MapReduce Edit on Github
Learning Objectives
The learning objectives for MapReduce are:
- Interprocess Communication (IPC)
- Pipes
- Files and File Descriptors
- MapReduce
- Jeff Dean
Suggested Readings
We suggest you read the following from the
wikibook
before starting MapReduce:
MapReduce
This is a continuation of the MapReduce lab.
The inputs, outputs, and general flow are the same, but now you will be solving more difficult and interesting problems.
In 2004, Google released a general framework for processing large data sets on clusters of computers. We recommend you read this link on Wikipedia for a general understanding of MapReduce. Also, this paper written by Jeffrey Dean and Sanjay Ghemawat gives more detailed information about MapReduce. However, we will explain everything you need to know below.
To demonstrate what MapReduce can do, we’ll start with a small dataset–three lines of text:
Hello
there
class!
The goal of this MapReduce program will be to count the number of occurrences of each letter in the input.
MapReduce is designed to make it easy to process large data sets, spreading the work across many machines. We’ll start by splitting our (not so large) data set into one chunk per line.
Chunk #1 | Chunk #2 | Chunk #3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Input | “Hello” | “there” | “class!” |
Map. Once the data is split into chunks, map()
is used to convert the input into (key, value)
pairs.
In this example, our map()
function will create a (key, value)
pair for each letter in the input, where the key is the letter and the value is 1.
Chunk #1 | Chunk #2 | Chunk #3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Input | “Hello” | “there” | “class!” |
Output | (h, 1) |
(t, 1) |
(c, 1) |
(e, 1) |
(h, 1) |
(l, 1) |
|
(l, 1) |
(e, 1) |
(a, 1) |
|
(l, 1) |
(r, 1) |
(s, 1) |
|
(o, 1) |
(e, 1) |
(s, 1) |
Reduce. Now that the data is organized into (key, value)
pairs, the reduce()
function is used to combine all the values for each key.
In this example, it will “reduce” multiple values by adding up the counts for each letter.
Note that only values for the same key are reduced.
Each key is reduced independently, which makes it easy to process keys in parallel.
Chunk #1 | Chunk #2 | Chunk #3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Input | (h, 1) |
(t, 1) |
(c, 1) |
(e, 1) |
(h, 1) |
(l, 1) |
|
(l, 1) |
(e, 1) |
(a, 1) |
|
(l, 1) |
(r, 1) |
(s, 1) |
|
(o, 1) |
(e, 1) |
(s, 1) |
|
Output | (a, 1) |
||
(c, 1) |
|||
(e, 3) |
|||
(h, 2) |
|||
(l, 3) |
|||
(o, 1) |
|||
(r, 1) |
|||
(s, 2) |
|||
(t, 1) |
MapReduce is useful because many different algorithms can be implemented by plugging in different functions for map()
and reduce()
.
If you want to implement a new algorithm you just need to implement those two functions.
The MapReduce framework will take care of all the other aspects of running a large job: splitting the data and CPU time across any number of machines, recovering from machine failures, tracking job progress, etc.
The MP
For this MP, you have been tasked with building a simplified version of the MapReduce framework.
It will run multiple processes on one machine as independent processing units and use IPC mechanisms to communicate between them.
map()
and reduce()
will be programs that read from standard input and write to standard output.
The input data for each mapper program will be lines of text.
Key/value pairs will be represented as a line of text with “: “ between the key and the value:
key1: value1
key two: values and keys may contain spaces
key_3: but they cannot have colons or newlines
Version 1 - many mappers, one reducer
For version 1, you’ll spread the work across multiple instances of the mapper executable.
[...input_file...]
| | |
MAP1 MAP2 MAP3
\ | /
REDUCE
|
output_file
The input file will need to be split into chunks, with one chunk for each mapper process.
To split the input file, we’ve supplied the tool splitter
.
Run it without arguments for a brief explanation of how it works.
You’ll start up one instance of splitter for each mapper, using a pipe to send stdout
of splitter to stdin
of the mapper program.
splitter inputfile 3 0
|
| splitter inputfile 3 1
| |
| | splitter inputfile 3 2
| | |
MAP1 MAP2 MAP3
\ | /
REDUCE
|
output_file
Command line:
mr1 <input_file> <output_file> <mapper_executable> <reducer_executable> <mapper_count>
Sample Usage
% ./mr1 test.in test.out my_mapper my_reducer 3
my_mapper 0 exited with status 1
my_mapper 2 exited with status 2
output pairs in test.out: 9
Your program will:
- Split the input file into
parts and pipe the contents into different mapper processes (use splitter). - Write the output of the reducer process to the output file.
- Print any nonzero exit statuses.
- Count the number of lines in the output file and print it to
stdout
.
Remember to close all the unused file descriptors!
This too can be done in the Unix shell:
% (./splitter inputfile 3 0 | my_mapper ; \
./splitter inputfile 3 1 | my_mapper ; \
./splitter inputfile 3 2 | my_mapper ; ) | my_reducer > test.out
Files used for grading part 1:
- mr1.c
- common.c
- common.h
Things we will be testing for in Part 1:
- Inputs of varying size
- Different types of mapper and reducer tasks
- Both mapper and and reducer generating accurate output to stdout file descriptor independently
- Splitter being used correctly to generate equally sized input data for each mapper
- All mappers being run in parallel resulting in at least 2x performance speedup for the pi executable
- No memory leaks and memory errors when running the application
Things that will not be tested for in Part 1:
- Illegal inputs for either the mapper or reducer (Input data in a format other than as described above)
- Invalid mapper or reducer code (mappers or reducers that do not work)
- Key Value pairs that are larger than a pipe buffer.
Version 2 - many mappers, many reducers
For the final version of your program, you’ll add support for multiple reducers. Each reducer will handle a distinct subset of the keys. In a full implementation of MapReduce, each map process would know how to send data to each reducer process and send each key/value pair to the appropriate place.
In our simplified version of MapReduce, one process will handle the routing of key/value pairs to the correct reducer process. We’ll call it the shuffler.
splitter inputfile 3 0
|
| splitter inputfile 3 1
| |
| | splitter inputfile 3 2
| | |
MAP1 MAP2 MAP3
\ | /
SHUFFLER
/ | | \
R1 R2 R3 R4
\ \ / /
\ \/ /
output_file
As before, all mapper processes will read from stdin
and write to stdout
. You should redirect stdout
of splitter to stdin
of mapper as in Version 1 and send stdout
of all mapper to write end of a pipe that is attachted to stdin
of the shuffler process, which you will write.
The shuffler will be run with N output filenames as command line parameters, where N is the number of reducer processes.
It will read key/value pairs from stdin
, hash the key with hashKey()
function declared in utils.h
and then use the hash, modulo N, to decide which output file will the key/value pair will be written to.
Please note, you must put your shuffler implementation in ‘shuffler.c’.
const char *key = ...
const char *value = ...
FILE *outf = output_files[ hashKey(key) % N ];
fprintf(outf, "%s: %s\n", key, value)
Sample shuffler input:
a: 1
c: 1
e: 3
h: 2
l: 3
o: 1
r: 1
s: 2
t: 1
Sample shuffler output (with 3 output files):
File1 | File2 | File3 |
---|---|---|
c: 1 | e: 3 | a: 1 |
l: 3 | h: 2 | s: 2 |
o: 1 | t: 1 | |
r: 1 |
Sample shuffler output (with 4 output files):
File1 | File2 | File3 | File4 |
---|---|---|---|
c: 1 | r: 1 | a: 1 | h: 2 |
o: 1 | e: 3 | l: 3 | |
s: 2 | t: 1 |
mkfifo.
Time for the fun part. You can create pipes that look like normal files (see man page for mkfifo()
).
Your main program will use mkfifo()
to create a pipe file for each reducer.
Use ./fifo_N
as the names of the fifo
files (so they will be created in the current directory), where N is the index of the reducer that will read from it.
Use S_IRWXU
as the mode
argument for mkfifo()
.
Your program will give the names of those fifo files to shuffler on its command line and set up each reducer such that it reads from corresponding fifo file.
mkfifo()
will fail if the file exists already. You should try to remove all fifo files before creating any in order to prevent your program from crashing during testing. And at the end of your program, remove all fifo files created. Make sure to check the return value of mkfifo()
. Your program should print a helpful error message and exit with a nonzero exit status if it mkfifo()
fails.
All the reducers will send their output to one output file.
When opening the output file (with open()
) be sure to set O_APPEND
(if you do not, the reducers will overwrite each other).
Command line:
mr2 <input_file> <output_file> <mapper_executable> <reducer_executable> <mapper_count> <reducer_count>
Sample Usage
% ./mr2 test.in test.out my_mapper my_reducer 3 4
my_mapper 2 exited with status 1
my_reducer 3 exited with status 1
output pairs in test.out: 9
Your program will:
- Split the input file into
parts and pipe the contents into different mapper processes (use splitter). - Split the results of the mappers among the reducers using the shuffler.
- Write the output of each of the
reducer process to the output file. - You must use fifo files to communicate between the shuffler and the reducers.
- Print any nonzero exit statuses.
- Count the number of lines in the output file and print it to
stdout
.
Files used for grading part 2:
- mr2.c
- shuffler.c
- common.c
- common.h
Things we will be testing for in Part 2:
- Input data of varying sizes
- Different types of mapper and reducer tasks being spawned based on the arguments specified
- Both mapper, reducer and shuffler tasks will be tested both independently of one another and run together
- Splitter being used correctly to generate equally sized input data for each mapper
- All mappers and reducers being run in parallel resulting in at least 2x performance speedup for the pi executable
- Ensuring that mkfifo is used correctly and cleaned up
- No memory leaks and memory errors when running application
Things that will not be tested for in Part 2:
- Illegal inputs for either the mapper or reducer (Input data in a format other than as described above)
- Invalid mapper or reducer code (mappers or reducers that do not work)
- Key Value pairs that are larger than a pipe buffer.
Building and Running
Building
This MP has a very complicated Makefile
, but, it defines all the normal targets.
make # builds provided code and student code in release mode
make debug # builds provided code and student code in debug mode
# there is no tsan target because threading is not needed for this MP.
If you are curious, you can run make test
to build and run all of the tests in the unit_tests
directory.
These tests test the provided code, and can serve as some examples of how it all works.
Input Data
To download the example input files (books from Project Gutenberg), use the Makefile
:
make data
You should now see data/dracula.txt
and data/alice.txt
in your mp folder
Running Your Code
We have provided the following mappers:
mapper_wordcount
mapper_lettercount
mapper_asciicount
mapper_wordlengths
mapper_pi
These each be used anywhere we specify my_mapper
in these docs.
And the following reducers:
reducer_sum
reducer_pi
These each be used anywhere we specify my_reducer
in these docs.
For example, if you wanted to count the occurrences of each word in Alice in Wonderland, you can run and of the following
./mr0 data/alice.txt test.out ./mapper_wordcount ./reducer_sum
With 4 mappers:
./mr1 data/alice.txt test.out ./mapper_wordcount ./reducer_sum 4
With 4 mappers and 4 reducers
./mr2 data/alice.txt test.out ./mapper_wordcount ./reducer_sum 4 4
Record Setting Pi Code
As well as the simple mapper/reducer pairs, we also have also included some really cool pi computation code (see this for more info).
For instructions on how to use the pi code, see the file pi/README.txt
.
Note that we do not currently compile this with an NVIDIA compiler, so you will
not be able to use the CUDA version of this code (which we have not tested) unless you fiddle with the Makefile
.
Submission Instructions
Please fully read details on Academic Integrity . These are shared between all MPs in CS 241.
We will be using Subversion as our hand-in system this semester. Our grading system will checkout your most recent (pre-deadline) commit for grading. Therefore, to hand in your code, all you have to do is commit it to your Subversion repository.
To check out the provided code for
mapreduce
from the class repository, go to your cs241 directory (the one you checked out for "know your tools") and run:
svn up
If you run ls
you will now see a
mapreduce
folder, where you can find this assignment! To commit your changes (send them to us) type:
svn ci -m "mapreduce submission"
Your repository directory can be viewed from a web browser from the following URL: https://subversion.ews.illinois.edu/svn/fa16-cs241/NETID/mapreduce where NETID is your University NetID. It is important to check that the files you expect to be graded are present and up to date in your SVN copy.