The INVALIDATE METADATA
statement marks the metadata for one or all
tables as stale. The next time the Impala service performs a query against a table whose
metadata is invalidated, Impala reloads the associated metadata before the query proceeds.
As this is a very expensive operation compared to the incremental metadata update done by
the REFRESH
statement, when possible, prefer REFRESH
rather than INVALIDATE METADATA
.
INVALIDATE METADATA
is required when the following changes are made
outside of Impala, in Hive and other Hive client, such as SparkSQL:
SERVER
or DATABASE
level Ranger privileges are
changed.
No INVALIDATE METADATA
is needed when the changes are made by
impalad
.
See Overview of Impala Metadata and the Metastore for the information about the way Impala uses metadata and how it shares the same metastore database as Hive.
Once issued, the INVALIDATE METADATA
statement cannot be cancelled.
Syntax:
INVALIDATE METADATA [[db_name.]table_name]
If there is no table specified, the cached metadata for all tables is flushed and synced with Hive Metastore (HMS). If tables were dropped from the HMS, they will be removed from the catalog, and if new tables were added, they will show up in the catalog.
If you specify a table name, only the metadata for that one table is flushed and synced with the HMS.
Usage notes:
To return accurate query results, Impala need to keep the metadata current for the
databases and tables queried. Therefore, if some other entity modifies information used by
Impala in the metastore, the information cached by Impala must be updated via
INVALIDATE METADATA
or REFRESH
.
INVALIDATE METADATA
and REFRESH
are counterparts:
INVALIDATE METADATA
is an asynchronous operations that simply
discards the loaded metadata from the catalog and coordinator caches. After that
operation, the catalog and all the Impala coordinators only know about the existence
of databases and tables and nothing more. Metadata loading for tables is triggered
by any subsequent queries.
REFRESH
reloads the metadata synchronously.
REFRESH
is more lightweight than doing a full metadata load after a
table has been invalidated. REFRESH
cannot detect changes in block
locations triggered by operations like HDFS balancer, hence causing remote reads
during query execution with negative performance implications.
Use REFRESH
after invalidating a specific table to separate the metadata
load from the first query that's run against that table.
Examples:
This example illustrates creating a new database and new table in Hive, then doing an
INVALIDATE METADATA
statement in Impala using the fully qualified table
name, after which both the new table and the new database are visible to Impala.
Before the INVALIDATE METADATA
statement was issued, Impala would give a
"not found" error if you tried to refer to those database or table names.
$ hive
hive> CREATE DATABASE new_db_from_hive;
hive> CREATE TABLE new_db_from_hive.new_table_from_hive (x INT);
hive> quit;
$ impala-shell
> REFRESH new_db_from_hive.new_table_from_hive;
ERROR: AnalysisException: Database does not exist: new_db_from_hive
> INVALIDATE METADATA new_db_from_hive.new_table_from_hive;
> SHOW DATABASES LIKE 'new*';
+--------------------+
| new_db_from_hive |
+--------------------+
> SHOW TABLES IN new_db_from_hive;
+---------------------+
| new_table_from_hive |
+---------------------+
Use the REFRESH
statement for incremental metadata update.
> REFRESH new_table_from_hive;
For more examples of using INVALIDATE METADATA
with a combination of
Impala and Hive operations, see
Switching Back and Forth Between Impala and Hive.
HDFS considerations:
By default, the INVALIDATE METADATA
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. (This checking does not apply
when the catalogd configuration option
--load_catalog_in_background
is set to false
, which it
is by default.) Impala reports any lack of write permissions as an INFO
message in the log file.
If you change HDFS permissions to make data readable or writeable by the Impala user,
issue another INVALIDATE METADATA
to make Impala aware of the change.
Kudu considerations:
By default, 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. If the Kudu service is not integrated with the Hive Metastore, Impala will manage Kudu table metadata in the Hive Metastore.
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.
Related information:
Overview of Impala Metadata and the Metastore, REFRESH Statement