XMLWordPrintableJSON

Details

    • Improvement
    • Status: Closed
    • Major
    • Resolution: Fixed
    • None
    • 0.23.0
    • mrv2
    • None
    • Hide
      MapReduce has undergone a complete re-haul in hadoop-0.23 and we now have, what we call, MapReduce 2.0 (MRv2).

      The fundamental idea of MRv2 is to split up the two major functionalities of the JobTracker, resource management and job scheduling/monitoring, into separate daemons. The idea is to have a global ResourceManager (RM) and per-application ApplicationMaster (AM). An application is either a single job in the classical sense of Map-Reduce jobs or a DAG of jobs. The ResourceManager and per-node slave, the NodeManager (NM), form the data-computation framework. The ResourceManager is the ultimate authority that arbitrates resources among all the applications in the system. The per-application ApplicationMaster is, in effect, a framework specific library and is tasked with negotiating resources from the ResourceManager and working with the NodeManager(s) to execute and monitor the tasks.

      The ResourceManager has two main components:
      * Scheduler (S)
      * ApplicationsManager (ASM)

      The Scheduler is responsible for allocating resources to the various running applications subject to familiar constraints of capacities, queues etc. The Scheduler is pure scheduler in the sense that it performs no monitoring or tracking of status for the application. Also, it offers no guarantees on restarting failed tasks either due to application failure or hardware failures. The Scheduler performs its scheduling function based the resource requirements of the applications; it does so based on the abstract notion of a Resource Container which incorporates elements such as memory, cpu, disk, network etc.

      The Scheduler has a pluggable policy plug-in, which is responsible for partitioning the cluster resources among the various queues, applications etc. The current Map-Reduce schedulers such as the CapacityScheduler and the FairScheduler would be some examples of the plug-in.

      The CapacityScheduler supports hierarchical queues to allow for more predictable sharing of cluster resources.
      The ApplicationsManager is responsible for accepting job-submissions, negotiating the first container for executing the application specific ApplicationMaster and provides the service for restarting the ApplicationMaster container on failure.

      The NodeManager is the per-machine framework agent who is responsible for launching the applications' containers, monitoring their resource usage (cpu, memory, disk, network) and reporting the same to the Scheduler.

      The per-application ApplicationMaster has the responsibility of negotiating appropriate resource containers from the Scheduler, tracking their status and monitoring for progress.
      Show
      MapReduce has undergone a complete re-haul in hadoop-0.23 and we now have, what we call, MapReduce 2.0 (MRv2). The fundamental idea of MRv2 is to split up the two major functionalities of the JobTracker, resource management and job scheduling/monitoring, into separate daemons. The idea is to have a global ResourceManager (RM) and per-application ApplicationMaster (AM). An application is either a single job in the classical sense of Map-Reduce jobs or a DAG of jobs. The ResourceManager and per-node slave, the NodeManager (NM), form the data-computation framework. The ResourceManager is the ultimate authority that arbitrates resources among all the applications in the system. The per-application ApplicationMaster is, in effect, a framework specific library and is tasked with negotiating resources from the ResourceManager and working with the NodeManager(s) to execute and monitor the tasks. The ResourceManager has two main components: * Scheduler (S) * ApplicationsManager (ASM) The Scheduler is responsible for allocating resources to the various running applications subject to familiar constraints of capacities, queues etc. The Scheduler is pure scheduler in the sense that it performs no monitoring or tracking of status for the application. Also, it offers no guarantees on restarting failed tasks either due to application failure or hardware failures. The Scheduler performs its scheduling function based the resource requirements of the applications; it does so based on the abstract notion of a Resource Container which incorporates elements such as memory, cpu, disk, network etc. The Scheduler has a pluggable policy plug-in, which is responsible for partitioning the cluster resources among the various queues, applications etc. The current Map-Reduce schedulers such as the CapacityScheduler and the FairScheduler would be some examples of the plug-in. The CapacityScheduler supports hierarchical queues to allow for more predictable sharing of cluster resources. The ApplicationsManager is responsible for accepting job-submissions, negotiating the first container for executing the application specific ApplicationMaster and provides the service for restarting the ApplicationMaster container on failure. The NodeManager is the per-machine framework agent who is responsible for launching the applications' containers, monitoring their resource usage (cpu, memory, disk, network) and reporting the same to the Scheduler. The per-application ApplicationMaster has the responsibility of negotiating appropriate resource containers from the Scheduler, tracking their status and monitoring for progress.
    • mr2,mapreduce-2.0

    Description

      Re-factor MapReduce into a generic resource scheduler and a per-job, user-defined component that manages the application execution.

      Attachments

        1. capacity-scheduler-dark-theme.png
          192 kB
          Luke Lu
        2. hadoop_contributors_meet_07_01_2011.pdf
          531 kB
          Sharad Agarwal
        3. MapReduce_NextGen_Architecture.pdf
          554 kB
          Arun Murthy
        4. MR-279_MR_files_to_move.txt
          23 kB
          Mahadev Konar
        5. MR-279_MR_files_to_move.txt
          23 kB
          Arun Murthy
        6. MR-279_MR_files_to_move-20110817.txt
          23 kB
          Vinod Kumar Vavilapalli
        7. MR-279.patch
          3.94 MB
          Arun Murthy
        8. MR-279.patch
          3.66 MB
          Arun Murthy
        9. MR-279.sh
          0.8 kB
          Arun Murthy
        10. MR-279-script.sh
          3 kB
          Arun Murthy
        11. MR-279-script.sh
          2 kB
          Mahadev Konar
        12. MR-279-script-20110817.sh
          3 kB
          Vinod Kumar Vavilapalli
        13. MR-279-script-final.sh
          3 kB
          Arun Murthy
        14. multi-column-stable-sort-default-theme.png
          299 kB
          Luke Lu
        15. NodeManager.gv
          6 kB
          Binglin Chang
        16. NodeManager.png
          228 kB
          Binglin Chang
        17. post-move.patch
          99 kB
          Arun Murthy
        18. post-move.patch
          85 kB
          Arun Murthy
        19. post-move.patch
          83 kB
          Mahadev Konar
        20. post-move-patch-20110817.2.txt
          126 kB
          Vinod Kumar Vavilapalli
        21. post-move-patch-final.txt
          131 kB
          Mahadev Konar
        22. ResourceManager.gv
          6 kB
          Binglin Chang
        23. ResourceManager.png
          290 kB
          Binglin Chang
        24. yarn-state-machine.job.dot
          2 kB
          Greg Roelofs
        25. yarn-state-machine.job.png
          23 kB
          Greg Roelofs
        26. yarn-state-machine.task.dot
          2 kB
          Greg Roelofs
        27. yarn-state-machine.task.png
          18 kB
          Greg Roelofs
        28. yarn-state-machine.task-attempt.dot
          3 kB
          Greg Roelofs
        29. yarn-state-machine.task-attempt.png
          25 kB
          Greg Roelofs

        Issue Links

          Activity

            People

              Unassigned Unassigned
              acmurthy Arun Murthy
              Votes:
              6 Vote for this issue
              Watchers:
              109 Start watching this issue

              Dates

                Created:
                Updated:
                Resolved: