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Posted to issues@spark.apache.org by "Hyukjin Kwon (Jira)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2019/12/02 02:39:00 UTC

[jira] [Resolved] (SPARK-30024) Support subdirectories when accessing partitioned Parquet Hive table

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-30024?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Hyukjin Kwon resolved SPARK-30024.
----------------------------------
    Resolution: Invalid

> Support subdirectories when accessing partitioned Parquet Hive table
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: SPARK-30024
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-30024
>             Project: Spark
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: SQL
>    Affects Versions: 2.4.4
>            Reporter: Michael Lotkowski
>            Priority: Major
>
> Hi all,
>  
> We have ran in to issues when trying to read parquet partitioned table created by Hive. I think I have narrowed down the cause to how [InMemoryFileIndex|[https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/master/sql/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/sql/execution/datasources/InMemoryFileIndex.scala#L95]] created a parent -> file mapping.
>  
> The folder structure created by Hive is as follows:
> s3://bucket/table/date=2019-11-25/subdir1/data1.parquet
> s3://bucket/table/date=2019-11-25/subdir2/data2.parquet
>  
> Looking through the code it seems that InMemoryFileIndex is creating a mapping of leaf files to their parents yielding the following mapping:
>  val leafDirToChildrenFiles = Map(
>     s3://bucket/table/date=2019-11-25/subdir1 -> s3://bucket/table/date=2019-11-25/subdir1/data1.parquet,
>     s3://bucket/table/date=2019-11-25/subdir2 -> s3://bucket/table/date=2019-11-25/subdir2/data2.parquet
> )
>  
> Which then in turn is used in [PartitioningAwareFileIndex|[https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/master/sql/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/sql/execution/datasources/PartitioningAwareFileIndex.scala#L83]]
> to prune the partitions. From my understanding pruning works by looking up the partition path in leafDirToChildrenFiles which in this case is s3://bucket/table/date=2019-11-25/ and therefore it fails to find any files for this partition.
>  
> My suggested fix is to update how the InMemoryFileIndex builds the mapping, instead of having a map between parent dir to file, is to have a map of rootPath to file. More concretely [https://gist.github.com/lotkowskim/76e8ff265493efd0b2b7175446805a82]
>  
> I have tested this by updating the jar running on EMR and we correctly can now read the data from these partitioned tables. It's also worth noting that we can read the data, without any modifications to the code, if we use the following settings:
>  
> "spark.sql.hive.convertMetastoreParquet" to "false",
> "spark.hive.mapred.supports.subdirectories" to "true",
> "spark.hadoop.mapreduce.input.fileinputformat.input.dir.recursive" to "true"
>  
> However with these settings we lose the ability to prune partitions causing us to read the entire table every time as we aren't using a Spark relation.
>  
> I want to start discussion on whether this is a correct change, or if we are missing something more obvious. In either case I would be happy to fully implement the change.
>  
> Thanks,
> Michael
>  
>  
>  



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