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Oozie Examples

Command Line Examples

Setting Up the Examples

Oozie examples are bundled within the Oozie distribution in the oozie-examples.tar.gz file.

Expanding this file will create an examples/ directory in the local file system.

The examples/ directory must be copied to the user HOME directory in HDFS:

$ hadoop fs -put examples examples

NOTE: If an examples directory already exists in HDFS, it must be deleted before copying it again. Otherwise files may not be copied.

Running the Examples

For the Streaming and Pig example, the Oozie Share Library must be installed in HDFS.

Add Oozie bin/ to the environment PATH.

The examples assume the JobTracker is localhost:9001 and the NameNode is hdfs://localhost:9000 . If the actual values are different, the job properties files in the examples directory must be edited to the correct values.

The example applications are under the examples/app directory, one directory per example. The directory contains the application XML file (workflow, or worklfow and coordinator), the job.properties file to submit the job and any JAR files the example may need.

The inputs for all examples are in the examples/input-data/ directory.

The examples create output under the examples/output-data/${EXAMPLE_NAME} directory.

Note : The job.properties file needs to be a local file during submissions, and not a HDFS path.

How to run an example application:

$ oozie job -oozie http://localhost:8080/oozie -config examples/apps/map-reduce/job.properties -run
.
job: 14-20090525161321-oozie-tucu

Check the workflow job status:

$ oozie job -oozie http://localhost:8080/oozie -info 14-20090525161321-oozie-tucu
.
.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Workflow Name :  map-reduce-wf
App Path      :  hdfs://localhost:9000/user/tucu/examples/apps/map-reduce
Status        :  SUCCEEDED
Run           :  0
User          :  tucu
Group         :  users
Created       :  2009-05-26 05:01 +0000
Started       :  2009-05-26 05:01 +0000
Ended         :  2009-05-26 05:01 +0000
Actions
.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Action Name             Type        Status     Transition  External Id            External Status  Error Code    Start Time              End Time
.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
mr-node                 map-reduce  OK         end         job_200904281535_0254  SUCCEEDED        -             2009-05-26 05:01 +0000  2009-05-26 05:01 +0000
.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

To check the workflow job status via the Oozie web console, with a browser go to http://localhost:8080/oozie .

To avoid having to provide the -oozie option with the Oozie URL with every oozie command, set OOZIE_URL env variable to the Oozie URL in the shell environment. For example:

$ export OOZIE_URL="http://localhost:8080/oozie"
$
$ oozie job -info 14-20090525161321-oozie-tucu

Java API Example

Oozie provides a =Java Client API that simplifies integrating Oozie with Java applications. This Java Client API is a convenience API to interact with Oozie Web-Services API.

The following code snippet shows how to submit an Oozie job using the Java Client API.

import org.apache.oozie.client.OozieClient;
import org.apache.oozie.client.WorkflowJob;
.
import java.util.Properties;
.
    ...
.
    // get a OozieClient for local Oozie
    OozieClient wc = new OozieClient("http://bar:8080/oozie");
.
    // create a workflow job configuration and set the workflow application path
    Properties conf = wc.createConfiguration();
    conf.setProperty(OozieClient.APP_PATH, "hdfs://foo:9000/usr/tucu/my-wf-app");
.
    // setting workflow parameters
    conf.setProperty("jobTracker", "foo:9001");
    conf.setProperty("inputDir", "/usr/tucu/inputdir");
    conf.setProperty("outputDir", "/usr/tucu/outputdir");
    ...
.
    // submit and start the workflow job
    String jobId = wc.run(conf);
    System.out.println("Workflow job submitted");
.
    // wait until the workflow job finishes printing the status every 10 seconds
    while (wc.getJobInfo(jobId).getStatus() == Workflow.Status.RUNNING) {
        System.out.println("Workflow job running ...");
        Thread.sleep(10 * 1000);
    }
.
    // print the final status o the workflow job
    System.out.println("Workflow job completed ...");
    System.out.println(wf.getJobInfo(jobId));
    ...

Local Oozie Example

Oozie provides a embedded Oozie implementation, LocalOozie , which is useful for development, debugging and testing of workflow applications within the convenience of an IDE.

The code snipped below shows the usage of the LocalOozie class. All the interaction with Oozie is done using Oozie OozieClient Java API, as shown in the previous section.

The examples bundled with Oozie include the complete and running class, LocalOozieExample from where this snipped was taken.

import org.apache.oozie.local.LocalOozie;
import org.apache.oozie.client.OozieClient;
import org.apache.oozie.client.WorkflowJob;
.
import java.util.Properties;
.
    ...
    // start local Oozie
    LocalOozie.start();
.
    // get a OozieClient for local Oozie
    OozieClient wc = LocalOozie.getClient();
.
    // create a workflow job configuration and set the workflow application path
    Properties conf = wc.createConfiguration();
    conf.setProperty(OozieClient.APP_PATH, "hdfs://foo:9000/usr/tucu/my-wf-app");
.
    // setting workflow parameters
    conf.setProperty("jobTracker", "foo:9001");
    conf.setProperty("inputDir", "/usr/tucu/inputdir");
    conf.setProperty("outputDir", "/usr/tucu/outputdir");
    ...
.
    // submit and start the workflow job
    String jobId = wc.run(conf);
    System.out.println("Workflow job submitted");
.
    // wait until the workflow job finishes printing the status every 10 seconds
    while (wc.getJobInfo(jobId).getStatus() == Workflow.Status.RUNNING) {
        System.out.println("Workflow job running ...");
        Thread.sleep(10 * 1000);
    }
.
    // print the final status o the workflow job
    System.out.println("Workflow job completed ...");
    System.out.println(wf.getJobInfo(jobId));
.
    // stop local Oozie
    LocalOozie.stop();
    ...

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