Return-Path: X-Original-To: apmail-hbase-commits-archive@www.apache.org Delivered-To: apmail-hbase-commits-archive@www.apache.org Received: from mail.apache.org (hermes.apache.org [140.211.11.3]) by minotaur.apache.org (Postfix) with SMTP id 1EC321779F for ; Thu, 29 Jan 2015 22:59:10 +0000 (UTC) Received: (qmail 42675 invoked by uid 500); 29 Jan 2015 22:59:02 -0000 Delivered-To: apmail-hbase-commits-archive@hbase.apache.org Received: (qmail 42380 invoked by uid 500); 29 Jan 2015 22:59:02 -0000 Mailing-List: contact commits-help@hbase.apache.org; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk List-Help: List-Unsubscribe: List-Post: List-Id: Reply-To: dev@hbase.apache.org Delivered-To: mailing list commits@hbase.apache.org Received: (qmail 41914 invoked by uid 99); 29 Jan 2015 22:59:01 -0000 Received: from git1-us-west.apache.org (HELO git1-us-west.apache.org) (140.211.11.23) by apache.org (qpsmtpd/0.29) with ESMTP; Thu, 29 Jan 2015 22:59:01 +0000 Received: by git1-us-west.apache.org (ASF Mail Server at git1-us-west.apache.org, from userid 33) id 93166E0F1E; Thu, 29 Jan 2015 22:59:01 +0000 (UTC) Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: misty@apache.org To: commits@hbase.apache.org Date: Thu, 29 Jan 2015 22:59:07 -0000 Message-Id: <0ad8167dc20f475bae06a51c614c0278@git.apache.org> In-Reply-To: References: X-Mailer: ASF-Git Admin Mailer Subject: [07/11] hbase git commit: HBASE-12922 Post-asciidoc conversion fix-ups part 2 http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/hbase/blob/a7816d88/src/main/asciidoc/_chapters/mapreduce.adoc ---------------------------------------------------------------------- diff --git a/src/main/asciidoc/_chapters/mapreduce.adoc b/src/main/asciidoc/_chapters/mapreduce.adoc index 1228f57..a008a4f 100644 --- a/src/main/asciidoc/_chapters/mapreduce.adoc +++ b/src/main/asciidoc/_chapters/mapreduce.adoc @@ -29,48 +29,48 @@ Apache MapReduce is a software framework used to analyze large amounts of data, and is the framework used most often with link:http://hadoop.apache.org/[Apache Hadoop]. MapReduce itself is out of the scope of this document. -A good place to get started with MapReduce is link:http://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r1.2.1/mapred_tutorial.html. -MapReduce version 2 (MR2)is now part of link:http://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r2.3.0/hadoop-yarn/hadoop-yarn-site/[YARN]. +A good place to get started with MapReduce is http://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r2.6.0/hadoop-mapreduce-client/hadoop-mapreduce-client-core/MapReduceTutorial.html. +MapReduce version 2 (MR2)is now part of link:http://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r2.3.0/hadoop-yarn/hadoop-yarn-site/[YARN]. This chapter discusses specific configuration steps you need to take to use MapReduce on data within HBase. -In addition, it discusses other interactions and issues between HBase and MapReduce jobs. +In addition, it discusses other interactions and issues between HBase and MapReduce jobs. -.mapred and mapreduce +.`mapred` and `mapreduce` [NOTE] ==== There are two mapreduce packages in HBase as in MapReduce itself: _org.apache.hadoop.hbase.mapred_ and _org.apache.hadoop.hbase.mapreduce_. The former does old-style API and the latter the new style. The latter has more facility though you can usually find an equivalent in the older package. -Pick the package that goes with your mapreduce deploy. +Pick the package that goes with your MapReduce deploy. When in doubt or starting over, pick the _org.apache.hadoop.hbase.mapreduce_. -In the notes below, we refer to o.a.h.h.mapreduce but replace with the o.a.h.h.mapred if that is what you are using. -==== +In the notes below, we refer to o.a.h.h.mapreduce but replace with the o.a.h.h.mapred if that is what you are using. +==== [[hbase.mapreduce.classpath]] == HBase, MapReduce, and the CLASSPATH By default, MapReduce jobs deployed to a MapReduce cluster do not have access to either the HBase configuration under `$HBASE_CONF_DIR` or the HBase classes. -To give the MapReduce jobs the access they need, you could add _hbase-site.xml_ to the _$HADOOP_HOME/conf/_ directory and add the HBase JARs to the _`$HADOOP_HOME`/conf/_ directory, then copy these changes across your cluster. -You could add hbase-site.xml to `$HADOOP_HOME`/conf and add HBase jars to the $HADOOP_HOME/lib. -You would then need to copy these changes across your cluster or edit _`$HADOOP_HOME`/conf/hadoop-env.sh_ and add them to the `HADOOP_CLASSPATH` variable. +To give the MapReduce jobs the access they need, you could add _hbase-site.xml_ to the _$HADOOP_HOME/conf/_ directory and add the HBase JARs to the _HADOOP_HOME/conf/_ directory, then copy these changes across your cluster. +You could add _hbase-site.xml_ to _$HADOOP_HOME/conf_ and add HBase jars to the _$HADOOP_HOME/lib_ directory. +You would then need to copy these changes across your cluster or edit _$HADOOP_HOMEconf/hadoop-env.sh_ and add them to the `HADOOP_CLASSPATH` variable. However, this approach is not recommended because it will pollute your Hadoop install with HBase references. It also requires you to restart the Hadoop cluster before Hadoop can use the HBase data. Since HBase 0.90.x, HBase adds its dependency JARs to the job configuration itself. The dependencies only need to be available on the local `CLASSPATH`. -The following example runs the bundled HBase link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/RowCounter.html[RowCounter] MapReduce job against a table named [systemitem]+usertable+ If you have not set the environment variables expected in the command (the parts prefixed by a `$` sign and curly braces), you can use the actual system paths instead. +The following example runs the bundled HBase link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/RowCounter.html[RowCounter] MapReduce job against a table named `usertable` If you have not set the environment variables expected in the command (the parts prefixed by a `$` sign and curly braces), you can use the actual system paths instead. Be sure to use the correct version of the HBase JAR for your system. -The backticks (``` symbols) cause ths shell to execute the sub-commands, setting the CLASSPATH as part of the command. -This example assumes you use a BASH-compatible shell. +The backticks (``` symbols) cause ths shell to execute the sub-commands, setting the `CLASSPATH` as part of the command. +This example assumes you use a BASH-compatible shell. [source,bash] ---- $ HADOOP_CLASSPATH=`${HBASE_HOME}/bin/hbase classpath` ${HADOOP_HOME}/bin/hadoop jar ${HBASE_HOME}/hbase-server-VERSION.jar rowcounter usertable ---- -When the command runs, internally, the HBase JAR finds the dependencies it needs for zookeeper, guava, and its other dependencies on the passed `HADOOP_CLASSPATH` and adds the JARs to the MapReduce job configuration. -See the source at TableMapReduceUtil#addDependencyJars(org.apache.hadoop.mapreduce.Job) for how this is done. +When the command runs, internally, the HBase JAR finds the dependencies it needs for ZooKeeper, Guava, and its other dependencies on the passed `HADOOP_CLASSPATH` and adds the JARs to the MapReduce job configuration. +See the source at `TableMapReduceUtil#addDependencyJars(org.apache.hadoop.mapreduce.Job)` for how this is done. [NOTE] ==== @@ -89,10 +89,10 @@ $ HADOOP_CLASSPATH=${HBASE_HOME}/hbase-server/target/hbase-server-VERSION-SNAPSH ---- ==== -.Notice to Mapreduce users of HBase 0.96.1 and above +.Notice to MapReduce users of HBase 0.96.1 and above [CAUTION] ==== -Some mapreduce jobs that use HBase fail to launch. +Some MapReduce jobs that use HBase fail to launch. The symptom is an exception similar to the following: ---- @@ -125,15 +125,15 @@ Exception in thread "main" java.lang.IllegalAccessError: class ... ---- -This is caused by an optimization introduced in link:https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-9867[HBASE-9867] that inadvertently introduced a classloader dependency. +This is caused by an optimization introduced in link:https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-9867[HBASE-9867] that inadvertently introduced a classloader dependency. This affects both jobs using the `-libjars` option and "fat jar," those which package their runtime dependencies in a nested `lib` folder. -In order to satisfy the new classloader requirements, hbase-protocol.jar must be included in Hadoop's classpath. -See <> for current recommendations for resolving classpath errors. +In order to satisfy the new classloader requirements, `hbase-protocol.jar` must be included in Hadoop's classpath. +See <> for current recommendations for resolving classpath errors. The following is included for historical purposes. -This can be resolved system-wide by including a reference to the hbase-protocol.jar in hadoop's lib directory, via a symlink or by copying the jar into the new location. +This can be resolved system-wide by including a reference to the `hbase-protocol.jar` in Hadoop's lib directory, via a symlink or by copying the jar into the new location. This can also be achieved on a per-job launch basis by including it in the `HADOOP_CLASSPATH` environment variable at job submission time. When launching jobs that package their dependencies, all three of the following job launching commands satisfy this requirement: @@ -162,7 +162,7 @@ This functionality was lost due to a bug in HBase 0.95 (link:https://issues.apac The priority order for choosing the scanner caching is as follows: . Caching settings which are set on the scan object. -. Caching settings which are specified via the configuration option +hbase.client.scanner.caching+, which can either be set manually in _hbase-site.xml_ or via the helper method `TableMapReduceUtil.setScannerCaching()`. +. Caching settings which are specified via the configuration option `hbase.client.scanner.caching`, which can either be set manually in _hbase-site.xml_ or via the helper method `TableMapReduceUtil.setScannerCaching()`. . The default value `HConstants.DEFAULT_HBASE_CLIENT_SCANNER_CACHING`, which is set to `100`. Optimizing the caching settings is a balance between the time the client waits for a result and the number of sets of results the client needs to receive. @@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ See the API documentation for link:https://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/h == Bundled HBase MapReduce Jobs -The HBase JAR also serves as a Driver for some bundled mapreduce jobs. +The HBase JAR also serves as a Driver for some bundled MapReduce jobs. To learn about the bundled MapReduce jobs, run the following command. [source,bash] @@ -202,35 +202,35 @@ $ ${HADOOP_HOME}/bin/hadoop jar ${HBASE_HOME}/hbase-server-VERSION.jar rowcounte == HBase as a MapReduce Job Data Source and Data Sink -HBase can be used as a data source, link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/TableInputFormat.html[TableInputFormat], and data sink, link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/TableOutputFormat.html[TableOutputFormat] or link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/MultiTableOutputFormat.html[MultiTableOutputFormat], for MapReduce jobs. +HBase can be used as a data source, link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/TableInputFormat.html[TableInputFormat], and data sink, link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/TableOutputFormat.html[TableOutputFormat] or link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/MultiTableOutputFormat.html[MultiTableOutputFormat], for MapReduce jobs. Writing MapReduce jobs that read or write HBase, it is advisable to subclass link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/TableMapper.html[TableMapper] and/or link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/TableReducer.html[TableReducer]. -See the do-nothing pass-through classes link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/IdentityTableMapper.html[IdentityTableMapper] and link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/IdentityTableReducer.html[IdentityTableReducer] for basic usage. -For a more involved example, see link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/RowCounter.html[RowCounter] or review the `org.apache.hadoop.hbase.mapreduce.TestTableMapReduce` unit test. +See the do-nothing pass-through classes link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/IdentityTableMapper.html[IdentityTableMapper] and link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/IdentityTableReducer.html[IdentityTableReducer] for basic usage. +For a more involved example, see link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/RowCounter.html[RowCounter] or review the `org.apache.hadoop.hbase.mapreduce.TestTableMapReduce` unit test. If you run MapReduce jobs that use HBase as source or sink, need to specify source and sink table and column names in your configuration. When you read from HBase, the `TableInputFormat` requests the list of regions from HBase and makes a map, which is either a `map-per-region` or `mapreduce.job.maps` map, whichever is smaller. If your job only has two maps, raise `mapreduce.job.maps` to a number greater than the number of regions. -Maps will run on the adjacent TaskTracker if you are running a TaskTracer and RegionServer per node. +Maps will run on the adjacent TaskTracker/NodeManager if you are running a TaskTracer/NodeManager and RegionServer per node. When writing to HBase, it may make sense to avoid the Reduce step and write back into HBase from within your map. This approach works when your job does not need the sort and collation that MapReduce does on the map-emitted data. On insert, HBase 'sorts' so there is no point double-sorting (and shuffling data around your MapReduce cluster) unless you need to. -If you do not need the Reduce, you myour map might emit counts of records processed for reporting at the end of the jobj, or set the number of Reduces to zero and use TableOutputFormat. +If you do not need the Reduce, your map might emit counts of records processed for reporting at the end of the job, or set the number of Reduces to zero and use TableOutputFormat. If running the Reduce step makes sense in your case, you should typically use multiple reducers so that load is spread across the HBase cluster. A new HBase partitioner, the link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/HRegionPartitioner.html[HRegionPartitioner], can run as many reducers the number of existing regions. The HRegionPartitioner is suitable when your table is large and your upload will not greatly alter the number of existing regions upon completion. -Otherwise use the default partitioner. +Otherwise use the default partitioner. == Writing HFiles Directly During Bulk Import If you are importing into a new table, you can bypass the HBase API and write your content directly to the filesystem, formatted into HBase data files (HFiles). Your import will run faster, perhaps an order of magnitude faster. -For more on how this mechanism works, see <>. +For more on how this mechanism works, see <>. == RowCounter Example -The included link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/RowCounter.html[RowCounter] MapReduce job uses `TableInputFormat` and does a count of all rows in the specified table. -To run it, use the following command: +The included link:http://hbase.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/mapreduce/RowCounter.html[RowCounter] MapReduce job uses `TableInputFormat` and does a count of all rows in the specified table. +To run it, use the following command: [source,bash] ---- @@ -239,9 +239,9 @@ $ ./bin/hadoop jar hbase-X.X.X.jar This will invoke the HBase MapReduce Driver class. Select `rowcounter` from the choice of jobs offered. -This will print rowcouner usage advice to standard output. +This will print rowcounter usage advice to standard output. Specify the tablename, column to count, and output directory. -If you have classpath errors, see <>. +If you have classpath errors, see <>. [[splitter]] == Map-Task Splitting @@ -249,14 +249,14 @@ If you have classpath errors, see < { - public void map(ImmutableBytesWritable row, Result value, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { - // this example is just copying the data from the source table... - context.write(row, resultToPut(row,value)); - } - - private static Put resultToPut(ImmutableBytesWritable key, Result result) throws IOException { - Put put = new Put(key.get()); - for (KeyValue kv : result.raw()) { - put.add(kv); - } - return put; - } + public void map(ImmutableBytesWritable row, Result value, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { + // this example is just copying the data from the source table... + context.write(row, resultToPut(row,value)); + } + + private static Put resultToPut(ImmutableBytesWritable key, Result result) throws IOException { + Put put = new Put(key.get()); + for (KeyValue kv : result.raw()) { + put.add(kv); + } + return put; + } } ---- -There isn't actually a reducer step, so `TableOutputFormat` takes care of sending the `Put` to the target table. +There isn't actually a reducer step, so `TableOutputFormat` takes care of sending the `Put` to the target table. -This is just an example, developers could choose not to use `TableOutputFormat` and connect to the target table themselves. +This is just an example, developers could choose not to use `TableOutputFormat` and connect to the target table themselves. [[mapreduce.example.readwrite.multi]] === HBase MapReduce Read/Write Example With Multi-Table Output -TODO: example for `MultiTableOutputFormat`. +TODO: example for `MultiTableOutputFormat`. [[mapreduce.example.summary]] === HBase MapReduce Summary to HBase Example The following example uses HBase as a MapReduce source and sink with a summarization step. -This example will count the number of distinct instances of a value in a table and write those summarized counts in another table. +This example will count the number of distinct instances of a value in a table and write those summarized counts in another table. [source,java] ---- @@ -395,72 +395,71 @@ scan.setCacheBlocks(false); // don't set to true for MR jobs // set other scan attrs TableMapReduceUtil.initTableMapperJob( - sourceTable, // input table - scan, // Scan instance to control CF and attribute selection - MyMapper.class, // mapper class - Text.class, // mapper output key - IntWritable.class, // mapper output value - job); + sourceTable, // input table + scan, // Scan instance to control CF and attribute selection + MyMapper.class, // mapper class + Text.class, // mapper output key + IntWritable.class, // mapper output value + job); TableMapReduceUtil.initTableReducerJob( - targetTable, // output table - MyTableReducer.class, // reducer class - job); + targetTable, // output table + MyTableReducer.class, // reducer class + job); job.setNumReduceTasks(1); // at least one, adjust as required boolean b = job.waitForCompletion(true); if (!b) { - throw new IOException("error with job!"); + throw new IOException("error with job!"); } ----- +---- In this example mapper a column with a String-value is chosen as the value to summarize upon. -This value is used as the key to emit from the mapper, and an `IntWritable` represents an instance counter. +This value is used as the key to emit from the mapper, and an `IntWritable` represents an instance counter. [source,java] ---- public static class MyMapper extends TableMapper { - public static final byte[] CF = "cf".getBytes(); - public static final byte[] ATTR1 = "attr1".getBytes(); - - private final IntWritable ONE = new IntWritable(1); - private Text text = new Text(); + public static final byte[] CF = "cf".getBytes(); + public static final byte[] ATTR1 = "attr1".getBytes(); - public void map(ImmutableBytesWritable row, Result value, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { - String val = new String(value.getValue(CF, ATTR1)); - text.set(val); // we can only emit Writables... + private final IntWritable ONE = new IntWritable(1); + private Text text = new Text(); - context.write(text, ONE); - } + public void map(ImmutableBytesWritable row, Result value, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { + String val = new String(value.getValue(CF, ATTR1)); + text.set(val); // we can only emit Writables... + context.write(text, ONE); + } } ----- +---- -In the reducer, the "ones" are counted (just like any other MR example that does this), and then emits a `Put`. +In the reducer, the "ones" are counted (just like any other MR example that does this), and then emits a `Put`. [source,java] ---- public static class MyTableReducer extends TableReducer { - public static final byte[] CF = "cf".getBytes(); - public static final byte[] COUNT = "count".getBytes(); - - public void reduce(Text key, Iterable values, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { - int i = 0; - for (IntWritable val : values) { - i += val.get(); - } - Put put = new Put(Bytes.toBytes(key.toString())); - put.add(CF, COUNT, Bytes.toBytes(i)); - - context.write(null, put); - } + public static final byte[] CF = "cf".getBytes(); + public static final byte[] COUNT = "count".getBytes(); + + public void reduce(Text key, Iterable values, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { + int i = 0; + for (IntWritable val : values) { + i += val.get(); + } + Put put = new Put(Bytes.toBytes(key.toString())); + put.add(CF, COUNT, Bytes.toBytes(i)); + + context.write(null, put); + } } ----- +---- [[mapreduce.example.summary.file]] === HBase MapReduce Summary to File Example This very similar to the summary example above, with exception that this is using HBase as a MapReduce source but HDFS as the sink. The differences are in the job setup and in the reducer. -The mapper remains the same. +The mapper remains the same. [source,java] ---- @@ -474,19 +473,19 @@ scan.setCacheBlocks(false); // don't set to true for MR jobs // set other scan attrs TableMapReduceUtil.initTableMapperJob( - sourceTable, // input table - scan, // Scan instance to control CF and attribute selection - MyMapper.class, // mapper class - Text.class, // mapper output key - IntWritable.class, // mapper output value - job); + sourceTable, // input table + scan, // Scan instance to control CF and attribute selection + MyMapper.class, // mapper class + Text.class, // mapper output key + IntWritable.class, // mapper output value + job); job.setReducerClass(MyReducer.class); // reducer class job.setNumReduceTasks(1); // at least one, adjust as required FileOutputFormat.setOutputPath(job, new Path("/tmp/mr/mySummaryFile")); // adjust directories as required boolean b = job.waitForCompletion(true); if (!b) { - throw new IOException("error with job!"); + throw new IOException("error with job!"); } ---- @@ -497,68 +496,68 @@ As for the Reducer, it is a "generic" Reducer instead of extending TableMapper a ---- public static class MyReducer extends Reducer { - public void reduce(Text key, Iterable values, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { - int i = 0; - for (IntWritable val : values) { - i += val.get(); - } - context.write(key, new IntWritable(i)); - } + public void reduce(Text key, Iterable values, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { + int i = 0; + for (IntWritable val : values) { + i += val.get(); + } + context.write(key, new IntWritable(i)); + } } ---- [[mapreduce.example.summary.noreducer]] === HBase MapReduce Summary to HBase Without Reducer -It is also possible to perform summaries without a reducer - if you use HBase as the reducer. +It is also possible to perform summaries without a reducer - if you use HBase as the reducer. An HBase target table would need to exist for the job summary. The Table method `incrementColumnValue` would be used to atomically increment values. -From a performance perspective, it might make sense to keep a Map of values with their values to be incremeneted for each map-task, and make one update per key at during the `cleanup` method of the mapper. -However, your milage may vary depending on the number of rows to be processed and unique keys. +From a performance perspective, it might make sense to keep a Map of values with their values to be incremented for each map-task, and make one update per key at during the `cleanup` method of the mapper. +However, your mileage may vary depending on the number of rows to be processed and unique keys. -In the end, the summary results are in HBase. +In the end, the summary results are in HBase. [[mapreduce.example.summary.rdbms]] === HBase MapReduce Summary to RDBMS Sometimes it is more appropriate to generate summaries to an RDBMS. For these cases, it is possible to generate summaries directly to an RDBMS via a custom reducer. -The `setup` method can connect to an RDBMS (the connection information can be passed via custom parameters in the context) and the cleanup method can close the connection. +The `setup` method can connect to an RDBMS (the connection information can be passed via custom parameters in the context) and the cleanup method can close the connection. It is critical to understand that number of reducers for the job affects the summarization implementation, and you'll have to design this into your reducer. Specifically, whether it is designed to run as a singleton (one reducer) or multiple reducers. Neither is right or wrong, it depends on your use-case. -Recognize that the more reducers that are assigned to the job, the more simultaneous connections to the RDBMS will be created - this will scale, but only to a point. +Recognize that the more reducers that are assigned to the job, the more simultaneous connections to the RDBMS will be created - this will scale, but only to a point. [source,java] ---- - public static class MyRdbmsReducer extends Reducer { +public static class MyRdbmsReducer extends Reducer { - private Connection c = null; + private Connection c = null; - public void setup(Context context) { - // create DB connection... - } + public void setup(Context context) { + // create DB connection... + } - public void reduce(Text key, Iterable values, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { - // do summarization - // in this example the keys are Text, but this is just an example - } + public void reduce(Text key, Iterable values, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { + // do summarization + // in this example the keys are Text, but this is just an example + } - public void cleanup(Context context) { - // close db connection - } + public void cleanup(Context context) { + // close db connection + } } ---- -In the end, the summary results are written to your RDBMS table/s. +In the end, the summary results are written to your RDBMS table/s. [[mapreduce.htable.access]] == Accessing Other HBase Tables in a MapReduce Job -Although the framework currently allows one HBase table as input to a MapReduce job, other HBase tables can be accessed as lookup tables, etc., in a MapReduce job via creating an Table instance in the setup method of the Mapper. +Although the framework currently allows one HBase table as input to a MapReduce job, other HBase tables can be accessed as lookup tables, etc., in a MapReduce job via creating an Table instance in the setup method of the Mapper. [source,java] ---- public class MyMapper extends TableMapper { @@ -571,16 +570,16 @@ public class MyMapper extends TableMapper { } public void map(ImmutableBytesWritable row, Result value, Context context) throws IOException, InterruptedException { - // process Result... - // use 'myOtherTable' for lookups + // process Result... + // use 'myOtherTable' for lookups } ----- +---- [[mapreduce.specex]] == Speculative Execution It is generally advisable to turn off speculative execution for MapReduce jobs that use HBase as a source. This can either be done on a per-Job basis through properties, on on the entire cluster. -Especially for longer running jobs, speculative execution will create duplicate map-tasks which will double-write your data to HBase; this is probably not what you want. +Especially for longer running jobs, speculative execution will create duplicate map-tasks which will double-write your data to HBase; this is probably not what you want. -See <> for more information. +See <> for more information.