SET Statement
The SET
statement specifies values for query options that control the runtime behavior of other statements within the same session.
When issued in impala-shell
, the SET
command is interpreted as an impala-shell
command that has differences from the SQL SET
statement. See impala-shell Command Reference for the information about the SET
command in impala-shell
.
Syntax:
SET
SET ALL
SET query_option=option_value
SET query_option=""
SET
and SET ALL
with no arguments return a result set consisting of all the applicable query options and their current values.
The query_option and option_value are case-insensitive.
Unlike the impala-shell
command version of SET
, when used as a SQL statement, the string values for option_value need to be quoted, e.g. SET option="new_value"
.
The SET query_option = ""
statement unsets the value of the query_option in the current session, reverting it to the default state. In impala-shell
, use the UNSET
command to set a query option to it default.
Each query option has a specific allowed notation for its arguments. See Query Options for the SET Statement for the details of each query option.
Usage notes:
In Impala 2.11 and higher, the outputs of the SET
and SET ALL
statements were reorganized as below:
The options are divided into groups:
Regular Query Options
,Advanced Query Options
,Development Query Options
, andDeprecated Query Options
.The advanced options are intended for use in specific kinds of performance tuning and debugging scenarios.
The development options are related to internal development of Impala or features that are not yet finalized. These options might be changed or removed without notice.
The deprecated options are related to features that are removed or changed so that the options no longer have any purpose. These options might be removed in future versions.
By default, only the first two groups, regular and advanced, are displayed by the
SET
command. UseSET ALL
to see all groups of options.impala-shell options and user-specified variables are always displayed at the end of the list of query options, after all appropriate option groups.
Added in: Impala 2.0.0
SET
has always been available as an impala-shell command. Promoting it to a SQL statement lets you use this feature in client applications through the JDBC and ODBC APIs.
HDFS permissions: This statement does not touch any HDFS files or directories, therefore no HDFS permissions are required.
Related information:
See Query Options for the SET Statement for the query options you can adjust using this statement.
Parent topic: Impala SQL Statements