Hi,
this is standard convention for hortonworks distribution. First Three
are HBase version, the last two are HDP version.
Cheers
Tomasz Bem.
On 2016-03-31 06:27, Ted Yu wrote:
bq. hbase version is 1.1.1.2.3
I don't think there was ever such a release - there should be only 3 dots.
bq. /hbase is the default storage location for tables in hdfs
the root dir is given by hbase.rootdir config parameter.
Here is sample listing:
http://pastebin.com/ekF4tsYn
Under data, you would see:
drwxr-xr-x - hbase hdfs 0 2016-03-22 20:26
/apps/hbase/data/data/default
drwxr-xr-x - hbase hdfs 0 2016-03-14 19:13
/apps/hbase/data/data/hbase
hbase is system namespace.
Under default (or your own namespace), you would get table dir. Here is a
sample:
drwxr-xr-x - hbase hdfs 0 2016-03-22 20:26
/apps/hbase/data/data/default/elog_pn_split
On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 7:26 PM, Stephen Durfey <[email protected]> wrote:
I believe the easiest way would be to run 'hadoop dfs -du -h /hbase'. I
believe /hbase is the default storage location for tables in hdfs. The size
will be either compressed or uncompressed, depending upon if compression is
enabled.
On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 6:32 PM -0700, "marjana" <[email protected]>
wrote:
Hello,
I am new to hBase, so sorry if I am talking nonsense.
I am trying to figure out a way how to find the total size of each table in
my hBase.
I have looked into hbase shell commands. There's "status 'detailed'", that
shows storefileSizeMB. If I were to add all of these grouped by tablename,
would that be the correct way to show MB used per table?
Is there any other (easier/cleaner) way?
hbase version is 1.1.1.2.3, HDFS: 2.7.1
Thanks
Marjana
--
View this message in context:
http://apache-hbase.679495.n3.nabble.com/find-size-of-each-table-in-the-cluster-tp4078899.html
Sent from the HBase User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.