Nutch+HBase

时间:2022-04-20 03:36:52

Nutch+HBase

当我们为nutch的架构发愁的时候,nutch的开发人员送来了nutchbase。我一些简单的测试表明,在hadoop0.20.1和hbase0.20.2上,稍加修改可以运行起来。 
它的优点很明显:架构合理.

开发者是这样说的,引用自jira 
http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NUTCH-650

A) Why integrate with hbase?

All your data in a central location 
No more segment/crawldb/linkdb merges. 
No
more "missing" data in a job. There are a lot of places where we copy
data from one structure to another just so that it is available in a
later job. For example, during parsing we don't have access to a URL's
fetch status. So we copy fetch status into content metadata. This will
no longer be necessary with hbase integration. 
A much simpler data
model. If you want to update a small part in a single record, now you
have to write a MR job that reads the relevant directory, change the
single record, remove old directory and rename new directory. With
hbase, you can just update that record. Also, hbase gives us access to
Yahoo! Pig, which I think, with its SQL-ish language may be easier for
people to understand and use. 
B) Design 
Design is actually rather straightforward.

We
store everything (fetch time, status, content, parsed text, outlinks,
inlinks, etc.) in hbase. I have written a small utility class that
creates "webtable" with necessary columns. 
So now most jobs just take the name of the table as input. 
There
are two main classes for interfacing with hbase. ImmutableRowPart wraps
around a RowResult and has helper getters (getStatus(), getContent(),
etc.). RowPart is similar to ImmutableRowPart but also has setters. The
idea is that RowPart also wraps RowResult but also keeps a list of
updates done to that row. So when getSomething is called, it first
checks if Something is already updated (if so then returns the updated
version) or returns from RowResult. RowPart can also create a
BatchUpdate from its list of updates. 
URLs are stores in reversed
host order. For example, http://bar.foo.com:8983/to/index.html?a=b
becomes com.foo.bar:http:8983/to/index.html?a=b. This way, URLs from the
same tld/host/domain are stored closer to each other. TableUtil has
methods for reversing and unreversing URLs. 
CrawlDatum Status-es are simplifed. Since everything is in central location now, no point in having a DB and FETCH status. 
Jobs:

Each
job marks rows so that the next job knows which rows to read. For
example, if GeneratorHbase decides that a URL should be generated it
marks the URL with a TMP_FETCH_MARK (Marking a url is simply creating a
special metadata field.) When FetcherHbase runs, it skips over anything
without this special mark. 
InjectorHbase: First, a job runs where
injected urls are marked. Then in the next job, if a row has the mark
but nothing else (here, I assumed that if a row has "status:" column,
that it already exists), InjectorHbase initializes the row. 
GeneratorHbase: Supports max-per-host configuration and topN. Marks generated urls with a marker. 
FetcherHbase: Very similar to original Fetcher. Marks urls successfully fetched. Skips over URLs not marked by GeneratorHbase 
ParseTable: Similar to original Parser. Outlinks are stored "outlinks:<fromUrl>" -> "anchor". 
UpdateTable: Does updatedb's and invertlink's job. Also clears any markers. 
IndexerHbase: Indexes the entire table. Skips over URLs not parsed successfully.

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