REFRESH Statement

To accurately respond to queries, the Impala node that acts as the coordinator (the node to which you are connected through impala-shell, JDBC, or ODBC) must have current metadata about those databases and tables that are referenced in Impala queries. If you are not familiar with the way Impala uses metadata and how it shares the same metastore database as Hive, see Overview of Impala Metadata and the Metastore for background information.

Syntax:

REFRESH [db_name.]table_name [PARTITION (key_col1=val1 [, key_col2=val2...])]
REFRESH FUNCTIONS db_name

Usage notes:

Use the REFRESH statement to load the latest metastore metadata and block location data for a particular table in these scenarios:

  • After loading new data files into the HDFS data directory for the table. (Once you have set up an ETL pipeline to bring data into Impala on a regular basis, this is typically the most frequent reason why metadata needs to be refreshed.)
  • After issuing ALTER TABLE, INSERT, LOAD DATA, or other table-modifying SQL statement in Hive.

You only need to issue the REFRESH statement on the node to which you connect to issue queries. The coordinator node divides the work among all the Impala nodes in a cluster, and sends read requests for the correct HDFS blocks without relying on the metadata on the other nodes.

REFRESH reloads the metadata for the table from the metastore database, and does an incremental reload of the low-level block location data to account for any new data files added to the HDFS data directory for the table. It is a low-overhead, single-table operation, specifically tuned for the common scenario where new data files are added to HDFS.

Only the metadata for the specified table is flushed. The table must already exist and be known to Impala, either because the CREATE TABLE statement was run in Impala rather than Hive, or because a previous INVALIDATE METADATA statement caused Impala to reload its entire metadata catalog.

INVALIDATE METADATA and REFRESH are counterparts: INVALIDATE METADATA waits to reload the metadata when needed for a subsequent query, but reloads all the metadata for the table, which can be an expensive operation, especially for large tables with many partitions. REFRESH reloads the metadata immediately, but only loads the block location data for newly added data files, making it a less expensive operation overall. If data was altered in some more extensive way, such as being reorganized by the HDFS balancer, use INVALIDATE METADATA to avoid a performance penalty from reduced local reads. If you used Impala version 1.0, the INVALIDATE METADATA statement works just like the Impala 1.0 REFRESH statement did, while the Impala 1.1 REFRESH is optimized for the common use case of adding new data files to an existing table, thus the table name argument is now required.

A metadata update for an impalad instance is required if:

  • A metadata change occurs.
  • and the change is made through Hive.
  • and the change is made to a metastore database to which clients such as the Impala shell or ODBC directly connect.

A metadata update for an Impala node is not required after you run ALTER TABLE, INSERT, or other table-modifying statement in Impala rather than Hive. Impala handles the metadata synchronization automatically through the catalog service.

Database and table metadata is typically modified by:

  • Hive - through ALTER, CREATE, DROP or INSERT operations.
  • Impalad - through CREATE TABLE, ALTER TABLE, and INSERT operations. Such changes are propagated to all Impala nodes by the Impala catalog service.

REFRESH causes the metadata for that table to be immediately reloaded. For a huge table, that process could take a noticeable amount of time; but doing the refresh up front avoids an unpredictable delay later, for example if the next reference to the table is during a benchmark test.

Refreshing a single partition:

In CDH 5.9 / Impala 2.7 and higher, the REFRESH statement can apply to a single partition at a time, rather than the whole table. Include the optional PARTITION (partition_spec) clause and specify values for each of the partition key columns.

The following examples show how to make Impala aware of data added to a single partition, after data is loaded into a partition's data directory using some mechanism outside Impala, such as Hive or Spark. The partition can be one that Impala created and is already aware of, or a new partition created through Hive.

impala> create table p (x int) partitioned by (y int);
impala> insert into p (x,y) values (1,2), (2,2), (2,1);
impala> show partitions p;
+-------+-------+--------+------+...
| y     | #Rows | #Files | Size |...
+-------+-------+--------+------+...
| 1     | -1    | 1      | 2B   |...
| 2     | -1    | 1      | 4B   |...
| Total | -1    | 2      | 6B   |...
+-------+-------+--------+------+...

-- ... Data is inserted into one of the partitions by some external mechanism ...
beeline> insert into p partition (y = 1) values(1000);

impala> refresh p partition (y=1);
impala> select x from p where y=1;
+------+
| x    |
+------+
| 2    | <- Original data created by Impala
| 1000 | <- Additional data inserted through Beeline
+------+

The same applies for tables with more than one partition key column. The PARTITION clause of the REFRESH statement must include all the partition key columns.

impala> create table p2 (x int) partitioned by (y int, z int);
impala> insert into p2 (x,y,z) values (0,0,0), (1,2,3), (2,2,3);
impala> show partitions p2;
+-------+---+-------+--------+------+...
| y     | z | #Rows | #Files | Size |...
+-------+---+-------+--------+------+...
| 0     | 0 | -1    | 1      | 2B   |...
| 2     | 3 | -1    | 1      | 4B   |...
| Total |   | -1    | 2      | 6B   |...
+-------+---+-------+--------+------+...

-- ... Data is inserted into one of the partitions by some external mechanism ...
beeline> insert into p2 partition (y = 2, z = 3) values(1000);

impala> refresh p2 partition (y=2, z=3);
impala> select x from p where y=2 and z = 3;
+------+
| x    |
+------+
| 1    | <- Original data created by Impala
| 2    | <- Original data created by Impala
| 1000 | <- Additional data inserted through Beeline
+------+

The following examples show how specifying a nonexistent partition does not cause any error, and the order of the partition key columns does not have to match the column order in the table. The partition spec must include all the partition key columns; specifying an incomplete set of columns does cause an error.

-- Partition doesn't exist.
refresh p2 partition (y=0, z=3);
refresh p2 partition (y=0, z=-1)
-- Key columns specified in a different order than the table definition.
refresh p2 partition (z=1, y=0)
-- Incomplete partition spec causes an error.
refresh p2 partition (y=0)
ERROR: AnalysisException: Items in partition spec must exactly match the partition columns in the table definition: default.p2 (1 vs 2)

If you connect to different Impala nodes within an impala-shell session for load-balancing purposes, you can enable the SYNC_DDL query option to make each DDL statement wait before returning, until the new or changed metadata has been received by all the Impala nodes. See SYNC_DDL Query Option for details.

Examples:

The following example shows how you might use the REFRESH statement after manually adding new HDFS data files to the Impala data directory for a table:

[impalad-host:21000] > refresh t1;
[impalad-host:21000] > refresh t2;
[impalad-host:21000] > select * from t1;
...
[impalad-host:21000] > select * from t2;
... 

For more examples of using REFRESH and INVALIDATE METADATA with a combination of Impala and Hive operations, see Switching Back and Forth Between Impala and Hive.

Related impala-shell options:

The impala-shell option -r issues an INVALIDATE METADATA statement when starting up the shell, effectively performing a REFRESH of all tables. Due to the expense of reloading the metadata for all tables, the impala-shell -r option is not recommended for day-to-day use in a production environment. (This option was mainly intended as a workaround for synchronization issues in very old Impala versions.)

HDFS permissions:

The user ID that the impalad daemon runs under, typically the impala user, must have execute permissions for all the relevant directories holding table data. (A table could have data spread across multiple directories, or in unexpected paths, if it uses partitioning or specifies a LOCATION attribute for individual partitions or the entire table.) Issues with permissions might not cause an immediate error for this statement, but subsequent statements such as SELECT or SHOW TABLE STATS could fail.

All HDFS and Sentry permissions and privileges are the same whether you refresh the entire table or a single partition.

HDFS considerations:

The REFRESH command checks HDFS permissions of the underlying data files and directories, caching this information so that a statement can be cancelled immediately if for example the impala user does not have permission to write to the data directory for the table. Impala reports any lack of write permissions as an INFO message in the log file, in case that represents an oversight. If you change HDFS permissions to make data readable or writeable by the Impala user, issue another REFRESH to make Impala aware of the change.

Amazon S3 considerations:

The REFRESH and INVALIDATE METADATA statements also cache metadata for tables where the data resides in the Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3). In particular, issue a REFRESH for a table after adding or removing files in the associated S3 data directory. See Using Impala with the Amazon S3 Filesystem for details about working with S3 tables.

Cancellation: Cannot be cancelled.

Kudu considerations:

Much of the metadata for Kudu tables is handled by the underlying storage layer. Kudu tables have less reliance on the metastore database, and require less metadata caching on the Impala side. For example, information about partitions in Kudu tables is managed by Kudu, and Impala does not cache any block locality metadata for Kudu tables.

The REFRESH and INVALIDATE METADATA statements are needed less frequently for Kudu tables than for HDFS-backed tables. Neither statement is needed when data is added to, removed, or updated in a Kudu table, even if the changes are made directly to Kudu through a client program using the Kudu API. Run REFRESH table_name or INVALIDATE METADATA table_name for a Kudu table only after making a change to the Kudu table schema, such as adding or dropping a column, by a mechanism other than Impala.

UDF considerations:

In CDH 5.12 / Impala 2.9 and higher, you can refresh the user-defined functions (UDFs) that Impala recognizes, at the database level, by running the REFRESH FUNCTIONS statement with the database name as an argument. Java-based UDFs can be added to the metastore database through Hive CREATE FUNCTION statements, and made visible to Impala by subsequently running REFRESH FUNCTIONS. For example:
CREATE DATABASE shared_udfs;
USE shared_udfs;
...use CREATE FUNCTION statements in Hive to create some Java-based UDFs
   that Impala is not initially aware of...
REFRESH FUNCTIONS shared_udfs;
SELECT udf_created_by_hive(c1) FROM ...

Related information:

Overview of Impala Metadata and the Metastore, INVALIDATE METADATA Statement