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Currently, the query events (audits and lineages) are logged as a part of query unregistration. This delays the event logging in cases where the Unregister() is delayed by client for some reason (ex: Hue does not call Unregister until the browser tab is closed) or the client goes away without calling Unregister and the query timeout kicks in. This patch moves this event logging to an earlier stage in the query lifecycle. Moved the event logging related code into ClientRequestState for easier code refactoring. The conditions under which the events are logged are slightly modified by this patch. Without the patch, events are logged for unsuccessful queries if atleast a single fetch is perfomed. This patch relaxes this guarantee to log events for any query that reaches the FINISHED state (rows are available to fetch by the client) and does not wait for a fetch to be performed. This simplifies the coordinator state machine by avoiding unnecessary synchronization. Added some test coverage for coordinator side code paths for writing lineages. fe specific lineage tests only verified the correctness of lineage created but did not test whether it was being flushed correctly to the disk. Change-Id: I639b9c1acb9806b29292cd85be2863688453ca2e Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/14143 Reviewed-by: Bharath Vissapragada <bharathv@cloudera.com> Tested-by: Impala Public Jenkins <impala-public-jenkins@cloudera.com>
391 lines
17 KiB
Python
391 lines
17 KiB
Python
# Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
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# or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
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# distributed with this work for additional information
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# regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
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# to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
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# "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
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# with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
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#
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# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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#
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# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
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# software distributed under the License is distributed on an
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# "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
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# KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
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# specific language governing permissions and limitations
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# under the License.
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# This module is used for common utilities related to parsing test files
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import codecs
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import collections
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import logging
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import os
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import os.path
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import re
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from collections import defaultdict
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from textwrap import dedent
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LOG = logging.getLogger('impala_test_suite')
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# constants
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SECTION_DELIMITER = "===="
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SUBSECTION_DELIMITER = "----"
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# The QueryTestSectionReader provides utility functions that help to parse content
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# from a query test file
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class QueryTestSectionReader(object):
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@staticmethod
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def build_query(query_section_text):
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"""Build a query by stripping comments and trailing newlines and semi-colons."""
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query_section_text = remove_comments(query_section_text)
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return query_section_text.rstrip("\n;")
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@staticmethod
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def get_table_name_components(table_format, table_name, scale_factor=''):
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"""
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Returns a pair (db_name, tbl_name). If the table_name argument is
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fully qualified, return the database name mentioned there,
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otherwise get the default db name from the table format and scale
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factor.
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"""
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# If table name is fully qualified return the db prefix
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split = table_name.split('.')
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assert len(split) <= 2, 'Unexpected table format: %s' % table_name
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db_name = split[0] if len(split) == 2 else \
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QueryTestSectionReader.get_db_name(table_format, scale_factor)
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return (db_name, split[-1])
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@staticmethod
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def get_db_name(table_format, scale_factor=''):
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"""
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Get the database name to use.
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Database names are dependent on the scale factor, file format, compression type
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and compression codec. This method returns the appropriate database name to the
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caller based on the table format information provided.
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"""
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if table_format.file_format == 'text' and table_format.compression_codec == 'none':
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suffix = ''
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elif table_format.compression_codec == 'none':
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suffix = '_%s' % (table_format.file_format)
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elif table_format.compression_type == 'record':
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suffix = '_%s_record_%s' % (table_format.file_format,
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table_format.compression_codec)
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else:
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suffix = '_%s_%s' % (table_format.file_format, table_format.compression_codec)
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dataset = table_format.dataset.replace('-', '')
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return dataset + scale_factor + suffix
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def remove_comments(section_text):
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return '\n'.join([l for l in section_text.split('\n') if not l.strip().startswith('#')])
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def parse_query_test_file(file_name, valid_section_names=None, encoding=None):
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"""
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Reads the specified query test file accepting the given list of valid section names
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Uses a default list of valid section names if valid_section_names is None
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Returns the result as a list of dictionaries. Each dictionary in the list corresponds
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to a test case and each key in the dictionary maps to a section in that test case.
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"""
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# Update the valid section names as we support other test types
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# (ex. planner, data error)
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section_names = valid_section_names
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if section_names is None:
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section_names = ['QUERY', 'HIVE_QUERY', 'RESULTS', 'TYPES', 'LABELS', 'SETUP',
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'CATCH', 'ERRORS', 'USER', 'RUNTIME_PROFILE', 'SHELL', 'DML_RESULTS',
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'DBAPI_RESULTS', 'HS2_TYPES', 'HIVE_MAJOR_VERSION', 'LINEAGE']
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return parse_test_file(file_name, section_names, encoding=encoding,
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skip_unknown_sections=False)
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def parse_table_constraints(constraints_file):
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"""Reads a table constraints file, if one exists"""
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schema_include = defaultdict(list)
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schema_exclude = defaultdict(list)
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schema_only = defaultdict(list)
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if not os.path.isfile(constraints_file):
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LOG.info('No schema constraints file file found')
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else:
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with open(constraints_file, 'rb') as constraints_file:
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for line in constraints_file.readlines():
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line = line.strip()
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if not line or line.startswith('#'):
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continue
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# Format: table_name:<name>, constraint_type:<type>, table_format:<t1>,<t2>,...
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table_name, constraint_type, table_formats =\
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[value.split(':')[1].strip() for value in line.split(',', 2)]
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# 'only' constraint -- If a format defines an only constraint, only those tables
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# collected for the same table_format will be created.
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if constraint_type == 'only':
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for f in map(parse_table_format_constraint, table_formats.split(',')):
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schema_only[f].append(table_name.lower())
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elif constraint_type == 'restrict_to':
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schema_include[table_name.lower()] +=\
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map(parse_table_format_constraint, table_formats.split(','))
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elif constraint_type == 'exclude':
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schema_exclude[table_name.lower()] +=\
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map(parse_table_format_constraint, table_formats.split(','))
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else:
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raise ValueError, 'Unknown constraint type: %s' % constraint_type
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return schema_include, schema_exclude, schema_only
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def parse_table_format_constraint(table_format_constraint):
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# TODO: Expand how we parse table format constraints to support syntax such as
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# a table format string with a wildcard character. Right now we don't do anything.
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return table_format_constraint
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def parse_test_file(test_file_name, valid_section_names, skip_unknown_sections=True,
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encoding=None):
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"""
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Parses an Impala test file
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Test files have the format:
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==== <- Section
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---- [Name] <- Named subsection
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// some text
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---- [Name2] <- Named subsection
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...
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====
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The valid section names are passed in to this function. The encoding to use
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when reading the data can be specified with the 'encoding' flag.
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"""
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with open(test_file_name, 'rb') as test_file:
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file_data = test_file.read()
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if encoding: file_data = file_data.decode(encoding)
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return parse_test_file_text(file_data, valid_section_names,
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skip_unknown_sections)
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def parse_test_file_text(text, valid_section_names, skip_unknown_sections=True):
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sections = list()
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section_start_regex = re.compile(r'(?m)^%s' % SECTION_DELIMITER)
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match = section_start_regex.search(text)
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if match is not None:
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# Assume anything before the first section (==== tag) is a header and ignore it. To
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# ensure that test will not be skipped unintentionally we reject headers that start
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# with what looks like a subsection.
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header = text[:match.start()]
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if re.match(r'^%s' % SUBSECTION_DELIMITER, header):
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raise RuntimeError, dedent("""
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Header must not start with '%s'. Everything before the first line matching '%s'
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is considered header information and will be ignored. However a header must not
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start with '%s' to prevent test cases from accidentally being ignored.""" %
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(SUBSECTION_DELIMITER, SECTION_DELIMITER, SUBSECTION_DELIMITER))
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text = text[match.start():]
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# Split the test file up into sections. For each section, parse all subsections.
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for section in section_start_regex.split(text):
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parsed_sections = collections.defaultdict(str)
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for sub_section in re.split(r'(?m)^%s' % SUBSECTION_DELIMITER, section[1:]):
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# Skip empty subsections
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if not sub_section.strip():
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continue
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lines = sub_section.split('\n')
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subsection_name = lines[0].strip()
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subsection_comment = None
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subsection_info = [s.strip() for s in subsection_name.split(':')]
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if(len(subsection_info) == 2):
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subsection_name, subsection_comment = subsection_info
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lines_content = lines[1:-1]
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subsection_str = '\n'.join([line for line in lines_content])
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if len(lines_content) != 0:
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# Add trailing newline to last line if present. This disambiguates between the
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# case of no lines versus a single line with no text.
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subsection_str += "\n"
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if subsection_name not in valid_section_names:
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if skip_unknown_sections or not subsection_name:
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print sub_section
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print 'Unknown section \'%s\'' % subsection_name
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continue
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else:
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raise RuntimeError, 'Unknown subsection: %s' % subsection_name
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if subsection_name == 'QUERY' and subsection_comment:
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parsed_sections['QUERY_NAME'] = subsection_comment
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if subsection_name == 'RESULTS' and subsection_comment:
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for comment in subsection_comment.split(','):
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if comment == 'MULTI_LINE':
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parsed_sections['MULTI_LINE'] = comment
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elif comment.startswith('VERIFY'):
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parsed_sections['VERIFIER'] = comment
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else:
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raise RuntimeError, 'Unknown subsection comment: %s' % comment
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if subsection_name == 'CATCH':
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parsed_sections['CATCH'] = list()
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if subsection_comment == None:
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parsed_sections['CATCH'].append(subsection_str)
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elif subsection_comment == 'ANY_OF':
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parsed_sections['CATCH'].extend(lines_content)
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else:
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raise RuntimeError, 'Unknown subsection comment: %s' % subsection_comment
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for exception_str in parsed_sections['CATCH']:
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assert exception_str.strip(), "Empty exception string."
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continue
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# The DML_RESULTS section is used to specify what the state of the table should be
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# after executing a DML query (in the QUERY section). The target table name must
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# be specified in a table comment, and then the expected rows in the table are the
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# contents of the section. If the TYPES and LABELS sections are provided, they
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# will be verified against the DML_RESULTS. Using both DML_RESULTS and RESULTS is
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# not supported.
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if subsection_name == 'DML_RESULTS':
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if subsection_comment is None or subsection_comment == '':
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raise RuntimeError, 'DML_RESULTS requires that the table is specified ' \
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'in the comment.'
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parsed_sections['DML_RESULTS_TABLE'] = subsection_comment
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parsed_sections['VERIFIER'] = 'VERIFY_IS_EQUAL_SORTED'
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# The RUNTIME_PROFILE section is used to specify lines of text that should be
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# present in the query runtime profile. It takes an option comment containing a
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# table format. RUNTIME_PROFILE secions with a comment are only evaluated for the
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# specified format. If there is a RUNTIME_PROFILE section without a comment, it is
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# evaluated for all formats that don't have a commented section for this query.
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if subsection_name == 'RUNTIME_PROFILE':
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if subsection_comment is not None and subsection_comment is not "":
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allowed_formats = ['kudu']
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if not subsection_comment.startswith("table_format="):
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raise RuntimeError, 'RUNTIME_PROFILE comment (%s) must be of the form ' \
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'"table_format=FORMAT"' % subsection_comment
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table_format = subsection_comment[13:]
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if table_format not in allowed_formats:
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raise RuntimeError, 'RUNTIME_PROFILE table format (%s) must be in: %s' % \
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(table_format, allowed_formats)
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subsection_name = 'RUNTIME_PROFILE_%s' % table_format
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parsed_sections[subsection_name] = subsection_str
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if parsed_sections:
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sections.append(parsed_sections)
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return sections
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def split_section_lines(section_str):
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"""
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Given a section string as produced by parse_test_file_text(), split it into separate
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lines. The section string must have a trailing newline.
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"""
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if section_str == '':
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return []
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assert section_str[-1] == '\n'
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# Trim off the trailing newline and split into lines.
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return section_str[:-1].split('\n')
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def join_section_lines(lines):
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"""
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The inverse of split_section_lines().
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"""
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return '\n'.join(lines) + '\n'
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def write_test_file(test_file_name, test_file_sections, encoding=None):
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"""
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Given a list of test file sections, write out the corresponding test file
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This is useful when updating the results of a test.
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The file encoding can be specified in the 'encoding' parameter. If not specified
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the default system encoding will be used.
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"""
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with codecs.open(test_file_name, 'w', encoding=encoding) as test_file:
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test_file_text = list()
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for test_case in test_file_sections:
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test_file_text.append(SECTION_DELIMITER)
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for section_name, section_value in test_case.items():
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# Have to special case query name and verifier because they have annotations
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# in the headers
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if section_name in ['QUERY_NAME', 'VERIFIER']:
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continue
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# TODO: We need a more generic way of persisting the old test file.
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# Special casing will blow up.
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full_section_name = section_name
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if section_name == 'QUERY' and test_case.get('QUERY_NAME'):
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full_section_name = '%s: %s' % (section_name, test_case['QUERY_NAME'])
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if section_name == 'RESULTS' and test_case.get('VERIFIER'):
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full_section_name = '%s: %s' % (section_name, test_case['VERIFIER'])
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test_file_text.append("%s %s" % (SUBSECTION_DELIMITER, full_section_name))
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section_value = ''.join(test_case[section_name])
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if section_value.strip():
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test_file_text.append(section_value)
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test_file_text.append(SECTION_DELIMITER)
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test_file.write(('\n').join(test_file_text))
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def load_tpc_queries(workload, include_stress_queries=False, query_name_filters=[]):
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"""
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Returns a list of queries for the given workload. 'workload' should either be 'tpch',
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'tpcds', 'tpch_nested', or 'targeted-perf'. The types of queries that are returned:
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- 'standard' queries, i.e. from the spec for that workload. These queries will have
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filenames like '{workload}-q*.test' and one query per file.
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- 'stress' queries, if 'include_stress_queries' is true, which run against data from
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the workkload but were designed to stress specific aspects of Impala. These queries
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have filenames like '{workload}-stress-*.test' and may have multiple queries per file.
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- 'targeted' queries, if the workload is 'targeted-perf', which have no restrictions.
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The returned queries are filtered according to 'query_name_filters', a list of query
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name regexes, if specified.
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All queries are required to have a name specified, i.e. each test case should have:
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---- QUERY: WORKLOAD-<QUERY_NAME>
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"""
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LOG.info("Loading %s queries", workload)
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queries = dict()
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query_dir = os.path.join(
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os.environ['IMPALA_HOME'], "testdata", "workloads", workload, "queries")
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# Check whether the workload name corresponds to an existing directory.
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if not os.path.isdir(query_dir):
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raise ValueError("Workload %s not found in %s" % (workload, query_dir))
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# IMPALA-6715 and others from the past: This pattern enforces the queries we actually
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# find. Both workload directories contain other queries that are not part of the TPC
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# spec.
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file_workload = workload
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if workload == "tpcds":
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# TPCDS is assumed to always use decimal_v2, which is the default since 3.0
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file_workload = "tpcds-decimal_v2"
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if include_stress_queries:
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file_name_pattern = re.compile(r"^{0}-(q.*|stress-.*).test$".format(file_workload))
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else:
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file_name_pattern = re.compile(r"^{0}-(q.*).test$".format(file_workload))
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query_name_pattern = re.compile(r"^{0}-(.*)$".format(workload.upper()))
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if workload == "tpch_nested":
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query_name_pattern = re.compile(r"^TPCH-(.*)$")
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if workload == "targeted-perf":
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# We don't enforce any restrictions on targeted-perf queries.
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file_name_pattern = re.compile(r"(.*)")
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query_name_pattern = re.compile(r"(.*)")
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query_name_filters = map(str.strip, query_name_filters) if query_name_filters else []
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filter_regex = re.compile(r'|'.join(['^%s$' % n for n in query_name_filters]), re.I)
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for query_file in os.listdir(query_dir):
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is_standard = "stress" not in query_file and workload != "targeted-perf"
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file_match = file_name_pattern.search(query_file)
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if not file_match:
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continue
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file_path = os.path.join(query_dir, query_file)
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test_cases = parse_query_test_file(file_path)
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for test_case in test_cases:
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query_sql = remove_comments(test_case["QUERY"])
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if re.match(filter_regex, test_case["QUERY_NAME"]):
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query_name_match = query_name_pattern.search(test_case["QUERY_NAME"])
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# For standard queries, we require that the query name matches the file name.
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if is_standard and file_match.group(1).upper() != query_name_match.group(1):
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raise Exception("Query name '%s' does not match file name '%s'"
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% (query_name_match.group(1), file_match.group(1).upper()))
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queries[query_name_match.group(0)] = query_sql
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# The standard tpc queries must have one query per file.
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if is_standard and len(test_cases) != 1:
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raise Exception("Expected exactly 1 query to be in file %s but got %s"
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% (file_path, len(test_cases)))
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return queries
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