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Posted to dev@avro.apache.org by "Catalin Alexandru Zamfir (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2012/05/16 16:39:03 UTC

[jira] [Updated] (AVRO-1093) DataFileWriter, appendEncoded causes AvroRuntimeException when read back

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AVRO-1093?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Catalin Alexandru Zamfir updated AVRO-1093:
-------------------------------------------

    Description: 
We're doing this:
{code}
// Check
		if (!(objRecordsBuffer
		.containsKey (objShardPath))) {
			// Set
			objRecordsBuffer.put (objShardPath,
			new ByteBufferOutputStream ());
		}

		// Set
		Encoder objEncoder =  EncoderFactory.get ()
		.binaryEncoder (objRecordsBuffer
		.get (objShardPath), null);

		// Write
		objGenericDatumWriter.write (objRecordConstructor.build (), objEncoder);
		objEncoder.flush ();

// For
				for (ByteBuffer objRecord : objRecordsBuffer
				.get (objKey).getBufferList ()) {
					// Append
					objRecordWriter.appendEncoded (objRecord);
				}

				// Erase
				objRecordWriter.flush ();
				objRecordWriter.close ();
{code}

It writes the data to HDFS. Reading it back outputs the follosing exception:
{code}
Caused by: org.apache.avro.AvroRuntimeException: java.io.IOException: Block read partially, the data may be corrupt
        at org.apache.avro.file.DataFileStream.hasNext(DataFileStream.java:210)
        at net.RnD.FileUtils.TimestampedReader.hasNext(TimestampedReader.java:113)
        at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.read1BAvros(App.java:131)
        at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.executeCode(App.java:534)
        at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.main(App.java:453)
        ... 5 more
Caused by: java.io.IOException: Block read partially, the data may be corrupt
        at org.apache.avro.file.DataFileStream.hasNext(DataFileStream.java:194)
        ... 9 more
{code}

The objRecordWriter is an instance of DataFileWriter.create or DataFileWriter.appendto (SeekableInput). In relation to AVRO-1090 ticket.
Instead of having big "hashmaps" in memory, we've decided to serialize the data in "byte buffers" in memory. Because it's faster. Using "appendEncoded" although seems to write something to HDFS, reading the data back, exposes this error.
Help would be appreciated. I've looked @ appendEncoded in DataFileWriter but could not figure out if it's our job to add a sync marker, or does appendEncoded does that for us.
Must the "ByteBuffer" we give, be the length of one exact record?
Examples and documentation on this method is welcomed.

  was:
We're doing this:
{code}
// Check
		if (!(objRecordsBuffer
		.containsKey (objShardPath))) {
			// Set
			objRecordsBuffer.put (objShardPath,
			new ByteBufferOutputStream ());
		}

		// Set
		Encoder objEncoder =  EncoderFactory.get ()
		.binaryEncoder (objRecordsBuffer
		.get (objShardPath), null);

		// Write
		objGenericDatumWriter.write (objRecordConstructor.build (), objEncoder);
		objEncoder.flush ();

// For
				for (ByteBuffer objRecord : objRecordsBuffer
				.get (objKey).getBufferList ()) {
					// Append
					objRecordWriter.appendEncoded (objRecord);
				}

				// Erase
				objRecordWriter.flush ();
				objRecordWriter.close ();
{code}

It writes the data to HDFS. Reading it back outputs the follosing exception:
{code}
Caused by: org.apache.avro.AvroRuntimeException: java.io.IOException: Block read partially, the data may be corrupt
        at org.apache.avro.file.DataFileStream.hasNext(DataFileStream.java:210)
        at net.RnD.FileUtils.TimestampedReader.hasNext(TimestampedReader.java:113)
        at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.read1BAvros(App.java:131)
        at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.executeCode(App.java:534)
        at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.main(App.java:453)
        ... 5 more
Caused by: java.io.IOException: Block read partially, the data may be corrupt
        at org.apache.avro.file.DataFileStream.hasNext(DataFileStream.java:194)
        ... 9 more
{code}

The objRecordWriter is an instance of DataFileWriter.create or DataFileWriter.appendto (SeekableInput). In relation to AVRO-1090 ticket.

Instead of having big "hashmaps" in memory, we've decided to serialize the data in "byte buffers" in memory. Because it's faster. Using "appendEncoded" although seems to write something to HDFS, reading the data back, exposes this error.

Help would be appreciated. I've looked @ appendEncoded in DataFileWriter but could not figure out if it's our job to add a sync marker, or does appendEncoded does that for us.

Must the "ByteBuffer" we give, be the length of one exact record?
Examples and documentation on this method is welcomed.

    
> DataFileWriter, appendEncoded causes AvroRuntimeException when read back
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: AVRO-1093
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AVRO-1093
>             Project: Avro
>          Issue Type: Bug
>    Affects Versions: 1.6.3
>            Reporter: Catalin Alexandru Zamfir
>
> We're doing this:
> {code}
> // Check
> 		if (!(objRecordsBuffer
> 		.containsKey (objShardPath))) {
> 			// Set
> 			objRecordsBuffer.put (objShardPath,
> 			new ByteBufferOutputStream ());
> 		}
> 		// Set
> 		Encoder objEncoder =  EncoderFactory.get ()
> 		.binaryEncoder (objRecordsBuffer
> 		.get (objShardPath), null);
> 		// Write
> 		objGenericDatumWriter.write (objRecordConstructor.build (), objEncoder);
> 		objEncoder.flush ();
> // For
> 				for (ByteBuffer objRecord : objRecordsBuffer
> 				.get (objKey).getBufferList ()) {
> 					// Append
> 					objRecordWriter.appendEncoded (objRecord);
> 				}
> 				// Erase
> 				objRecordWriter.flush ();
> 				objRecordWriter.close ();
> {code}
> It writes the data to HDFS. Reading it back outputs the follosing exception:
> {code}
> Caused by: org.apache.avro.AvroRuntimeException: java.io.IOException: Block read partially, the data may be corrupt
>         at org.apache.avro.file.DataFileStream.hasNext(DataFileStream.java:210)
>         at net.RnD.FileUtils.TimestampedReader.hasNext(TimestampedReader.java:113)
>         at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.read1BAvros(App.java:131)
>         at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.executeCode(App.java:534)
>         at net.RnD.Hadoop.App.main(App.java:453)
>         ... 5 more
> Caused by: java.io.IOException: Block read partially, the data may be corrupt
>         at org.apache.avro.file.DataFileStream.hasNext(DataFileStream.java:194)
>         ... 9 more
> {code}
> The objRecordWriter is an instance of DataFileWriter.create or DataFileWriter.appendto (SeekableInput). In relation to AVRO-1090 ticket.
> Instead of having big "hashmaps" in memory, we've decided to serialize the data in "byte buffers" in memory. Because it's faster. Using "appendEncoded" although seems to write something to HDFS, reading the data back, exposes this error.
> Help would be appreciated. I've looked @ appendEncoded in DataFileWriter but could not figure out if it's our job to add a sync marker, or does appendEncoded does that for us.
> Must the "ByteBuffer" we give, be the length of one exact record?
> Examples and documentation on this method is welcomed.

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