A simple Hadoop streaming library based on conduit,
useful for writing mapper and reducer logic in Haskell and running it on AWS Elastic MapReduce,
Azure HDInsight, GCP Dataproc, and so forth.
Hackage: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/hadoop-streaming
Word Count Example
See the Haddock in HadoopStreaming.Text
for a simple word-count example.
A Few Things to Note
ByteString vs Text
The HadoopStreaming module provides the general Mapper and Reducer data types, whose input and output
types are abstract. They are usually instantiated with either ByteString or Text.
ByteString is more suitable if the input/output needs to be decoded/encoded, for instance using the
base64-bytestring library. On the other hand, Text could make more sense if decoding/encoding is not needed,
or if the data is not UTF-8 encoded (see below regarding encodings). In general I’d imagine ByteString being
used much more often than Text.
The HadoopStreaming.ByteString and HadoopStreaming.Text modules provide some utilities for working with
ByteString and Text, respectively.
Encoding
It is highly recommended that your input data be UTF-8 encoded, as this is the default encoding Hadoop uses. If you
must use other encodings such as UTF-16, keep in mind the following gotchas:
-
It is not enough that your code can work with the encoding you choose to use:
-
By default, if any of your input files does not end with a UTF-8 representation of newline, i.e., a 0x0A byte, Hadoop
streaming will add a 0x0A byte.
-
Likewise, if any line in your mapper output does not contain a UTF-8 representation of tab (0x09), Hadoop streaming will
add it at the end of the line.
This will almost certainly break your job. It may be possible to configure Hadoop streaming and tell it to use other encodings,
so that the above behavior is consistent with the encoding you choose to use, but I don’t know whether that is the case. I tried
-D mapreduce.map.java.opts="-Dfile.encoding=UTF-16BE" but that doesn’t seem to work.
-
If you use ByteString as the input type and use Data.ByteString.hGetLine to read lines from the input, be
aware that Data.ByteString.hGetLine uses 0x0A bytes as line breaks, so it doesn’t work properly for
non-UTF-8 encoded input. For example, in UTF-16BE and UTF-16LE, the newline character is encoded as 0x00 0x0A and 0x0A 0x00,
respectively.