Search

Chapter 59. HDFS2

download PDF

HDFS2 Component

Available as of Camel 2.13
The hdfs2 component enables you to read and write messages from/to an HDFS file system using Hadoop 2.x. HDFS is the distributed file system at the heart of Hadoop.
Maven users will need to add the following dependency to their pom.xml for this component:
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId>
    <artifactId>camel-hdfs2</artifactId>
    <version>x.x.x</version>
    <!-- use the same version as your Camel core version -->
</dependency>

URI format

hdfs2://hostname[:port][/path][?options]
You can append query options to the URI in the following format, ?option=value&option=value&... The path is treated in the following way:
  1. as a consumer, if it's a file, it just reads the file, otherwise if it represents a directory it scans all the file under the path satisfying the configured pattern. All the files under that directory must be of the same type.
  2. as a producer, if at least one split strategy is defined, the path is considered a directory and under that directory the producer creates a different file per split named using the configured UuidGenerator.
Note
When consuming from HDFS in normal mode, a file is split into chunks, producing a message per chunk. You can configure the size of the chunk using the chunkSize option. If you want to read from HDFS and write to a regular file using the File component, you can set fileMode=Append to concatenate the chunks.

Options

Name
Default Value
Description
overwrite
true
The file can be overwritten
append
false
Append to existing file. Notice that not all HDFS file systems support the append option.
bufferSize
4096
The buffer size used by HDFS
replication
3
The HDFS replication factor
blockSize
67108864
The size of the HDFS blocks
fileType
NORMAL_FILE
It can be SEQUENCE_FILE, MAP_FILE, ARRAY_FILE, or BLOOMMAP_FILE, see Hadoop
fileSystemType
HDFS
It can be LOCAL for local filesystem
keyType
NULL
The type for the key in case of sequence or map files. See below.
valueType
TEXT
The type for the key in case of sequence or map files. See below.
splitStrategy
A string describing the strategy on how to split the file based on different criteria. See below.
openedSuffix
opened
When a file is opened for reading/writing the file is renamed with this suffix to avoid to read it during the writing phase.
readSuffix
read
Once the file has been read is renamed with this suffix to avoid to read it again.
initialDelay
0
For the consumer, how much to wait (milliseconds) before to start scanning the directory.
delay
0
The interval (milliseconds) between the directory scans.
pattern
*
The pattern used for scanning the directory
chunkSize
4096
When reading a normal file, this is split into chunks producing a message per chunk.
connectOnStartup
true
Camel 2.9.3/2.10.1: Whether to connect to the HDFS file system on starting the producer/consumer. If false then the connection is created on-demand. Notice that HDFS may take up till 15 minutes to establish a connection, as it has hardcoded 45 x 20 sec redelivery. By setting this option to false allows your application to startup, and not block for up till 15 minutes.
owner
The file owner must match this owner for the consumer to pickup the file. Otherwise the file is skipped.

KeyType and ValueType

  • NULL it means that the key or the value is absent
  • BYTE for writing a byte, the java Byte class is mapped into a BYTE
  • BYTES for writing a sequence of bytes. It maps the java ByteBuffer class
  • INT for writing java integer
  • FLOAT for writing java float
  • LONG for writing java long
  • DOUBLE for writing java double
  • TEXT for writing java strings
BYTES is also used with everything else, for example, in Camel a file is sent around as an InputStream, int this case is written in a sequence file or a map file as a sequence of bytes.

Splitting Strategy

In the current version of Hadoop opening a file in append mode is disabled since it's not very reliable. So, for the moment, it's only possible to create new files. The Camel HDFS endpoint tries to solve this problem in this way:
  • If the split strategy option has been defined, the hdfs path will be used as a directory and files will be created using the configured UuidGenerator
  • Every time a splitting condition is met, a new file is created. The splitStrategy option is defined as a string with the following syntax: splitStrategy=<ST>:<value>,<ST>:<value>,*
where <ST> can be:
  • BYTES a new file is created, and the old is closed when the number of written bytes is more than <value>
  • MESSAGES a new file is created, and the old is closed when the number of written messages is more than <value>
  • IDLE a new file is created, and the old is closed when no writing happened in the last <value> milliseconds
Note
note that this strategy currently requires either setting an IDLE value or setting the HdfsConstants.HDFS_CLOSE header to false to use the BYTES/MESSAGES configuration...otherwise, the file will be closed with each message
for example:
hdfs2://localhost/tmp/simple-file?splitStrategy=IDLE:1000,BYTES:5
it means: a new file is created either when it has been idle for more than 1 second or if more than 5 bytes have been written. So, running hadoop fs -ls /tmp/simple-file you'll see that multiple files have been created.

Message Headers

The following headers are supported by this component:

Producer only

Header
Description
CamelFileName
Camel 2.13: Specifies the name of the file to write (relative to the endpoint path). The name can be a String or an Expression object. Only relevant when not using a split strategy.

Controlling to close file stream

When using the HDFS2 producer without a split strategy, then the file output stream is by default closed after the write. However you may want to keep the stream open, and only explicitly close the stream later. For that you can use the header HdfsConstants.HDFS_CLOSE (value = "CamelHdfsClose") to control this. Setting this value to a boolean allows you to explicit control whether the stream should be closed or not.
Notice this does not apply if you use a split strategy, as there are various strategies that can control when the stream is closed.

Using this component in OSGi

There are some quirks when running this component in an OSGi environment related to the mechanism Hadoop 2.x uses to discover different org.apache.hadoop.fs.FileSystem implementations. Hadoop 2.x uses java.util.ServiceLoader which looks for /META-INF/services/org.apache.hadoop.fs.FileSystem files defining available filesystem types and implementations. These resources are not available when running inside OSGi.
As with camel-hdfs component, the default configuration files need to be visible from the bundle class loader. A typical way to deal with it is to keep a copy of core-default.xml (and e.g., hdfs-default.xml) in your bundle root.

Using this component with manually defined routes

There are two options:
  1. Package /META-INF/services/org.apache.hadoop.fs.FileSystem resource with bundle that defines the routes. This resource should list all the required Hadoop 2.x filesystem implementations.
  2. Provide boilerplate initialization code which populates internal, static cache inside org.apache.hadoop.fs.FileSystem class:
org.apache.hadoop.conf.Configuration conf = new org.apache.hadoop.conf.Configuration();
conf.setClass("fs.file.impl", org.apache.hadoop.fs.LocalFileSystem.class, FileSystem.class);
conf.setClass("fs.hdfs.impl", org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DistributedFileSystem.class, FileSystem.class);
...
FileSystem.get("file:///", conf);
FileSystem.get("hdfs://localhost:9000/", conf);
...

Using this component with Blueprint container

Two options:
  1. Package /META-INF/services/org.apache.hadoop.fs.FileSystem resource with bundle that contains blueprint definition.
  2. Add the following to the blueprint definition file:
<bean id="hdfsOsgiHelper" class="org.apache.camel.component.hdfs2.HdfsOsgiHelper">
   <argument>
      <map>
         <entry key="file:///" value="org.apache.hadoop.fs.LocalFileSystem"  />
         <entry key="hdfs://localhost:9000/" value="org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DistributedFileSystem" />
         ...
      </map>
   </argument>
</bean>

<bean id="hdfs2" class="org.apache.camel.component.hdfs2.HdfsComponent" depends-on="hdfsOsgiHelper" />
This way Hadoop 2.x will have correct mapping of URI schemes to filesystem implementations.
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.