Showing posts with label hdfs shell commands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hdfs shell commands. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

HDFS Basic Commands

This article will explore some Hadoop basic commands that help in our day-to-day activities.

Hadoop file system shell commands are organized in a similar way to Unix/Linux environments. For people who work with Unix shell, it is easy to turn to Hadoop shell commands. Such commands communicate with HDFS and other Hadoop-supported file systems.

1) List-out the contents of the directory.

ls
is to list out the files from the current directory (local system)

hadoop fs -ls
will list HDFS home directory (/user/cloudera/) content of the current user

hadoop fs -ls /
will list sub-directories of the root directory.

hdfs dfs -ls
will list the contents of the root directory.

Note: Use hadoop fs for older versions and hdfs dfs for newer versions of Hadoop. 

hadoop fs -ls /user/cloudera
/user/cloudera is default HDFS location in Cloudera VM where users files get copied.

hadoop fs -ls -R / 
recursively displays entries in all subdirectories of a path

2) Create or delete a directory

hadoop fs –mkdir /path/directory_name
mkdir is the command to create a folder/directory in a given path. 

Example:
hadoop fs -mkdir testdir1
hadoop fs –mkdir /user/cloudera/testdir2

hadoop fs -rm -r /user/cloudera/testdir2
-rm -r is the command to delete a folder/directory or a specific file.

Example:
hadoop fs -rm -r /user/cloudera/testdir2
hadoop fs -rmr /user/cloudera/testdir2/file1.txt

Note: If the OS is in safemode then you’ll not be able to create any directories in HDFS.

To check the status of safemode
hadoop dfsadmin -safemode get

To change the safemode to ON
hadoop dfsadmin -safemode enter

To change the safemode to OFF / or to leave the safemode

hadoop dfsadmin -safemode leave


3) Copy The File From Local System To Hadoop

hadoop fs -put <sourcefilepath> <destinationfilepath>

Examples:

hadoop fs -put Desktop/Documents/emp.txt /user/cloudera/empdir

hadoop fs -copyFromLocal Desktop/Documents/emp.txt /user/cloudera/emp.txt

To know more about "copyFromLocal", "put" "copyToLocal" and "get", please click here.  

4) Read the file

hadoop fs -cat /user/cloudera/emp.txt

The above command helps in reading the file however, one has to avoid using this command for large files since it can impact on I/O. This command is good for files with small data.

5) Copy the file from HDFS to Local System

hadoop fs -get /user/cloudera/emp.txt Desktop/Documents/emp1.txt
hadoop fs -copyToLocal /user/cloudera/emp.txt Desktop/Documents/emp2.txt

This is reverse scenario of Put & CopyFromLocal. For more information click here.


6) Move the file from one HDFS location to another (HDFS location)

Hadoop fs -mv emp.txt testDir

Hadoop fs -mv testDir tesDir2

Hadoop fs -mv testDir2/testDir /user/cloudera

Hadoop fs -mv testDir/emp.txt /user/cloudera

7) Admin Commands

sudo vi /etc/hadoop/conf/hdfs-site.xml 
Note: hdfs-site.xml is a configuration file where we can change.

To view the config settings
go to --> computer-browse folder-filesystem-->etc-->hadoop-->conf-->hdfs-site.xml

To change the default configuration values such as dfs.replication or dfs.blocksize from hdfs-site.xml, use the sudo commands

sudo vi /etc/hadoop/conf/hdfs-site.xml
Note: "vi" is the editor to edit such sudo files.

Click "I" for insert option or to bring it in edit mode.

Modify the values as per your requirement.

To save and exit :wq!

hadoop fs -tail [-f] <file>

The Hadoop fs shell tail command shows the last 1KB of a file on console or stdout.


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