAMP. -
You cannot directly cast a
STRINGvalue toBOOLEAN. You can use aCASEexpression to evaluate string values such as'T','true', and so on and return Booleantrueandfalsevalues as appropriate. -
You can cast a
BOOLEANvalue toSTRING, returning'1'fortruevalues and'0'forfalsevalues.
Partitioning:
Although it might be convenient to use STRING columns
for partition keys, even when those columns contain numbers, for
performance and scalability it is much better to use numeric columns as
partition keys whenever practical. Although the underlying HDFS directory
name might be the same in either case, the in-memory storage for the
partition key columns is more compact, and computations are faster, if
partition key columns such as YEAR,
MONTH, DAY and so on are declared as
INT, SMALLINT, and so on.
Zero-length strings: For purposes of clauses such as DISTINCT and GROUP
BY, Impala considers zero-length strings (""), NULL, and space
to all be different values.
Text table considerations: Values of this type are potentially larger in text tables than in tables using Parquet or other binary formats.
Avro considerations: The Avro specification
allows string values up to 2**64 bytes in length. Impala queries for Avro tables use 32-bit
integers to hold string lengths. In Impala 2.5 and higher, Impala truncates
CHAR and VARCHAR values in Avro tables to (2**31)-1
bytes. If a query encounters a STRING value longer than (2**31)-1 bytes in
an Avro table, the query fails. In earlier releases, encountering such long values in an
Avro table could cause a crash.
Column statistics considerations: Because the values of this type have variable size, none of the
column statistics fields are filled in until you run the COMPUTE STATS statement.
Examples:
The following examples demonstrate double-quoted and single-quoted string literals, and required escaping for quotation marks within string literals:
SELECT 'I am a single-quoted string';
SELECT "I am a double-quoted string";
SELECT 'I\'m a single-quoted string with an apostrophe';
SELECT "I\'m a double-quoted string with an apostrophe";
SELECT 'I am a "short" single-quoted string containing quotes';
SELECT "I am a \"short\" double-quoted string containing quotes";
The following examples demonstrate calls to string manipulation functions to concatenate strings, convert numbers to strings, or pull out substrings:
SELECT CONCAT("Once upon a time, there were ", CAST(3 AS STRING), ' little pigs.');
SELECT SUBSTR("hello world",7,5);
The following examples show how to perform operations on
STRING columns within a table:
CREATE TABLE t1 (s1 STRING, s2 STRING);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ("hello", 'world'), (CAST(7 AS STRING), "wonders");
SELECT s1, s2, length(s1) FROM t1 WHERE s2 LIKE 'w%';
