Created
November 27, 2009 07:42
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import java.io.IOException; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.HBaseConfiguration; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.HColumnDescriptor; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.HTableDescriptor; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Get; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.HBaseAdmin; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.HConnection; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.HConnectionManager; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.HTable; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Put; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Result; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.ResultScanner; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Scan; | |
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.util.Bytes; | |
/** | |
* | |
* @author imyousuf | |
*/ | |
public class Main { | |
/** | |
* @param args the command line arguments | |
*/ | |
public static void main(String[] args) | |
throws IOException { | |
// You need a configuration object to tell the client where to connect. | |
// When you create a HBaseConfiguration, it reads in whatever you've set | |
// into your hbase-site.xml and in hbase-default.xml, as long as these can | |
// be found on the CLASSPATH | |
HBaseConfiguration config = new HBaseConfiguration(); | |
// Name of the column and column family | |
final String myLittleHBaseTable = "myLittleHBaseTable"; | |
final String myLittleFamily = "myLittleFamily"; | |
//Get a connection for checking whether the table needed exists or need to | |
//be created | |
HConnection hConnection = HConnectionManager.getConnection(config); | |
if (!hConnection.tableExists(myLittleHBaseTable.getBytes())) { | |
//Create a administrative object to create the missing table | |
HBaseAdmin admin = new HBaseAdmin(config); | |
//Create a table description with the table name | |
HTableDescriptor descriptor = new HTableDescriptor(myLittleHBaseTable); | |
//Create a column decriptor defining a column family. | |
final HColumnDescriptor hColumnDescriptor = new HColumnDescriptor( | |
myLittleFamily); | |
//Add column family to table | |
descriptor.addFamily(hColumnDescriptor); | |
//Ask admin object to create table using the descriptor | |
admin.createTable(descriptor); | |
} | |
// This instantiates an HTable object that connects you to | |
// the "myLittleHBaseTable" table. | |
HTable table = new HTable(config, myLittleHBaseTable); | |
// To add to a row, use Put. A Put constructor takes the name of the row | |
// you want to insert into as a byte array. In HBase, the Bytes class has | |
// utility for converting all kinds of java types to byte arrays. In the | |
// below, we are converting the String "myLittleRow" into a byte array to | |
// use as a row key for our update. Once you have a Put instance, you can | |
// adorn it by setting the names of columns you want to update on the row, | |
// the timestamp to use in your update, etc.If no timestamp, the server | |
// applies current time to the edits. | |
Put p = new Put(Bytes.toBytes("myLittleRow")); | |
// To set the value you'd like to update in the row 'myRow', specify the | |
// column family, column qualifier, and value of the table cell you'd like | |
// to update. The column family must already exist in your table schema. | |
// The qualifier can be anything. All must be specified as byte arrays as | |
// hbase is all about byte arrays. Lets pretend the table | |
// 'myLittleHBaseTable' was created with a family 'myLittleFamily'. | |
p.add(Bytes.toBytes(myLittleFamily), Bytes.toBytes("someQualifier"), | |
Bytes.toBytes("Some Value")); | |
// Once you've adorned your Put instance with all the updates you want to | |
// make, to commit it do the following (The HTable#put method takes the | |
// Put instance you've been building and pushes the changes you made into | |
// hbase) | |
table.put(p); | |
// Now, to retrieve the data we just wrote. The values that come back are | |
// Result instances. Generally, a Result is an object that will package up | |
// the hbase return into the form you find most palatable. | |
Get g = new Get(Bytes.toBytes("myLittleRow")); | |
Result r = table.get(g); | |
byte[] value = r.getValue(Bytes.toBytes(myLittleFamily), | |
Bytes.toBytes("someQualifier")); | |
// If we convert the value bytes, we should get back 'Some Value', the | |
// value we inserted at this location. | |
String valueStr = Bytes.toString(value); | |
System.out.println("GET: " + valueStr); | |
// Sometimes, you won't know the row you're looking for. In this case, you | |
// use a Scanner. This will give you cursor-like interface to the contents | |
// of the table. To set up a Scanner, do like you did above making a Put | |
// and a Get, create a Scan. Adorn it with column names, etc. | |
Scan s = new Scan(); | |
s.addColumn(Bytes.toBytes(myLittleFamily), Bytes.toBytes("someQualifier")); | |
ResultScanner scanner = table.getScanner(s); | |
try { | |
// Scanners return Result instances. | |
// Now, for the actual iteration. One way is to use a while loop like so: | |
for (Result rr = scanner.next(); rr != null; rr = scanner.next()) { | |
// print out the row we found and the columns we were looking for | |
System.out.println("Found row: " + rr); | |
} | |
// The other approach is to use a foreach loop. Scanners are iterable! | |
// for (Result rr : scanner) { | |
// System.out.println("Found row: " + rr); | |
// } | |
} | |
finally { | |
// Make sure you close your scanners when you are done! | |
// Thats why we have it inside a try/finally clause | |
scanner.close(); | |
} | |
} | |
} |
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