- StarRocks
- Introduction to StarRocks
- Quick Start
- Deployment
- Deployment overview
- Prepare
- Deploy
- Deploy classic StarRocks
- Deploy and use shared-data StarRocks
- Manage
- Table Design
- Data Loading
- Concepts
- Overview of data loading
- Load data from a local file system or a streaming data source using HTTP PUT
- Load data from HDFS or cloud storage
- Continuously load data from Apache Kafka®
- Bulk load using Apache Sparkâ„¢
- Load data using INSERT
- Load data using Stream Load transaction interface
- Realtime synchronization from MySQL
- Continuously load data from Apache Flink®
- Change data through loading
- Transform data at loading
- Data Unloading
- Query Data Sources
- Query Acceleration
- Gather CBO statistics
- Synchronous materialized view
- Asynchronous materialized view
- Colocate Join
- Lateral Join
- Query Cache
- Index
- Computing the Number of Distinct Values
- Sorted streaming aggregate
- Administration
- Management
- Data recovery
- User Privilege and Authentication
- Performance Tuning
- Reference
- SQL Reference
- User Account Management
- Cluster Management
- ADD SQLBLACKLIST
- ADMIN CANCEL REPAIR TABLE
- ADMIN CHECK TABLET
- ADMIN REPAIR TABLE
- ADMIN SET CONFIG
- ADMIN SET REPLICA STATUS
- ADMIN SHOW CONFIG
- ADMIN SHOW REPLICA DISTRIBUTION
- ADMIN SHOW REPLICA STATUS
- ALTER RESOURCE GROUP
- ALTER SYSTEM
- CANCEL DECOMMISSION
- CREATE FILE
- CREATE RESOURCE GROUP
- DELETE SQLBLACKLIST
- DROP FILE
- DROP RESOURCE GROUP
- EXPLAIN
- INSTALL PLUGIN
- KILL
- SET
- SHOW BACKENDS
- SHOW BROKER
- SHOW COMPUTE NODES
- SHOW FILE
- SHOW FRONTENDS
- SHOW FULL COLUMNS
- SHOW INDEX
- SHOW PLUGINS
- SHOW PROC
- SHOW PROCESSLIST
- SHOW RESOURCE GROUP
- SHOW SQLBLACKLIST
- SHOW TABLE STATUS
- SHOW VARIABLES
- UNINSTALL PLUGIN
- DDL
- ALTER DATABASE
- ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW
- ALTER TABLE
- ALTER VIEW
- ALTER RESOURCE
- ANALYZE TABLE
- BACKUP
- CANCEL ALTER TABLE
- CANCEL BACKUP
- CANCEL RESTORE
- CREATE ANALYZE
- CREATE DATABASE
- CREATE EXTERNAL CATALOG
- CREATE INDEX
- CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
- CREATE REPOSITORY
- CREATE RESOURCE
- CREATE TABLE AS SELECT
- CREATE TABLE LIKE
- CREATE TABLE
- CREATE VIEW
- CREATE FUNCTION
- DROP ANALYZE
- DROP STATS
- DROP CATALOG
- DROP DATABASE
- DROP INDEX
- DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW
- DROP REPOSITORY
- DROP RESOURCE
- DROP TABLE
- DROP VIEW
- DROP FUNCTION
- HLL
- KILL ANALYZE
- RECOVER
- REFRESH EXTERNAL TABLE
- RESTORE
- SET CATALOG
- SHOW ANALYZE JOB
- SHOW ANALYZE STATUS
- SHOW META
- SHOW RESOURCES
- SHOW FUNCTION
- TRUNCATE TABLE
- USE
- DML
- ALTER LOAD
- ALTER ROUTINE LOAD
- BROKER LOAD
- CANCEL LOAD
- CANCEL EXPORT
- CANCEL REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW
- CREATE ROUTINE LOAD
- DELETE
- EXPORT
- GROUP BY
- INSERT
- PAUSE ROUTINE LOAD
- REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW
- RESUME ROUTINE LOAD
- SELECT
- SHOW ALTER TABLE
- SHOW ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW
- SHOW BACKUP
- SHOW CATALOGS
- SHOW CREATE CATALOG
- SHOW CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
- SHOW CREATE TABLE
- SHOW CREATE VIEW
- SHOW DATA
- SHOW DATABASES
- SHOW DELETE
- SHOW DYNAMIC PARTITION TABLES
- SHOW EXPORT
- SHOW LOAD
- SHOW MATERIALIZED VIEWS
- SHOW PARTITIONS
- SHOW PROPERTY
- SHOW REPOSITORIES
- SHOW RESTORE
- SHOW ROUTINE LOAD
- SHOW ROUTINE LOAD TASK
- SHOW SNAPSHOT
- SHOW TABLES
- SHOW TABLET
- SHOW TRANSACTION
- SPARK LOAD
- STOP ROUTINE LOAD
- STREAM LOAD
- SUBMIT TASK
- UPDATE
- Auxiliary Commands
- Data Types
- Keywords
- AUTO_INCREMENT
- Function Reference
- Java UDFs
- Window functions
- Lambda expression
- Aggregate Functions
- array_agg
- avg
- any_value
- approx_count_distinct
- bitmap
- bitmap_agg
- count
- grouping
- grouping_id
- hll_empty
- hll_hash
- hll_raw_agg
- hll_union
- hll_union_agg
- max
- max_by
- min
- multi_distinct_sum
- multi_distinct_count
- percentile_approx
- percentile_cont
- percentile_disc
- retention
- stddev
- stddev_samp
- sum
- variance, variance_pop, var_pop
- var_samp
- window_funnel
- Array Functions
- array_agg
- array_append
- array_avg
- array_concat
- array_contains
- array_contains_all
- array_cum_sum
- array_difference
- array_distinct
- array_filter
- array_intersect
- array_join
- array_length
- array_map
- array_max
- array_min
- array_position
- array_remove
- array_slice
- array_sort
- array_sortby
- array_sum
- arrays_overlap
- array_to_bitmap
- cardinality
- element_at
- reverse
- unnest
- Bit Functions
- Bitmap Functions
- base64_to_bitmap
- bitmap_agg
- bitmap_and
- bitmap_andnot
- bitmap_contains
- bitmap_count
- bitmap_from_string
- bitmap_empty
- bitmap_has_any
- bitmap_hash
- bitmap_intersect
- bitmap_max
- bitmap_min
- bitmap_or
- bitmap_remove
- bitmap_to_array
- bitmap_to_base64
- bitmap_to_string
- bitmap_union
- bitmap_union_count
- bitmap_union_int
- bitmap_xor
- intersect_count
- sub_bitmap
- to_bitmap
- JSON Functions
- Overview of JSON functions and operators
- JSON operators
- JSON constructor functions
- JSON query and processing functions
- Map Functions
- Binary Functions
- Conditional Functions
- Cryptographic Functions
- Date Functions
- add_months
- adddate
- convert_tz
- current_date
- current_time
- current_timestamp
- date
- date_add
- date_format
- date_slice
- date_sub, subdate
- date_trunc
- datediff
- day
- dayname
- dayofmonth
- dayofweek
- dayofyear
- days_add
- days_diff
- days_sub
- from_days
- from_unixtime
- hour
- hours_add
- hours_diff
- hours_sub
- microseconds_add
- microseconds_sub
- minute
- minutes_add
- minutes_diff
- minutes_sub
- month
- monthname
- months_add
- months_diff
- months_sub
- now
- quarter
- second
- seconds_add
- seconds_diff
- seconds_sub
- str_to_date
- str2date
- time_slice
- time_to_sec
- timediff
- timestamp
- timestampadd
- timestampdiff
- to_date
- to_days
- unix_timestamp
- utc_timestamp
- week
- week_iso
- weekofyear
- weeks_add
- weeks_diff
- weeks_sub
- year
- years_add
- years_diff
- years_sub
- Geographic Functions
- Math Functions
- String Functions
- append_trailing_char_if_absent
- ascii
- char
- char_length
- character_length
- concat
- concat_ws
- ends_with
- find_in_set
- group_concat
- hex
- hex_decode_binary
- hex_decode_string
- instr
- lcase
- left
- length
- locate
- lower
- lpad
- ltrim
- money_format
- null_or_empty
- parse_url
- repeat
- replace
- reverse
- right
- rpad
- rtrim
- space
- split
- split_part
- starts_with
- strleft
- strright
- substring
- trim
- ucase
- unhex
- upper
- Pattern Matching Functions
- Percentile Functions
- Scalar Functions
- Utility Functions
- cast function
- hash function
- System variables
- User-defined variables
- Error code
- System limits
- SQL Reference
- FAQ
- Benchmark
- Developers
- Contribute to StarRocks
- Code Style Guides
- Use the debuginfo file for debugging
- Development Environment
- Trace Tools
- Integration
EXPORT
Description
Exports the data of a table to a specified location.
This is an asynchronous operation. The export result is returned after you submit the export task. You can use SHOW EXPORT to view the progress of the export task.
Syntax
EXPORT TABLE <table_name>
[PARTITION (<partition_name>[, ...])]
[(<column_name>[, ...])]
TO <export_path>
[opt_properties]
WITH BROKER
[broker_properties]
Parameters
table_name
The name of the table. StarRocks supports exporting the data of tables whose
engine
isolap
ormysql
.partition_name
The partitions from which you want to export data. By default, if you do not specify this parameter, StarRocks exports the data from all partitions of the table.
column_name
The columns from which you want to export data. The sequence of columns that you specify by using this parameter can differ from the schema of the table. By default, if you do not specify this parameter, StarRocks exports the data from all columns of the table.
export_path
The location to which you want to export the data of the table. If the location contains a path, make sure that the path ends with a slash (/). Otherwise, the part following the last slash (/) in the path will be used as the prefix to the name of the exported file. By default,
data_
is used as the file name prefix if no file name prefix is specified.opt_properties
Optional properties that you can configure for the export task.
Syntax:
[PROPERTIES ("<key>"="<value>", ...)]
Property Description column_separator The column separator that you want to use in the exported file. Default value: \t
.line_delimiter The row separator that you want to use in the exported file. Default value: \n
.load_mem_limit The maximum memory that is allowed for the export task on each individual BE. Unit: bytes. The default maximum memory is 2 GB. timeout The amount of time after which the export task times out. Unit: second. Default value: 86400
, meaning 1 day.include_query_id Specifies whether the name of the exported file contains query_id
. Valid values:true
andfalse
. The valuetrue
specifies that the file name containsquery_id
, and the valuefalse
specifies that the file name does not containquery_id
.WITH BROKER
In v2.4 and earlier, input
WITH BROKER "<broker_name>"
to specify the broker you want to use. From v2.5 onwards, you no longer need to specify a broker, but you still need to retain theWITH BROKER
keyword. For more information, see Export data using EXPORT > Background information.broker_properties
The information that is used to authenticate the source data. The authentication information varies depending on the data source. For more information, see BROKER LOAD.
Examples
Export all data of a table to HDFS
The following example exports all data of the testTbl
table to the hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/
path of an HDFS cluster:
EXPORT TABLE testTbl
TO "hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/"
WITH BROKER
(
"username"="xxx",
"password"="yyy"
);
Export the data of specified partitions of a table to HDFS
The following example exports the data of two partitions, p1
and p2
, of the testTbl
table to the hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/
path of an HDFS cluster:
EXPORT TABLE testTbl
PARTITION (p1,p2)
TO "hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/"
WITH BROKER
(
"username"="xxx",
"password"="yyy"
);
Export all data of a table to HDFS with column separator specified
The following example exports all data of the testTbl
table to the hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/
path of an HDFS cluster and specifies that commas (,
) is used as the column separator:
EXPORT TABLE testTbl
TO "hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/"
PROPERTIES
(
"column_separator"=","
)
WITH BROKER
(
"username"="xxx",
"password"="yyy"
);
The following example exports all data of the testTbl
table to the hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/
path of an HDFS cluster and specifies that \x01
(the default column separator supported by Hive) is used as the column separator:
EXPORT TABLE testTbl
TO "hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/"
PROPERTIES
(
"column_separator"="\\x01"
)
WITH BROKER;
Export all data of a table to HDFS with file name prefix specified
The following example exports all data of the testTbl
table to the hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/
path of an HDFS cluster and specifies that testTbl_
is used as the prefix to the name of the exported file:
EXPORT TABLE testTbl
TO "hdfs://<hdfs_host>:<hdfs_port>/a/b/c/testTbl_"
WITH BROKER;
Export data to AWS S3
The following example exports all data of the testTbl
table to the s3-package/export/
path of an AWS S3 bucket:
EXPORT TABLE testTbl
TO "s3a://s3-package/export/"
WITH BROKER
(
"aws.s3.access_key" = "xxx",
"aws.s3.secret_key" = "yyy",
"aws.s3.region" = "zzz"
);