Just out of curiosity: what is the code base for the odbc drivers by Hortonworks, cloudera & co? Did they develop them on their own?
If yes, maybe one should think about an open source one, which is reliable and supports a richer set of Odbc functionality. Especially in the light of Orc,parquet, llap, tez and spark on Hive the odbc driver has actually now some use cases for interactive analytics. I can see already some improvements that could be made especially for visual analytic tools, such as Tableau or Spotfire. > On 10 Mar 2016, at 21:49, Toby Allsopp <toby.alls...@wherescape.com> wrote: > > I've had the best luck with the Hortonworks driver (32-bit Windows). The > Cloudera and Microsoft ones have seemed flaky (crashes, some SQL not > supported). I haven't tried the Data Direct driver. > > Cheers, > Toby. > >> On Fri, Mar 11, 2016 at 4:46 AM, Mich Talebzadeh <mich.talebza...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> Hi, >> >> The best ODBC drivers that I found to work with Hive 2 is Progress Data >> Direct driver for Hive (ODBC 3 compliant).. >> >> I tried Cloudera one very shaky (although I tried that on Hive 1.2.1). Tried >> Microsoft ones but it hangs. Just to be clear I am using 64-bit drivers. >> >> This is not direct data fetch from Hive tables. I have used Power Designer >> to create a Physical Mo from Hive schema/database using ODBC3 connection >> (Power designer does not have Hive in list of its databases so ODB3 is the >> choice). >> >> I then intend to create a logical model from this physical model. >> >> Anyone has better suggestions(s) for Hive ODBC drivers >> >> Dr Mich Talebzadeh >> >> LinkedIn >> https://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=AAEAAAAWh2gBxianrbJd6zP6AcPCCdOABUrV8Pw >> >> http://talebzadehmich.wordpress.com >