C API libhdfs
Overview
libhdfs is a JNI based C API for Hadoop's Distributed File System (HDFS). It provides C APIs to a subset of the HDFS APIs to manipulate HDFS files and the filesystem. libhdfs is part of the Hadoop distribution and comes pre-compiled in ${HADOOP_HOME}/libhdfs/libhdfs.so .
The APIs
The libhdfs APIs are a subset of: hadoop fs APIs.
The header file for libhdfs describes each API in detail and is available in ${HADOOP_HOME}/src/c++/libhdfs/hdfs.h
A Sample Program
#include "hdfs.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { hdfsFS fs = hdfsConnect("default", 0); const char* writePath = "/tmp/testfile.txt"; hdfsFile writeFile = hdfsOpenFile(fs, writePath, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT, 0, 0, 0); if(!writeFile) { fprintf(stderr, "Failed to open %s for writing!\n", writePath); exit(-1); } char* buffer = "Hello, World!"; tSize num_written_bytes = hdfsWrite(fs, writeFile, (void*)buffer, strlen(buffer)+1); if (hdfsFlush(fs, writeFile)) { fprintf(stderr, "Failed to 'flush' %s\n", writePath); exit(-1); } hdfsCloseFile(fs, writeFile); }
How To Link With The Library
See the Makefile for hdfs_test.c in the libhdfs source directory (${HADOOP_HOME}/src/c++/libhdfs/Makefile) or something like:
gcc above_sample.c -I${HADOOP_HOME}/src/c++/libhdfs -L${HADOOP_HOME}/libhdfs -lhdfs -o above_sample
Common Problems
The most common problem is the CLASSPATH is not set properly when calling a program that uses libhdfs. Make sure you set it to all the Hadoop jars needed to run Hadoop itself. Currently, there is no way to programmatically generate the classpath, but a good bet is to include all the jar files in ${HADOOP_HOME} and ${HADOOP_HOME}/lib as well as the right configuration directory containing hdfs-site.xml
Thread Safe
libhdfs is thread safe
- Concurrency and Hadoop FS "handles"
The Hadoop FS implementation includes a FS handle cache which caches based on the URI of the namenode along with the user connecting. So, all calls to hdfsConnect will return the same handle but calls to hdfsConnectAsUser with different users will return different handles. But, since HDFS client handles are completely thread safe, this has no bearing on concurrency. - Concurrency and libhdfs/JNI
The libhdfs calls to JNI should always be creating thread local storage, so (in theory), libhdfs should be as thread safe as the underlying calls to the Hadoop FS.