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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HIVE-6028?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13848123#comment-13848123
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Sergey Shelukhin commented on HIVE-6028:
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Wrt 00, my point is that 00 is not a valid string so it should not work.
Depending on opinion it should either give an error (string-int compare), or 
not match (as it doesn't in 0.12) because column type is string, and 00 to me 
is an integer 0, so if type is coerced to type of the column, '00' != '0' . 
Can you work around by using properly quoted strings, e.g. '00'?

As for commit, that would be HIVE-4914, but it's quite a large one, it may have 
some dependencies and bugfixes.


> Partition predicate literals are not interpreted correctly.
> -----------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: HIVE-6028
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HIVE-6028
>             Project: Hive
>          Issue Type: Bug
>    Affects Versions: 0.12.0
>            Reporter: Pala M Muthaia
>         Attachments: Hive-6028-explain-plan.txt
>
>
> When parsing/analyzing query, hive treats partition predicate value as int 
> instead of string. This breaks down and leads to incorrect result when the 
> partition predicate value starts with int 0, e.g: hour=00, hour=05 etc.
> The following repro illustrates the bug:
> -- create test table and partition, populate with some data
> create table test_partition_pred(col1 int) partitioned by (hour STRING);
> insert into table test_partition_pred partition (hour=00) select 21 FROM  
> some_table limit 1;
> -- this query returns incorrect results, i.e. just empty set.
> select * from test_partition_pred where hour=00;
> OK
> -- this query returns correct result. Note predicate value is string literal
> select * from test_partition_pred where hour='00';
> OK
> 21    00
> explain plan illustrates how the query was interpreted. Particularly the 
> partition predicate is pushed down as regular filter clause, with hour=0 as 
> predicate. See attached explain plan file.
> Note:
> 1. The type of the partition column is defined as string, not int.
> 2. This is a regression in Hive 0.12. This used to work in Hive 0.11
> 3. Not an issue when the partition value starts with integer other than 0, 
> e.g hour=10, hour=11 etc.
> 4. As seen above, workaround is to use string literal hour='00' etc.
> This should not be too bad if in the failing case hive complains that 
> partition hour=0 is not found, or complains literal type doesn't match column 
> type. Instead hive silently pushes it down as filter clause, and query 
> succeeds with empty set as result.
> We found this out in our production tables partitioned by hour, only a few 
> days after it started occurring, when there were empty data sets for 
> partitions hour=00 to hour=09.



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