Reputation: 1883
Can anyone tell me the difference between Hive's external table and internal tables. I know the difference comes when dropping the table. I don't understand what you mean by the data and metadata is deleted in internal and only metadata is deleted in external tables. Can anyone explain me in terms of nodes please.
Upvotes: 126
Views: 221747
Reputation: 11
Both Internal and External tables are owned by HIVE. The only difference being the ownership of data. The commands for creating both tables are shown below. Only an additional EXTERNAL keyword comes in case of external table creation. Both tables can be created/deleted/modified using SQL Statements.
In case of Internal Tables, both the table and the data contained in the tables are managed by HIVE. That is, we can add/delete/modify any data using HIVE. When we DROP the table, along with the table, the data will also get deleted.
Eg: CREATE TABLE tweets (text STRING, words INT, length INT) ROW FORMAT DELIMITED FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' STORED AS TEXTFILE;
In case of External Tables, only the table is managed by HIVE. The data present in these tables can be from any storage locations like HDFS. We cant add/delete/modify the data in these tables. We can only use the data in these tables using SELECT statements. When we DROP the table, only the table gets deleted and not the data contained in it. This is why its said that only meta-data gets deleted. When we create EXTERNAL tables, we need to mention the location of the data.
Eg: CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE tweets (text STRING, words INT, length INT) ROW FORMAT DELIMITED FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' STORED AS TEXTFILE LOCATION '/user/hive/warehouse/tweets';
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 28199
For External Tables, Hive stores the data in the LOCATION specified during creation of the table(generally not in warehouse directory). If the external table is dropped, then the table metadata is deleted but not the data.
For Internal tables, Hive stores data into its warehouse directory. If the table is dropped then both the table metadata and the data will be deleted.
Difference between Internal & External tables :
For External Tables -
External table stores files on the HDFS server but tables are not linked to the source file completely.
If you delete an external table the file still remains on the HDFS server.
As an example if you create an external table called “table_test” in HIVE using HIVE-QL and link the table to file “file”, then deleting “table_test” from HIVE will not delete “file” from HDFS.
External table files are accessible to anyone who has access to HDFS file structure and therefore security needs to be managed at the HDFS file/folder level.
Meta data is maintained on master node, and deleting an external table from HIVE only deletes the metadata not the data/file.
For Internal Tables-
- Stored in a directory based on settings in
hive.metastore.warehouse.dir
, by default internal tables are stored in the following directory “/user/hive/warehouse” you can change it by updating the location in the config file .- Deleting the table deletes the metadata and data from master-node and HDFS respectively.
- Internal table file security is controlled solely via HIVE. Security needs to be managed within HIVE, probably at the schema level (depends on organization).
Hive may have internal or external tables, this is a choice that affects how data is loaded, controlled, and managed.
Use EXTERNAL tables when:
Use INTERNAL tables when:
Source :
HDInsight: Hive Internal and External Tables Intro
Internal & external tables in Hadoop- HIVE
Upvotes: 55
Reputation: 1
I would like to add that
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 61
An internal table data is stored in the warehouse folder, whereas an external table data is stored at the location you mentioned in table creation.
So when you delete an internal table, it deletes the schema as well as the data under the warehouse folder, but for an external table it's only the schema that you will loose.
So when you want an external table back you again after deleting it, can create a table with the same schema again and point it to the original data location. Hope it is clear now.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 2302
In Hive We can also create an external table. It tells Hive to refer to the data that is at an existing location outside the warehouse directory. Dropping External tables will delete metadata but not the data.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 39
INTERNAL : Table is created First and Data is loaded later
EXTERNAL : Data is present and Table is created on top of it.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 51
The only difference in behaviour (not the intended usage) based on my limited research and testing so far (using Hive 1.1.0 -cdh5.12.0) seems to be that when a table is dropped
(NOTE: See Section 'Managed and External Tables' in https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/Hive/LanguageManual+DDL which list some other difference which I did not completely understand)
I believe Hive chooses the location where it needs to create the table based on the following precedence from top to bottom
When the "Location" option is not used during the "creation of a hive table", the above precedence rule is used. This is applicable for both Internal and External tables. This means an Internal table does not necessarily have to reside in the Warehouse directory and can reside anywhere else.
Note: I might have missed some scenarios, but based on my limited exploration, the behaviour of both Internal and Extenal table seems to be the same except for the one difference (data deletion) described above. I tried the following scenarios for both Internal and External tables.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 342
The best use case for an external table in the hive is when you want to create the table from a file either CSV or text
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 7440
Hive has a relational database on the master node it uses to keep track of state.
For instance, when you CREATE TABLE FOO(foo string) LOCATION 'hdfs://tmp/';
, this table schema is stored in the database.
If you have a partitioned table, the partitions are stored in the database(this allows hive to use lists of partitions without going to the file-system and finding them, etc). These sorts of things are the 'metadata'.
When you drop an internal table, it drops the data, and it also drops the metadata.
When you drop an external table, it only drops the meta data. That means hive is ignorant of that data now. It does not touch the data itself.
Upvotes: 128
Reputation: 732
In simple words, there are two things:
Hive can manage things in warehouse i.e. it will not delete data out of warehouse. When we delete table:
1) For internal tables the data is managed internally in warehouse. So will be deleted.
2) For external tables the data is managed eternal from warehouse. So can't be deleted and clients other then hive can also use it.
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 1101
Hive tables can be created as EXTERNAL or INTERNAL. This is a choice that affects how data is loaded, controlled, and managed.
Use EXTERNAL tables when:
Use INTERNAL tables when:
The data is temporary.
You want Hive to completely manage the lifecycle of the table and data.
Upvotes: 104
Reputation: 139
Consider this scenario which best suits for External Table:
A MapReduce (MR) job filters a huge log file to spit out n
sub log files (e.g. each sub log file contains a specific message type log) and the output i.e n
sub log files are stored in hdfs.
These log files are to be loaded into Hive tables for performing further analytic, in this scenario I would recommend an External Table(s), because the actual log files are generated and owned by an external process i.e. a MR job besides you can avoid an additional step of loading each generated log file into respective Hive table as well.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1
For managed tables, Hive controls the lifecycle of their data. Hive stores the data for managed tables in a sub-directory under the directory defined by hive.metastore.warehouse.dir by default.
When we drop a managed table, Hive deletes the data in the table.But managed tables are less convenient for sharing with other tools. For example, lets say we have data that is created and used primarily by Pig , but we want to run some queries against it, but not give Hive ownership of the data.
At that time, external table is defined that points to that data, but doesn’t take ownership of it.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 6580
When there is data already in HDFS, an external Hive table can be created to describe the data. It is called EXTERNAL because the data in the external table is specified in the LOCATION properties instead of the default warehouse directory.
When keeping data in the internal tables, Hive fully manages the life cycle of the table and data. This means the data is removed once the internal table is dropped. If the external table is dropped, the table metadata is deleted but the data is kept. Most of the time, an external table is preferred to avoid deleting data along with tables by mistake.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
hive stores only the meta data in metastore and original data in out side of hive when we use external table we can give location' ' by these our original data wont effect when we drop the table
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1450
Also Keep in mind that Hive is a big data warehouse. When you want to drop a table you dont want to lose Gigabytes or Terabytes of data. Generating, moving and copying data at that scale can be time consuming. When you drop a 'Managed' table hive will also trash its data. When you drop a 'External' table only the schema definition from hive meta-store is removed. The data on the hdfs still remains.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 119
External hive table has advantages that it does not remove files when we drop tables,we can set row formats with different settings , like serde....delimited
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 231
Internal tables are useful if you want Hive to manage the complete lifecycle of your data including the deletion, whereas external tables are useful when the files are being used outside of Hive.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 31
In external tables, if you drop it, it deletes only schema of the table, table data exists in physical location. So to deleted the data use hadoop fs - rmr tablename . Managed table hive will have full control on tables. In external tables users will have control on it.
Upvotes: 3