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发表于 2015-4-28 12:17:13 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
  This page describes the JRuby IRB-based HBase Shell.  It replaces the SQL-like HQL, the Shell found in HBase versions 0.1.x and previous.  Some discussion of new shell requirements can be found in the Shell Replacement document.
  To run the shell, do
$ ${HBASE_HOME}/bin/hbase shell  You'll be presented with a prompt like the following:
HBase Shell; enter 'help' for list of supported commands.
Version: 0.2.0-dev, r670701, Mon Jun 23 17:26:36 PDT 2008
hbase(main):001:0>  Type 'help' followed by a return to get a listing of commands.
  
Commands
hbase(main):001:0> help
HBASE SHELL COMMANDS:
alter     Alter column family schema;  pass table name and a dictionary
           specifying new column family schema. Dictionaries are described
           below in the GENERAL NOTES section.  Dictionary must include name
           of column family to alter.  For example,
           To change or add the 'f1' column family in table 't1' from defaults
           to instead keep a maximum of 5 cell VERSIONS, do:
           hbase> alter 't1', {NAME => 'f1', VERSIONS => 5}
           To delete the 'f1' column family in table 't1', do:
           hbase> alter 't1', {NAME => 'f1', METHOD => 'delete'}
           You can also change table-scope attributes like MAX_FILESIZE
           MEMSTORE_FLUSHSIZE and READONLY.
           For example, to change the max size of a family to 128MB, do:
           hbase> alter 't1', {METHOD => 'table_att', MAX_FILESIZE => '134217728'}
count     Count the number of rows in a table. This operation may take a LONG
           time (Run '$HADOOP_HOME/bin/hadoop jar hbase.jar rowcount' to run a
           counting mapreduce job). Current count is shown every 1000 rows by
           default. Count interval may be optionally specified. Examples:
           hbase> count 't1'
           hbase> count 't1', 100000
create    Create table; pass table name, a dictionary of specifications per
           column family, and optionally a dictionary of table configuration.
           Dictionaries are described below in the GENERAL NOTES section.
           Examples:
           hbase> create 't1', {NAME => 'f1', VERSIONS => 5}
           hbase> create 't1', {NAME => 'f1'}, {NAME => 'f2'}, {NAME => 'f3'}
           hbase> # The above in shorthand would be the following:
           hbase> create 't1', 'f1', 'f2', 'f3'
           hbase> create 't1', {NAME => 'f1', VERSIONS => 1, TTL => 2592000, \
             BLOCKCACHE => true}
describe  Describe the named table: e.g. "hbase> describe 't1'"
delete    Put a delete cell value at specified table/row/column and optionally
           timestamp coordinates.  Deletes must match the deleted cell's
           coordinates exactly.  When scanning, a delete cell suppresses older
           versions. Takes arguments like the 'put' command described below
deleteall Delete all cells in a given row; pass a table name, row, and optionally
           a column and timestamp
disable   Disable the named table: e.g. "hbase> disable 't1'"
drop      Drop the named table. Table must first be disabled. If table has
           more than one region, run a major compaction on .META.:
           hbase> major_compact ".META."
enable    Enable the named table
exists    Does the named table exist? e.g. "hbase> exists 't1'"
exit      Type "hbase> exit" to leave the HBase Shell
get       Get row or cell contents; pass table name, row, and optionally
           a dictionary of column(s), timestamp and versions.  Examples:
           hbase> get 't1', 'r1'
           hbase> get 't1', 'r1', {COLUMN => 'c1'}
           hbase> get 't1', 'r1', {COLUMN => ['c1', 'c2', 'c3']}
           hbase> get 't1', 'r1', {COLUMN => 'c1', TIMESTAMP => ts1}
           hbase> get 't1', 'r1', {COLUMN => 'c1', TIMESTAMP => ts1, \
             VERSIONS => 4}
list      List all tables in hbase
put       Put a cell 'value' at specified table/row/column and optionally
           timestamp coordinates.  To put a cell value into table 't1' at
           row 'r1' under column 'c1' marked with the time 'ts1', do:
           hbase> put 't1', 'r1', 'c1', 'value', ts1
tools     Listing of hbase surgery tools
scan      Scan a table; pass table name and optionally a dictionary of scanner
           specifications.  Scanner specifications may include one or more of
           the following: LIMIT, STARTROW, STOPROW, TIMESTAMP, or COLUMNS.  If
           no columns are specified, all columns will be scanned.  To scan all
           members of a column family, leave the qualifier empty as in
           'col_family:'.  Examples:
           hbase> scan '.META.'
           hbase> scan '.META.', {COLUMNS => 'info:regioninfo'}
           hbase> scan 't1', {COLUMNS => ['c1', 'c2'], LIMIT => 10, \
             STARTROW => 'xyz'}
           For experts, there is an additional option -- CACHE_BLOCKS -- which
           switches block caching for the scanner on (true) or off (false).  By
           default it is enabled.  Examples:
           hbase> scan 't1', {COLUMNS => ['c1', 'c2'], CACHE_BLOCKS => false}
status    Show cluster status. Can be 'summary', 'simple', or 'detailed'. The
           default is 'summary'. Examples:
           hbase> status
           hbase> status 'simple'
           hbase> status 'summary'
           hbase> status 'detailed'
shutdown  Shut down the cluster.
truncate  Disables, drops and recreates the specified table.
version   Output this HBase version
GENERAL NOTES:
Quote all names in the hbase shell such as table and column names.  Don't
forget commas delimit command parameters.  Type  after entering a
command to run it.  Dictionaries of configuration used in the creation and
alteration of tables are ruby Hashes. They look like this:
  {'key1' => 'value1', 'key2' => 'value2', ...}
They are opened and closed with curley-braces.  Key/values are delimited by
the '=>' character combination.  Usually keys are predefined constants such as
NAME, VERSIONS, COMPRESSION, etc.  Constants do not need to be quoted.  Type
'Object.constants' to see a (messy) list of all constants in the environment.
In case you are using binary keys or values and need to enter them into the
shell then use double-quotes to make use of hexadecimal or octal notations,
for example:
  hbase> get 't1', "key\x03\x3f\xcd"
  hbase> get 't1', "key\003\023\011"
  hbase> put 't1', "test\xef\xff", 'f1:', "\x01\x33\x40"
Using the double-quote notation you can directly use the values output by the
shell for example during a "scan" call.
This HBase shell is the JRuby IRB with the above HBase-specific commands added.
For more on the HBase Shell, see http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/Hbase/Shell  
General Notes
  GENERAL  NOTES: Quote all names in the hbase shell such as table and column  names.  Don't forget commas delimit command parameters.  Type   after entering a command to run it.  Dictionaries of  configuration used in the creation and alteration of tables are ruby  Hashes. They look like this:

  •   {'key1' => 'value1', 'key2' => 'value2', ...}
  They  are opened and closed with curley-braces.  Key/values are delimited by  the '=>' character combination.  Usually keys are predefined  constants such as NAME, VERSIONS, COMPRESSION, etc.  Constants do not  need to be quoted.  Type 'Object.constants' to see a (messy) list of all  constants in the environment.
  This HBase shell is the JRuby IRB with the above HBase-specific commands added.
  
Anatomy Lesson
  The HBase Shell is a ruby script, ${HBASE_HOME}/bin/hirb.rb, that is passed to the JRuby class org.jruby.Main (See ${HBASE_HOME}/bin/shell and search for org.jruby.Main to see how its done).
  The hirb.rb'  script defines a set of hbase methods (get, set, scan, etc.), sets some  environment variables, imports a few hbase-particular modules -- a  results Formatter and a ruby wrapper around the HBaseAdmin and HTable java classes that can be found at ${HBASE_HOME}/bin/HBase.rb  -- and then starts up a subclass of IRB, named HIRB (IRB is the name of  the interactive Ruby interpreter; for an untainted irb experience, type  'irb' on a system that has ruby installed).  The subclassing is done to  alter slightly some of the usual IRB behaviors.  For instance, every  command invocation returns a result and the result is printed to the  terminal even if the result is nil.  The subclass intercepts nil  emissions and just suppresses them.
  Anything you can do in irb, or at least in its JRuby equivalent, jirb, you should be able to do in HBase Shell.
  
Scripting
  You can pass scripts to the HBase Shell by doing the following:
durruti:~ stack$ ${HBASE_HOME}/bin/hbase shell PATH_TO_SCRIPT  Your script can lean on the methods provided by the HBase Shell.
  For  more control, you may prefer manipulating HTable and HBaseAdmin methods  directly.  For example, if you would do your own formatting or you are  storing structures that are mangled when manipulated in HBase Shell.  In  this case, you might pass your scripts directly to JRuby by doing:
durruti:~ stack$ ${HBASE_HOME}/bin/hbase org.jruby.Main PATH_TO_SCRIPT  For examples writing straight ruby manhandling hbase client instances, see the scripts on this page: Hbase/JRuby (Ignore the sections that have you fetching the jruby jar and the prefacing your scripts with the '#!' bang magic).
  
Useful Tricks
  
irbrc
  Create an .irbrc file for yourself in your home directory.  Add HBase Shell customizations.  A useful one is command history:
durruti:~ stack$ more .irbrc
require 'irb/ext/save-history'
IRB.conf[:SAVE_HISTORY] = 100
IRB.conf[:HISTORY_FILE] = "#{ENV['HOME']}/.irb-save-history"  
Log date to timestamp
  To convert the date '08/08/16 20:56:29' from an hbase log into a timestamp, do:
hbase(main):021:0> import java.text.SimpleDateFormat
hbase(main):022:0> import java.text.ParsePosition
hbase(main):023:0> SimpleDateFormat.new("yy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss").parse("08/08/16 20:56:29", ParsePosition.new(0)).getTime() => 1218920189000  To go the other direction, do:
hbase(main):021:0> import java.util.Date
hbase(main):022:0> Date.new(1218920189000).toString() => "Sat Aug 16 20:56:29 UTC 2008"To output in a format that is exactly like hbase log format is a pain messing with SimpleDateFormat.

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