hadoop/hadoop-yarn-project/hadoop-yarn
Arun Murthy 6cd0736cc5 YARN-230. RM Restart phase 1 - includes support for saving/restarting all applications on an RM bounce. Contributed by Bikas Saha.
git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/hadoop/common/trunk@1423758 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
2012-12-19 04:21:18 +00:00
..
bin YARN-40. Provided support for missing YARN commands Contributed by Devaraj K and Vinod Kumar Vavilapalli. 2012-10-08 22:18:42 +00:00
conf YARN-181. Fixed eclipse settings broken by capacity-scheduler.xml move via YARN-140. Contributed by Siddharth Seth. 2012-10-23 22:48:49 +00:00
dev-support YARN-3. Add support for CPU isolation/monitoring of containers. (adferguson via tucu) 2012-12-18 22:58:32 +00:00
hadoop-yarn-api YARN-230. RM Restart phase 1 - includes support for saving/restarting all applications on an RM bounce. Contributed by Bikas Saha. 2012-12-19 04:21:18 +00:00
hadoop-yarn-applications YARN-129. Simplify classpath construction for mini YARN tests. 2012-11-19 15:12:22 +00:00
hadoop-yarn-client YARN-230. RM Restart phase 1 - includes support for saving/restarting all applications on an RM bounce. Contributed by Bikas Saha. 2012-12-19 04:21:18 +00:00
hadoop-yarn-common YARN-230. RM Restart phase 1 - includes support for saving/restarting all applications on an RM bounce. Contributed by Bikas Saha. 2012-12-19 04:21:18 +00:00
hadoop-yarn-server YARN-230. RM Restart phase 1 - includes support for saving/restarting all applications on an RM bounce. Contributed by Bikas Saha. 2012-12-19 04:21:18 +00:00
hadoop-yarn-site YARN-187. Add hierarchical queues to the fair scheduler. Contributed by Sandy Ryza. 2012-11-30 12:03:25 +00:00
README YARN-1. Promote YARN to be a sub-project of Apache Hadoop. 2012-08-08 05:22:27 +00:00
pom.xml HADOOP-8755. Print thread dump when tests fail due to timeout. Contributed by Andrey Klochkov. 2012-09-14 01:44:23 +00:00

README

YARN (YET ANOTHER RESOURCE NEGOTIATOR or YARN Application Resource Negotiator)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Requirements
-------------
Java: JDK 1.6
Maven: Maven 3

Setup
-----
Install protobuf 2.4.0a or higher (Download from http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/downloads/list)
 - install the protoc executable (configure, make, make install)
 - install the maven artifact (cd java; mvn install)
Installing protoc requires gcc 4.1.x or higher.
If the make step fails with (Valid until a fix is released for protobuf 2.4.0a)
    ./google/protobuf/descriptor.h:1152: error:
    `google::protobuf::internal::Mutex*google::protobuf::DescriptorPool::mutex_'
    is private
  Replace descriptor.cc with http://protobuf.googlecode.com/svn-history/r380/trunk/src/google/protobuf/descriptor.cc


Quick Maven Tips
----------------
clean workspace: mvn clean
compile and test: mvn install
skip tests: mvn install -DskipTests
skip test execution but compile: mvn install -Dmaven.test.skip.exec=true
clean and test: mvn clean install
run selected test after compile: mvn test -Dtest=TestClassName (combined: mvn clean install -Dtest=TestClassName)
create runnable binaries after install: mvn assembly:assembly -Pnative (combined: mvn clean install assembly:assembly -Pnative)

Eclipse Projects
----------------
http://maven.apache.org/guides/mini/guide-ide-eclipse.html

1. Generate .project and .classpath files in all maven modules
mvn eclipse:eclipse
CAUTION: If the project structure has changed from your previous workspace, clean up all .project and .classpath files recursively. Then run:
mvn eclipse:eclipse

2. Import the projects in eclipse.

3. Set the environment variable M2_REPO to point to your .m2/repository location.

NetBeans Projects
-----------------

NetBeans has builtin support of maven projects. Just "Open Project..."
and everything is setup automatically. Verified with NetBeans 6.9.1.


Custom Hadoop Dependencies
--------------------------

By default Hadoop dependencies are specified in the top-level pom.xml
properties section. One can override them via -Dhadoop-common.version=...
on the command line. ~/.m2/settings.xml can also be used to specify
these properties in different profiles, which is useful for IDEs.

Modules
-------
YARN consists of multiple modules. The modules are listed below as per the directory structure:

hadoop-yarn-api - Yarn's cross platform external interface

hadoop-yarn-common - Utilities which can be used by yarn clients and server

hadoop-yarn-server - Implementation of the hadoop-yarn-api
	hadoop-yarn-server-common - APIs shared between resourcemanager and nodemanager
	hadoop-yarn-server-nodemanager (TaskTracker replacement)
	hadoop-yarn-server-resourcemanager (JobTracker replacement)

Utilities for understanding the code
------------------------------------
Almost all of the yarn components as well as the mapreduce framework use
state-machines for all the data objects. To understand those central pieces of
the code, a visual representation of the state-machines helps much. You can first
convert the state-machines into graphviz(.gv) format by
running:
   mvn compile -Pvisualize
Then you can use the dot program for generating directed graphs and convert the above
.gv files to images. The graphviz package has the needed dot program and related
utilites.For e.g., to generate png files you can run:
   dot -Tpng NodeManager.gv > NodeManager.png