Upgrading Impala
Upgrading Impala involves building or acquiring new Impala-related binaries, and then restarting Impala services.
Upgrading Impala
-
Shut down all Impala-related daemons on all relevant hosts in the cluster:
-
Stop
impaladon each Impala node in your cluster:$ sudo service impala-server stop -
Stop any instances of the state store in your cluster:
$ sudo service impala-state-store stop -
Stop any instances of the catalog service in your cluster:
$ sudo service impala-catalog stop
-
Stop
-
Follow the build procedure in the README.md file to produce new Impala binaries.
-
Replace the binaries for all Impala-related daemons on all relevant hosts in the cluster.
- Check if there are new recommended or required configuration settings to put into place in the configuration files, typically under /etc/impala/conf. See Post-Installation Configuration for Impala for settings related to performance and scalability.
-
Restart all Impala-related daemons on all relevant hosts in the cluster:
-
Restart the Impala state store service on the desired nodes in your cluster.
Expect to see a process named
statestoredif the service started successfully.$ sudo service impala-state-store start $ ps ax | grep [s]tatestored 6819 ? Sl 0:07 /usr/lib/impala/sbin/statestored -log_dir=/var/log/impala -state_store_port=24000Restart the state store service before the Impala server service to avoid "Not connected" errors when you run
impala-shell. -
Restart the Impala catalog service on whichever host it runs on in your cluster.
Expect to see a process named
catalogdif the service started successfully.$ sudo service impala-catalog restart $ ps ax | grep [c]atalogd 6068 ? Sl 4:06 /usr/lib/impala/sbin/catalogd -
Restart the Impala daemon service on each node in your cluster. Expect to see a
process named
impaladif the service started successfully.$ sudo service impala-server start $ ps ax | grep [i]mpalad 7936 ? Sl 0:12 /usr/lib/impala/sbin/impalad -log_dir=/var/log/impala -state_store_port=24000 -state_store_host=127.0.0.1 -be_port=22000
-
Restart the Impala state store service on the desired nodes in your cluster.
Expect to see a process named
If the services did not start successfully (even though the sudo
service command might display [OK]), check for errors in the
Impala log file, typically in /var/log/impala.
Impala Upgrade Considerations
Grant REFRESH Privilege to Impala Roles with SELECT or INSERT Privilege when Upgrading to Impala 3.0
To use the fine grained privileges feature in
Impala 3.0, if a role has the SELECT or
INSERT privilege on an object in Impala before upgrading to
Impala 3.0, grant that role the REFRESH privilege
after the upgrade.
List of Reserved Words Updated in Impala 3.0
The list of reserved words in Impala was updated in Impala 3.0. If you need to use a reserved word as an identifier, e.g. a table name, enclose the word in back-ticks.
impalad and catalogd startup flag.
‑‑reserved_words_version=2.11.0
Note that this startup option will be deprecated in a future release.
Decimal V2 Used by Default in Impala 3.0
In Impala, two different implementations of DECIMAL types are
supported. Starting in Impala 3.0, DECIMAL V2
is used by default. See DECIMAL Type
for detail information.
DECIMAL type
for the backward compatibility of your queries, set the DECIMAL_V2
query option to FALSE:
SET DECIMAL_V2=FALSE;
Behavior of Column Aliases Changed in Impala 3.0
To conform to the SQL standard, Impala no longer performs alias substitution in the
subexpressions of GROUP BY, HAVING, and
ORDER BY. See Overview of Impala Aliases for examples of
supported and unsupported aliases syntax.
Default PARQUET_ARRAY_RESOLUTION Changed in Impala 3.0
The default value for the PARQUET_ARRAY_RESOLUTION was changed to
THREE_LEVEL in Impala 3.0, to
match the Parquet standard 3-level encoding.
See PARQUET_ARRAY_RESOLUTION Query Option (Impala 2.9 or higher only) for the information
about the query option.
Enable Clustering Hint for Inserts
In Impala 3.0, the clustered hint is enabled by default. The hint adds a local sort by the partitioning columns to a query plan.
The clustered hint is only effective for HDFS and Kudu tables.
As in previous versions, the noclustered hint prevents clustering. If
a table has ordering columns defined, the noclustered hint is ignored
with a warning.
Deprecated Query Options Removed in Impala 3.0
-
DEFAULT_ORDER_BY_LIMIT -
ABORT_ON_DEFAULT_LIMIT_EXCEEDED -
V_CPU_CORES -
RESERVATION_REQUEST_TIMEOUT -
RM_INITIAL_MEM -
SCAN_NODE_CODEGEN_THRESHOLD -
MAX_IO_BUFFERS -
RM_INITIAL_MEM -
DISABLE_CACHED_READS
Fine-grained Privileges Added in Impala 3.0
Starting in Impala 3.0, finer grained privileges are enforced,
such as the REFRESH, CREATE, DROP,
and ALTER privileges. In particular, running REFRESH
or INVALIDATE METADATA now requires the new REFRESH
privilege. Users who did not previously have the ALL privilege will
no longer be able to run REFRESH or INVALIDATE
METADATA after an upgrade. Those users need to have the
REFRESH or ALL privilege granted to run
REFRESH or INVALIDATE METADATA.
See GRANT Statement (Impala 2.0 or higher only) for the new privileges, the scope, and other information about the new privileges.
refresh_after_connect Impala Shell Option Removed in Impala 3.0
The deprecated ‑‑refresh_after_connect option was removed
from Impala Shell in Impala 3.0
Return Type Changed for EXTRACT and DATE_PART Functions in Impala 3.0
EXTRACT and
DATE_PART functions:
-
The output type of the
EXTRACTandDATE_PARTfunctions was changed toBIGINT. -
Extracting the millisecond part from a
TIMESTAMPreturns the seconds component and the milliseconds component. For example,EXTRACT (CAST('2006-05-12 18:27:28.123456789' AS TIMESTAMP), 'MILLISECOND')will return28123.
Port Change for SHUTDOWN Command
If you used the SHUTDOWN command in Impala 3.1, and specified a port
explicitly, change the port number parameter, in Impala 3.2, to use the KRPC port.
Change in Client Connection Timeout
The default behavior of client connection timeout changed.
In Impala 3.2 and lower, client waited indefinitely to open the new
session if the maximum number of threads specified by
--fe_service_threads has been allocated.
In Impala 3.3 and higher, a new startup flag,
--accepted_client_cnxn_timeout, was added to
control how the server should treat new connection requests if we have
run out of the configured number of server threads.
If --accepted_client_cnxn_timeout > 0, new
connection requests are rejected after the specified timeout.
If --accepted_client_cnxn_timeout=0, clients waits
indefinitely to connect to Impala. You can use this setting to restore
the pre-Impala 3.3 behavior.
The default timeout is 5 minutes.
Default Setting Changes
| Release Changed | Setting | Default Value |
|---|---|---|
| Impala 2.12 | ‑‑compact_catalog_topicimpalad
flag |
true
|
| Impala 2.12 | ‑‑max_cached_file_handlesimpalad
flag |
20000
|
| Impala 3.0 | PARQUET_ARRAY_RESOLUTION query
option |
THREE_LEVEL
|
| Impala 3.0 | DECIMAL_V2
|
TRUE
|