Create a Dataflow pipeline using Java
This document shows you how to set up your Google Cloud project, create an example pipeline built with the Apache Beam SDK for Java, and run the example pipeline on the Dataflow service. The pipeline reads a text file from Cloud Storage, counts the number of unique words in the file, and then writes the word counts back to Cloud Storage. For an introduction to the WordCount pipeline, see the How to use WordCount in Apache Beam video.
This tutorial requires Maven, but it's also possible to convert the example project from Maven to Gradle. To learn more, see Optional: Convert from Maven to Gradle.
To follow step-by-step guidance for this task directly in the Google Cloud console, click Guide me:
Before you begin
- Sign in to your Google Cloud account. If you're new to Google Cloud, create an account to evaluate how our products perform in real-world scenarios. New customers also get $300 in free credits to run, test, and deploy workloads.
- Install the Google Cloud CLI.
-
To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:
gcloud init
-
Create or select a Google Cloud project.
-
Create a Google Cloud project:
gcloud projects create PROJECT_ID
Replace
PROJECT_ID
with a name for the Google Cloud project you are creating. -
Select the Google Cloud project that you created:
gcloud config set project PROJECT_ID
Replace
PROJECT_ID
with your Google Cloud project name.
-
-
Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.
-
Enable the Dataflow, Compute Engine, Cloud Logging, Cloud Storage, Google Cloud Storage JSON, BigQuery, Cloud Pub/Sub, Cloud Datastore, and Cloud Resource Manager APIs:
gcloud services enable dataflow
compute_component logging storage_component storage_api bigquery pubsub datastore.googleapis.com cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com -
Create local authentication credentials for your user account:
gcloud auth application-default login
-
Grant roles to your user account. Run the following command once for each of the following IAM roles:
roles/iam.serviceAccountUser
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID --member="user:USER_IDENTIFIER" --role=ROLE
- Replace
PROJECT_ID
with your project ID. -
Replace
USER_IDENTIFIER
with the identifier for your user account. For example,user:myemail@example.com
. - Replace
ROLE
with each individual role.
- Replace
- Install the Google Cloud CLI.
-
To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:
gcloud init
-
Create or select a Google Cloud project.
-
Create a Google Cloud project:
gcloud projects create PROJECT_ID
Replace
PROJECT_ID
with a name for the Google Cloud project you are creating. -
Select the Google Cloud project that you created:
gcloud config set project PROJECT_ID
Replace
PROJECT_ID
with your Google Cloud project name.
-
-
Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.
-
Enable the Dataflow, Compute Engine, Cloud Logging, Cloud Storage, Google Cloud Storage JSON, BigQuery, Cloud Pub/Sub, Cloud Datastore, and Cloud Resource Manager APIs:
gcloud services enable dataflow
compute_component logging storage_component storage_api bigquery pubsub datastore.googleapis.com cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com -
Create local authentication credentials for your user account:
gcloud auth application-default login
-
Grant roles to your user account. Run the following command once for each of the following IAM roles:
roles/iam.serviceAccountUser
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID --member="user:USER_IDENTIFIER" --role=ROLE
- Replace
PROJECT_ID
with your project ID. -
Replace
USER_IDENTIFIER
with the identifier for your user account. For example,user:myemail@example.com
. - Replace
ROLE
with each individual role.
- Replace
Grant roles to your Compute Engine default service account. Run the following command once for each of the following IAM roles:
roles/dataflow.admin
roles/dataflow.worker
roles/storage.objectAdmin
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID --member="serviceAccount:PROJECT_NUMBER-compute@developer.gserviceaccount.com" --role=SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ROLE
- Replace
PROJECT_ID
with your project ID. - Replace
PROJECT_NUMBER
with your project number. To find your project number, see Identify projects or use thegcloud projects describe
command. - Replace
SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ROLE
with each individual role.
-
Create a Cloud Storage bucket and configure it as follows:
-
Set the storage class to
S
(Standard). -
Set the storage location to the following:
US
(United States). -
Replace
BUCKET_NAME
with a unique bucket name. Don't include sensitive information in the bucket name because the bucket namespace is global and publicly visible.
gcloud storage buckets create gs://BUCKET_NAME --default-storage-class STANDARD --location US
-
Set the storage class to
- Copy the following, as you need them in a later section:
- Your Cloud Storage bucket name.
- Your Google Cloud project ID. To find this ID, see Identifying projects.
- Download and install the
Java Development Kit (JDK) version 11. (Dataflow continues
to support version 8.) Verify that the
JAVA_HOME
environment variable is set and points to your JDK installation. - Download and install Apache Maven, following Maven's installation guide for your specific operating system.
Get the pipeline code
The Apache Beam SDK is an open source programming model for data processing pipelines. You define these pipelines with an Apache Beam program and can choose a runner, such as Dataflow, to run your pipeline.
- In your shell or terminal, use the
Maven Archetype Plugin to create a Maven project on your computer that
contains the Apache Beam SDK's
WordCount
examples:mvn archetype:generate \ -DarchetypeGroupId=org.apache.beam \ -DarchetypeArtifactId=beam-sdks-java-maven-archetypes-examples \ -DarchetypeVersion=2.61.0 \ -DgroupId=org.example \ -DartifactId=word-count-beam \ -Dversion="0.1" \ -Dpackage=org.apache.beam.examples \ -DinteractiveMode=false
The command creates a new directory called
word-count-beam
under your current directory. Theword-count-beam
directory contains a simplepom.xml
file and a series of example pipelines that count words in text files. - Verify that your
word-count-beam
directory contains thepom.xml
file:Linux or macOS
cd word-count-beam/ ls
The output is the following:
pom.xml src
Windows
cd word-count-beam/ dir
The output is the following:
pom.xml src
- Verify that your Maven project contains the example pipelines:
Linux or macOS
ls src/main/java/org/apache/beam/examples/
The output is the following:
DebuggingWordCount.java WindowedWordCount.java common MinimalWordCount.java WordCount.java
Windows
dir src/main/java/org/apache/beam/examples/
The output is the following:
DebuggingWordCount.java WindowedWordCount.java common MinimalWordCount.java WordCount.java
For a detailed introduction to the Apache Beam concepts that are used in these examples, see
the Apache Beam WordCount Example. The instructions in the next
sections use
WordCount.java
.
Run the pipeline locally
- In your shell or terminal, run the
WordCount
pipeline locally from yourword-count-beam
directory:mvn compile exec:java \ -Dexec.mainClass=org.apache.beam.examples.WordCount \ -Dexec.args="--output=counts"
The output files have the prefix
counts
and are written to theword-count-beam
directory. They contain unique words from the input text and the number of occurrences of each word.
Run the pipeline on the Dataflow service
- In your shell or terminal, build and run the
WordCount
pipeline on the Dataflow service from yourword-count-beam
directory:mvn -Pdataflow-runner compile exec:java \ -Dexec.mainClass=org.apache.beam.examples.WordCount \ -Dexec.args="--project=PROJECT_ID \ --gcpTempLocation=gs://BUCKET_NAME/temp/ \ --output=gs://BUCKET_NAME/output \ --runner=DataflowRunner \ --region=REGION"
Replace the following:
PROJECT_ID
: your Google Cloud project IDBUCKET_NAME
: the name of your Cloud Storage bucketREGION
: a Dataflow region, likeus-central1
View your results
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Dataflow Jobs page.
Go to JobsThe Jobs page shows the details of all the available jobs, including the status. The wordcount job's Status is Running at first, and then updates to Succeeded.
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Cloud Storage Buckets page.
Go to BucketsThe Buckets page displays the list of all the storage buckets in your project.
- Click the storage bucket that you created.
The Bucket details page shows the output files and staging files that your Dataflow job created.
Clean up
To avoid incurring charges to your Google Cloud account for the resources used on this page, delete the Google Cloud project with the resources.
Delete the project
The easiest way to eliminate billing is to delete the Google Cloud project that you created for the quickstart.
- In the Google Cloud console, go to the Manage resources page.
- In the project list, select the project that you want to delete, and then click Delete.
- In the dialog, type the project ID, and then click Shut down to delete the project.
Delete the individual resources
If you want to keep the Google Cloud project that you used in this quickstart, then delete the individual resources:
- In the Google Cloud console, go to the Cloud Storage Buckets page.
- Click the checkbox for the bucket that you want to delete.
- To delete the bucket, click Delete, and then follow the instructions.
Revoke the roles that you granted to the Compute Engine default service account. Run the following command once for each of the following IAM roles:
roles/dataflow.admin
roles/dataflow.worker
roles/storage.objectAdmin
gcloud projects remove-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID \ --member=serviceAccount:PROJECT_NUMBER-compute@developer.gserviceaccount.com \ --role=SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ROLE
-
Optional: Revoke the authentication credentials that you created, and delete the local credential file.
gcloud auth application-default revoke
-
Optional: Revoke credentials from the gcloud CLI.
gcloud auth revoke
What's next
- Learn about the Apache Beam programming model.
- Learn how to use Apache Beam to build pipelines.
- Work through the WordCount and Mobile Gaming examples.