tHDFSOutputRaw Standard properties
These properties are used to configure tHDFSOutputRaw running in the Standard Job framework.
The Standard tHDFSOutputRaw component belongs to the Big Data family.
The component in this framework is available in all Talend products with Big Data and in Talend Data Fabric.
Basic settings
Property type |
Either Built-In or Repository. Built-In: No property data stored centrally. Repository: Select the repository file where the properties are stored. |
Schema and Edit Schema |
A schema is a row description. It defines the number of fields (columns) to be processed and passed on to the next component. When you create a Spark Job, avoid the reserved word line when naming the fields. The schema of this component is read-only. You can click Edit schema to view the schema.
|
Use an existing connection |
Select this check box and in the Component List click the HDFS connection component from which you want to reuse the connection details already defined. Note that when a Job contains the parent Job and the child Job, Component List presents only the connection components in the same Job level. |
Distribution |
Select the cluster you are using from the drop-down list. The options in the
list vary depending on the component you are using. Among these options, the following
ones requires specific configuration:
|
Version |
Select the version of the Hadoop distribution you are using. The available options vary depending on the component you are using. |
Scheme | Select the URI scheme of the file system to be used from the
Scheme drop-down list. This scheme could be
The schemes present on this list vary depending on the distribution you are using and only the scheme that appears on this list with a given distribution is officially supported by Talend. Once a scheme is selected, the corresponding syntax such as webhdfs://localhost:50070/ for WebHDFS is displayed in the field for the NameNode location of your cluster. If you have selected
ADLS, the connection parameters to be defined become:
|
NameNode URI |
Type in the URI of the Hadoop NameNode, the master node of a Hadoop system. For example, we assume that you have chosen a machine called masternode as the NameNode, then the location is hdfs://masternode:portnumber. If you are using WebHDFS, the location should be webhdfs://masternode:portnumber; WebHDFS with SSL is not supported yet. |
Use kerberos authentication |
If you are accessing the Hadoop cluster running with Kerberos security, select this check box, then, enter the Kerberos principal name for the NameNode in the field displayed. This enables you to use your username to authenticate against the credentials stored in Kerberos. This check box is available depending on the Hadoop distribution you are connecting to. |
Use a keytab to authenticate |
Select the Use a keytab to authenticate check box to log into a Kerberos-enabled system using a given keytab file. A keytab file contains pairs of Kerberos principals and encrypted keys. You need to enter the principal to be used in the Principal field and the access path to the keytab file itself in the Keytab field. This keytab file must be stored in the machine in which your Job actually runs, for example, on a Talend JobServer. Note that the user that executes a keytab-enabled Job is not necessarily the one a principal designates but must have the right to read the keytab file being used. For example, the username you are using to execute a Job is user1 and the principal to be used is guest; in this situation, ensure that user1 has the right to read the keytab file to be used. |
Use Datanode hostname |
Select the Use datanode hostname check box to allow the Job to access datanodes via their hostnames. This actually sets the dfs.client.use.datanode.hostname property to true. When connecting to a S3N filesystem, you must select this check box. |
User name |
The User name field is available when you are not using Kerberos to authenticate. In the User name field, enter the login username for your distribution. If you leave it empty, the username of the machine hosting Talend Studio will be used. |
Group |
Enter the membership including the authentication user under which the HDFS instances were started. This field is available depending on the distribution you are using. |
File Name |
Browse to, or enter the location of the file which you write data to. This file is created automatically if it does not exist. |
Action |
Select the action that you want to perform on the file:
|
Custom encoding |
You may encounter encoding issues when you process the stored data. In that situation, select this check box to display the Encoding list. Select the encoding from the list or select Custom and define it manually. This field is compulsory for database data handling. The supported encodings depend on the JVM that you are using. For more information, see https://docs.oracle.com. This option is not available for a Sequence file. |
Compression |
Select the Compress the data check box to compress the output data. Hadoop provides different compression formats that help reduce the space needed for storing files and speed up data transfer. When reading a compressed file, Talend Studio needs to uncompress it before being able to feed it to the input flow. Note that when the type of the file to be written is Sequence File, the compression algorithm is embedded within the container files (the part- files) of this sequence file. These files can be read by a Talend component such as tHDFSInput within MapReduce Jobs and other applications that understand the sequence file format. Alternatively, when the type is Text File, the output files can be accessed with standard compression utilities that understand the bzip2 or gzip container files. |
Die on error |
Select the check box to stop the execution of the Job when an error occurs. Clear the check box to skip any rows on error and complete the process for error-free rows. When errors are skipped, you can collect the rows on error using a Row > Reject link. |
Advanced settings
Hadoop properties |
Talend Studio
uses a default configuration for its engine to perform
operations in a Hadoop distribution. If you need to use a custom configuration in a specific
situation, complete this table with the property or properties to be customized. Then at
runtime, the customized property or properties will override those default ones.
For further information about the properties required by Hadoop and its related
systems such as HDFS and Hive, see the documentation of the Hadoop distribution you are
using or see Apache's Hadoop documentation and then select the version of the
documentation you want. For demonstration purposes, the links to some properties are listed
below:
|
tStatCatcher Statistics |
Select this check box to collect log data at the component level. |
Global Variables
Global Variables |
FILENAME_PATH: the path of the input file. This is an After variable and it returns a string. ERROR_MESSAGE: the error message generated by the component when an error occurs. This is an After variable and it returns a string. This variable functions only if the Die on error check box is cleared, if the component has this check box. A Flow variable functions during the execution of a component while an After variable functions after the execution of the component. To fill up a field or expression with a variable, press Ctrl+Space to access the variable list and choose the variable to use from it. For more information about variables, see Using contexts and variables. |
Usage
Usage rule |
This component needs an input component that provides the data of a single column. This column must be labeled to content and its type must be Object. For example, you can:
For further information about tHMap, see tHMap. For further information about tConvertType, see tConvertType. For further information about tJavaRow, see tJavaRow. For further information about tFixedFlowInput, see tFixedFlowInput. For further information about how to use a global variable, see Using contexts and variables. |
Dynamic settings |
Click the [+] button to add a row in the table and fill the Code field with a context variable to choose your HDFS connection dynamically from multiple connections planned in your Job. This feature is useful when you need to access files in different HDFS systems or different distributions, especially when you are working in an environment where you cannot change your Job settings, for example, when your Job has to be deployed and executed independent of Talend Studio . The Dynamic settings table is available only when the Use an existing connection check box is selected in the Basic settings view. Once a dynamic parameter is defined, the Component List box in the Basic settings view becomes unusable. For examples on using dynamic parameters, see Reading data from databases through context-based dynamic connections and Reading data from different MySQL databases using dynamically loaded connection parameters. For more information on Dynamic settings and context variables, see Dynamic schema and Creating a context group and define context variables in it. |
Prerequisites |
The Hadoop distribution must be properly installed, so as to guarantee the interaction with Talend Studio . The following list presents MapR related information for example.
For further information about how to install a Hadoop distribution, see the manuals corresponding to the Hadoop distribution you are using. |