Szerkesztés

Megosztás a következőn keresztül:


PolyBase Transact-SQL reference

Applies to: SQL Server

This article reviews options for using PolyBase to query external data in-place, referred to as data virtualization, for a variety of external data sources.

T-SQL syntax used in PolyBase

To use PolyBase, you must create external tables to reference your external data. Refer to:

Note

In order to use PolyBase you must have sysadmin or CONTROL SERVER level permissions on the database.

Tutorials

For examples of queries, see PolyBase Queries.

For more tutorials on various external data sources, review:

File metadata functions

Sometimes, you might need to know which file or folder source correlates to a specific row in the result set.

You can use functions filepath and filename to return file names and/or the path in the result set. Or you can use them to filter data based on the file name and/or folder path. In the following sections, you'll find short descriptions along samples.

Filename function

This function returns the file name that the row originates from.

Return data type is nvarchar(1024). For optimal performance, always cast result of filename function to appropriate data type. If you use character data type, make sure appropriate length is used.

The following sample reads the NYC Yellow Taxi data files for the last three months of 2017 and returns the number of rides per file. The OPENROWSET part of the query specifies which files will be read.

SELECT
    nyc.filename() AS [filename]
    ,COUNT_BIG(*) AS [rows]
FROM  
    OPENROWSET(
        BULK 'parquet/taxi/year=2017/month=9/*.parquet',
        DATA_SOURCE = 'SqlOnDemandDemo',
        FORMAT='PARQUET'
    ) nyc
GROUP BY nyc.filename();

The following example shows how filename() can be used in the WHERE clause to filter the files to be read. It accesses the entire folder in the OPENROWSET part of the query and filters files in the WHERE clause.

Your results will be the same as the prior example.

SELECT
    r.filename() AS [filename]
    ,COUNT_BIG(*) AS [rows]
FROM OPENROWSET(
    BULK 'csv/taxi/yellow_tripdata_2017-*.csv',
        DATA_SOURCE = 'SqlOnDemandDemo',
        FORMAT = 'CSV',
        PARSER_VERSION = '2.0',
        FIRSTROW = 2) 
        WITH (C1 varchar(200) ) AS [r]
WHERE
    r.filename() IN ('yellow_tripdata_2017-10.csv', 'yellow_tripdata_2017-11.csv', 'yellow_tripdata_2017-12.csv')
GROUP BY
    r.filename()
ORDER BY
    [filename];

Filepath function

This function returns a full path or a part of path:

  • When called without parameter, returns the full file path that a row originates from.
  • When called with parameter, returns part of path that matches the wildcard on position specified in the parameter. For example, parameter value 1 would return part of path that matches the first wildcard.

Return data type is nvarchar(1024). For optimal performance, always cast result of filepath function to appropriate data type. If you use character data type, make sure appropriate length is used.

The following sample reads NYC Yellow Taxi data files for the last three months of 2017. It returns the number of rides per file path. The OPENROWSET part of the query specifies which files will be read.

SELECT
    r.filepath() AS filepath
    ,COUNT_BIG(*) AS [rows]
FROM OPENROWSET(
        BULK 'csv/taxi/yellow_tripdata_2017-1*.csv',
        DATA_SOURCE = 'SqlOnDemandDemo',
        FORMAT = 'CSV',
        PARSER_VERSION = '2.0',
        FIRSTROW = 2
    )
    WITH (
        vendor_id INT
    ) AS [r]
GROUP BY
    r.filepath()
ORDER BY
    filepath;

The following example shows how filepath() can be used in the WHERE clause to filter the files to be read.

You can use the wildcards in the OPENROWSET part of the query and filter the files in the WHERE clause. Your results will be the same as the prior example.

SELECT
    r.filepath() AS filepath
    ,r.filepath(1) AS [year]
    ,r.filepath(2) AS [month]
    ,COUNT_BIG(*) AS [rows]
FROM OPENROWSET(
        BULK 'csv/taxi/yellow_tripdata_*-*.csv',
        DATA_SOURCE = 'SqlOnDemandDemo',
        FORMAT = 'CSV',
        PARSER_VERSION = '2.0',        
        FIRSTROW = 2
    )
WITH (
    vendor_id INT
) AS [r]
WHERE
    r.filepath(1) IN ('2017')
    AND r.filepath(2) IN ('10', '11', '12')
GROUP BY
    r.filepath()
    ,r.filepath(1)
    ,r.filepath(2)
ORDER BY
    filepath;