Files
impala/testdata/common/widetable.py
Joe McDonnell 0c7c6a335e IMPALA-11977: Fix Python 3 broken imports and object model differences
Python 3 changed some object model methods:
 - __nonzero__ was removed in favor of __bool__
 - func_dict / func_name were removed in favor of __dict__ / __name__
 - The next() function was deprecated in favor of __next__
   (Code locations should use next(iter) rather than iter.next())
 - metaclasses are specified a different way
 - Locations that specify __eq__ should also specify __hash__

Python 3 also moved some packages around (urllib2, Queue, httplib,
etc), and this adapts the code to use the new locations (usually
handled on Python 2 via future). This also fixes the code to
avoid referencing exception variables outside the exception block
and variables outside of a comprehension. Several of these seem
like false positives, but it is better to avoid the warning.

This fixes these pylint warnings:
bad-python3-import
eq-without-hash
metaclass-assignment
next-method-called
nonzero-method
exception-escape
comprehension-escape

Testing:
 - Ran core tests
 - Ran release exhaustive tests

Change-Id: I988ae6c139142678b0d40f1f4170b892eabf25ee
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/19592
Reviewed-by: Joe McDonnell <joemcdonnell@cloudera.com>
Tested-by: Impala Public Jenkins <impala-public-jenkins@cloudera.com>
2023-03-09 17:17:57 +00:00

139 lines
4.7 KiB
Python
Executable File

#!/usr/bin/env impala-python
#
# Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
# or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
# distributed with this work for additional information
# regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
# to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
# "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
# with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
# software distributed under the License is distributed on an
# "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
# KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
# specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
# Functions for creating wide (i.e. many-column) tables. When run from the command line,
# specify either --get_columns to generate column descriptors, or --create_data to
# generate a CSV data file and prints a SQL load statement to incorporate
# into dataload SQL script generation.
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
from builtins import range
from datetime import datetime, timedelta
import itertools
import optparse
parser = optparse.OptionParser()
parser.add_option("--get_columns", dest="get_columns", default=False, action="store_true")
parser.add_option("--create_data", dest="create_data", default=False, action="store_true")
parser.add_option("-n", "--num_columns", dest="num_columns", type="int")
parser.add_option("-o", "--output_file", dest="output_file")
parser.add_option("--num_rows", dest="num_rows", default=10)
def get_columns(num_cols):
"""Returns 'num_cols' column declarations, cycling through every column type, as a
a list of strings."""
templates = [
'bool_col%i BOOLEAN',
'tinyint_col%i TINYINT',
'smallint_col%i SMALLINT',
'int_col%i INT',
'bigint_col%i BIGINT',
'float_col%i FLOAT',
'double_col%i DOUBLE',
'string_col%i STRING',
]
iter = itertools.cycle(templates)
# Produces [bool_col1, tinyint_col1, ..., bool_col2, tinyint_col2, ...]
# The final list has 'num_cols' elements.
return [next(iter) % (i // len(templates) + 1) for i in range(num_cols)]
# Data generators for different types. Each generator yields an infinite number of
# value strings suitable for writing to a CSV file.
def bool_generator():
"""Generates True, False repeating"""
b = True
while True:
yield str(b)
b = not b
def integer_generator():
"""Generates 0..4 repeating"""
i = 0
while True:
yield str(i % 5)
i += 1
def floating_point_generator():
"""Generates 0, 1.1, ..., 4.4 repeating"""
i = 0
while True:
yield str((i % 5) * 1.1)
i += 1
def quote(iter_fn):
"""Returns a generator that returns quoted values of iter_fn."""
def new_iter_fn():
iter = iter_fn()
while True:
yield "'%s'" % next(iter)
return new_iter_fn
def get_data(num_cols, num_rows, delimiter=',', quote_strings=False):
"""Returns the data for the given number of rows and columns as a list of strings, each
of which is a row delimited by 'delimiter'."""
generators = [
bool_generator, # boolean
integer_generator, # tinyint
integer_generator, # smallint
integer_generator, # int
integer_generator, # bigint
floating_point_generator, # float
floating_point_generator, # double
quote(integer_generator) if quote_strings else integer_generator, # string
]
# Create a generator instance for each column, cycling through the different types
iter = itertools.cycle(generators)
column_generators = [next(iter)() for i in range(num_cols)]
# Populate each row using column_generators
rows = []
for i in range(num_rows):
vals = [next(gen) for gen in column_generators]
rows.append(delimiter.join(vals))
return rows
if __name__ == "__main__":
(options, args) = parser.parse_args()
if options.get_columns == options.create_data:
parser.error("Must specify either --get_columns or --create_data")
if not options.num_columns:
parser.error("--num_columns option must be specified")
if options.get_columns:
# Output column descriptors
print('\n'.join(get_columns(options.num_columns)))
if options.create_data:
# Generate data locally, and output the SQL load command for use in dataload
if not options.output_file:
parser.error("--output_file option must be specified")
with open(options.output_file, "w") as f:
for row in get_data(options.num_columns, options.num_rows):
f.write(row)
f.write('\n')
print ("LOAD DATA LOCAL INPATH '%s' "
"OVERWRITE INTO TABLE {db_name}{db_suffix}.{table_name};"
% options.output_file)