How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

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How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Ben Yan
Hi:

        How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished, so that the downstream judge when the directory can be read.

Best
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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Hung
it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



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Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/
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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Ben Yan
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

> On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung <[hidden email]> wrote:
>
> it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
> so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
> Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
> period.
>
> If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
> ready.
> In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
> arrived.
> You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
> until watermark
> reaches
>
> Best,
>
> Sendoh
>
>
>
> --
> Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Kien Truong

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



--
Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

    
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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Ben Yan
Hi ,

I have tested it. There are some small problems. When checkpoint is finished, the name of the file will change, and the success file will be written before checkpoint.

Best,
Ben

On 1 Feb 2018, at 8:06 PM, Kien Truong <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



--
Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

    

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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Fabian Hueske-2
In case of a failure, Flink rolls back the job to the last checkpoint and reprocesses all data since that checkpoint.
Also the BucketingSink will truncate a file to the position of the last checkpoint if the file system supports truncate. If not, it writes a file with the valid length and starts a new file.

Therefore, all files that the BucketingSink finishes must be treated as volatile until the next checkpoint is completed.
Only when a checkpoint is completed a finalized file may be read. The files are renamed on checkpoint to signal that they are final and can be read. This would also be the right time to generate a _SUCCESS file.
Have a look at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method.

Best, Fabian




2018-02-05 6:43 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

I have tested it. There are some small problems. When checkpoint is finished, the name of the file will change, and the success file will be written before checkpoint.

Best,
Ben


On 1 Feb 2018, at 8:06 PM, Kien Truong <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



--
Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

    


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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Ben Yan
Hi ,

You've got a point. I saw that method, but how can I make sure that all the subtasks checkpoint are finished, because I can only write _SUCCESS file at that time.

Best,
Ben

On 5 Feb 2018, at 6:34 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

In case of a failure, Flink rolls back the job to the last checkpoint and reprocesses all data since that checkpoint.
Also the BucketingSink will truncate a file to the position of the last checkpoint if the file system supports truncate. If not, it writes a file with the valid length and starts a new file.

Therefore, all files that the BucketingSink finishes must be treated as volatile until the next checkpoint is completed.
Only when a checkpoint is completed a finalized file may be read. The files are renamed on checkpoint to signal that they are final and can be read. This would also be the right time to generate a _SUCCESS file.
Have a look at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method.

Best, Fabian




2018-02-05 6:43 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

I have tested it. There are some small problems. When checkpoint is finished, the name of the file will change, and the success file will be written before checkpoint.

Best,
Ben


On 1 Feb 2018, at 8:06 PM, Kien Truong <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



--
Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

    



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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Fabian Hueske-2
The notifyCheckpointComplete() method will be called when all subtasks of a job completed their checkpoints.
Check the JavaDocs of the CheckpointListener class [1].

Please note that you need to handle the case where multiple tasks try to create the _SUCCESS file concurrently.
So, there is a good chance of race conditions between file checks and modifications.

Best, Fabian

2018-02-06 4:14 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

You've got a point. I saw that method, but how can I make sure that all the subtasks checkpoint are finished, because I can only write _SUCCESS file at that time.

Best,
Ben


On 5 Feb 2018, at 6:34 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

In case of a failure, Flink rolls back the job to the last checkpoint and reprocesses all data since that checkpoint.
Also the BucketingSink will truncate a file to the position of the last checkpoint if the file system supports truncate. If not, it writes a file with the valid length and starts a new file.

Therefore, all files that the BucketingSink finishes must be treated as volatile until the next checkpoint is completed.
Only when a checkpoint is completed a finalized file may be read. The files are renamed on checkpoint to signal that they are final and can be read. This would also be the right time to generate a _SUCCESS file.
Have a look at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method.

Best, Fabian




2018-02-05 6:43 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

I have tested it. There are some small problems. When checkpoint is finished, the name of the file will change, and the success file will be written before checkpoint.

Best,
Ben


On 1 Feb 2018, at 8:06 PM, Kien Truong <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



--
Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

    




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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Ben Yan
Hi, 

Thanks for your reply! See here :https://github.com/apache/flink/blob/master/flink-connectors/flink-connector-filesystem/src/main/java/org/apache/flink/streaming/connectors/fs/bucketing/BucketingSink.java#L652  After calling this method, the file is renamed,and we can't determine which subtask is finished at last.

Best,
Ben

On 6 Feb 2018, at 5:35 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

The notifyCheckpointComplete() method will be called when all subtasks of a job completed their checkpoints.
Check the JavaDocs of the CheckpointListener class [1].

Please note that you need to handle the case where multiple tasks try to create the _SUCCESS file concurrently.
So, there is a good chance of race conditions between file checks and modifications.

Best, Fabian

2018-02-06 4:14 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

You've got a point. I saw that method, but how can I make sure that all the subtasks checkpoint are finished, because I can only write _SUCCESS file at that time.

Best,
Ben


On 5 Feb 2018, at 6:34 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

In case of a failure, Flink rolls back the job to the last checkpoint and reprocesses all data since that checkpoint.
Also the BucketingSink will truncate a file to the position of the last checkpoint if the file system supports truncate. If not, it writes a file with the valid length and starts a new file.

Therefore, all files that the BucketingSink finishes must be treated as volatile until the next checkpoint is completed.
Only when a checkpoint is completed a finalized file may be read. The files are renamed on checkpoint to signal that they are final and can be read. This would also be the right time to generate a _SUCCESS file.
Have a look at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method.

Best, Fabian




2018-02-05 6:43 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

I have tested it. There are some small problems. When checkpoint is finished, the name of the file will change, and the success file will be written before checkpoint.

Best,
Ben


On 1 Feb 2018, at 8:06 PM, Kien Truong <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



--
Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

    





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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Ben Yan
Hi, 

I think it can be judged at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method  in this way, as shown below:
if (!bucketState.isWriterOpen &&
bucketState.pendingFiles.isEmpty() &&
bucketState.pendingFilesPerCheckpoint.isEmpty()) {
boolean flag = true;
RemoteIterator<LocatedFileStatus> files = fs.listFiles(new Path(directory), false);
while (files.hasNext()) {
LocatedFileStatus file = files.next();
String fileName = file.getPath().getName();
if (fileName.lastIndexOf(".") != -1) {
flag = false;
break;
}
}
Path path = new Path(directory + "/_SUCCESS");
if (flag && !fs.exists(path)){
FSDataOutputStream outputStream = fs.create(path);
outputStream.flush();
outputStream.close();
}
// We've dealt with all the pending files and the writer for this bucket is not currently open.
// Therefore this bucket is currently inactive and we can remove it from our state.
bucketStatesIt.remove();
}

But we find this problem: occasionally, a file is always in the in-progress state, and the amount of data processed by each sub task is almost the same, and there is no data skew. There are no exceptions in the program.

Best,
Ben



On 6 Feb 2018, at 5:50 PM, xiaobin yan <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi, 

Thanks for your reply! See here :https://github.com/apache/flink/blob/master/flink-connectors/flink-connector-filesystem/src/main/java/org/apache/flink/streaming/connectors/fs/bucketing/BucketingSink.java#L652  After calling this method, the file is renamed,and we can't determine which subtask is finished at last.

Best,
Ben

On 6 Feb 2018, at 5:35 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

The notifyCheckpointComplete() method will be called when all subtasks of a job completed their checkpoints.
Check the JavaDocs of the CheckpointListener class [1].

Please note that you need to handle the case where multiple tasks try to create the _SUCCESS file concurrently.
So, there is a good chance of race conditions between file checks and modifications.

Best, Fabian

2018-02-06 4:14 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

You've got a point. I saw that method, but how can I make sure that all the subtasks checkpoint are finished, because I can only write _SUCCESS file at that time.

Best,
Ben


On 5 Feb 2018, at 6:34 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

In case of a failure, Flink rolls back the job to the last checkpoint and reprocesses all data since that checkpoint.
Also the BucketingSink will truncate a file to the position of the last checkpoint if the file system supports truncate. If not, it writes a file with the valid length and starts a new file.

Therefore, all files that the BucketingSink finishes must be treated as volatile until the next checkpoint is completed.
Only when a checkpoint is completed a finalized file may be read. The files are renamed on checkpoint to signal that they are final and can be read. This would also be the right time to generate a _SUCCESS file.
Have a look at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method.

Best, Fabian




2018-02-05 6:43 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

I have tested it. There are some small problems. When checkpoint is finished, the name of the file will change, and the success file will be written before checkpoint.

Best,
Ben


On 1 Feb 2018, at 8:06 PM, Kien Truong <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



--
Sent from: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/

    






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Re: How does BucketingSink generate a SUCCESS file when a directory is finished

Fabian Hueske-2
According to the JavaDocs of BucketingSink, in-progress files are still being written to.
I don't know what would cause a file to remain in that state.

Another thing to mention, you might want to ensure that only the last task that renames the file generates the _SUCCESS file.
Otherwise, the data might be consumed too early. You'd have to figure out how to do that in a race-condition free way.

Best, Fabian

2018-02-06 11:03 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi, 

I think it can be judged at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method  in this way, as shown below:
if (!bucketState.isWriterOpen &&
bucketState.pendingFiles.isEmpty() &&
bucketState.pendingFilesPerCheckpoint.isEmpty()) {
boolean flag = true;
RemoteIterator<LocatedFileStatus> files = fs.listFiles(new Path(directory), false);
while (files.hasNext()) {
LocatedFileStatus file = files.next();
String fileName = file.getPath().getName();
if (fileName.lastIndexOf(".") != -1) {
flag = false;
break;
}
}
Path path = new Path(directory + "/_SUCCESS");
if (flag && !fs.exists(path)){
FSDataOutputStream outputStream = fs.create(path);
outputStream.flush();
outputStream.close();
}
// We've dealt with all the pending files and the writer for this bucket is not currently open.
// Therefore this bucket is currently inactive and we can remove it from our state.
bucketStatesIt.remove();
}

But we find this problem: occasionally, a file is always in the in-progress state, and the amount of data processed by each sub task is almost the same, and there is no data skew. There are no exceptions in the program.

Best,
Ben



On 6 Feb 2018, at 5:50 PM, xiaobin yan <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi, 

Thanks for your reply! See here :https://github.com/apache/flink/blob/master/flink-connectors/flink-connector-filesystem/src/main/java/org/apache/flink/streaming/connectors/fs/bucketing/BucketingSink.java#L652  After calling this method, the file is renamed,and we can't determine which subtask is finished at last.

Best,
Ben

On 6 Feb 2018, at 5:35 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

The notifyCheckpointComplete() method will be called when all subtasks of a job completed their checkpoints.
Check the JavaDocs of the CheckpointListener class [1].

Please note that you need to handle the case where multiple tasks try to create the _SUCCESS file concurrently.
So, there is a good chance of race conditions between file checks and modifications.

Best, Fabian

2018-02-06 4:14 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

You've got a point. I saw that method, but how can I make sure that all the subtasks checkpoint are finished, because I can only write _SUCCESS file at that time.

Best,
Ben


On 5 Feb 2018, at 6:34 PM, Fabian Hueske <[hidden email]> wrote:

In case of a failure, Flink rolls back the job to the last checkpoint and reprocesses all data since that checkpoint.
Also the BucketingSink will truncate a file to the position of the last checkpoint if the file system supports truncate. If not, it writes a file with the valid length and starts a new file.

Therefore, all files that the BucketingSink finishes must be treated as volatile until the next checkpoint is completed.
Only when a checkpoint is completed a finalized file may be read. The files are renamed on checkpoint to signal that they are final and can be read. This would also be the right time to generate a _SUCCESS file.
Have a look at the BucketingSink.notifyCheckpointComplete() method.

Best, Fabian




2018-02-05 6:43 GMT+01:00 xiaobin yan <[hidden email]>:
Hi ,

I have tested it. There are some small problems. When checkpoint is finished, the name of the file will change, and the success file will be written before checkpoint.

Best,
Ben


On 1 Feb 2018, at 8:06 PM, Kien Truong <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi,

I did not actually test this, but I think with Flink 1.4 you can extend BucketingSink and overwrite the invoke method to access the watermark

Pseudo code:

invoke(IN value, SinkFunction.Context context) {
   long currentWatermark = context.watermark()
   long taskIndex = getRuntimeContext().getIndexOfThisSubtask()

    
    if (taskIndex == 0 && currentWatermark - lastSuccessWatermark > 1 hour) {
       Write _SUCCESS
       lastSuccessWatermark = currentWatermark round down to 1 hour
    }
    invoke(value)
}

Regards,
Kien
On 1/31/2018 5:54 PM, xiaobin yan wrote:
Hi:

I think so too! But I have a question that when should I add this logic in BucketingSink! And who does this logic, and ensures that the logic is executed only once, not every parallel instance of the sink that executes this logic!

Best,
Ben

On 31 Jan 2018, at 5:58 PM, Hung [hidden email] wrote:

it depends on how you partition your file. in my case I write file per hour,
so I'm sure that file is ready after that hour period, in processing time.
Here, read to be ready means this file contains all the data in that hour
period.

If the downstream runs in a batch way, you may want to ensure the file is
ready.
In this case, ready to read can mean all the data before watermark as
arrived.
You could take the BucketingSink and implement this logic there, maybe wait
until watermark
reaches

Best,

Sendoh



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