I believe so Jorn. 

I am not sure how much it differs from ORC file storage?

Cheers,

Dr Mich Talebzadeh

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Sybase ASE 15 Gold Medal Award 2008
A Winning Strategy: Running the most Critical Financial Data on ASE 15
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pdf
Author of the books "A Practitioner’s Guide to Upgrading to Sybase ASE 15",
ISBN 978-0-9563693-0-7. 
co-author "Sybase Transact SQL Guidelines Best Practices", ISBN
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-----Original Message-----
From: Jörn Franke [mailto:jornfra...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 06 January 2016 07:49
To: user@hive.apache.org
Subject: Re: Indexes in Hive

If I understand you correctly this could be just another Hive storage
format.

> On 06 Jan 2016, at 07:24, Mich Talebzadeh <m...@peridale.co.uk> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> Thinking loudly.
> 
> Ideally we should consider a totally columnar storage offering in 
> which each column of table is stored as compressed value (I disregard 
> for now how actually ORC does this but obviously it is not exactly a
columnar storage).
> 
> So each table can be considered as a loose federation of columnar 
> storage and each column is effectively an index?
> 
> As columns are far narrower than tables, each index block will be very 
> higher density and all operations like aggregates can be done directly 
> on index rather than table.
> 
> This type of table offering will be in true nature of data warehouse 
> storage. Of course row operations (get me all rows for this table) 
> will be slower but that is the trade-off that we need to consider.
> 
> Expecting users to write their own IndexHandler may be technically 
> interesting but commercially not viable as Hive needs to be a product 
> on its own merit not a development base. Writing your own storage
attributes etc.
> requires skills that will put off people seeing Hive as an attractive 
> proposition (requiring considerable investment in skill sets in order 
> to maintain Hive).
> 
> Thus my thinking on this is to offer true columnar storage in Hive to 
> be a proper data warehouse. In addition, the development tools cab ne 
> made available for those interested in tailoring their own specific 
> Hive solutions.
> 
> 
> HTH
> 
> 
> 
> Dr Mich Talebzadeh
> 
> LinkedIn
> https://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=AAEAAAAWh2gBxianrbJd6zP6AcPCC
> dOABUr
> V8Pw
> 
> Sybase ASE 15 Gold Medal Award 2008
> A Winning Strategy: Running the most Critical Financial Data on ASE 15 
>
http://login.sybase.com/files/Product_Overviews/ASE-Winning-Strategy-091908.
> pdf
> Author of the books "A Practitioner's Guide to Upgrading to Sybase ASE 
> 15", ISBN 978-0-9563693-0-7.
> co-author "Sybase Transact SQL Guidelines Best Practices", ISBN
> 978-0-9759693-0-4
> Publications due shortly:
> Complex Event Processing in Heterogeneous Environments, ISBN:
> 978-0-9563693-3-8
> Oracle and Sybase, Concepts and Contrasts, ISBN: 978-0-9563693-1-4, 
> volume one out shortly
> 
> http://talebzadehmich.wordpress.com
> 
> NOTE: The information in this email is proprietary and confidential. 
> This message is for the designated recipient only, if you are not the 
> intended recipient, you should destroy it immediately. Any information 
> in this message shall not be understood as given or endorsed by 
> Peridale Technology Ltd, its subsidiaries or their employees, unless 
> expressly so stated. It is the responsibility of the recipient to 
> ensure that this email is virus free, therefore neither Peridale Ltd, 
> its subsidiaries nor their employees accept any responsibility.
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gopal Vijayaraghavan [mailto:go...@hortonworks.com] On Behalf Of 
> Gopal Vijayaraghavan
> Sent: 05 January 2016 23:55
> To: user@hive.apache.org
> Subject: Re: Is Hive Index officially not recommended?
> 
> 
>> So in a nutshell in Hive if "external" indexes are not used for 
>> improving query response, what value they add and can we forget them 
>> for
> now?
> 
> The builtin indexes - those that write data as smaller tables are only 
> useful in a pre-columnar world, where the indexes offer a huge 
> reduction in IO.
> 
> Part #1 of using hive indexes effectively is to write your own 
> HiveIndexHandler, with usesIndexTable=false;
> 
> And then write a IndexPredicateAnalyzer, which lets you map arbitrary 
> lookups into other range conditions.
> 
> Not coincidentally - we're adding a "ANALYZE TABLE ... CACHE METADATA"
> which consolidates the "internal" index into an external store (HBase).
> 
> Some of the index data now lives in the HBase metastore, so that the 
> inclusion/exclusion of whole partitions can be done off the 
> consolidated index.
> 
> https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HIVE-11676
> 
> 
> The experience from BI workloads run by customers is that in general, 
> the lookup to the right "slice" of data is more of a problem than the 
> actual aggregate.
> 
> And that for a workhorse data warehouse, this has to survive even if 
> there's a non-stop stream of updates into it.
> 
> Cheers,
> Gopal
> 

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