Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joe McDonnell
1913ab46ed IMPALA-14501: Migrate most scripts from impala-python to impala-python3
To remove the dependency on Python 2, existing scripts need to use
python3 rather than python. These commands find those
locations (for impala-python and regular python):
git grep impala-python | grep -v impala-python3 | grep -v impala-python-common | grep -v init-impala-python
git grep bin/python | grep -v python3

This removes or switches most of these locations by various means:
1. If a python file has a #!/bin/env impala-python (or python) but
   doesn't have a main function, it removes the hash-bang and makes
   sure that the file is not executable.
2. Most scripts can simply switch from impala-python to impala-python3
   (or python to python3) with minimal changes.
3. The cm-api pypi package (which doesn't support Python 3) has been
   replaced by the cm-client pypi package and interfaces have changed.
   Rather than migrating the code (which hasn't been used in years), this
   deletes the old code and stops installing cm-api into the virtualenv.
   The code can be restored and revamped if there is any interest in
   interacting with CM clusters.
4. This switches tests/comparison over to impala-python3, but this code has
   bit-rotted. Some pieces can be run manually, but it can't be fully
   verified with Python 3. It shouldn't hold back the migration on its own.
5. This also replaces locations of impala-python in comments / documentation /
   READMEs.
6. kazoo (used for interacting with HBase) needed to be upgraded to a
   version that supports Python 3. The newest version of kazoo requires
   upgrades of other component versions, so this uses kazoo 2.8.0 to avoid
   needing other upgrades.

The two remaining uses of impala-python are:
 - bin/cmake_aux/create_virtualenv.sh
 - bin/impala-env-versioned-python
These will be removed separately when we drop Python 2 support
completely. In particular, these are useful for testing impala-shell
with Python 2 until we stop supporting Python 2 for impala-shell.

The docker-based tests still use /usr/bin/python, but this can
be switched over independently (and doesn't impact impala-python)

Testing:
 - Ran core job
 - Ran build + dataload on Centos 7, Redhat 8
 - Manual testing of individual scripts (except some bitrotted areas like the
   random query generator)

Change-Id: If209b761290bc7e7c716c312ea757da3e3bca6dc
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/23468
Reviewed-by: Michael Smith <michael.smith@cloudera.com>
Tested-by: Michael Smith <michael.smith@cloudera.com>
2025-10-22 16:30:17 +00:00
Joe McDonnell
c5a0ec8bdf IMPALA-11980 (part 1): Put all thrift-generated python code into the impala_thrift_gen package
This puts all of the thrift-generated python code into the
impala_thrift_gen package. This is similar to what Impyla
does for its thrift-generated python code, except that it
uses the impala_thrift_gen package rather than impala._thrift_gen.
This is a preparatory patch for fixing the absolute import
issues.

This patches all of the thrift files to add the python namespace.
This has code to apply the patching to the thirdparty thrift
files (hive_metastore.thrift, fb303.thrift) to do the same.

Putting all the generated python into a package makes it easier
to understand where the imports are getting code. When the
subsequent change rearranges the shell code, the thrift generated
code can stay in a separate directory.

This uses isort to sort the imports for the affected Python files
with the provided .isort.cfg file. This also adds an impala-isort
shell script to make it easy to run.

Testing:
 - Ran a core job

Change-Id: Ie2927f22c7257aa38a78084efe5bd76d566493c0
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/20169
Tested-by: Impala Public Jenkins <impala-public-jenkins@cloudera.com>
Reviewed-by: Riza Suminto <riza.suminto@cloudera.com>
2025-04-15 17:03:02 +00:00
Joe McDonnell
82bd087fb1 IMPALA-11973: Add absolute_import, division to all eligible Python files
This takes steps to make Python 2 behave like Python 3 as
a way to flush out issues with running on Python 3. Specifically,
it handles two main differences:
 1. Python 3 requires absolute imports within packages. This
    can be emulated via "from __future__ import absolute_import"
 2. Python 3 changed division to "true" division that doesn't
    round to an integer. This can be emulated via
    "from __future__ import division"

This changes all Python files to add imports for absolute_import
and division. For completeness, this also includes print_function in the
import.

I scrutinized each old-division location and converted some locations
to use the integer division '//' operator if it needed an integer
result (e.g. for indices, counts of records, etc). Some code was also using
relative imports and needed to be adjusted to handle absolute_import.
This fixes all Pylint warnings about no-absolute-import and old-division,
and these warnings are now banned.

Testing:
 - Ran core tests

Change-Id: Idb0fcbd11f3e8791f5951c4944be44fb580e576b
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/19588
Reviewed-by: Joe McDonnell <joemcdonnell@cloudera.com>
Tested-by: Joe McDonnell <joemcdonnell@cloudera.com>
2023-03-09 17:17:57 +00:00
Joe McDonnell
2b550634d2 IMPALA-11952 (part 2): Fix print function syntax
Python 3 now treats print as a function and requires
the parenthesis in invocation.

print "Hello World!"
is now:
print("Hello World!")

This fixes all locations to use the function
invocation. This is more complicated when the output
is being redirected to a file or when avoiding the
usual newline.

print >> sys.stderr , "Hello World!"
is now:
print("Hello World!", file=sys.stderr)

To support this properly and guarantee equivalent behavior
between python 2 and python 3, all files that use print
now add this import:
from __future__ import print_function

This also fixes random flake8 issues that intersect with
the changes.

Testing:
 - check-python-syntax.sh shows no errors related to print

Change-Id: Ib634958369ad777a41e72d80c8053b74384ac351
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/19552
Reviewed-by: Joe McDonnell <joemcdonnell@cloudera.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Smith <michael.smith@cloudera.com>
Tested-by: Michael Smith <michael.smith@cloudera.com>
2023-02-28 17:11:50 +00:00
Lars Volker
b5714097e0 IMPALA-7694: Add host resource usage metrics to profile
This change adds a mechanism to collect host resource usage metrics to
profiles. Metric collection can be controlled through a new query option
'RESOURCE_TRACE_RATIO'. It specifies the probability with which metrics
collection will be enabled. Collection always happens per query for all
executors that run one or more fragment instances of the query.

This mechanism adds a new time series counter class that collects all
measured values and does not re-sample them. It will re-sample values
when printing them into a string profile, preserving up to 64 values,
but Thrift profiles will contain the full list of values.

We add a new section "Per Node Profiles" to the profile to store and
show these values:

Per Node Profiles:
  lv-desktop:22000:
    CpuIoWaitPercentage (500.000ms): 0, 0
    CpuSysPercentage (500.000ms): 1, 1
    CpuUserPercentage (500.000ms): 4, 0
      - ScratchBytesRead: 0
      - ScratchBytesWritten: 0
      - ScratchFileUsedBytes: 0
      - ScratchReads: 0 (0)
      - ScratchWrites: 0 (0)
      - TotalEncryptionTime: 0.000ns
      - TotalReadBlockTime: 0.000ns

This change also uses the aforementioned mechanism to collect CPU usage
metrics (user, system, and IO wait time).

A future change can then add a tool to decode a Thrift profile and plot
the contained usage metrics, e.g. using matplotlib (IMPALA-8123). Such a
tool is not included in this change because it will require some
reworking of the python dependencies.

This change also includes a few minor improvements to make the resulting
code more readable:
- Extend the PeriodicCounterUpdater to call functions to update global
  metrics before updating the counters.
- Expose the scratch profile within the per node resource usage section.
- Improve documentation of the profile counter classes.
- Remove synchronization from StreamingSampler.
- Remove a few pieces of dead code that otherwise would have required
  updates.
- Factor some code for profile decoding into the Impala python library

Testing: This change contains a unit test for the system level metrics
collection and e2e tests for the profile changes.

Change-Id: I3aedc20c553ab8d7ed50f72a1a936eba151487d9
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/12069
Reviewed-by: Impala Public Jenkins <impala-public-jenkins@cloudera.com>
Tested-by: Impala Public Jenkins <impala-public-jenkins@cloudera.com>
2019-02-05 20:25:51 +00:00