Skip navigation links

Package org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client

Provides HBase Client

See: Description

Package org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client Description

Provides HBase Client

Table of Contents

Overview

To administer HBase, create and drop tables, list and alter tables, use Admin. Once created, table access is via an instance of Table. You add content to a table a row at a time. To insert, create an instance of a Put object. Specify value, target column and optionally a timestamp. Commit your update using Table.put(Put). To fetch your inserted value, use Get. The Get can be specified to be broad -- get all on a particular row -- or narrow; i.e. return only a single cell value. After creating an instance of Get, invoke Table.get(Get).

Use Scan to set up a scanner -- a Cursor- like access. After creating and configuring your Scan instance, call Table.getScanner(Scan) and then invoke next on the returned object. Both Table.get(Get) and Table.getScanner(Scan) return a Result.

Use Delete to remove content. You can remove individual cells or entire families, etc. Pass it to Table.delete(Delete) to execute.

Puts, Gets and Deletes take out a lock on the target row for the duration of their operation. Concurrent modifications to a single row are serialized. Gets and scans run concurrently without interference of the row locks and are guaranteed to not to return half written rows.

Client code accessing a cluster finds the cluster by querying ZooKeeper. This means that the ZooKeeper quorum to use must be on the client CLASSPATH. Usually this means make sure the client can find your hbase-site.xml.

Example API Usage

Once you have a running HBase, you probably want a way to hook your application up to it. If your application is in Java, then you should use the Java API. Here's an example of what a simple client might look like. This example assumes that you've created a table called "myTable" with a column family called "myColumnFamily".

import java.io.IOException;

import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.HBaseConfiguration;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.TableName;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Connection;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.ConnectionFactory;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Get;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Table;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Put;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Result;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.ResultScanner;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.Scan;
import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.util.Bytes;

// Class that has nothing but a main.
// Does a Put, Get and a Scan against an hbase table.
// The API described here is since HBase 1.0.
public class MyLittleHBaseClient {
  public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
    // You need a configuration object to tell the client where to connect.
    // When you create a HBaseConfiguration, it reads in whatever you've set
    // into your hbase-site.xml and in hbase-default.xml, as long as these can
    // be found on the CLASSPATH
    Configuration config = HBaseConfiguration.create();

    // Next you need a Connection to the cluster. Create one. When done with it,
    // close it. A try/finally is a good way to ensure it gets closed or use
    // the jdk7 idiom, try-with-resources: see
    // https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/exceptions/tryResourceClose.html
    //
    // Connections are heavyweight.  Create one once and keep it around. From a Connection
    // you get a Table instance to access Tables, an Admin instance to administer the cluster,
    // and RegionLocator to find where regions are out on the cluster. As opposed to Connections,
    // Table, Admin and RegionLocator instances are lightweight; create as you need them and then
    // close when done.
    //
    Connection connection = ConnectionFactory.createConnection(config);
    try {

      // The below instantiates a Table object that connects you to the "myLittleHBaseTable" table
      // (TableName.valueOf turns String into a TableName instance).
      // When done with it, close it (Should start a try/finally after this creation so it gets
      // closed for sure the jdk7 idiom, try-with-resources: see
      // https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/exceptions/tryResourceClose.html)
      Table table = connection.getTable(TableName.valueOf("myLittleHBaseTable"));
      try {

        // To add to a row, use Put.  A Put constructor takes the name of the row
        // you want to insert into as a byte array.  In HBase, the Bytes class has
        // utility for converting all kinds of java types to byte arrays.  In the
        // below, we are converting the String "myLittleRow" into a byte array to
        // use as a row key for our update. Once you have a Put instance, you can
        // adorn it by setting the names of columns you want to update on the row,
        // the timestamp to use in your update, etc. If no timestamp, the server
        // applies current time to the edits.
        Put p = new Put(Bytes.toBytes("myLittleRow"));

        // To set the value you'd like to update in the row 'myLittleRow', specify
        // the column family, column qualifier, and value of the table cell you'd
        // like to update.  The column family must already exist in your table
        // schema.  The qualifier can be anything.  All must be specified as byte
        // arrays as hbase is all about byte arrays.  Lets pretend the table
        // 'myLittleHBaseTable' was created with a family 'myLittleFamily'.
        p.add(Bytes.toBytes("myLittleFamily"), Bytes.toBytes("someQualifier"),
        Bytes.toBytes("Some Value"));

        // Once you've adorned your Put instance with all the updates you want to
        // make, to commit it do the following (The HTable#put method takes the
        // Put instance you've been building and pushes the changes you made into
        // hbase)
        table.put(p);

        // Now, to retrieve the data we just wrote. The values that come back are
        // Result instances. Generally, a Result is an object that will package up
        // the hbase return into the form you find most palatable.
        Get g = new Get(Bytes.toBytes("myLittleRow"));
        Result r = table.get(g);
        byte [] value = r.getValue(Bytes.toBytes("myLittleFamily"),
          Bytes.toBytes("someQualifier"));

        // If we convert the value bytes, we should get back 'Some Value', the
        // value we inserted at this location.
        String valueStr = Bytes.toString(value);
        System.out.println("GET: " + valueStr);

        // Sometimes, you won't know the row you're looking for. In this case, you
        // use a Scanner. This will give you cursor-like interface to the contents
        // of the table.  To set up a Scanner, do like you did above making a Put
        // and a Get, create a Scan.  Adorn it with column names, etc.
        Scan s = new Scan();
        s.addColumn(Bytes.toBytes("myLittleFamily"), Bytes.toBytes("someQualifier"));
        ResultScanner scanner = table.getScanner(s);
        try {
           // Scanners return Result instances.
           // Now, for the actual iteration. One way is to use a while loop like so:
           for (Result rr = scanner.next(); rr != null; rr = scanner.next()) {
             // print out the row we found and the columns we were looking for
             System.out.println("Found row: " + rr);
           }

           // The other approach is to use a foreach loop. Scanners are iterable!
           // for (Result rr : scanner) {
           //   System.out.println("Found row: " + rr);
           // }
         } finally {
           // Make sure you close your scanners when you are done!
           // Thats why we have it inside a try/finally clause
           scanner.close();
         }

         // Close your table and cluster connection.
       } finally {
         if (table != null) table.close();
       }
     } finally {
       connection.close();
     }
  }
}

There are many other methods for putting data into and getting data out of HBase, but these examples should get you started. See the Table javadoc for more methods. Additionally, there are methods for managing tables in the Admin class.

If your client is NOT Java, then you should consider the Thrift or REST libraries.

Related Documentation

See also the section in the HBase Reference Guide where it discusses HBase Client. It has section on how to access HBase from inside your multithreaded environment how to control resources consumed client-side, etc.

Skip navigation links

Copyright © 2007–2019 Cloudera. All rights reserved.