You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to dev@jena.apache.org by "Rob Vesse (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2015/01/26 20:05:39 UTC

[jira] [Closed] (JENA-820) Blank Node output under Hadoop can cause identifiers to diverge in multi-stage pipelines

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JENA-820?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Rob Vesse closed JENA-820.
--------------------------

> Blank Node output under Hadoop can cause identifiers to diverge in multi-stage pipelines
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: JENA-820
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JENA-820
>             Project: Apache Jena
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: RDF Tools for Hadoop
>            Reporter: Rob Vesse
>            Assignee: Rob Vesse
>             Fix For: Jena 2.12.2
>
>
> In writing up the documentation on the RDF Tools for Hadoop and enumerating the possible issues that blank nodes imply I discovered an issue that I hadn't previously considered.
> For a single job the input and output formats all ensure that blank nodes are consistently given the same identifiers if they had the same syntactic ID and were in the same file.  This is done even when a file is being read in multiple chunks by multiple map tasks.  However by its nature each reduce task will create an output file so potentially you can end up with blank nodes spread over multiple files.
> However if we then read these files into a subsequent job the blank nodes may now be spread across multiple files so even though they were the same node originally our allocation policy will cause the identifiers to diverge and become distinct blank nodes which is incorrect behaviour.
> Since there is no clear universal fix for this what I am considering doing is instead introducing a configuration setting that will allow the file path to be ignored for the purpose of blank node identifier allocations within a job.  This will mean that identifiers are purely allocated on the basis of the Job ID and thus the same syntactic ID in any file will result in the same blank node identifier.  As the user will hopefully will have left this turned off for the first job even if we start with the same syntactic ID but in different files the normal allocation policy for the first job should ensure unique IDs for the later jobs.
> My next step on this is to implement a failing unit test (and then temporarily ignore it) which demonstrates this issue.



--
This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA
(v6.3.4#6332)