![]() ![]() If not logged out already, log out of the application by clicking the username in the upper-right and choose “Sign Out”. This function can be used to change a password as well. Type the password for the account and click “Sign In” Enter the email address and password associated with the account. Steps to Log in Using an Existing Accountįind the HIVE CMS application in the Windows Start Menu (or on the desktop) and run it.Ī log in screen will appear. Use the credentials from the previous steps to log in to the application. If successful, a message will indicate that the new password has been set.Ĭlose the browser and find the HIVE CMS application in the Windows Start Menu. Enter the username (email) and temporary password (if provided).Įnter a new password following the best practices.Ĭonfirm the new password by typing it again. Click the link in the emailĪ log in screen will open in the web browser. Getting Started by Logging In Steps to Log In with a New AccountĪ welcome email will be sent to the email address specified as the account username. If account information must be shared (for example: tech support), use a new password. Use strong passwords containing punctuation (!$%&), numbers, letters and mixed cases.ĭo not use passwords from other accounts. Log out or lock the desktop when away from the workstation. Most users will already have been provided an account to use and will have received either the specific username and password or an email with an account activation link. An email address and password must be established or provided by an organization that owns a subscription for HIVE (unless using Free HIVE). Logging in to HIVE CMS with a CTC user account About the CTC user accountsĪ CTC account is required to use the HIVE services and applications. Of many file types that are most often stored in local drives and folders. ![]() Web applications and databases provided and managed by CTC Software Inc. See Hive Resources for more information.Įxecutes a shell command from the Hive shell.Įxecutes a dfs command from the Hive shell.Įxecutes a Hive query and prints results to standard output.HIVE CMS (Content Management System) is a cloud-based service comprising the CMS desktop application (this guide), Removes the resource(s) from the distributed cache.Īs of Hive 1.2.0, removes the resource(s) which were added using the from the distributed cache. See Hive Resources for more information.Ĭhecks whether the given resources are already added to the distributed cache or not. Lists the resources already added to the distributed cache. See Hive Resources for more information.Īs of Hive 1.2.0, adds one or more files, jars or archives to the list of resources in the distributed cache using an Ivy URL of the form ivy://group:module:version?query_string. Prints all Hadoop and Hive configuration variables.Īdds one or more files, jars, or archives to the list of resources in the distributed cache. Prints a list of configuration variables that are overridden by the user or Hive. Note: If you misspell the variable name, the CLI will not show an error. Sets the value of a particular configuration variable (key). Resets the configuration to the default values (as of Hive 0.10: see HIVE-3202). Use quit or exit to leave the interactive shell. Use the following command to specify the new Beeline-based Hive CLI tool: Since some existing Hive CLI features are not supported in the new Hive CLI, we are using the old Hive client implementation by default. We use a new Hive CLI on top of Beeline to implement the Hive CLI functionality. The goal is that no or minimal changes are required from existing user scripts using Hive CLI. In this way, the new Hive CLI is just an alias to Beeline at both the shell script level and the high code level. ![]() Ideally, Hive CLI should be deprecated as the Hive community has long recommended using the Beeline plus HiveServer2 configuration however, because of the wide use of Hive CLI, we instead are replacing Hive CLI's implementation with a new Hive CLI on top of Beeline plus embedded HiveServer2 ( HIVE-10511) so that the Hive community only needs to maintain a single code path. For the first use case, Beeline provides or is supposed to provide equal functionality, yet is implemented differently from Hive CLI. Hive Server has been deprecated and removed from the Hive code base as of Hive 1.0.0 ( HIVE-6977) and replaced with HiveServer2 ( HIVE-2935), so the second use case no longer applies. The first is that it served as a thick client for SQL on Hadoop and the second is that it served as a command line tool for Hive Server (the original Hive server, now often referred to as "HiveServer1"). ![]() Hive CLI is a legacy tool which had two main use cases. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |