DESCRIBE Statement
The DESCRIBE
statement displays metadata about a table, such as the column names and their data types. In Impala 2.3 and higher, you can specify the name of a complex type column, which takes the form of a dotted path. The path might include multiple components in the case of a nested type definition. In Impala 2.5 and higher, the DESCRIBE DATABASE
form can display information about a database.
Syntax:
DESCRIBE [DATABASE] [FORMATTED|EXTENDED] object_name
object_name ::=
[db_name.]table_name[.complex_col_name ...]
| db_name
You can use the abbreviation DESC
for the DESCRIBE
statement.
The DESCRIBE FORMATTED
variation displays additional information, in a format familiar to users of Apache Hive. The extra information includes low-level details such as whether the table is internal or external, when it was created, the file format, the location of the data in HDFS, whether the object is a table or a view, and (for views) the text of the query from the view definition.
Note: The Compressed
field is not a reliable indicator of whether the table contains compressed data. It typically always shows No
, because the compression settings only apply during the session that loads data and are not stored persistently with the table metadata.
Describing databases:
By default, the DESCRIBE
output for a database includes the location and the comment, which can be set by the LOCATION
and COMMENT
clauses on the CREATE DATABASE
statement.
The additional information displayed by the FORMATTED
or EXTENDED
keyword includes the HDFS user ID that is considered the owner of the database, and any optional database properties. The properties could be specified by the WITH DBPROPERTIES
clause if the database is created using a Hive CREATE DATABASE
statement. Impala currently does not set or do any special processing based on those properties.
The following examples show the variations in syntax and output for describing databases. This feature is available in Impala 2.5 and higher.
describe database default;
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
| name | location | comment |
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
| default | /user/hive/warehouse | Default Hive database |
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
describe database formatted default;
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
| name | location | comment |
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
| default | /user/hive/warehouse | Default Hive database |
| Owner: | | |
| | public | ROLE |
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
describe database extended default;
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
| name | location | comment |
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
| default | /user/hive/warehouse | Default Hive database |
| Owner: | | |
| | public | ROLE |
+---------+----------------------+-----------------------+
Describing tables:
If the DATABASE
keyword is omitted, the default for the DESCRIBE
statement is to refer to a table.
If you have the SELECT
privilege on a subset of the table columns and no other relevant table/database/server-level privileges, DESCRIBE
returns the data from the columns you have access to.
If you have the SELECT
privilege on a subset of the table columns and no other relevant table/database/server-level privileges, DESCRIBE FORMATTED/EXTENDED
does not return the LOCATION
field. The LOCATION
data is shown if you have any privilege on the table, the containing database or the server.
-- By default, the table is assumed to be in the current database.
describe my_table;
+------+--------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+------+--------+---------+
| x | int | |
| s | string | |
+------+--------+---------+
-- Use a fully qualified table name to specify a table in any database.
describe my_database.my_table;
+------+--------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+------+--------+---------+
| x | int | |
| s | string | |
+------+--------+---------+
-- The formatted or extended output includes additional useful information.
-- The LOCATION field is especially useful to know for DDL statements and HDFS commands
-- during ETL jobs. (The LOCATION includes a full hdfs:// URL, omitted here for readability.)
describe formatted my_table;
+------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+----------------------+
| name | type | comment |
+------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+----------------------+
| # col_name | data_type | comment |
| | NULL | NULL |
| x | int | NULL |
| s | string | NULL |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Detailed Table Information | NULL | NULL |
| Database: | my_database | NULL |
| Owner: | jrussell | NULL |
| CreateTime: | Fri Mar 18 15:58:00 PDT 2016 | NULL |
| LastAccessTime: | UNKNOWN | NULL |
| Protect Mode: | None | NULL |
| Retention: | 0 | NULL |
| Location: | /user/hive/warehouse/my_database.db/my_table | NULL |
| Table Type: | MANAGED_TABLE | NULL |
| Table Parameters: | NULL | NULL |
| | transient_lastDdlTime | 1458341880 |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Storage Information | NULL | NULL |
| SerDe Library: | org. ... .LazySimpleSerDe | NULL |
| InputFormat: | org.apache.hadoop.mapred.TextInputFormat | NULL |
| OutputFormat: | org. ... .HiveIgnoreKeyTextOutputFormat | NULL |
| Compressed: | No | NULL |
| Num Buckets: | 0 | NULL |
| Bucket Columns: | [] | NULL |
| Sort Columns: | [] | NULL |
+------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+----------------------+
Complex type considerations:
Because the column definitions for complex types can become long, particularly when such types are nested, the DESCRIBE
statement uses special formatting for complex type columns to make the output readable.
For the ARRAY
, STRUCT
, and MAP
types available in Impala 2.3 and higher, the DESCRIBE
output is formatted to avoid excessively long lines for multiple fields within a STRUCT
, or a nested sequence of complex types.
You can pass a multi-part qualified name to DESCRIBE
to specify an ARRAY
, STRUCT
, or MAP
column and visualize its structure as if it were a table. For example, if table T1
contains an ARRAY
column A1
, you could issue the statement DESCRIBE t1.a1
. If table T1
contained a STRUCT
column S1
, and a field F1
within the STRUCT
was a MAP
, you could issue the statement DESCRIBE t1.s1.f1
. An ARRAY
is shown as a two-column table, with ITEM
and POS
columns. A STRUCT
is shown as a table with each field representing a column in the table. A MAP
is shown as a two-column table, with KEY
and VALUE
columns.
For example, here is the DESCRIBE
output for a table containing a single top-level column of each complex type:
create table t1 (x int, a array<int>, s struct<f1: string, f2: bigint>, m map<string,int>) stored as parquet;
describe t1;
+------+-----------------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+------+-----------------+---------+
| x | int | |
| a | array<int> | |
| s | struct< | |
| | f1:string, | |
| | f2:bigint | |
| | > | |
| m | map<string,int> | |
+------+-----------------+---------+
Here are examples showing how to “drill down” into the layouts of complex types, including using multi-part names to examine the definitions of nested types. The < >
delimiters identify the columns with complex types; these are the columns where you can descend another level to see the parts that make up the complex type. This technique helps you to understand the multi-part names you use as table references in queries involving complex types, and the corresponding column names you refer to in the SELECT
list. These tables are from the “nested TPC-H” schema, shown in detail in Sample Schema and Data for Experimenting with Impala Complex Types.
The REGION
table contains an ARRAY
of STRUCT
elements:
The first
DESCRIBE
specifies the table name, to display the definition of each top-level column.The second
DESCRIBE
specifies the name of a complex column,REGION.R_NATIONS
, showing that when you include the name of anARRAY
column in aFROM
clause, that table reference acts like a two-column table with columnsITEM
andPOS
.The final
DESCRIBE
specifies the fully qualified name of theITEM
field, to display the layout of its underlyingSTRUCT
type in table format, with the fields mapped to column names.
-- #1: The overall layout of the entire table.
describe region;
+-------------+-------------------------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+-------------+-------------------------+---------+
| r_regionkey | smallint | |
| r_name | string | |
| r_comment | string | |
| r_nations | array<struct< | |
| | n_nationkey:smallint, | |
| | n_name:string, | |
| | n_comment:string | |
| | >> | |
+-------------+-------------------------+---------+
-- #2: The ARRAY column within the table.
describe region.r_nations;
+------+-------------------------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+------+-------------------------+---------+
| item | struct< | |
| | n_nationkey:smallint, | |
| | n_name:string, | |
| | n_comment:string | |
| | > | |
| pos | bigint | |
+------+-------------------------+---------+
-- #3: The STRUCT that makes up each ARRAY element.
-- The fields of the STRUCT act like columns of a table.
describe region.r_nations.item;
+-------------+----------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+-------------+----------+---------+
| n_nationkey | smallint | |
| n_name | string | |
| n_comment | string | |
+-------------+----------+---------+
The CUSTOMER
table contains an ARRAY
of STRUCT
elements, where one field in the STRUCT
is another ARRAY
of STRUCT
elements:
Again, the initial
DESCRIBE
specifies only the table name.The second
DESCRIBE
specifies the qualified name of the complex column,CUSTOMER.C_ORDERS
, showing how anARRAY
is represented as a two-column table with columnsITEM
andPOS
.The third
DESCRIBE
specifies the qualified name of theITEM
of theARRAY
column, to see the structure of the nestedARRAY
. Again, it has has two parts,ITEM
andPOS
. Because theARRAY
contains aSTRUCT
, the layout of theSTRUCT
is shown.The fourth and fifth
DESCRIBE
statements drill down into aSTRUCT
field that is itself a complex type, anARRAY
ofSTRUCT
. TheITEM
portion of the qualified name is only required when theARRAY
elements are anonymous. The fields of theSTRUCT
give names to any other complex types nested inside theSTRUCT
. Therefore, theDESCRIBE
parametersCUSTOMER.C_ORDERS.ITEM.O_LINEITEMS
andCUSTOMER.C_ORDERS.O_LINEITEMS
are equivalent. (For brevity, leave out theITEM
portion of a qualified name when it is not required.)The final
DESCRIBE
shows the layout of the deeply nestedSTRUCT
type. Because there are no more complex types nested inside thisSTRUCT
, this is as far as you can drill down into the layout for this table.
-- #1: The overall layout of the entire table.
describe customer;
+--------------+------------------------------------+
| name | type |
+--------------+------------------------------------+
| c_custkey | bigint |
... more scalar columns ...
| c_orders | array<struct< |
| | o_orderkey:bigint, |
| | o_orderstatus:string, |
| | o_totalprice:decimal(12,2), |
| | o_orderdate:string, |
| | o_orderpriority:string, |
| | o_clerk:string, |
| | o_shippriority:int, |
| | o_comment:string, |
| | o_lineitems:array<struct< |
| | l_partkey:bigint, |
| | l_suppkey:bigint, |
| | l_linenumber:int, |
| | l_quantity:decimal(12,2), |
| | l_extendedprice:decimal(12,2), |
| | l_discount:decimal(12,2), |
| | l_tax:decimal(12,2), |
| | l_returnflag:string, |
| | l_linestatus:string, |
| | l_shipdate:string, |
| | l_commitdate:string, |
| | l_receiptdate:string, |
| | l_shipinstruct:string, |
| | l_shipmode:string, |
| | l_comment:string |
| | >> |
| | >> |
+--------------+------------------------------------+
-- #2: The ARRAY column within the table.
describe customer.c_orders;
+------+------------------------------------+
| name | type |
+------+------------------------------------+
| item | struct< |
| | o_orderkey:bigint, |
| | o_orderstatus:string, |
... more struct fields ...
| | o_lineitems:array<struct< |
| | l_partkey:bigint, |
| | l_suppkey:bigint, |
... more nested struct fields ...
| | l_comment:string |
| | >> |
| | > |
| pos | bigint |
+------+------------------------------------+
-- #3: The STRUCT that makes up each ARRAY element.
-- The fields of the STRUCT act like columns of a table.
describe customer.c_orders.item;
+-----------------+----------------------------------+
| name | type |
+-----------------+----------------------------------+
| o_orderkey | bigint |
| o_orderstatus | string |
| o_totalprice | decimal(12,2) |
| o_orderdate | string |
| o_orderpriority | string |
| o_clerk | string |
| o_shippriority | int |
| o_comment | string |
| o_lineitems | array<struct< |
| | l_partkey:bigint, |
| | l_suppkey:bigint, |
... more struct fields ...
| | l_comment:string |
| | >> |
+-----------------+----------------------------------+
-- #4: The ARRAY nested inside the STRUCT elements of the first ARRAY.
describe customer.c_orders.item.o_lineitems;
+------+----------------------------------+
| name | type |
+------+----------------------------------+
| item | struct< |
| | l_partkey:bigint, |
| | l_suppkey:bigint, |
... more struct fields ...
| | l_comment:string |
| | > |
| pos | bigint |
+------+----------------------------------+
-- #5: Shorter form of the previous DESCRIBE. Omits the .ITEM portion of the name
-- because O_LINEITEMS and other field names provide a way to refer to things
-- inside the ARRAY element.
describe customer.c_orders.o_lineitems;
+------+----------------------------------+
| name | type |
+------+----------------------------------+
| item | struct< |
| | l_partkey:bigint, |
| | l_suppkey:bigint, |
... more struct fields ...
| | l_comment:string |
| | > |
| pos | bigint |
+------+----------------------------------+
-- #6: The STRUCT representing ARRAY elements nested inside
-- another ARRAY of STRUCTs. The lack of any complex types
-- in this output means this is as far as DESCRIBE can
-- descend into the table layout.
describe customer.c_orders.o_lineitems.item;
+-----------------+---------------+
| name | type |
+-----------------+---------------+
| l_partkey | bigint |
| l_suppkey | bigint |
... more scalar columns ...
| l_comment | string |
+-----------------+---------------+
Usage notes:
After the impalad daemons are restarted, the first query against a table can take longer than subsequent queries, because the metadata for the table is loaded before the query is processed. This one-time delay for each table can cause misleading results in benchmark tests or cause unnecessary concern. To “warm up” the Impala metadata cache, you can issue a DESCRIBE
statement in advance for each table you intend to access later.
When you are dealing with data files stored in HDFS, sometimes it is important to know details such as the path of the data files for an Impala table, and the hostname for the namenode. You can get this information from the DESCRIBE FORMATTED
output. You specify HDFS URIs or path specifications with statements such as LOAD DATA
and the LOCATION
clause of CREATE TABLE
or ALTER TABLE
. You might also use HDFS URIs or paths with Linux commands such as hadoop and hdfs to copy, rename, and so on, data files in HDFS.
If you connect to different Impala nodes within an impala-shell session for load-balancing purposes, you can enable the SYNC_DDL
query option to make each DDL statement wait before returning, until the new or changed metadata has been received by all the Impala nodes. See SYNC_DDL Query Option for details.
Each table can also have associated table statistics and column statistics. To see these categories of information, use the SHOW TABLE STATS table_name
and SHOW COLUMN STATS table_name
statements. See SHOW Statement for details.
Important: After adding or replacing data in a table used in performance-critical queries, issue a COMPUTE STATS
statement to make sure all statistics are up-to-date. Consider updating statistics for a table after any INSERT
, LOAD DATA
, or CREATE TABLE AS SELECT
statement in Impala, or after loading data through Hive and doing a REFRESH table_name
in Impala. This technique is especially important for tables that are very large, used in join queries, or both.
Examples:
The following example shows the results of both a standard DESCRIBE
and DESCRIBE FORMATTED
for different kinds of schema objects:
DESCRIBE
for a table or a view returns the name, type, and comment for each of the columns. For a view, if the column value is computed by an expression, the column name is automatically generated as_c0
,_c1
, and so on depending on the ordinal number of the column.- A table created with no special format or storage clauses is designated as a
MANAGED_TABLE
(an “internal table” in Impala terminology). Its data files are stored in an HDFS directory under the default Hive data directory. By default, it uses Text data format. - A view is designated as
VIRTUAL_VIEW
inDESCRIBE FORMATTED
output. Some of its properties areNULL
or blank because they are inherited from the base table. The text of the query that defines the view is part of theDESCRIBE FORMATTED
output. - A table with additional clauses in the
CREATE TABLE
statement has differences inDESCRIBE FORMATTED
output. The output forT2
includes theEXTERNAL_TABLE
keyword because of theCREATE EXTERNAL TABLE
syntax, and differentInputFormat
andOutputFormat
fields to reflect the Parquet file format.
[localhost:21000] > create table t1 (x int, y int, s string);
Query: create table t1 (x int, y int, s string)
[localhost:21000] > describe t1;
Query: describe t1
Query finished, fetching results ...
+------+--------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+------+--------+---------+
| x | int | |
| y | int | |
| s | string | |
+------+--------+---------+
Returned 3 row(s) in 0.13s
[localhost:21000] > describe formatted t1;
Query: describe formatted t1
Query finished, fetching results ...
+------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+------------+
| name | type | comment |
+------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+------------+
| # col_name | data_type | comment |
| | NULL | NULL |
| x | int | None |
| y | int | None |
| s | string | None |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Detailed Table Information | NULL | NULL |
| Database: | describe_formatted | NULL |
| Owner: | doc_demo | NULL |
| CreateTime: | Mon Jul 22 17:03:16 EDT 2013 | NULL |
| LastAccessTime: | UNKNOWN | NULL |
| Protect Mode: | None | NULL |
| Retention: | 0 | NULL |
| Location: | hdfs://127.0.0.1:8020/user/hive/warehouse/ | |
| | describe_formatted.db/t1 | NULL |
| Table Type: | MANAGED_TABLE | NULL |
| Table Parameters: | NULL | NULL |
| | transient_lastDdlTime | 1374526996 |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Storage Information | NULL | NULL |
| SerDe Library: | org.apache.hadoop.hive.serde2.lazy. | |
| | LazySimpleSerDe | NULL |
| InputFormat: | org.apache.hadoop.mapred.TextInputFormat | NULL |
| OutputFormat: | org.apache.hadoop.hive.ql.io. | |
| | HiveIgnoreKeyTextOutputFormat | NULL |
| Compressed: | No | NULL |
| Num Buckets: | 0 | NULL |
| Bucket Columns: | [] | NULL |
| Sort Columns: | [] | NULL |
+------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+------------+
Returned 26 row(s) in 0.03s
[localhost:21000] > create view v1 as select x, upper(s) from t1;
Query: create view v1 as select x, upper(s) from t1
[localhost:21000] > describe v1;
Query: describe v1
Query finished, fetching results ...
+------+--------+---------+
| name | type | comment |
+------+--------+---------+
| x | int | |
| _c1 | string | |
+------+--------+---------+
Returned 2 row(s) in 0.10s
[localhost:21000] > describe formatted v1;
Query: describe formatted v1
Query finished, fetching results ...
+------------------------------+------------------------------+----------------------+
| name | type | comment |
+------------------------------+------------------------------+----------------------+
| # col_name | data_type | comment |
| | NULL | NULL |
| x | int | None |
| _c1 | string | None |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Detailed Table Information | NULL | NULL |
| Database: | describe_formatted | NULL |
| Owner: | doc_demo | NULL |
| CreateTime: | Mon Jul 22 16:56:38 EDT 2013 | NULL |
| LastAccessTime: | UNKNOWN | NULL |
| Protect Mode: | None | NULL |
| Retention: | 0 | NULL |
| Table Type: | VIRTUAL_VIEW | NULL |
| Table Parameters: | NULL | NULL |
| | transient_lastDdlTime | 1374526598 |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Storage Information | NULL | NULL |
| SerDe Library: | null | NULL |
| InputFormat: | null | NULL |
| OutputFormat: | null | NULL |
| Compressed: | No | NULL |
| Num Buckets: | 0 | NULL |
| Bucket Columns: | [] | NULL |
| Sort Columns: | [] | NULL |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # View Information | NULL | NULL |
| View Original Text: | SELECT x, upper(s) FROM t1 | NULL |
| View Expanded Text: | SELECT x, upper(s) FROM t1 | NULL |
+------------------------------+------------------------------+----------------------+
Returned 28 row(s) in 0.03s
[localhost:21000] > create external table t2 (x int, y int, s string) stored as parquet location '/user/doc_demo/sample_data';
[localhost:21000] > describe formatted t2;
Query: describe formatted t2
Query finished, fetching results ...
+------------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+------------+
| name | type | comment |
+------------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+------------+
| # col_name | data_type | comment |
| | NULL | NULL |
| x | int | None |
| y | int | None |
| s | string | None |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Detailed Table Information | NULL | NULL |
| Database: | describe_formatted | NULL |
| Owner: | doc_demo | NULL |
| CreateTime: | Mon Jul 22 17:01:47 EDT 2013 | NULL |
| LastAccessTime: | UNKNOWN | NULL |
| Protect Mode: | None | NULL |
| Retention: | 0 | NULL |
| Location: | hdfs://127.0.0.1:8020/user/doc_demo/sample_data | NULL |
| Table Type: | EXTERNAL_TABLE | NULL |
| Table Parameters: | NULL | NULL |
| | EXTERNAL | TRUE |
| | transient_lastDdlTime | 1374526907 |
| | NULL | NULL |
| # Storage Information | NULL | NULL |
| SerDe Library: | org.apache.hadoop.hive.serde2.lazy.LazySimpleSerDe | NULL |
| InputFormat: | org.apache.impala.hive.serde.ParquetInputFormat | NULL |
| OutputFormat: | org.apache.impala.hive.serde.ParquetOutputFormat | NULL |
| Compressed: | No | NULL |
| Num Buckets: | 0 | NULL |
| Bucket Columns: | [] | NULL |
| Sort Columns: | [] | NULL |
+------------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+------------+
Returned 27 row(s) in 0.17s
Cancellation: Cannot be cancelled.
HDFS permissions:
The user ID that the impalad daemon runs under, typically the impala
user, must have read and execute permissions for all directories that are part of the table. (A table could span multiple different HDFS directories if it is partitioned. The directories could be widely scattered because a partition can reside in an arbitrary HDFS directory based on its LOCATION
attribute.)
Kudu considerations:
The information displayed for Kudu tables includes the additional attributes that are only applicable for Kudu tables:
- Whether or not the column is part of the primary key. Every Kudu table has a
true
value here for at least one column. There could be multipletrue
values, for tables with composite primary keys. - Whether or not the column is nullable. Specified by the
NULL
orNOT NULL
attributes on theCREATE TABLE
statement. Columns that are part of the primary key are automatically non-nullable. - The default value, if any, for the column. Specified by the
DEFAULT
attribute on theCREATE TABLE
statement. If the default value isNULL
, that is not indicated in this column. It is implied bynullable
being true and no other default value specified. - The encoding used for values in the column. Specified by the
ENCODING
attribute on theCREATE TABLE
statement. - The compression used for values in the column. Specified by the
COMPRESSION
attribute on theCREATE TABLE
statement. - The block size (in bytes) used for the underlying Kudu storage layer for the column. Specified by the
BLOCK_SIZE
attribute on theCREATE TABLE
statement.
The following example shows DESCRIBE
output for a simple Kudu table, with a single-column primary key and all column attributes left with their default values:
describe million_rows;
+------+--------+---------+-------------+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------------+------------+
| name | type | comment | primary_key | nullable | default_value | encoding | compression | block_size |
+------+--------+---------+-------------+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------------+------------+
| id | string | | true | false | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| s | string | | false | false | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
+------+--------+---------+-------------+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------------+------------+
The following example shows DESCRIBE
output for a Kudu table with a two-column primary key, and Kudu-specific attributes applied to some columns:
create table kudu_describe_example
(
c1 int, c2 int,
c3 string, c4 string not null, c5 string default 'n/a', c6 string default '',
c7 bigint not null, c8 bigint null default null, c9 bigint default -1 encoding bit_shuffle,
primary key(c1,c2)
)
partition by hash (c1, c2) partitions 10 stored as kudu;
describe kudu_describe_example;
+------+--------+---------+-------------+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------------+------------+
| name | type | comment | primary_key | nullable | default_value | encoding | compression | block_size |
+------+--------+---------+-------------+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------------+------------+
| c1 | int | | true | false | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c2 | int | | true | false | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c3 | string | | false | true | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c4 | string | | false | false | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c5 | string | | false | true | n/a | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c6 | string | | false | true | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c7 | bigint | | false | false | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c8 | bigint | | false | true | | AUTO_ENCODING | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
| c9 | bigint | | false | true | -1 | BIT_SHUFFLE | DEFAULT_COMPRESSION | 0 |
+------+--------+---------+-------------+----------+---------------+---------------+---------------------+------------+
Related information:
Overview of Impala Tables, CREATE TABLE Statement, SHOW TABLES Statement, SHOW CREATE TABLE Statement
Parent topic: Impala SQL Statements