SHOW Statements #
SHOW statements are used to list objects within their corresponding parent, such as catalogs, databases, tables and views, columns, functions, and modules. See the individual commands for more details and additional options.
SHOW CREATE statements are used to print a DDL statement with which a given object can be created. The currently ‘SHOW CREATE’ statement is only available in printing DDL statement of the given table and view.
Flink SQL supports the following SHOW statements for now:
- SHOW CATALOGS
- SHOW CURRENT CATALOG
- SHOW CREATE CATALOG
- SHOW DATABASES
- SHOW CURRENT DATABASE
- SHOW TABLES
- SHOW CREATE TABLE
- SHOW COLUMNS
- SHOW PARTITIONS
- SHOW PROCEDURES
- SHOW VIEWS
- SHOW CREATE VIEW
- SHOW FUNCTIONS
- SHOW MODULES
- SHOW JARS
- SHOW JOBS
Run a SHOW statement #
SHOW statements can be executed with the executeSql()
method of the TableEnvironment
. The executeSql()
method returns objects for a successful SHOW operation, otherwise will throw an exception.
The following examples show how to run a SHOW statement in TableEnvironment
.
SHOW statements can be executed with the executeSql()
method of the TableEnvironment
. The executeSql()
method returns objects for a successful SHOW operation, otherwise will throw an exception.
The following examples show how to run a SHOW statement in TableEnvironment
.
SHOW statements can be executed with the execute_sql()
method of the TableEnvironment
. The execute_sql()
method returns objects for a successful SHOW operation, otherwise will throw an exception.
The following examples show how to run a SHOW statement in TableEnvironment
.
SHOW statements can be executed in SQL CLI.
The following examples show how to run a SHOW statement in SQL CLI.
StreamExecutionEnvironment env = StreamExecutionEnvironment.getExecutionEnvironment();
StreamTableEnvironment tEnv = StreamTableEnvironment.create(env);
// show catalogs
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CATALOGS").print();
// +-----------------+
// | catalog name |
// +-----------------+
// | default_catalog |
// +-----------------+
// show current catalog
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CURRENT CATALOG").print();
// +----------------------+
// | current catalog name |
// +----------------------+
// | default_catalog |
// +----------------------+
// create a catalog
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE CATALOG cat2 WITH (...)");
// show create catalog
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CREATE CATALOG cat2").print();
// +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
// | result |
// +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
// | CREATE CATALOG `cat2` WITH (
// 'default-database' = 'db',
// 'type' = 'generic_in_memory'
// )
// |
// +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
// 1 row in set
// show databases
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW DATABASES").print();
// +------------------+
// | database name |
// +------------------+
// | default_database |
// +------------------+
// show current database
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CURRENT DATABASE").print();
// +-----------------------+
// | current database name |
// +-----------------------+
// | default_database |
// +-----------------------+
// create a table
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE TABLE my_table (...) WITH (...)");
// show tables
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW TABLES").print();
// +------------+
// | table name |
// +------------+
// | my_table |
// +------------+
// show create table
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CREATE TABLE my_table").print();
// CREATE TABLE `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_table` (
// ...
// ) WITH (
// ...
// )
// show columns
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW COLUMNS FROM my_table LIKE '%f%'").print();
// +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
// | name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
// +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
// | field2 | BYTES | true | | | |
// +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
// create a view
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE VIEW my_view AS SELECT * FROM my_table");
// show views
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW VIEWS").print();
// +-----------+
// | view name |
// +-----------+
// | my_view |
// +-----------+
// show create view
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CREATE VIEW my_view").print();
// CREATE VIEW `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_view`(`field1`, `field2`, ...) as
// SELECT *
// FROM `default_catalog`.`default_database`.`my_table`
// show functions
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW FUNCTIONS").print();
// +---------------+
// | function name |
// +---------------+
// | mod |
// | sha256 |
// | ... |
// +---------------+
// create a user defined function
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE FUNCTION f1 AS ...");
// show user defined functions
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW USER FUNCTIONS").print();
// +---------------+
// | function name |
// +---------------+
// | f1 |
// | ... |
// +---------------+
// show modules
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW MODULES").print();
// +-------------+
// | module name |
// +-------------+
// | core |
// +-------------+
// show full modules
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW FULL MODULES").print();
// +-------------+-------+
// | module name | used |
// +-------------+-------+
// | core | true |
// | hive | false |
// +-------------+-------+
val env = StreamExecutionEnvironment.getExecutionEnvironment()
val tEnv = StreamTableEnvironment.create(env)
// show catalogs
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CATALOGS").print()
// +-----------------+
// | catalog name |
// +-----------------+
// | default_catalog |
// +-----------------+
// create a catalog
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE CATALOG cat2 WITH (...)")
// show create catalog
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CREATE CATALOG cat2").print()
// +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
// | result |
// +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
// | CREATE CATALOG `cat2` WITH (
// 'default-database' = 'db',
// 'type' = 'generic_in_memory'
// )
// |
// +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
// 1 row in set
// show databases
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW DATABASES").print()
// +------------------+
// | database name |
// +------------------+
// | default_database |
// +------------------+
// create a table
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE TABLE my_table (...) WITH (...)")
// show tables
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW TABLES").print()
// +------------+
// | table name |
// +------------+
// | my_table |
// +------------+
// show create table
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CREATE TABLE my_table").print()
// CREATE TABLE `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_table` (
// ...
// ) WITH (
// ...
// )
// show columns
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW COLUMNS FROM my_table LIKE '%f%'").print()
// +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
// | name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
// +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
// | field2 | BYTES | true | | | |
// +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
// create a view
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE VIEW my_view AS SELECT * FROM my_table")
// show views
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW VIEWS").print()
// +-----------+
// | view name |
// +-----------+
// | my_view |
// +-----------+
// show create view
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW CREATE VIEW my_view").print();
// CREATE VIEW `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_view`(`field1`, `field2`, ...) as
// SELECT *
// FROM `default_catalog`.`default_database`.`my_table`
// show functions
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW FUNCTIONS").print()
// +---------------+
// | function name |
// +---------------+
// | mod |
// | sha256 |
// | ... |
// +---------------+
// create a user defined function
tEnv.executeSql("CREATE FUNCTION f1 AS ...")
// show user defined functions
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW USER FUNCTIONS").print()
// +---------------+
// | function name |
// +---------------+
// | f1 |
// | ... |
// +---------------+
// show modules
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW MODULES").print()
// +-------------+
// | module name |
// +-------------+
// | core |
// +-------------+
// show full modules
tEnv.executeSql("SHOW FULL MODULES").print()
// +-------------+-------+
// | module name | used |
// +-------------+-------+
// | core | true |
// | hive | false |
// +-------------+-------+
table_env = StreamTableEnvironment.create(...)
# show catalogs
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW CATALOGS").print()
# +-----------------+
# | catalog name |
# +-----------------+
# | default_catalog |
# +-----------------+
# create a catalog
table_env.execute_sql("CREATE CATALOG cat2 WITH (...)")
# show create catalog
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW CREATE CATALOG cat2").print()
# +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
# | result |
# +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
# | CREATE CATALOG `cat2` WITH (
# 'default-database' = 'db',
# 'type' = 'generic_in_memory'
# )
# |
# +---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
# 1 row in set
# show databases
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW DATABASES").print()
# +------------------+
# | database name |
# +------------------+
# | default_database |
# +------------------+
# create a table
table_env.execute_sql("CREATE TABLE my_table (...) WITH (...)")
# show tables
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW TABLES").print()
# +------------+
# | table name |
# +------------+
# | my_table |
# +------------+
# show create table
table_env.executeSql("SHOW CREATE TABLE my_table").print()
# CREATE TABLE `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_table` (
# ...
# ) WITH (
# ...
# )
# show columns
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW COLUMNS FROM my_table LIKE '%f%'").print()
# +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
# | name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
# +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
# | field2 | BYTES | true | | | |
# +--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
# create a view
table_env.execute_sql("CREATE VIEW my_view AS SELECT * FROM my_table")
# show views
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW VIEWS").print()
# +-----------+
# | view name |
# +-----------+
# | my_view |
# +-----------+
# show create view
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW CREATE VIEW my_view").print()
# CREATE VIEW `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_view`(`field1`, `field2`, ...) as
# SELECT *
# FROM `default_catalog`.`default_database`.`my_table`
# show functions
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW FUNCTIONS").print()
# +---------------+
# | function name |
# +---------------+
# | mod |
# | sha256 |
# | ... |
# +---------------+
# create a user defined function
table_env.execute_sql("CREATE FUNCTION f1 AS ...")
# show user defined functions
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW USER FUNCTIONS").print()
# +---------------+
# | function name |
# +---------------+
# | f1 |
# | ... |
# +---------------+
# show modules
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW MODULES").print()
# +-------------+
# | module name |
# +-------------+
# | core |
# +-------------+
# show full modules
table_env.execute_sql("SHOW FULL MODULES").print()
# +-------------+-------+
# | module name | used |
# +-------------+-------+
# | core | true |
# | hive | false |
# +-------------+-------+
Flink SQL> SHOW CATALOGS;
default_catalog
Flink SQL> CREATE CATALOG cat2 WITH (...);
[INFO] Execute statement succeeded.
Flink SQL> SHOW CREATE CATALOG cat2;
CREATE CATALOG `cat2` WITH (
...
)
Flink SQL> SHOW DATABASES;
default_database
Flink SQL> CREATE TABLE my_table (...) WITH (...);
[INFO] Table has been created.
Flink SQL> SHOW TABLES;
my_table
Flink SQL> SHOW CREATE TABLE my_table;
CREATE TABLE `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_table` (
...
) WITH (
...
)
Flink SQL> SHOW COLUMNS from MyUserTable LIKE '%f%';
+--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
| name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
+--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
| field2 | BYTES | true | | | |
+--------+-------+------+-----+--------+-----------+
1 row in set
Flink SQL> CREATE VIEW my_view AS SELECT * from my_table;
[INFO] View has been created.
Flink SQL> SHOW VIEWS;
my_view
Flink SQL> SHOW CREATE VIEW my_view;
CREATE VIEW `default_catalog`.`default_db`.`my_view`(`field1`, `field2`, ...) as
SELECT *
FROM `default_catalog`.`default_database`.`my_table`
Flink SQL> SHOW FUNCTIONS;
mod
sha256
...
Flink SQL> CREATE FUNCTION f1 AS ...;
[INFO] Function has been created.
Flink SQL> SHOW USER FUNCTIONS;
f1
...
Flink SQL> SHOW MODULES;
+-------------+
| module name |
+-------------+
| core |
+-------------+
1 row in set
Flink SQL> SHOW FULL MODULES;
+-------------+------+
| module name | used |
+-------------+------+
| core | true |
+-------------+------+
1 row in set
Flink SQL> SHOW JARS;
/path/to/addedJar.jar
SHOW CATALOGS #
SHOW CATALOGS
Show all catalogs.
SHOW CURRENT CATALOG #
SHOW CURRENT CATALOG
Show current catalog.
SHOW CREATE CATALOG #
SHOW CREATE CATALOG catalog_name
Show creation statement for an existing catalog.
The output includes the catalog’s name and relevant properties, which allows you to gain an intuitive understanding of the underlying catalog’s metadata.
Assumes that the catalog cat2
is created as follows:
create catalog cat2 WITH (
'type'='generic_in_memory',
'default-database'='db'
);
Shows the creation statement.
show create catalog cat2;
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| result |
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| CREATE CATALOG `cat2` WITH (
'default-database' = 'db',
'type' = 'generic_in_memory'
)
|
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1 row in set
SHOW DATABASES #
SHOW DATABASES [ ( FROM | IN ) catalog_name] [ [NOT] (LIKE | ILIKE) <sql_like_pattern> ]
Show all databases within optionally specified catalog.
If no catalog is specified, then the default catalog is used.
Additionally, a <sql_like_pattern>
can be used to filter the databases.
LIKE
Show all databases with a LIKE
clause, whose name is similar to the <sql_like_pattern>
.
The syntax of the SQL pattern in the LIKE
clause is the same as that of the MySQL
dialect.
%
matches any number of characters, even zero characters, and\%
matches one%
character._
matches exactly one character,\_
matches one_
character.
ILIKE
The same behavior as LIKE
but the SQL pattern is case-insensitive.
SHOW CURRENT DATABASE #
SHOW CURRENT DATABASE
Show current database.
SHOW TABLES #
SHOW TABLES [ ( FROM | IN ) [catalog_name.]database_name ] [ [NOT] LIKE <sql_like_pattern> ]
Show all tables for an optionally specified database. If no database is specified then the tables are returned from the current database. Additionally, the output of this statement may be filtered by an optional matching pattern.
LIKE
Show all tables with given table name and optional LIKE
clause, whose name is whether similar to the <sql_like_pattern>
.
The syntax of sql pattern in LIKE
clause is the same as that of MySQL
dialect.
%
matches any number of characters, even zero characters,\%
matches one%
character._
matches exactly one character,\_
matches one_
character.
SHOW TABLES EXAMPLES #
Assumes that the db1
database located in catalog1
catalog has the following tables:
- person
- dim
the current database in session has the following tables:
- items
- orders
- Shows all tables of the given database.
show tables from db1;
-- show tables from catalog1.db1;
-- show tables in db1;
-- show tables in catalog1.db1;
+------------+
| table name |
+------------+
| dim |
| person |
+------------+
2 rows in set
- Shows all tables of the given database, which are similar to the given sql pattern.
show tables from db1 like '%n';
-- show tables from catalog1.db1 like '%n';
-- show tables in db1 like '%n';
-- show tables in catalog1.db1 like '%n';
+------------+
| table name |
+------------+
| person |
+------------+
1 row in set
- Shows all tables of the given database, which are not similar to the given sql pattern.
show tables from db1 not like '%n';
-- show tables from catalog1.db1 not like '%n';
-- show tables in db1 not like '%n';
-- show tables in catalog1.db1 not like '%n';
+------------+
| table name |
+------------+
| dim |
+------------+
1 row in set
- Shows all tables of the current database.
show tables;
+------------+
| table name |
+------------+
| items |
| orders |
+------------+
2 rows in set
SHOW CREATE TABLE #
SHOW CREATE TABLE [[catalog_name.]db_name.]table_name
Show create table statement for specified table.
The output includes the table name, column names, data types, constraints, comments, and configurations.
It is a very useful statement when you need to understand the structure, configuration and constraints of an existing table or to recreate the table in another database.
Assumes that the table orders
is created as follows:
CREATE TABLE orders (
order_id BIGINT NOT NULL comment 'this is the primary key, named ''order_id''.',
product VARCHAR(32),
amount INT,
ts TIMESTAMP(3) comment 'notice: watermark, named ''ts''.',
ptime AS PROCTIME() comment 'notice: computed column, named ''ptime''.',
WATERMARK FOR ts AS ts - INTERVAL '1' SECOND,
CONSTRAINT `PK_order_id` PRIMARY KEY (order_id) NOT ENFORCED
) WITH (
'connector' = 'datagen'
);
Shows the creation statement.
show create table orders;
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| result |
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| CREATE TABLE `default_catalog`.`default_database`.`orders` (
`order_id` BIGINT NOT NULL COMMENT 'this is the primary key, named ''order_id''.',
`product` VARCHAR(32),
`amount` INT,
`ts` TIMESTAMP(3) COMMENT 'notice: watermark, named ''ts''.',
`ptime` AS PROCTIME() COMMENT 'notice: computed column, named ''ptime''.',
WATERMARK FOR `ts` AS `ts` - INTERVAL '1' SECOND,
CONSTRAINT `PK_order_id` PRIMARY KEY (`order_id`) NOT ENFORCED
) WITH (
'connector' = 'datagen'
)
|
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1 row in set
Attention Currently SHOW CREATE TABLE
only supports table that is created by Flink SQL DDL.
SHOW COLUMNS #
SHOW COLUMNS ( FROM | IN ) [[catalog_name.]database.]<table_name> [ [NOT] LIKE <sql_like_pattern>]
Show all columns of the table with given table name and optional like clause.
LIKE
Show all columns of the table with given table name and optional LIKE
clause, whose name is whether similar to the <sql_like_pattern>
.
The syntax of sql pattern in LIKE
clause is the same as that of MySQL
dialect.
SHOW COLUMNS EXAMPLES #
Assumes that the table named orders
in the database1
database which is located in the catalog1
catalog has the following structure:
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----------+---------------+----------------------------+
| name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----------+---------------+----------------------------+
| user | BIGINT | false | PRI(user) | | |
| product | VARCHAR(32) | true | | | |
| amount | INT | true | | | |
| ts | TIMESTAMP(3) *ROWTIME* | true | | | `ts` - INTERVAL '1' SECOND |
| ptime | TIMESTAMP_LTZ(3) *PROCTIME* | false | | AS PROCTIME() | |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----------+---------------+----------------------------+
- Shows all columns of the given table.
show columns from orders;
-- show columns from database1.orders;
-- show columns from catalog1.database1.orders;
-- show columns in orders;
-- show columns in database1.orders;
-- show columns in catalog1.database1.orders;
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----------+---------------+----------------------------+
| name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----------+---------------+----------------------------+
| user | BIGINT | false | PRI(user) | | |
| product | VARCHAR(32) | true | | | |
| amount | INT | true | | | |
| ts | TIMESTAMP(3) *ROWTIME* | true | | | `ts` - INTERVAL '1' SECOND |
| ptime | TIMESTAMP_LTZ(3) *PROCTIME* | false | | AS PROCTIME() | |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----------+---------------+----------------------------+
5 rows in set
- Shows all columns of the given table, which are similar to the given sql pattern.
show columns from orders like '%r';
-- show columns from database1.orders like '%r';
-- show columns from catalog1.database1.orders like '%r';
-- show columns in orders like '%r';
-- show columns in database1.orders like '%r';
-- show columns in catalog1.database1.orders like '%r';
+------+--------+-------+-----------+--------+-----------+
| name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
+------+--------+-------+-----------+--------+-----------+
| user | BIGINT | false | PRI(user) | | |
+------+--------+-------+-----------+--------+-----------+
1 row in set
- Shows all columns of the given table, which are not similar to the given sql pattern.
show columns from orders not like '%_r';
-- show columns from database1.orders not like '%_r';
-- show columns from catalog1.database1.orders not like '%_r';
-- show columns in orders not like '%_r';
-- show columns in database1.orders not like '%_r';
-- show columns in catalog1.database1.orders not like '%_r';
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----+---------------+----------------------------+
| name | type | null | key | extras | watermark |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----+---------------+----------------------------+
| product | VARCHAR(32) | true | | | |
| amount | INT | true | | | |
| ts | TIMESTAMP(3) *ROWTIME* | true | | | `ts` - INTERVAL '1' SECOND |
| ptime | TIMESTAMP_LTZ(3) *PROCTIME* | false | | AS PROCTIME() | |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------+-----+---------------+----------------------------+
4 rows in set
SHOW PARTITIONS #
SHOW PARTITIONS [[catalog_name.]database.]<table_name> [ PARTITION <partition_spec>]
<partition_spec>:
(key1=val1, key2=val2, ...)
Show all partitions of the partitioned table with the given table name and optional partition clause.
PARTITION Show all the partitions which are under the provided <partition_spec> in the given table.
SHOW PARTITIONS EXAMPLES #
Assumes that the partitioned table table1
in the database1
database which is located in the catalog1
catalog has the following partitions:
+---------+-----------------------------+
| id | date |
+---------+-----------------------------+
| 1001 | 2020-01-01 |
| 1002 | 2020-01-01 |
| 1002 | 2020-01-02 |
+---------+-----------------------------+
- Shows all partitions of the given table.
show partitions table1;
-- show partitions database1.table1;
-- show partitions catalog1.database1.table1;
+---------+-----------------------------+
| id | date |
+---------+-----------------------------+
| 1001 | 2020-01-01 |
| 1002 | 2020-01-01 |
| 1002 | 2020-01-02 |
+---------+-----------------------------+
3 rows in set
- Shows all partitions of the given table with the given partition spec.
show partitions table1 partition (id=1002);
-- show partitions database1.table1 partition (id=1002);
-- show partitions catalog1.database1.table1 partition (id=1002);
+---------+-----------------------------+
| id | date |
+---------+-----------------------------+
| 1002 | 2020-01-01 |
| 1002 | 2020-01-02 |
+---------+-----------------------------+
2 rows in set
SHOW PROCEDURES #
SHOW PROCEDURES [ ( FROM | IN ) [catalog_name.]database_name ] [ [NOT] (LIKE | ILIKE) <sql_like_pattern> ]
Show all procedures for an optionally specified database. If no database is specified then the procedures are returned from the current database. Additionally, a <sql_like_pattern>
can be used to filter the procedures.
LIKE
Show all procedures with a LIKE
clause, whose name is similar to the <sql_like_pattern>
.
The syntax of the SQL pattern in the LIKE
clause is the same as that of the MySQL
dialect.
%
matches any number of characters, even zero characters, and\%
matches one%
character._
matches exactly one character,\_
matches one_
character.
ILIKE
The same behavior as LIKE
but the SQL pattern is case-insensitive.
SHOW VIEWS #
SHOW VIEWS
Show all views in the current catalog and the current database.
SHOW CREATE VIEW #
SHOW CREATE VIEW [catalog_name.][db_name.]view_name
Show create view statement for specified view.
SHOW FUNCTIONS #
SHOW [USER] FUNCTIONS [ ( FROM | IN ) [catalog_name.]database_name ] [ [NOT] (LIKE | ILIKE) <sql_like_pattern> ]
Show all functions including system functions and user-defined functions for an optionally specified database. If no database is specified then the functions are returned from the current database. Additionally, a <sql_like_pattern>
can be used to filter the functions.
USER
Show only user-defined functions for an optionally specified database. If no database is specified then the functions are returned from the current database. Additionally, a <sql_like_pattern>
can be used to filter the functions.
LIKE
Show all functions with a LIKE
clause, whose name is similar to the <sql_like_pattern>
.
The syntax of the SQL pattern in the LIKE
clause is the same as that of the MySQL
dialect.
%
matches any number of characters, even zero characters, and\%
matches one%
character._
matches exactly one character,\_
matches one_
character.
ILIKE
The same behavior as LIKE
but the SQL pattern is case-insensitive.
SHOW MODULES #
SHOW [FULL] MODULES
Show all enabled module names with resolution order.
FULL Show all loaded modules and enabled status with resolution order.
SHOW JARS #
SHOW JARS
Show all added jars in the session classloader which are added by ADD JAR
statements.
Attention Currently SHOW JARS
statements only work in the SQL CLI or SQL Gateway.
SHOW JOBS #
SHOW JOBS
Show the jobs in the Flink cluster.
Attention Currently SHOW JOBS
statements only work in the SQL CLI or SQL Gateway.