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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HIVE-24693?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17285449#comment-17285449
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David Mollitor edited comment on HIVE-24693 at 2/16/21, 7:46 PM:
-----------------------------------------------------------------

In working on this ticket, I learned something interesting:

{code:java|title=Timestamp.java}
private static final DateTimeFormatter PARSE_FORMATTER = new 
DateTimeFormatterBuilder()
      // Date
      .appendValue(YEAR, 1, 10, 
SignStyle.NORMAL).appendLiteral('-').appendValue(MONTH_OF_YEAR, 1, 2, 
SignStyle.NORMAL) ...

private static final DateTimeFormatter PRINT_FORMATTER = new 
DateTimeFormatterBuilder()
      // Date and Time Parts
      .append(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss")) ...
{code}

When the *PARSING* code is built, it uses *YEAR*.  However the *FORMATTER* code 
is using *yyyy*.  The equivalence should be:

{{ChornoField.YEAR}} = "uuuu"
{{ChronoField.YEAR_OF_ERA}} = "yyyy"

So, what I ran into in my work on skipping the timestamp parsing is that I 
stumbled on the fact that Hive is reading YEAR but displaying YEAR_OF_ERA, 
which are not the same things.  YEAR has negative dates, YEAR_OF_ERA does not 
usually have negative dates, for example a "negative date" in YEAR_OF_ERA would 
be +2000 BCE whereas YEAR would be -2000.  So, Hive is kinda whacky and out of 
sync currently for negative years.


was (Author: belugabehr):
In working on this ticket, I learned something interesting:

{java|title=Timestamp.java}
private static final DateTimeFormatter PARSE_FORMATTER = new 
DateTimeFormatterBuilder()
      // Date
      .appendValue(YEAR, 1, 10, 
SignStyle.NORMAL).appendLiteral('-').appendValue(MONTH_OF_YEAR, 1, 2, 
SignStyle.NORMAL) ...

private static final DateTimeFormatter PRINT_FORMATTER = new 
DateTimeFormatterBuilder()
      // Date and Time Parts
      .append(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss")) ...
{code}

When the *PARSING* code is built, it uses *YEAR*.  However the *FORMATTER* code 
is using *yyyy*.  The equivalence should be:

{{ChornoField.YEAR}} = "uuuu"
{{ChronoField.YEAR_OF_ERA}} = "yyyy"

So, what I ran into in my work on skipping the timestamp parsing is that I 
stumbled on the fact that Hive is reading YEAR but displaying YEAR_OF_ERA, 
which are not the same things.  YEAR has negative dates, YEAR_OF_ERA does not 
usually have negative dates, for example a "negative date" in YEAR_OF_ERA would 
be +2000 BCE whereas YEAR would be -2000.  So, Hive is kinda whacky and out of 
sync currently for negative years.

> Parquet Timestamp Values Read/Write Very Slow
> ---------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: HIVE-24693
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HIVE-24693
>             Project: Hive
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>            Reporter: David Mollitor
>            Assignee: David Mollitor
>            Priority: Critical
>              Labels: pull-request-available
>          Time Spent: 5.5h
>  Remaining Estimate: 0h
>
> Parquet {{DataWriteableWriter}} relias on {{NanoTimeUtils}} to convert a 
> timestamp object into a binary value.  The way in which it does this,... it 
> calls {{toString()}} on the timestamp object, and then parses the String.  
> This particular timestamp do not carry a timezone, so the string is something 
> like:
> {{2021-21-03 12:32:23.0000...}}
> The parse code tries to parse the string assuming there is a time zone, and 
> if not, falls-back and applies the provided "default time zone".  As was 
> noted in [HIVE-24353], if something fails to parse, it is very expensive to 
> try to parse again.  So, for each timestamp in the Parquet file, it:
> * Builds a string from the time stamp
> * Parses it (throws an exception, parses again)
> There is no need to do this kind of string manipulations/parsing, it should 
> just be using the epoch millis/seconds/time stored internal to the Timestamp 
> object.
> {code:java}
>   // Converts Timestamp to TimestampTZ.
>   public static TimestampTZ convert(Timestamp ts, ZoneId defaultTimeZone) {
>     return parse(ts.toString(), defaultTimeZone);
>   }
> {code}



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