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Real-Time Data Processing with a Flow

In this guide you will learn how to process data in real time with the Cask Data Application Platform (CDAP). You will also learn how easy it is to scale out real-time data processing applications on CDAP.

What You Will Build

You will build a CDAP application that processes disk usage information across machines in a large company in order to identify disks that may need to be replaced soon. You will:

  • Build a Flow to process disk usage data in real time;
  • Use Datasets to store the number of slow reads per disk and track slow disks that may need to be replaced soon; and
  • Build a Service to query via HTTP which slow disks should be replaced.

What You Will Need

Let’s Build It!

The following sections will guide you through implementing a real-time data processing application from scratch. If you want to deploy and run the application right away, you can clone the sources from this GitHub repository. In that case, feel free to skip the following two sections and jump directly to the Build and Run Application section.

Application Design

In CDAP, you process data in real time by implementing a Flow. In this example the Flow consists of two Flowlets. The Detector Flowlet consumes data from a diskReads Stream, parses the event, and outputs the disk ID if the event was a slow disk read. The Tracker Flowlet reads the disk ID emitted by the Detector, and updates a count of how often that disk has recorded a slow read. If a disk has recorded too many slow reads, the disk ID is written to a separate dataset that tracks all disks that should soon be replaced.

docs/images/app-design.png

Implementation

The recommended way to build a CDAP application from scratch is to use a Maven project. Use the following directory structure (you’ll find contents of the files below):

./pom.xml
./src/main/java/co/cask/cdap/guides/flow/DiskPerformanceApp.java
./src/main/java/co/cask/cdap/guides/flow/DiskPerformanceFlow.java
./src/main/java/co/cask/cdap/guides/flow/DiskPerformanceHTTPHandler.java
./src/main/java/co/cask/cdap/guides/flow/DetectorFlowlet.java
./src/main/java/co/cask/cdap/guides/flow/TrackerFlowlet.java

First create the application, which contains a stream, flow, and datasets.

public class DiskPerformanceApp extends AbstractApplication {
  static final String APP_NAME = "DiskPerformanceApp";
  static final String STREAM_NAME = "diskReads";

  @Override
  public void configure() {
    setName(APP_NAME);
    addStream(new Stream(STREAM_NAME));
    createDataset("slowDiskReads", KeyValueTable.class);
    createDataset("slowDisks", KeyValueTable.class);
    addFlow(new DiskPerformanceFlow());
    addService(DiskPerformanceHTTPHandler.NAME, new DiskPerformanceHTTPHandler());
  }
}

Next, we create a Flow, which is composed of two Flowlets, the Detector and the Tracker. The Detector Flowlet parses disk I/O events from the Stream and emits the disk ID if the operation is slower than a threshold. The Tracker consumes the output of the Detector Flowlet and performs an analysis to detect a slow disk. Since a Tracker Flowlet performs dataset operations, it may be slower than a Detector Flowlet that performs all processing in memory. Thus, it's a good idea to have multiple Tracker Flowlet instances.

In the Flow specification below, we'll start with a single Detector and two Tracker Flowlets. The parser reads from the stream, and the tracker then reads from the parser. We will set the number of Tracker instances to two. This means that there will be two separate Trackers running, each taking turns reading what the Detector outputs. You want to do this if a single Detector can output more quickly than a single Tracker can process.

public class DiskPerformanceFlow extends AbstractFlow {
  static final String NAME = "DiskPerformanceFlow";

  @Override
  public void configure() {
    setName(NAME);
    setDescription("Tracks slow disks using I/O ops stats");
    addFlowlet(DetectorFlowlet.NAME, new DetectorFlowlet());
    // start with 2 instances of the tracker
    addFlowlet(TrackerFlowlet.NAME, new TrackerFlowlet(), 2);
    connectStream(DiskPerformanceApp.STREAM_NAME, DetectorFlowlet.NAME);
    connect(DetectorFlowlet.NAME, TrackerFlowlet.NAME);
  }
}

Next we create the Detector Flowlet, which reads from the Stream and outputs the disk ID if the event was a slow read.

public class DetectorFlowlet extends AbstractFlowlet {
  private static final long SLOW_THRESHOLD = 1000;
  static final String NAME = "slowReadDetector";

  private OutputEmitter<String> out;

  @ProcessInput
  public void process(StreamEvent diskMetrics) {
    String event = Charsets.UTF_8.decode(diskMetrics.getBody()).toString();
    // events are expected to have the following format:
    // diskId operationTime (in microseconds)
    String[] fields = event.split(" ", 2);
    String diskId = fields[0];
    long readTime = Long.parseLong(fields[1]);
    if (readTime > SLOW_THRESHOLD) {
      out.emit(diskId);
    }
  }
}

Next we create the Tracker Flowlet, which reads the output of the Detector Flowlet, and updates how many times each disk reported a slow read. If a disk records too many slow reads, the Tracker places it in a separate dataset used to track slow disks that may need to be replaced soon.

public class TrackerFlowlet extends AbstractFlowlet {
  // intentionally set very low for illustrative purposes
  private static final long FLAG_THRESHOLD = 3;
  static final String NAME = "slowDiskTracker";

  @UseDataSet("slowDiskReads")
  private KeyValueTable slowDiskReadsTable;

  @UseDataSet("slowDisks")
  private KeyValueTable slowDisksTable;

  @ProcessInput
  public void process(String diskId) {
    byte[] countAsBytes = slowDiskReadsTable.read(diskId);
    long slowCount = countAsBytes == null ? 0 : Bytes.toLong(countAsBytes);
    slowCount++;
    slowDiskReadsTable.write(diskId, Bytes.toBytes(slowCount));
    if (slowCount == FLAG_THRESHOLD) {
      slowDisksTable.write(diskId, Bytes.toBytes(System.currentTimeMillis()));
    }
  }
}

Finally, we implement a Service that exposes a RESTful API used to display the slow disks that need to be replaced soon:

public class DiskPerformanceHTTPHandler extends AbstractHttpServiceHandler {
  private static final SimpleDateFormat DATE_FORMAT = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss z");
  static final String NAME = "DiskPerformanceService";

  @UseDataSet("slowDisks")
  private KeyValueTable slowDisksTable;

  @Path("slowdisks")
  @GET
  public void getSlowDisks(HttpServiceRequest request, HttpServiceResponder responder) {
    Iterator<KeyValue<byte[], byte[]>> slowDisksScan = slowDisksTable.scan(null, null);
    Map<String, String> slowDisks = Maps.newHashMap();
    while (slowDisksScan.hasNext()) {
      KeyValue<byte[], byte[]> slowDisk = slowDisksScan.next();
      String diskId = Bytes.toString(slowDisk.getKey());
      long troubleTime = Bytes.toLong(slowDisk.getValue());
      String troubleTimeStr = DATE_FORMAT.format(new Date(troubleTime));
      slowDisks.put(diskId, troubleTimeStr);
    }
    responder.sendJson(200, slowDisks);
  }
}

With this, we have a working application! We can build it, send data to the stream, and send an HTTP request to get slow disks that should be replaced soon. Before we do that, let’s add a couple enhancements.

Real-Time Processing with Micro-batches

Everything that happens in the process method of a flowlet is guaranteed to happen exactly once. This is made possible by the execution of each process method inside a separate transaction, which is done by the CDAP framework. The overhead of the transaction is very small, but it is a good idea to minimize it even further by instructing the framework to process multiple inputs within the same transaction. That is, consume up to a small number of inputs, if those are available. This technique is called "processing with micro-batches."

With a batch size of 100, we will pay the cost of the overhead just once for every 100 events instead of 100 times for 100 events. Telling a flowlet to process its input in batches of 100 is as simple as adding the Batch annotation to the process method.

public class TrackerFlowlet extends AbstractFlowlet {
  ...

  @ProcessInput
  @Batch(100)
  public void process(String diskId) {
    ...
  }
}

Most of the time, using mini-batches is a trade-off between processing latency and throughput. You pay less overhead for transactions with mini-batches in order to reach a higher throughput. At the same time, your event is processed only when the whole batch is processed, which usually means a higher latency.

Optimizing for Scale

When using micro-batching, you need to be also careful about two things:

  • running out of memory; and
  • the increased chance for conflicts.

When you process data in batches, you keep the entire batch and any intermediate data in memory, which grows as you increase the batch size. When you consume data with multiple flowlet instances which update the same values in datasets, there is a chance for a conflict. The framework resolves them automatically, but in the end, you pay a price for the overhead caused by a retry. As batch size grows, the chance for a conflict increases, as more rows are modified by overlapping transactions. It is important to correctly partition data between flowlet instances to reduce the chance of conflict or to avoid it altogether.

One possible strategy is round-robin, which basically means that data is partitioned randomly and different batches processed in parallel may have the same values and may result in updating the same cells in a dataset. Using hash-partitioning instead of round-robin will help to resolve this. Let's take a look at the data flow of our application to see how we can employ a hash-partitioning strategy to avoid conflicts.

Suppose the Detector reads two slow disk reads for disk1. It outputs “disk1” and again outputs “disk1”. Since the default partitioning strategy is round-robin, Tracker1 takes the first “disk1” and Tracker2 takes the second “disk1”. Since both Trackers are running simultaneously, they both read that “disk1” was slow 0 times, they both add one to that count of 0, then both attempt to write what they think is the new value of 1. This is called a write conflict. CDAP detects the conflict, allows only one write to go through, then replays the entire second event. For example, CDAP may decide to let Tracker1 go through, which updates the slow count of disk1 to 1. When Tracker2 tries to write, CDAP will detect the conflict, then replay the event. Tracker2 reads “disk1” as input, gets the slow count of disk1 which has now been updated to 1, adds 1 to the count, and successfully writes the new value of 2.

Now pretend that we are using batches of 1000 instead of batches of 1. Tracker1 takes a batch of 1000 and Tracker2 takes a separate batch of 1000. The chance that Tracker1 has a disk in its batch that also appears in Tracker2’s batch is pretty high. This means that when they both go to update their counts, only one of their updates will go through, with the other needing to be replayed. This means the work that one Tracker did will be entirely wasted and retried again, which is much more costly with a big batch size because everything in the batch must be replayed.

One way to solve this problem is to make sure that no disks that go to Tracker1 ever go to Tracker2. For example, all events for disk1 should go only to Tracker1, and never should go to Tracker2. This is done by using hash partitioning instead of round-robin. This is easy in CDAP and can be done in two lines. When emitting in the Detector, a partition ID and key must be given in addition to the data being emitted.

public class DetectorFlowlet extends AbstractFlowlet {
  ...

  @ProcessInput
  public void process(StreamEvent diskMetrics) {
    ...
    if (readTime > SLOW_THRESHOLD) {
      out.emit(diskId, "diskId", diskId);
    }
  }
}

In the Tracker, you simply add the HashPartition annotation with the partition ID.

public class TrackerFlowlet extends AbstractFlowlet {
  ...

  @ProcessInput
  @Batch(10)
  @HashPartition("diskId")
  public void process(String diskId) {
    ...
  }
}

Now we can enjoy the benefits of larger batch sizes without worrying about wasted work due to write conflicts. With batching and hash partitioning, our Detector and Tracker classes have changed just three lines with their final versions below:

public class DetectorFlowlet extends AbstractFlowlet {
  private static final long SLOW_THRESHOLD = 1000;
  static final String NAME = "slowReadDetector";

  private OutputEmitter<String> out;

  @ProcessInput
  public void process(StreamEvent diskMetrics) {
    String event = Charsets.UTF_8.decode(diskMetrics.getBody()).toString();
    // events are expected to have the following format:
    // diskId operationTime (in microseconds)
    String[] fields = event.split(" ", 2);
    String diskId = fields[0];
    long readTime = Long.parseLong(fields[1]);
    if (readTime > SLOW_THRESHOLD) {
      out.emit(diskId, "diskId", diskId);
    }
  }
}

public class TrackerFlowlet extends AbstractFlowlet {
  // intentionally set very low for illustrative purposes
  private static final long FLAG_THRESHOLD = 3;
  static final String NAME = "slowDiskTracker";

  @UseDataSet("slowDiskReads")
  private KeyValueTable slowDiskReadsTable;

  @UseDataSet("slowDisks")
  private KeyValueTable slowDisksTable;

  @ProcessInput
  @Batch(100)
  @HashPartition("diskId")
  public void process(String diskId) {
    byte[] countAsBytes = slowDiskReadsTable.read(diskId);
    long slowCount = countAsBytes == null ? 0 : Bytes.toLong(countAsBytes);
    slowCount++;
    slowDiskReadsTable.write(diskId, Bytes.toBytes(slowCount));
    if (slowCount == FLAG_THRESHOLD) {
      slowDisksTable.write(diskId, Bytes.toBytes(System.currentTimeMillis()));
    }
  }
}

Build and Run Application

The DiskPerformanceApp can be built and packaged using the Apache Maven command:

$ mvn clean package

Note that the remaining commands assume that the cdap-cli.sh script is available on your PATH. If this is not the case, please add it:

$ export PATH=$PATH:<CDAP home>/bin

If you haven't already started a standalone CDAP installation, start it with the command:

$ cdap.sh start

We can then deploy the application:

$ cdap-cli.sh load artifact target/cdap-flow-guide-<version>.jar
$ cdap-cli.sh create app DiskPerformanceApp cdap-flow-guide <version> user

Next we start the flow:

$ cdap-cli.sh start flow DiskPerformanceApp.DiskPerformanceFlow

Note that there is one instance of the Detector Flowlet running and two instances of the Tracker Flowlet running:

$ cdap-cli.sh get flowlet instances DiskPerformanceApp.DiskPerformanceFlow.slowReadDetector
1

$ cdap-cli.sh get flowlet instances DiskPerformanceApp.DiskPerformanceFlow.slowDiskTracker
2

We can scale out our application and increase the number of Tracker Flowlets to four:

$ cdap-cli.sh set flowlet instances DiskPerformanceApp.DiskPerformanceFlow.slowDiskTracker 4
Successfully set flowlet 'DiskPerformanceFlow' of flow 'slowDiskTracker' of app 'DiskPerformanceApp' to 4 instances

$ cdap-cli.sh get flowlet instances DiskPerformanceApp.DiskPerformanceFlow.slowDiskTracker
4

Scaling your application is easy in CDAP! Now we can manually send enough slow disk events to the diskReads stream to get a disk classified as a slow disk:

$ cdap-cli.sh send stream diskReads \''disk1 1001'\'
$ cdap-cli.sh send stream diskReads \''disk1 1001'\'
$ cdap-cli.sh send stream diskReads \''disk1 1001'\'
$ cdap-cli.sh send stream diskReads \''disk1 1001'\'
$ cdap-cli.sh send stream diskReads \''disk1 1001'\'

Next we start the service:

$ cdap-cli.sh start service DiskPerformanceApp.DiskPerformanceService

The Service exposes a RESTful API that allows us to display all slow disks and the timestamp at which they were flagged as a slow disk. Make the request to query slow disks:

$ curl -w'\n' http://localhost:10000/v3/namespaces/default/apps/DiskPerformanceApp/services/DiskPerformanceService/methods/slowdisks

Example output:

{"disk1":"2015-04-04 13:46:33 PDT"}

Extend This Example

To make this application more useful, you can extend it by:

  • Including the disk type in the Stream event and categorize a slow read based on the type of disk.
  • Passing your own custom Java object through the Flowlets instead of a String.
  • Adding an endpoint to the Service that can remove a disk from the slowDisks Dataset.
  • Changing the logic so that 1000 normal disk read times counteract a slow disk read.
  • Tracking additional disk metrics, such as write times, and use a combination of factors to determine whether or not a disk belongs in the slowDisks table.

Share and Discuss!

Have a question? Discuss at the CDAP User Mailing List.

License

Copyright © 2014-2015 Cask Data, Inc.

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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