beam

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Published: Sep 4, 2020 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 20 Imported by: 0

Documentation

Overview

Package beam is an implementation of the Apache Beam (https://beam.apache.org) programming model in Go. Beam provides a simple, powerful model for building both batch and streaming parallel data processing pipelines.

For more on the Beam model see: https://beam.apache.org/documentation/programming-guide

For design choices this implementation makes see: https://s.apache.org/beam-go-sdk-design-rfc

Example (GettingStarted)
package main

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"
	"regexp"
	"strings"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam/io/textio"
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam/runners/direct"
)

func main() {
	// In order to start creating the pipeline for execution, a Pipeline object is needed.
	p := beam.NewPipeline()
	s := p.Root()

	// The pipeline object encapsulates all the data and steps in your processing task.
	// It is the basis for creating the pipeline's data sets as PCollections and its operations
	// as transforms.

	// The PCollection abstraction represents a potentially distributed,
	// multi-element data set. You can think of a PCollection as “pipeline” data;
	// Beam transforms use PCollection objects as inputs and outputs. As such, if
	// you want to work with data in your pipeline, it must be in the form of a
	// PCollection.

	// Transformations are applied in a scoped fashion to the pipeline. The scope
	// can be obtained from the pipeline object.

	// Start by reading text from an input files, and receiving a PCollection.
	lines := textio.Read(s, "protocol://path/file*.txt")

	// Transforms are added to the pipeline so they are part of the work to be
	// executed.  Since this transform has no PCollection as an input, it is
	// considered a 'root transform'

	// A pipeline can have multiple root transforms
	moreLines := textio.Read(s, "protocol://other/path/file*.txt")

	// Further transforms can be applied, creating an arbitrary, acyclic graph.
	// Subsequent transforms (and the intermediate PCollections they produce) are
	// attached to the same pipeline.
	all := beam.Flatten(s, lines, moreLines)
	wordRegexp := regexp.MustCompile(`[a-zA-Z]+('[a-z])?`)
	words := beam.ParDo(s, func(line string, emit func(string)) {
		for _, word := range wordRegexp.FindAllString(line, -1) {
			emit(word)
		}
	}, all)
	formatted := beam.ParDo(s, strings.ToUpper, words)
	textio.Write(s, "protocol://output/path", formatted)

	// Applying a transform adds it to the pipeline, rather than executing it
	// immediately.  Once the whole pipeline of transforms is constructed, the
	// pipeline can be executed by a PipelineRunner.  The direct runner executes the
	// transforms directly, sequentially, in this one process, which is useful for
	// unit tests and simple experiments:
	if err := direct.Execute(context.Background(), p); err != nil {
		fmt.Printf("Pipeline failed: %v", err)
	}
}
Output:

Example (MetricsDeclaredAnywhere)
package main

import (
	"context"
	"regexp"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam/core/metrics"
)

func ctxWithPtransformID(id string) context.Context {
	ctx := context.Background()
	ctx = metrics.SetBundleID(ctx, "exampleBundle")
	ctx = metrics.SetPTransformID(ctx, id)
	return ctx
}

var wordRE = regexp.MustCompile(`[a-zA-Z]+('[a-z])?`)

func main() {

	// Metrics can be declared outside DoFns, and used inside..
	outside := beam.NewCounter("example.namespace", "count")

	extractWordsDofn := func(ctx context.Context, line string, emit func(string)) {
		// They can be defined at time of use within a DoFn, if necessary.
		inside := beam.NewDistribution("example.namespace", "characters")
		for _, word := range wordRE.FindAllString(line, -1) {
			emit(word)
			outside.Inc(ctx, 1)
			inside.Update(ctx, int64(len(word)))
		}
	}
	ctx := ctxWithPtransformID("example")
	extractWordsDofn(ctx, "this has six words in it", func(string) {})
	extractWordsDofn(ctx, "this has seven words in it, see?", func(string) {})

	metrics.DumpToOutFromContext(ctx)
}
Output:

PTransformID: "example"
	example.namespace.characters - count: 13 sum: 43 min: 2 max: 5
	example.namespace.count - value: 13
Example (MetricsReusable)
package main

import (
	"context"
	"regexp"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam/core/metrics"
)

// A beam_test global context var to improve how the examples look.
var ctx = context.Background()

var wordRE = regexp.MustCompile(`[a-zA-Z]+('[a-z])?`)

func main() {

	// Metric proxies can be used in multiple DoFns
	c := beam.NewCounter("example.reusable", "count")

	extractWordsDofn := func(ctx context.Context, line string, emit func(string)) {
		for _, word := range wordRE.FindAllString(line, -1) {
			emit(word)
			c.Inc(ctx, 1)
		}
	}

	extractRunesDofn := func(ctx context.Context, line string, emit func(rune)) {
		for _, r := range line {
			emit(r)
			c.Inc(ctx, 1)
		}
	}
	ctx = metrics.SetBundleID(ctx, "exampleBundle")
	extractWordsDofn(metrics.SetPTransformID(ctx, "extract1"), "this has six words in it", func(string) {})

	extractRunesDofn(metrics.SetPTransformID(ctx, "extract2"), "seven thousand", func(rune) {})

	metrics.DumpToOutFromContext(ctx)
}
Output:

PTransformID: "extract1"
	example.reusable.count - value: 6
PTransformID: "extract2"
	example.reusable.count - value: 14

Index

Examples

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

View Source
var (
	TType = typex.TType
	UType = typex.UType
	VType = typex.VType
	WType = typex.WType
	XType = typex.XType
	YType = typex.YType
	ZType = typex.ZType
)

These are the reflect.Type instances of the universal types, which are used when binding actual types to "generic" DoFns that use Universal Types.

View Source
var EventTimeType = typex.EventTimeType

EventTimeType is the reflect.Type of EventTime.

View Source
var PipelineOptions = runtime.GlobalOptions

PipelineOptions are global options for the active pipeline. Options can be defined any time before execution and are re-created by the harness on remote execution workers. Global options should be used sparingly.

Functions

func Init

func Init()

Init is the hook that all user code must call after flags processing and other static initialization, for now.

func Initialized

func Initialized() bool

Initialized exposes the initialization status for runners.

func NewPipelineWithRoot

func NewPipelineWithRoot() (*Pipeline, Scope)

NewPipelineWithRoot creates a new empty pipeline and its root scope.

func ParDo0

func ParDo0(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option)

ParDo0 inserts a ParDo with zero output transform into the pipeline.

func ParDo2

func ParDo2(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, PCollection)

ParDo2 inserts a ParDo with 2 outputs into the pipeline.

func ParDo3

func ParDo3(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, PCollection, PCollection)

ParDo3 inserts a ParDo with 3 outputs into the pipeline.

func ParDo4

func ParDo4(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection)

ParDo4 inserts a ParDo with 4 outputs into the pipeline.

func ParDo5

func ParDo5(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection)

ParDo5 inserts a ParDo with 5 outputs into the pipeline.

func ParDo6

func ParDo6(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection)

ParDo6 inserts a ParDo with 6 outputs into the pipeline.

func ParDo7

func ParDo7(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection, PCollection)

ParDo7 inserts a ParDo with 7 outputs into the pipeline.

func RegisterCoder

func RegisterCoder(t reflect.Type, encoder, decoder interface{})

RegisterCoder registers a user defined coder for a given type, and will be used if there is no existing beam coder for that type. Must be called prior to beam.Init(), preferably in an init() function.

The coder used for a given type follows this ordering:

  1. Coders for Known Beam types.
  2. Coders registered for specific types
  3. Coders registered for interfaces types
  4. Default coder (JSON)

Coders for interface types are iterated over to check if a type satisfies them, and the most recent one registered will be used.

Repeated registrations of the same type overrides prior ones.

RegisterCoder additionally registers the type, and coder functions as per RegisterType and RegisterFunction to avoid redundant calls.

Supported Encoder Signatures

func(T) []byte
func(reflect.Type, T) []byte
func(T) ([]byte, error)
func(reflect.Type, T) ([]byte, error)

Supported Decoder Signatures

func([]byte) T
func(reflect.Type, []byte) T
func([]byte) (T, error)
func(reflect.Type, []byte) (T, error)

where T is the matching user type.

func RegisterFunction

func RegisterFunction(fn interface{})

RegisterFunction allows function registration. It is beneficial for performance and is needed for functions -- such as custom coders -- serialized during unit tests, where the underlying symbol table is not available. It should be called in init() only. Returns the external key for the function.

func RegisterInit

func RegisterInit(hook func())

RegisterInit registers an Init hook. Hooks are expected to be able to figure out whether they apply on their own, notably if invoked in a remote execution environment. They are all executed regardless of the runner.

func RegisterRunner

func RegisterRunner(name string, fn func(ctx context.Context, p *Pipeline) error)

RegisterRunner associates the name with the supplied runner, making it available to execute a pipeline via Run.

func RegisterType

func RegisterType(t reflect.Type)

RegisterType inserts "external" types into a global type registry to bypass serialization and preserve full method information. It should be called in init() only. TODO(wcn): the canonical definition of "external" is in v1.proto. We need user facing copy for this important concept.

func Run

func Run(ctx context.Context, runner string, p *Pipeline) error

Run executes the pipeline using the selected registred runner. It is customary to define a "runner" with no default as a flag to let users control runner selection.

func ValidateKVType

func ValidateKVType(col PCollection) (typex.FullType, typex.FullType)

ValidateKVType panics if the type of the PCollection is not KV<A,B>. It returns (A,B).

func ValidateNonCompositeType

func ValidateNonCompositeType(col PCollection) typex.FullType

ValidateNonCompositeType panics if the type of the PCollection is not a composite type. It returns the type.

Types

type Coder

type Coder struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Coder defines how to encode and decode values of type 'A' into byte streams. Coders are attached to PCollections of the same type. For PCollections consumed by GBK, the attached coders are required to be deterministic.

func DecodeCoder

func DecodeCoder(data string) (Coder, error)

DecodeCoder decodes a coder. Any custom coder function symbol must be resolvable via the runtime.GlobalSymbolResolver. The types must be encodable.

func NewCoder

func NewCoder(t FullType) Coder

NewCoder infers a Coder for any bound full type.

func (Coder) IsValid

func (c Coder) IsValid() bool

IsValid returns true iff the Coder is valid. Any use of an invalid Coder will result in a panic.

func (Coder) String

func (c Coder) String() string

func (Coder) Type

func (c Coder) Type() FullType

Type returns the full type 'A' of elements the coder can encode and decode. 'A' must be a concrete full type, such as int or KV<int,string>.

type Counter

type Counter struct {
	*metrics.Counter
}

Counter is a metric that can be incremented and decremented, and is aggregated by the sum.

Counters are safe to use in multiple bundles simultaneously, but not generally threadsafe. Your DoFn needs to manage the thread safety of Beam metrics for any additional concurrency it uses.

func NewCounter

func NewCounter(namespace, name string) Counter

NewCounter returns the Counter with the given namespace and name.

func (Counter) Dec

func (c Counter) Dec(ctx context.Context, v int64)

Dec decrements the counter within by the given amount.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

// A beam_test global context var to improve how the examples look.
var ctx = context.Background()

func main() {
	c := beam.NewCounter("example", "size")
	c.Dec(ctx, int64(len("foobar")))
}
Output:

func (Counter) Inc

func (c Counter) Inc(ctx context.Context, v int64)

Inc increments the counter within by the given amount.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

// A beam_test global context var to improve how the examples look.
var ctx = context.Background()

func main() {
	c := beam.NewCounter("example", "size")
	c.Inc(ctx, int64(len("foobar")))
}
Output:

type Distribution

type Distribution struct {
	*metrics.Distribution
}

Distribution is a metric that records various statistics about the distribution of reported values.

Distributions are safe to use in multiple bundles simultaneously, but not generally threadsafe. Your DoFn needs to manage the thread safety of Beam metrics for any additional concurrency it uses.

func NewDistribution

func NewDistribution(namespace, name string) Distribution

NewDistribution returns the Distribution with the given namespace and name.

func (Distribution) Update

func (c Distribution) Update(ctx context.Context, v int64)

Update adds an observation to this distribution.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"time"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

// A beam_test global context var to improve how the examples look.
var ctx = context.Background()

func main() {
	t := time.Millisecond * 42
	d := beam.NewDistribution("example", "latency_micros")
	d.Update(ctx, int64(t/time.Microsecond))
}
Output:

type ElementDecoder

type ElementDecoder = coder.ElementDecoder

ElementDecoder encapsulates being able to decode an element from a reader.

func NewElementDecoder

func NewElementDecoder(t reflect.Type) ElementDecoder

NewElementDecoder returns an ElementDecoder the given type.

type ElementEncoder

type ElementEncoder = coder.ElementEncoder

ElementEncoder encapsulates being able to encode an element into a writer.

func NewElementEncoder

func NewElementEncoder(t reflect.Type) ElementEncoder

NewElementEncoder returns a new encoding function for the given type.

type EncodedCoder

type EncodedCoder struct {
	// Coder is the coder to preserve across serialization.
	Coder Coder
}

EncodedCoder is a serialization wrapper around a coder for convenience.

func (EncodedCoder) MarshalJSON

func (w EncodedCoder) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error)

MarshalJSON returns the JSON encoding this value.

func (*EncodedCoder) UnmarshalJSON

func (w *EncodedCoder) UnmarshalJSON(buf []byte) error

UnmarshalJSON sets the state of this instance from the passed in JSON.

type EncodedFunc

type EncodedFunc struct {
	// Fn is the function to preserve across serialization.
	Fn reflectx.Func
}

EncodedFunc is a serialization wrapper around a function for convenience.

func (EncodedFunc) MarshalJSON

func (w EncodedFunc) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error)

MarshalJSON returns the JSON encoding this value.

func (*EncodedFunc) UnmarshalJSON

func (w *EncodedFunc) UnmarshalJSON(buf []byte) error

UnmarshalJSON sets the state of this instance from the passed in JSON.

type EncodedType

type EncodedType struct {
	// T is the type to preserve across serialization.
	T reflect.Type
}

EncodedType is a serialization wrapper around a type for convenience.

func (EncodedType) MarshalJSON

func (w EncodedType) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error)

MarshalJSON returns the JSON encoding this value.

func (*EncodedType) UnmarshalJSON

func (w *EncodedType) UnmarshalJSON(buf []byte) error

UnmarshalJSON sets the state of this instance from the passed in JSON.

type EventTime

type EventTime = typex.EventTime

EventTime represents the time of the event that generated an element. This is distinct from the time when an element is processed.

type FullType

type FullType = typex.FullType

FullType represents the tree structure of data types processed by the graph. It allows representation of composite types, such as KV<int, string> or CoGBK<int, int>, as well as "generic" such types, KV<int,T> or CoGBK<X,Y>, where the free "type variables" are the fixed universal types: T, X, etc.

type Gauge

type Gauge struct {
	*metrics.Gauge
}

Gauge is a metric that can have its new value set, and is aggregated by taking the last reported value.

Gauge are safe to use in multiple bundles simultaneously, but not generally threadsafe. Your DoFn needs to manage the thread safety of Beam metrics for any additional concurrency it uses.

func NewGauge

func NewGauge(namespace, name string) Gauge

NewGauge returns the Gauge with the given namespace and name.

func (Gauge) Set

func (c Gauge) Set(ctx context.Context, v int64)

Set sets the current value for this gauge.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

// A beam_test global context var to improve how the examples look.
var ctx = context.Background()

func main() {
	g := beam.NewGauge("example", "progress")
	g.Set(ctx, 42)
}
Output:

type Option

type Option interface {
	// contains filtered or unexported methods
}

Option is an optional value or context to a transformation, used at pipeline construction time. The primary use case is providing side inputs.

type PCollection

type PCollection struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

PCollection is an immutable collection of values of type 'A', which must be a concrete type, such as int or KV<int,string>. A PCollection can contain either a bounded or unbounded number of elements. Bounded and unbounded PCollections are produced as the output of PTransforms (including root PTransforms like textio.Read), and can be passed as the inputs of other PTransforms. Some root transforms produce bounded PCollections and others produce unbounded ones.

Each element in a PCollection has an associated timestamp. Sources assign timestamps to elements when they create PCollections, and other PTransforms propagate these timestamps from their input to their output implicitly or explicitly.

Additionally, each element is assigned to a set of windows. By default, all elements are assigned into a single default window, GlobalWindow.

func AddFixedKey

func AddFixedKey(s Scope, col PCollection) PCollection

AddFixedKey adds a fixed key (0) to every element.

func CoGroupByKey

func CoGroupByKey(s Scope, cols ...PCollection) PCollection

CoGroupByKey inserts a CoGBK transform into the pipeline.

func Combine

func Combine(s Scope, combinefn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) PCollection

Combine inserts a global Combine transform into the pipeline. It expects a PCollection<T> as input where T is a concrete type. Combine supports TypeDefinition options for binding generic types in combinefn.

func CombinePerKey

func CombinePerKey(s Scope, combinefn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) PCollection

CombinePerKey inserts a GBK and per-key Combine transform into the pipeline. It expects a PCollection<KV<K,T>>. The CombineFn may optionally take a key parameter. CombinePerKey supports TypeDefinition options for binding generic types in combinefn.

func Create

func Create(s Scope, values ...interface{}) PCollection

Create inserts a fixed non-empty set of values into the pipeline. The values must be of the same type 'A' and the returned PCollection is of type A.

The returned PCollections can be used as any other PCollections. The values are JSON-coded. Each runner may place limits on the sizes of the values and Create should generally only be used for small collections.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	beam.Create(s, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)               // PCollection<int>
	beam.Create(s, []int{5, 6}, []int{7, 8, 9}) // PCollection<[]int>
	beam.Create(s, []int{5, 6, 7, 8, 9})        // PCollection<[]int>
	beam.Create(s, "a", "b", "c")               // PCollection<string>
}
Output:

func CreateList

func CreateList(s Scope, list interface{}) PCollection

CreateList inserts a fixed set of values into the pipeline from a slice or array. Unlike Create this supports the creation of an empty PCollection.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	beam.CreateList(s, []int{5, 6, 7, 8, 9}) // PCollection<int>
}
Output:

func DropKey

func DropKey(s Scope, col PCollection) PCollection

DropKey drops the key for an input PCollection<KV<A,B>>. It returns a PCollection<B>.

func DropValue

func DropValue(s Scope, col PCollection) PCollection

DropValue drops the value for an input PCollection<KV<A,B>>. It returns a PCollection<A>.

func Explode

func Explode(s Scope, col PCollection) PCollection

Explode is a PTransform that takes a single PCollection<[]A> and returns a PCollection<A> containing all the elements for each incoming slice.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	d := beam.Create(s, []int{1, 2, 3, 4, 5}) // PCollection<[]int>
	beam.Explode(s, d)                        // PCollection<int>
}
Output:

func External

func External(s Scope, spec string, payload []byte, in []PCollection, out []FullType, bounded bool) []PCollection

External defines a Beam external transform. The interpretation of this primitive is runner specific. The runner is responsible for parsing the payload based on the spec provided to implement the behavior of the operation. Transform libraries should expose an API that captures the user's intent and serialize the payload as a byte slice that the runner will deserialize.

func Flatten

func Flatten(s Scope, cols ...PCollection) PCollection

Flatten is a PTransform that takes either multiple PCollections of type 'A' and returns a single PCollection of type 'A' containing all the elements in all the input PCollections. The name "Flatten" suggests taking a list of lists and flattening them into a single list.

By default, the Coder of the output PCollection is the same as the Coder of the first PCollection.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam/io/textio"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	a := textio.Read(s, "...some file path...") // PCollection<string>
	b := textio.Read(s, "...some other file path...")
	c := textio.Read(s, "...some third file path...")

	beam.Flatten(s, a, b, c) // PCollection<String>
}
Output:

func GroupByKey

func GroupByKey(s Scope, a PCollection) PCollection

GroupByKey is a PTransform that takes a PCollection of type KV<A,B>, groups the values by key and windows, and returns a PCollection of type GBK<A,B> representing a map from each distinct key and window of the input PCollection to an iterable over all the values associated with that key in the input per window. Each key in the output PCollection is unique within each window.

GroupByKey is analogous to converting a multi-map into a uni-map, and related to GROUP BY in SQL. It corresponds to the "shuffle" step between the Mapper and the Reducer in the MapReduce framework.

Two keys of type A are compared for equality by first encoding each of the keys using the Coder of the keys of the input PCollection, and then comparing the encoded bytes. This admits efficient parallel evaluation. Note that this requires that the Coder of the keys be deterministic.

By default, input and output PCollections share a key Coder and iterable values in the input and output PCollection share an element Coder.

GroupByKey is a key primitive in data-parallel processing, since it is the main way to efficiently bring associated data together into one location. It is also a key determiner of the performance of a data-parallel pipeline.

See CoGroupByKey for a way to group multiple input PCollections by a common key at once.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	type Doc struct{}
	var urlDocPairs beam.PCollection             // PCollection<KV<string, Doc>>
	urlToDocs := beam.GroupByKey(s, urlDocPairs) // PCollection<CoGBK<string, Doc>>

	// CoGBK parameters receive an iterator function with all values associated
	// with the same key.
	beam.ParDo0(s, func(key string, values func(*Doc) bool) {
		var cur Doc
		for values(&cur) {
			// ... process all docs having that url ...
		}
	}, urlToDocs) // PCollection<KV<string, []Doc>>
}
Output:

func Impulse

func Impulse(s Scope) PCollection

Impulse emits a single empty []byte into the global window. The resulting PCollection is a singleton of type []byte.

The purpose of Impulse is to trigger another transform, such as ones that take all information as side inputs.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	beam.Impulse(s) // PCollection<[]byte>
}
Output:

func ImpulseValue

func ImpulseValue(s Scope, value []byte) PCollection

ImpulseValue emits the supplied byte slice into the global window. The resulting PCollection is a singleton of type []byte.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	beam.ImpulseValue(s, []byte{}) // PCollection<[]byte>
}
Output:

func Must

func Must(a PCollection, err error) PCollection

Must returns the input, but panics if err != nil.

func MustN

func MustN(list []PCollection, err error) []PCollection

MustN returns the input, but panics if err != nil.

func ParDo

func ParDo(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) PCollection

ParDo is the core element-wise PTransform in Apache Beam, invoking a user-specified function on each of the elements of the input PCollection to produce zero or more output elements, all of which are collected into the output PCollection. Use one of the ParDo variants for a different number of output PCollections. The PCollections do no need to have the same types.

Elements are processed independently, and possibly in parallel across distributed cloud resources. The ParDo processing style is similar to what happens inside the "Mapper" or "Reducer" class of a MapReduce-style algorithm.

DoFns

The function to use to process each element is specified by a DoFn, either as single function or as a struct with methods, notably ProcessElement. The struct may also define Setup, StartBundle, FinishBundle and Teardown methods. The struct is JSON-serialized and may contain construction-time values.

Conceptually, when a ParDo transform is executed, the elements of the input PCollection are first divided up into some number of "bundles". These are farmed off to distributed worker machines (or run locally, if using the direct runner). For each bundle of input elements processing proceeds as follows:

  • If a struct, a fresh instance of the argument DoFn is created on a worker from json serialization, and the Setup method is called on this instance, if present. A runner may reuse DoFn instances for multiple bundles. A DoFn that has terminated abnormally (by returning an error) will never be reused.
  • The DoFn's StartBundle method, if provided, is called to initialize it.
  • The DoFn's ProcessElement method is called on each of the input elements in the bundle.
  • The DoFn's FinishBundle method, if provided, is called to complete its work. After FinishBundle is called, the framework will not again invoke ProcessElement or FinishBundle until a new call to StartBundle has occurred.
  • If any of Setup, StartBundle, ProcessElement or FinishBundle methods return an error, the Teardown method, if provided, will be called on the DoFn instance.
  • If a runner will no longer use a DoFn, the Teardown method, if provided, will be called on the discarded instance.

Each of the calls to any of the DoFn's processing methods can produce zero or more output elements. All of the of output elements from all of the DoFn instances are included in an output PCollection.

For example:

words := beam.ParDo(s, &Foo{...}, ...)
lengths := beam.ParDo(s, func (word string) int) {
      return len(word)
}, words)

Each output element has the same timestamp and is in the same windows as its corresponding input element. The timestamp can be accessed and/or emitted by including a EventTime-typed parameter. The name of the function or struct is used as the DoFn name. Function literals do not have stable names and should thus not be used in production code.

Side Inputs

While a ParDo processes elements from a single "main input" PCollection, it can take additional "side input" PCollections. These SideInput along with the DoFn parameter form express styles of accessing PCollection computed by earlier pipeline operations, passed in to the ParDo transform using SideInput options, and their contents accessible to each of the DoFn operations. For example:

words := ...
cufoff := ...  // Singleton PCollection<int>
smallWords := beam.ParDo(s, func (word string, cutoff int, emit func(string)) {
      if len(word) < cutoff {
           emit(word)
      }
}, words, beam.SideInput{Input: cutoff})

Additional Outputs

Optionally, a ParDo transform can produce zero or multiple output PCollections. Note the use of ParDo2 to specfic 2 outputs. For example:

words := ...
cufoff := ...  // Singleton PCollection<int>
small, big := beam.ParDo2(s, func (word string, cutoff int, small, big func(string)) {
      if len(word) < cutoff {
           small(word)
      } else {
           big(word)
      }
}, words, beam.SideInput{Input: cutoff})

By default, the Coders for the elements of each output PCollections is inferred from the concrete type.

No Global Shared State

There are three main ways to initialize the state of a DoFn instance processing a bundle:

  • Define public instance variable state. This state will be automatically JSON serialized and then deserialized in the DoFn instances created for bundles. This method is good for state known when the original DoFn is created in the main program, if it's not overly large. This is not suitable for any state which must only be used for a single bundle, as DoFn's may be used to process multiple bundles.

  • Compute the state as a singleton PCollection and pass it in as a side input to the DoFn. This is good if the state needs to be computed by the pipeline, or if the state is very large and so is best read from file(s) rather than sent as part of the DoFn's serialized state.

  • Initialize the state in each DoFn instance, in a StartBundle method. This is good if the initialization doesn't depend on any information known only by the main program or computed by earlier pipeline operations, but is the same for all instances of this DoFn for all program executions, say setting up empty caches or initializing constant data.

ParDo operations are intended to be able to run in parallel across multiple worker machines. This precludes easy sharing and updating mutable state across those machines. There is no support in the Beam model for communicating and synchronizing updates to shared state across worker machines, so programs should not access any mutable global variable state in their DoFn, without understanding that the Go processes for the main program and workers will each have its own independent copy of such state, and there won't be any automatic copying of that state across Java processes. All information should be communicated to DoFn instances via main and side inputs and serialized state, and all output should be communicated from a DoFn instance via output PCollections, in the absence of external communication mechanisms written by user code.

Splittable DoFns (Experimental)

Warning: Splittable DoFns are still experimental, largely untested, and likely to have bugs.

Splittable DoFns are DoFns that are able to split work within an element, as opposed to only at element boundaries like normal DoFns. This is useful for DoFns that emit many outputs per input element and can distribute that work among multiple workers. The most common examples of this are sources.

In order to split work within an element, splittable DoFns use the concept of restrictions, which are objects that are associated with an element and describe a portion of work on that element. For example, a restriction associated with a filename might describe what byte range within that file to process. In addition to restrictions, splittable DoFns also rely on restriction trackers to track progress and perform splits on a restriction currently being processed. See the `RTracker` interface in core/sdf/sdf.go for more details.

Splitting

Splitting means taking one restriction and splitting into two or more that cover the entire input space of the original one. In other words, processing all the split restrictions should produce identical output to processing the original one.

Splitting occurs in two stages. The initial splitting occurs before any restrictions have started processing. This step is used to split large restrictions into smaller ones that can then be distributed among multiple workers for processing. Initial splitting is user-defined and optional.

Dynamic splitting occurs during the processing of a restriction in runners that have implemented it. If there are available workers, runners may split the unprocessed portion of work from a busy worker and shard it to available workers in order to better distribute work. With unsplittable DoFns this can only occur on element boundaries, but for splittable DoFns this split can land within a restriction and will require splitting that restriction.

  • Note: The Go SDK currently does not support dynamic splitting for SDFs, only initial splitting. Only initially split restrictions can be distributed by liquid sharding. Stragglers will not be split during execution with dynamic splitting.

Splittable DoFn Methods

Making a splittable DoFn requires the following methods to be implemented on a DoFn in addition to the usual DoFn requirements. In the following method signatures `elem` represents the main input elements to the DoFn, and should match the types used in ProcessElement. `restriction` represents the user-defined restriction, and can be any type as long as it is consistent throughout all the splittable DoFn methods:

  • `CreateInitialRestriction(element) restriction` CreateInitialRestriction creates an initial restriction encompassing an entire element. The restriction created stays associated with the element it describes.
  • `SplitRestriction(elem, restriction) []restriction` SplitRestriction takes an element and its initial restriction, and optionally performs an initial split on it, returning a slice of all the split restrictions. If no splits are desired, the method returns a slice containing only the original restriction. This method will always be called on each newly created restriction before they are processed.
  • `RestrictionSize(elem, restriction) float64` RestrictionSize returns a cheap size estimation for a restriction. This size is an abstract scalar value that represents how much work a restriction takes compared to other restrictions in the same DoFn. For example, a size of 200 represents twice as much work as a size of 100, but the numbers do not represent anything on their own. Size is used by runners to estimate work for liquid sharding.
  • `CreateTracker(restriction) restrictionTracker` CreateTracker creates and returns a restriction tracker (a concrete type implementing the `sdf.RTracker` interface) given a restriction. The restriction tracker is used to track progress processing a restriction, and to allow for dynamic splits. This method is called on each restriction right before processing begins.
  • `ProcessElement(sdf.RTracker, element, func emit(output))` For splittable DoFns, ProcessElement requires a restriction tracker before inputs, and generally requires emits to be used for outputs, since restrictions will generally produce multiple outputs. For more details on processing restrictions in a splittable DoFn, see `sdf.RTracker`.

Fault Tolerance

In a distributed system, things can fail: machines can crash, machines can be unable to communicate across the network, etc. While individual failures are rare, the larger the job, the greater the chance that something, somewhere, will fail. Beam runners may strive to mask such failures by retrying failed DoFn bundles. This means that a DoFn instance might process a bundle partially, then crash for some reason, then be rerun (often as a new process) on that same bundle and on the same elements as before. Sometimes two or more DoFn instances will be running on the same bundle simultaneously, with the system taking the results of the first instance to complete successfully. Consequently, the code in a DoFn needs to be written such that these duplicate (sequential or concurrent) executions do not cause problems. If the outputs of a DoFn are a pure function of its inputs, then this requirement is satisfied. However, if a DoFn's execution has external side-effects, such as performing updates to external HTTP services, then the DoFn's code needs to take care to ensure that those updates are idempotent and that concurrent updates are acceptable. This property can be difficult to achieve, so it is advisable to strive to keep DoFns as pure functions as much as possible.

Optimization

Beam runners may choose to apply optimizations to a pipeline before it is executed. A key optimization, fusion, relates to ParDo operations. If one ParDo operation produces a PCollection that is then consumed as the main input of another ParDo operation, the two ParDo operations will be fused together into a single ParDo operation and run in a single pass; this is "producer-consumer fusion". Similarly, if two or more ParDo operations have the same PCollection main input, they will be fused into a single ParDo that makes just one pass over the input PCollection; this is "sibling fusion".

If after fusion there are no more unfused references to a PCollection (e.g., one between a producer ParDo and a consumer ParDo), the PCollection itself is "fused away" and won't ever be written to disk, saving all the I/O and space expense of constructing it.

When Beam runners apply fusion optimization, it is essentially "free" to write ParDo operations in a very modular, composable style, each ParDo operation doing one clear task, and stringing together sequences of ParDo operations to get the desired overall effect. Such programs can be easier to understand, easier to unit-test, easier to extend and evolve, and easier to reuse in new programs. The predefined library of PTransforms that come with Beam makes heavy use of this modular, composable style, trusting to the runner to "flatten out" all the compositions into highly optimized stages.

See https://beam.apache.org/documentation/programming-guide/#pardo for the web documentation for ParDo

Example (AdditionalOutputs)

Optionally, a ParDo transform can produce zero or multiple output PCollections. Note the use of ParDo2 to specify 2 outputs.

package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	var words beam.PCollection  // PCollection<string>
	var cutoff beam.PCollection // Singleton PCollection<int>
	small, big := beam.ParDo2(s, func(word string, cutoff int, small, big func(string)) {
		if len(word) < cutoff {
			small(word)
		} else {
			big(word)
		}
	}, words, beam.SideInput{Input: cutoff})

	_, _ = small, big
}
Output:

func ParDoN

func ParDoN(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) []PCollection

ParDoN inserts a ParDo with any number of outputs into the pipeline.

func Partition

func Partition(s Scope, n int, fn interface{}, col PCollection) []PCollection

Partition takes a PCollection<T> and a PartitionFn, uses the PartitionFn to split the elements of the input PCollection into N partitions, and returns a []PCollection<T> that bundles N PCollection<T>s containing the split elements.

A PartitionFn has the signature `func(T) int.`

T is permitted to be a KV.

func Reshuffle

func Reshuffle(s Scope, col PCollection) PCollection

Reshuffle copies a PCollection of the same kind and using the same element coder, and maintains the same windowing information. Importantly, it allows the result PCollection to be processed with a different sharding, in a different stage than the input PCollection.

For example, if a computation needs a lot of parallelism but produces only a small amount of output data, then the computation producing the data can run with as much parallelism as needed, while the output file is written with a smaller amount of parallelism, using the following pattern:

pc := bigHairyComputationNeedingParallelism(scope) // PCollection<string>
resharded := beam.Reshuffle(scope, pc)                // PCollection<string>

Another use case is when one has a non-deterministic DoFn followed by one that performs externally-visible side effects. Inserting a Reshuffle between these DoFns ensures that retries of the second DoFn will always be the same, which is necessary to make side effects idempotent.

A Reshuffle will force a break in the optimized pipeline. Consequently, this operation should be used sparingly, only after determining that the pipeline without reshuffling is broken in some way and performing an extra operation is worth the cost.

func Seq

func Seq(s Scope, col PCollection, dofns ...interface{}) PCollection

Seq is a convenience helper to chain single-input/single-output ParDos together in a sequence.

Example
package main

import (
	"math"
	"strconv"

	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam/io/textio"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	a := textio.Read(s, "...some file path...") // PCollection<string>

	beam.Seq(s, a,
		strconv.Atoi, // string to int
		func(i int) float64 { return float64(i) }, // int to float64
		math.Signbit, // float64 to bool
	) // PCollection<bool>
}
Output:

func SwapKV

func SwapKV(s Scope, col PCollection) PCollection

SwapKV swaps the key and value for an input PCollection<KV<A,B>>. It returns a PCollection<KV<B,A>>.

func TryCoGroupByKey

func TryCoGroupByKey(s Scope, cols ...PCollection) (PCollection, error)

TryCoGroupByKey inserts a CoGBK transform into the pipeline. Returns an error on failure.

func TryCombine

func TryCombine(s Scope, combinefn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, error)

TryCombine attempts to insert a global Combine transform into the pipeline. It may fail for multiple reasons, notably that the combinefn is not valid or cannot be bound -- due to type mismatch, say -- to the incoming PCollections.

func TryCombinePerKey

func TryCombinePerKey(s Scope, combinefn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) (PCollection, error)

TryCombinePerKey attempts to insert a per-key Combine transform into the pipeline. It may fail for multiple reasons, notably that the combinefn is not valid or cannot be bound -- due to type mismatch, say -- to the incoming PCollection.

func TryCreate

func TryCreate(s Scope, values ...interface{}) (PCollection, error)

TryCreate inserts a fixed non-empty set of values into the pipeline. The values must be of the same type.

func TryCreateList

func TryCreateList(s Scope, list interface{}) (PCollection, error)

TryCreateList inserts a fixed set of values into the pipeline from a slice or array. The values must be of the same type. Unlike TryCreate this supports the creation of an empty PCollection.

func TryExternal

func TryExternal(s Scope, spec string, payload []byte, in []PCollection, out []FullType, bounded bool) ([]PCollection, error)

TryExternal attempts to perform the work of External, returning an error indicating why the operation failed.

func TryFlatten

func TryFlatten(s Scope, cols ...PCollection) (PCollection, error)

TryFlatten merges incoming PCollections of type 'A' to a single PCollection of type 'A'. Returns an error indicating the set of PCollections that could not be flattened.

func TryGroupByKey

func TryGroupByKey(s Scope, a PCollection) (PCollection, error)

TryGroupByKey inserts a GBK transform into the pipeline. Returns an error on failure.

func TryParDo

func TryParDo(s Scope, dofn interface{}, col PCollection, opts ...Option) ([]PCollection, error)

TryParDo attempts to insert a ParDo transform into the pipeline. It may fail for multiple reasons, notably that the dofn is not valid or cannot be bound -- due to type mismatch, say -- to the incoming PCollections.

func TryReshuffle

func TryReshuffle(s Scope, col PCollection) (PCollection, error)

TryReshuffle inserts a Reshuffle into the pipeline, and returns an error if the pcollection's unable to be reshuffled.

func TryWindowInto

func TryWindowInto(s Scope, ws *window.Fn, col PCollection) (PCollection, error)

TryWindowInto attempts to insert a WindowInto transform.

func WindowInto

func WindowInto(s Scope, ws *window.Fn, col PCollection) PCollection

WindowInto applies the windowing strategy to each element.

func (PCollection) Coder

func (p PCollection) Coder() Coder

Coder returns the coder for the collection. The Coder is of type 'A'.

func (PCollection) IsValid

func (p PCollection) IsValid() bool

IsValid returns true iff the PCollection is valid and part of a Pipeline. Any use of an invalid PCollection will result in a panic.

func (PCollection) SetCoder

func (p PCollection) SetCoder(c Coder) error

SetCoder set the coder for the collection. The Coder must be of type 'A'.

func (PCollection) String

func (p PCollection) String() string

func (PCollection) Type

func (p PCollection) Type() FullType

Type returns the full type 'A' of the elements. 'A' must be a concrete type, such as int or KV<int,string>.

type Pipeline

type Pipeline struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Pipeline manages a directed acyclic graph of primitive PTransforms, and the PCollections that the PTransforms consume and produce. Each Pipeline is self-contained and isolated from any other Pipeline. The Pipeline owns the PCollections and PTransforms and they can by used by that Pipeline only. Pipelines can safely be executed concurrently.

func NewPipeline

func NewPipeline() *Pipeline

NewPipeline creates a new empty pipeline.

func (*Pipeline) Build

func (p *Pipeline) Build() ([]*graph.MultiEdge, []*graph.Node, error)

Build validates the Pipeline and returns a lower-level representation for execution. It is called by runners only.

func (*Pipeline) Root

func (p *Pipeline) Root() Scope

Root returns the root scope of the pipeline.

func (*Pipeline) String

func (p *Pipeline) String() string

type Scope

type Scope struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Scope is a hierarchical grouping for composite transforms. Scopes can be enclosed in other scopes and for a tree structure. For pipeline updates, the scope chain form a unique name. The scope chain can also be used for monitoring and visualization purposes.

func (Scope) IsValid

func (s Scope) IsValid() bool

IsValid returns true iff the Scope is valid. Any use of an invalid Scope will result in a panic.

func (Scope) Scope

func (s Scope) Scope(name string) Scope

Scope returns a sub-scope with the given name. The name provided may be augmented to ensure uniqueness.

func (Scope) String

func (s Scope) String() string

type SideInput

type SideInput struct {
	Input PCollection
}

SideInput provides a view of the given PCollection to the transformation.

Example
package main

import (
	"github.com/apache/beam/sdks/go/pkg/beam"
)

var s = beam.Scope{}

func main() {
	// words and sample are PCollection<string>
	var words, sample beam.PCollection
	// analyzeFn emits values from the primary based on the singleton side input.
	analyzeFn := func(primary string, side string, emit func(string)) {}
	// Use beam.SideInput to declare that the sample PCollection is the side input.
	beam.ParDo(s, analyzeFn, words, beam.SideInput{Input: sample})
}
Output:

type T

type T = typex.T

T is a Universal Type used to represent "generic" types in DoFn and PCollection signatures. Each universal type is distinct from all others.

type TypeDefinition

type TypeDefinition struct {
	// Var is the universal type defined.
	Var reflect.Type
	// T is the type it is bound to.
	T reflect.Type
}

TypeDefinition provides construction-time type information that the platform cannot infer, such as structured storage sources. These types are universal types that appear as output only. Types that are inferrable should not be conveyed via this mechanism.

type U

type U = typex.U

U is a Universal Type used to represent "generic" types in DoFn and PCollection signatures. Each universal type is distinct from all others.

type V

type V = typex.V

V is a Universal Type used to represent "generic" types in DoFn and PCollection signatures. Each universal type is distinct from all others.

type W

type W = typex.W

W is a Universal Type used to represent "generic" types in DoFn and PCollection signatures. Each universal type is distinct from all others.

type Window

type Window = typex.Window

type X

type X = typex.X

X is a Universal Type used to represent "generic" types in DoFn and PCollection signatures. Each universal type is distinct from all others.

type Y

type Y = typex.Y

Y is a Universal Type used to represent "generic" types in DoFn and PCollection signatures. Each universal type is distinct from all others.

type Z

type Z = typex.Z

Z is a Universal Type used to represent "generic" types in DoFn and PCollection signatures. Each universal type is distinct from all others.

Directories

Path Synopsis
Package artifact contains utilities for staging and retrieving artifacts.
Package artifact contains utilities for staging and retrieving artifacts.
gcsproxy
Package gcsproxy contains artifact staging and retrieval servers backed by GCS.
Package gcsproxy contains artifact staging and retrieval servers backed by GCS.
core
funcx
Package funcx contains functions and types used to perform type analysis of Beam functions.
Package funcx contains functions and types used to perform type analysis of Beam functions.
graph
Package graph is the internal representation of the Beam execution plan.
Package graph is the internal representation of the Beam execution plan.
graph/coder
Package coder contains coder representation and utilities.
Package coder contains coder representation and utilities.
graph/mtime
Package mtime contains a millisecond representation of time.
Package mtime contains a millisecond representation of time.
graph/window
Package window contains window representation, windowing strategies and utilities.
Package window contains window representation, windowing strategies and utilities.
metrics
Package metrics implements the Beam metrics API, described at http://s.apache.org/beam-metrics-api Metrics in the Beam model are uniquely identified by a namespace, a name, and the PTransform context in which they are used.
Package metrics implements the Beam metrics API, described at http://s.apache.org/beam-metrics-api Metrics in the Beam model are uniquely identified by a namespace, a name, and the PTransform context in which they are used.
runtime
Package runtime contains runtime hooks and utilities for pipeline options and type registration.
Package runtime contains runtime hooks and utilities for pipeline options and type registration.
runtime/coderx
Package coderx contains coders for primitive types that aren't included in the beam model.
Package coderx contains coders for primitive types that aren't included in the beam model.
runtime/exec
Package exec contains runtime plan representation and execution.
Package exec contains runtime plan representation and execution.
runtime/exec/optimized
Package optimized contains type-specialized shims for faster execution.
Package optimized contains type-specialized shims for faster execution.
runtime/graphx
Package graphx provides facilities to help with the serialization of pipelines into a serializable graph structure suitable for the worker.
Package graphx provides facilities to help with the serialization of pipelines into a serializable graph structure suitable for the worker.
runtime/graphx/schema
Package schema contains utility functions for relating Go types and Beam Schemas.
Package schema contains utility functions for relating Go types and Beam Schemas.
runtime/graphx/v1
Package v1 is a generated protocol buffer package.
Package v1 is a generated protocol buffer package.
runtime/harness
Package harness implements the SDK side of the Beam FnAPI.
Package harness implements the SDK side of the Beam FnAPI.
runtime/harness/init
Package init contains the harness initialization code defined by the FnAPI.
Package init contains the harness initialization code defined by the FnAPI.
runtime/harness/session
Package session is a generated protocol buffer package.
Package session is a generated protocol buffer package.
runtime/pipelinex
Package pipelinex contains utilities for manipulating Beam proto pipelines.
Package pipelinex contains utilities for manipulating Beam proto pipelines.
sdf
Package contains interfaces used specifically for splittable DoFns.
Package contains interfaces used specifically for splittable DoFns.
typex
Package typex contains full type representation for PCollections and DoFns, and utilities for type checking.
Package typex contains full type representation for PCollections and DoFns, and utilities for type checking.
util/dot
Package dot produces DOT graphs from Beam graph representations.
Package dot produces DOT graphs from Beam graph representations.
util/hooks
Package hooks allows runners to tailor execution of the worker harness.
Package hooks allows runners to tailor execution of the worker harness.
util/ioutilx
Package ioutilx contains additional io utilities.
Package ioutilx contains additional io utilities.
util/protox
Package protox contains utilities for working with protobufs.
Package protox contains utilities for working with protobufs.
util/reflectx
Package reflectx contains a set of reflection utilities and well-known types.
Package reflectx contains a set of reflection utilities and well-known types.
util/stringx
Package stringx contains utilities for working with strings.
Package stringx contains utilities for working with strings.
util/symtab
Package symtab allows reading low-level symbol information from the symbol table.
Package symtab allows reading low-level symbol information from the symbol table.
internal
errors
Package errors contains functionality for creating and wrapping errors with improved formatting compared to the standard Go error functionality.
Package errors contains functionality for creating and wrapping errors with improved formatting compared to the standard Go error functionality.
io
avroio
Package avroio contains transforms for reading and writing avro files.
Package avroio contains transforms for reading and writing avro files.
bigqueryio
Package bigqueryio provides transformations and utilities to interact with Google BigQuery.
Package bigqueryio provides transformations and utilities to interact with Google BigQuery.
databaseio
Package databaseio provides transformations and utilities to interact with generic database database/sql API.
Package databaseio provides transformations and utilities to interact with generic database database/sql API.
datastoreio
Package datastoreio provides transformations and utilities to interact with Google Datastore.
Package datastoreio provides transformations and utilities to interact with Google Datastore.
filesystem
Package filesystem contains an extensible file system abstraction.
Package filesystem contains an extensible file system abstraction.
filesystem/gcs
Package gcs contains a Google Cloud Storage (GCS) implementation of the Beam file system.
Package gcs contains a Google Cloud Storage (GCS) implementation of the Beam file system.
filesystem/local
Package local contains a local file implementation of the Beam file system.
Package local contains a local file implementation of the Beam file system.
filesystem/memfs
Package memfs contains a in-memory Beam filesystem.
Package memfs contains a in-memory Beam filesystem.
pubsubio
Package pubsubio provides access to PubSub on Dataflow streaming.
Package pubsubio provides access to PubSub on Dataflow streaming.
pubsubio/v1
Package v1 is a generated protocol buffer package.
Package v1 is a generated protocol buffer package.
rtrackers/offsetrange
Package offsetrange defines a restriction and restriction tracker for offset ranges.
Package offsetrange defines a restriction and restriction tracker for offset ranges.
synthetic
Package synthetic contains transforms for creating synthetic pipelines.
Package synthetic contains transforms for creating synthetic pipelines.
textio
Package textio contains transforms for reading and writing text files.
Package textio contains transforms for reading and writing text files.
Package log contains a re-targetable context-aware logging system.
Package log contains a re-targetable context-aware logging system.
Package model contains the portable Beam model contracts.
Package model contains the portable Beam model contracts.
options
gcpopts
Package gcpopts contains shared options for Google Cloud Platform.
Package gcpopts contains shared options for Google Cloud Platform.
jobopts
Package jobopts contains shared options for job submission.
Package jobopts contains shared options for job submission.
Package provision contains utilities for obtaining runtime provision, information -- such as pipeline options.
Package provision contains utilities for obtaining runtime provision, information -- such as pipeline options.
runners
dataflow
Package dataflow contains the Dataflow runner for submitting pipelines to Google Cloud Dataflow.
Package dataflow contains the Dataflow runner for submitting pipelines to Google Cloud Dataflow.
dataflow/dataflowlib
Package dataflowlib translates a Beam pipeline model to the Dataflow API job model, for submission to Google Cloud Dataflow.
Package dataflowlib translates a Beam pipeline model to the Dataflow API job model, for submission to Google Cloud Dataflow.
direct
Package direct contains the direct runner for running single-bundle pipelines in the current process.
Package direct contains the direct runner for running single-bundle pipelines in the current process.
dot
Package dot is a Beam runner that "runs" a pipeline by producing a DOT graph of the execution plan.
Package dot is a Beam runner that "runs" a pipeline by producing a DOT graph of the execution plan.
flink
Package flink contains the Flink runner.
Package flink contains the Flink runner.
spark
Package spark contains the Spark runner.
Package spark contains the Spark runner.
universal
Package universal contains a general-purpose runner that can submit jobs to any portable Beam runner.
Package universal contains a general-purpose runner that can submit jobs to any portable Beam runner.
universal/extworker
Package extworker provides an external worker service and related utilities.
Package extworker provides an external worker service and related utilities.
universal/runnerlib
Package runnerlib contains utilities for submitting Go pipelines to a Beam model runner.
Package runnerlib contains utilities for submitting Go pipelines to a Beam model runner.
vet
Package vet is a Beam runner that "runs" a pipeline by producing generated code to avoid symbol table lookups and reflection in pipeline execution.
Package vet is a Beam runner that "runs" a pipeline by producing generated code to avoid symbol table lookups and reflection in pipeline execution.
vet/testpipeline
Package testpipeline exports small test pipelines for testing the vet runner.
Package testpipeline exports small test pipelines for testing the vet runner.
testing
passert
Package passert contains verification transformations for testing pipelines.
Package passert contains verification transformations for testing pipelines.
ptest
Package ptest contains utilities for pipeline unit testing.
Package ptest contains utilities for pipeline unit testing.
transforms
filter
Package filter contains transformations for removing pipeline elements based on various conditions.
Package filter contains transformations for removing pipeline elements based on various conditions.
stats
Package stats contains transforms for statistical processing.
Package stats contains transforms for statistical processing.
top
Package top contains transformations for finding the smallest (or largest) N elements based on arbitrary orderings.
Package top contains transformations for finding the smallest (or largest) N elements based on arbitrary orderings.
util
errorx
Package errorx contains utilities for handling errors.
Package errorx contains utilities for handling errors.
execx
Package execx contains wrappers and utilities for the exec package.
Package execx contains wrappers and utilities for the exec package.
gcsx
Package gcsx contains utilities for working with Google Cloud Storage (GCS).
Package gcsx contains utilities for working with Google Cloud Storage (GCS).
grpcx
Package grpcx contains utilities for working with gRPC.
Package grpcx contains utilities for working with gRPC.
pubsubx
Package pubsubx contains utilities for working with Google PubSub.
Package pubsubx contains utilities for working with Google PubSub.
shimx
Package shimx specifies the templates for generating type assertion shims for Apache Beam Go SDK pipelines.
Package shimx specifies the templates for generating type assertion shims for Apache Beam Go SDK pipelines.
starcgenx
Package starcgenx is a Static Analysis Type Assertion shim and Registration Code Generator which provides an extractor to extract types from a package, in order to generate approprate shimsr a package so code can be generated for it.
Package starcgenx is a Static Analysis Type Assertion shim and Registration Code Generator which provides an extractor to extract types from a package, in order to generate approprate shimsr a package so code can be generated for it.
syscallx
Package syscallx provides system call utilities that attempt to hide platform differences.
Package syscallx provides system call utilities that attempt to hide platform differences.
x
beamx
Package beamx is a convenience package for beam.
Package beamx is a convenience package for beam.
debug
Package debug contains pipeline components that may help in debugging pipeline issues.
Package debug contains pipeline components that may help in debugging pipeline issues.
hooks/perf
Package perf is to add performance measuring hooks to a runner, such as cpu, heap, or trace profiles.
Package perf is to add performance measuring hooks to a runner, such as cpu, heap, or trace profiles.

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