Migrating Apache Flume Flows to Apache NiFi: JMS To X and X to JMS

Migrating Apache Flume Flows to Apache NiFi:  JMS To/From Anywhere



This is a simple use case of being a gateway between JMS and other sources and sinks.   We can do a lot more than that in NiFi.  We can be a JMS Consumer or Producer.  All with No Code.  We can work with topics and queues and any message types you have.   We can turn tabular messages (JSON, CSV, XML, AVRO, Parquet, Grokable Text) into Records and process them at speed with queries, updates, merging and fast record processing that is schema aware.  So we know your fields and types and can validate those for you while real-time querying that data as it is sent from and to JMS topics and queues with Apache Calcite SQL.  We can store your schemas in our Cloudera Schema Registry and allow for REST API access to them.   Schemas are accessible from Spark, Flink, Kafka, NiFi and more.

It is extremely easy to do this in NiFi.

In our example we are using Apache ActiveMQ 5.15 as our example JMS Broker.   We are grabbing example data from a few different REST sources and pushing to and from our JMS broker.


Simple NiFi Flow For Pushing JMS Data to KUDU


We can monitor our JMS Activity in Apache ActiveMQ's Web Console




With Apache NiFi We Ingest All the REST Feeds




These feeds include Coinbase




NYC Demographics and Live Subway GTFS Data



Transit Land Feeds and Operators


World Trading Data



'Quandl REST Data


It is easy to Consume JMS messages from Topics or Queues


Consuming Messages in a snap, We just need to set our Connection Factory Service, Destination and Topic/Queue.




 JMS Connection Factory Settings, Just a Java Class, JAR path and Broker URI.   Yes we support SSL!


For JMS Queues, pick QUEUE and your QUEUE Name


Example JMS MetaData Produced including Delivery Mode, Expiration and Message ID




 Consume From a QUEUE


Consume From A TOPIC



Let's Push Any and All REST Feed to JMS Topics and Queues










References

Migrating Apache Flume Flows to Apache NiFi: Any Relational Database To/From Anywhere

Migrating Apache Flume Flows to Apache NiFi:  Any Relational Database To/From Anywhere



This is a simple use case of being a gateway between Relational Databases and other sources and sinks.   We can do a lot more than that in NiFi.  We can SELECT, UPDATE, INSERT, DELETE and run any DML.  All with No Code.   We can also access metadata from an RDBMS and build dynamical ELT systems from that.

It is extremely easy to do this in NiFi.


Instead of using Flume, Let's Use Apache NiFi to Move Any Tabular Data To and From Databases




From A Relational Database (via JDBC Driver) to Anywhere.   In our case, we will pull from an RDBMS and post to Kudu.


Step 1:  QueryDatabaseTableRecord (Create Connection Pool, Pick DB Type, Table Name, Record Writer)
Step 2:  PutKudu (Set Kudu Master, Table Name, 
Done!

Query Database


Connect to Kudu




Let's Write JSON Records That Get Converted to Kudu Records or RDBMS/MySQL/JDBC Records 



Schema For The Data




Read All The Records From Our JDBC Database





Let's Create an Apache Kudu table to Put Database Records To





Let's Examine the MySQL Table We Want to Read/Write To and From





Let's Check the MariaDB Table



MySQL Table Information






From Anywhere (Say a Device) to A Relational Database (via JDBC Driver).   In our case, we will insert into an RDBMS from Kafka.


Step 1:  Acquire or modify data say ConsumeKafkaRecord_2
Step 2:  PutDatabaseRecord (Set Record Reader, INSERT or UPDATE, Connection Pool, Table Name)
Done!


Put Database Records in Any JDBC/RDBMS



Setup Your Connection Pool to SELECT, UPDATE, INSERT or DELETE





SQL DDL

Create MariaDB/MySQL Table


CREATE TABLE iot ( uuid VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
 ipaddress VARCHAR(255),top1pct BIGINT, top1 VARCHAR(255),
cputemp VARCHAR(255), gputemp VARCHAR(255),
 gputempf VARCHAR(255),
cputempf varchar(255), runtime VARCHAR(255),
host VARCHAR(255), filename VARCHAR(255),
 imageinput VARCHAR(255),hostname varchar(255),
macaddress varchar(255), end VARCHAR(255), te VARCHAR(255), systemtime VARCHAR(255),

cpu BIGINT, diskusage VARCHAR(255), memory BIGINT, id VARCHAR(255));

Create Kudu Table


CREATE TABLE iot ( uuid STRING,
 ipaddress STRING,top1pct BIGINT, 
 top1 STRING,
cputemp STRING, 
gputemp STRING,
 gputempf STRING,
cputempf STRING, runtime STRING,
host STRING, filename STRING,
 imageinput STRING,hostname STRING,
macaddress STRING, 
`end` STRING, te STRING, systemtime STRING,
cpu BIGINT, diskusage STRING, 
memory BIGINT, 
id STRING,
PRIMARY KEY (uuid)
)
PARTITION BY HASH PARTITIONS 16 
STORED AS KUDU 

TBLPROPERTIES ('kudu.num_tablet_replicas' = '1');

References

Using GrovePi with Raspberry Pi and MiNiFi Agents for Data Ingest to Parquet, Kudu, ORC, Kafka, Hive and Impala

Using GrovePi with Raspberry Pi and MiNiFi Agents for Data Ingest


Source Code:  https://github.com/tspannhw/minifi-grove-sensors

Acquiring sensor data from Grove sensors is easy using a GrovePi Hat and some compatible sensors.


Just before my talk at the Future of Data Meetup @ Bell Works in Holmdel, NJ, I thought I should ingest some data from a grove sensor interface.

It's so easy a sleeping cat could do it.




So what does this device look like?  



I have a temperature and humidity sensor on there.




The distance sonic sensor is in there too, that's for the next article.




Let's do this with minimal RAM.




That's a 64GB hard drive underneath in the white case with the RPI.





I need more data and BACON.



We design our MiNiFi Agent Flow in CEM/EFM.   Grab JSON data stream and run sensors.


Apache NiFi 1.9.2 / CFM 1.0 Received HTTPS S2S Events From MiNiFi Agent




A simple flow to query and convert our JSON data, then store it to Kudu and HDFS (ORC) as well as push it to Kafka with a schema.




Let's read that Kafka message and store to Parquet, we will push to MQTT and JMS in the next article.   This is our universal proxy/gateway.



We could infer a schema and not save it.   But by saving a schema to the schema registry it makes SMM, Kafka, NiFi and others schema aware and easy to automagically query and convert between CSV/JSON/XML/AVRO/Parquet and more.

Let's store the data in Parquet files on HDFS with an Impala table.   In Apache NiFi 1.10 there is a ParquetWriter



Before we push to Kafka, let's create a topic for it with Cloudera SMM



Let's build an impala table for that Kudu data.



We can query our tables with ease as data rapidly is added.





Let's Examine the Parquet Files that NiFi Generated





 Let's query that parquet data with Impala in Hue



 Let's monitor that data in Kafka with Cloudera SMM






That was easy from device to enterprise cloud data store(s) with enterprise messages, security, governance, lineage, data catalog, SDX, monitoring and more.   How easy can you ingest IoT data, query it mid stream and store it in multiple data stores.   It took longer to write the article then to do the project and code.   All graphical, Single Sign On, multiple schemas/verisons/data types/engines, multiple OSs, edge, cloud and laptop.   Easy.

Table DDL


CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE IF NOT EXISTS grovesensors2 
(humidity STRING, uuid STRING, systemtime STRING, runtime STRING, cpu DOUBLE, id STRING, te STRING, host STRING, `end` STRING, 
macaddress STRING, temperature STRING, diskusage STRING, memory DOUBLE, ipaddress STRING, host_name STRING) 
STORED AS ORC
LOCATION '/tmp/grovesensors'

CREATE TABLE grovesensors ( uuid STRING,  `end` STRING,humidity STRING, systemtime STRING, runtime STRING, cpu DOUBLE, id STRING, te STRING, 
host STRING,
macaddress STRING, temperature STRING, diskusage STRING, memory DOUBLE, ipaddress STRING, host_name STRING,
PRIMARY KEY (uuid, `end`)
)
PARTITION BY HASH PARTITIONS 16
STORED AS KUDU
TBLPROPERTIES ('kudu.num_tablet_replicas' = '1')

hdfs dfs -mkdir -p /tmp/grovesensors
hdfs dfs -mkdir -p /tmp/groveparquet

CREATE  EXTERNAL TABLE grove_parquet 
 (
 diskusage STRING, 
  memory DOUBLE,  host_name STRING,
  systemtime STRING,
  macaddress STRING,
  temperature STRING,
  humidity STRING,
  cpu DOUBLE,
  uuid STRING,  ipaddress STRING,
  host STRING,
  `end` STRING,  te STRING,
  runtime STRING,
  id STRING
)
STORED AS PARQUET
LOCATION '/tmp/groveparquet/'

Parquet Format



message org.apache.nifi.grove {
  optional binary diskusage (STRING);
  optional double memory;
  optional binary host_name (STRING);
  optional binary systemtime (STRING);
  optional binary macaddress (STRING);
  optional binary temperature (STRING);
  optional binary humidity (STRING);
  optional double cpu;
  optional binary uuid (STRING);
  optional binary ipaddress (STRING);
  optional binary host (STRING);
  optional binary end (STRING);
  optional binary te (STRING);
  optional binary runtime (STRING);
  optional binary id (STRING);
}

References