Dataproc client libraries

This page shows how to get started with the Cloud Client Libraries for the Dataproc API. Client libraries make it easier to access Google Cloud APIs from a supported language. Although you can use Google Cloud APIs directly by making raw requests to the server, client libraries provide simplifications that significantly reduce the amount of code you need to write.

However, we recommend using the older Google API Client Libraries if running on App Engine standard environment. Read more about the Cloud Client Libraries and the older Google API Client Libraries in Client libraries explained.

Dataproc Cloud Client Libraries may be in alpha or beta stage. See the library reference for details.

Install the client library

C++

See Setting up a C++ development environment for details about this client library's requirements and install dependencies.

C#

Also see Google.Cloud.Dataproc.V1 Installation

For more information, see Setting Up a C# Development Environment.

Go

go get cloud.google.com/go/dataproc/apiv1

For more information, see Install the Cloud Client Libraries for Go.

For more information, see Setting Up a Go Development Environment.

Java

If you are using Maven, add this to your pom.xml file:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
    <artifactId>google-cloud-dataproc</artifactId>
    <version>insert dataproc-library-version here</version>
</dependency>

If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies:

compile group: 'com.google.cloud', name: 'google-cloud-dataproc', version: 'insert dataproc-library-version here'

For more information, see Setting Up a Java Development Environment.

Node.js

npm install --save @google-cloud/dataproc

For more information, see Setting Up a Node.js Development Environment.

PHP

composer require google/cloud

For more information, see Using PHP on Google Cloud.

Python

pip install --upgrade google-cloud-dataproc

For more information, see Setting Up a Python Development Environment.

Ruby

gem install google-cloud-dataproc

For more information, see Setting Up a Ruby Development Environment.

Set up authentication

To authenticate calls to Google Cloud APIs, client libraries support Application Default Credentials (ADC); the libraries look for credentials in a set of defined locations and use those credentials to authenticate requests to the API. With ADC, you can make credentials available to your application in a variety of environments, such as local development or production, without needing to modify your application code.

For production environments, the way you set up ADC depends on the service and context. For more information, see Set up Application Default Credentials.

For a local development environment, you can set up ADC with the credentials that are associated with your Google Account:

  1. Install and initialize the gcloud CLI.

    When you initialize the gcloud CLI, be sure to specify a Google Cloud project in which you have permission to access the resources your application needs.

  2. Create your credential file:

    gcloud auth application-default login

    A sign-in screen appears. After you sign in, your credentials are stored in the local credential file used by ADC.

Use the client library

The following example shows how to use the client library.

C++

+

#include "google/cloud/dataproc/v1/cluster_controller_client.h"
#include "google/cloud/common_options.h"
#include <iostream>

int main(int argc, char* argv[]) try {
  if (argc != 3) {
    std::cerr << "Usage: " << argv[0] << " project-id region\n";
    return 1;
  }
  std::string const project_id = argv[1];
  std::string const region = argv[2];

  namespace dataproc = ::google::cloud::dataproc_v1;

  auto client = dataproc::ClusterControllerClient(
      dataproc::MakeClusterControllerConnection(region == "global" ? ""
                                                                   : region));

  for (auto c : client.ListClusters(project_id, region)) {
    if (!c) throw std::move(c).status();
    std::cout << c->cluster_name() << "\n";
  }

  return 0;
} catch (google::cloud::Status const& status) {
  std::cerr << "google::cloud::Status thrown: " << status << "\n";
  return 1;
}

Go

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"
	"io"

	dataproc "cloud.google.com/go/dataproc/apiv1"
	"cloud.google.com/go/dataproc/apiv1/dataprocpb"
	"google.golang.org/api/option"
)

func createCluster(w io.Writer, projectID, region, clusterName string) error {
	// projectID := "your-project-id"
	// region := "us-central1"
	// clusterName := "your-cluster"
	ctx := context.Background()

	// Create the cluster client.
	endpoint := region + "-dataproc.googleapis.com:443"
	clusterClient, err := dataproc.NewClusterControllerClient(ctx, option.WithEndpoint(endpoint))
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("dataproc.NewClusterControllerClient: %w", err)
	}
	defer clusterClient.Close()

	// Create the cluster config.
	req := &dataprocpb.CreateClusterRequest{
		ProjectId: projectID,
		Region:    region,
		Cluster: &dataprocpb.Cluster{
			ProjectId:   projectID,
			ClusterName: clusterName,
			Config: &dataprocpb.ClusterConfig{
				MasterConfig: &dataprocpb.InstanceGroupConfig{
					NumInstances:   1,
					MachineTypeUri: "n1-standard-2",
				},
				WorkerConfig: &dataprocpb.InstanceGroupConfig{
					NumInstances:   2,
					MachineTypeUri: "n1-standard-2",
				},
			},
		},
	}

	// Create the cluster.
	op, err := clusterClient.CreateCluster(ctx, req)
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("CreateCluster: %w", err)
	}

	resp, err := op.Wait(ctx)
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("CreateCluster.Wait: %w", err)
	}

	// Output a success message.
	fmt.Fprintf(w, "Cluster created successfully: %s", resp.ClusterName)
	return nil
}

Java

import com.google.api.gax.longrunning.OperationFuture;
import com.google.cloud.dataproc.v1.Cluster;
import com.google.cloud.dataproc.v1.ClusterConfig;
import com.google.cloud.dataproc.v1.ClusterControllerClient;
import com.google.cloud.dataproc.v1.ClusterControllerSettings;
import com.google.cloud.dataproc.v1.ClusterOperationMetadata;
import com.google.cloud.dataproc.v1.InstanceGroupConfig;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException;

public class CreateCluster {

  public static void createCluster() throws IOException, InterruptedException {
    // TODO(developer): Replace these variables before running the sample.
    String projectId = "your-project-id";
    String region = "your-project-region";
    String clusterName = "your-cluster-name";
    createCluster(projectId, region, clusterName);
  }

  public static void createCluster(String projectId, String region, String clusterName)
      throws IOException, InterruptedException {
    String myEndpoint = String.format("%s-dataproc.googleapis.com:443", region);

    // Configure the settings for the cluster controller client.
    ClusterControllerSettings clusterControllerSettings =
        ClusterControllerSettings.newBuilder().setEndpoint(myEndpoint).build();

    // Create a cluster controller client with the configured settings. The client only needs to be
    // created once and can be reused for multiple requests. Using a try-with-resources
    // closes the client, but this can also be done manually with the .close() method.
    try (ClusterControllerClient clusterControllerClient =
        ClusterControllerClient.create(clusterControllerSettings)) {
      // Configure the settings for our cluster.
      InstanceGroupConfig masterConfig =
          InstanceGroupConfig.newBuilder()
              .setMachineTypeUri("n1-standard-2")
              .setNumInstances(1)
              .build();
      InstanceGroupConfig workerConfig =
          InstanceGroupConfig.newBuilder()
              .setMachineTypeUri("n1-standard-2")
              .setNumInstances(2)
              .build();
      ClusterConfig clusterConfig =
          ClusterConfig.newBuilder()
              .setMasterConfig(masterConfig)
              .setWorkerConfig(workerConfig)
              .build();
      // Create the cluster object with the desired cluster config.
      Cluster cluster =
          Cluster.newBuilder().setClusterName(clusterName).setConfig(clusterConfig).build();

      // Create the Cloud Dataproc cluster.
      OperationFuture<Cluster, ClusterOperationMetadata> createClusterAsyncRequest =
          clusterControllerClient.createClusterAsync(projectId, region, cluster);
      Cluster response = createClusterAsyncRequest.get();

      // Print out a success message.
      System.out.printf("Cluster created successfully: %s", response.getClusterName());

    } catch (ExecutionException e) {
      System.err.println(String.format("Error executing createCluster: %s ", e.getMessage()));
    }
  }
}

Node.js

.
const dataproc = require('@google-cloud/dataproc');

// TODO(developer): Uncomment and set the following variables
// projectId = 'YOUR_PROJECT_ID'
// region = 'YOUR_CLUSTER_REGION'
// clusterName = 'YOUR_CLUSTER_NAME'

// Create a client with the endpoint set to the desired cluster region
const client = new dataproc.v1.ClusterControllerClient({
  apiEndpoint: `${region}-dataproc.googleapis.com`,
  projectId: projectId,
});

async function createCluster() {
  // Create the cluster config
  const request = {
    projectId: projectId,
    region: region,
    cluster: {
      clusterName: clusterName,
      config: {
        masterConfig: {
          numInstances: 1,
          machineTypeUri: 'n1-standard-2',
        },
        workerConfig: {
          numInstances: 2,
          machineTypeUri: 'n1-standard-2',
        },
      },
    },
  };

  // Create the cluster
  const [operation] = await client.createCluster(request);
  const [response] = await operation.promise();

  // Output a success message
  console.log(`Cluster created successfully: ${response.clusterName}`);

Python

from google.cloud import dataproc_v1 as dataproc


def create_cluster(project_id, region, cluster_name):
    """This sample walks a user through creating a Cloud Dataproc cluster
    using the Python client library.

    Args:
        project_id (string): Project to use for creating resources.
        region (string): Region where the resources should live.
        cluster_name (string): Name to use for creating a cluster.
    """

    # Create a client with the endpoint set to the desired cluster region.
    cluster_client = dataproc.ClusterControllerClient(
        client_options={"api_endpoint": f"{region}-dataproc.googleapis.com:443"}
    )

    # Create the cluster config.
    cluster = {
        "project_id": project_id,
        "cluster_name": cluster_name,
        "config": {
            "master_config": {"num_instances": 1, "machine_type_uri": "n1-standard-2"},
            "worker_config": {"num_instances": 2, "machine_type_uri": "n1-standard-2"},
        },
    }

    # Create the cluster.
    operation = cluster_client.create_cluster(
        request={"project_id": project_id, "region": region, "cluster": cluster}
    )
    result = operation.result()

    # Output a success message.
    print(f"Cluster created successfully: {result.cluster_name}")

Additional resources

C++

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for C++:

C#

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for C#:

Go

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Go:

Java

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Java:

Node.js

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Node.js:

PHP

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for PHP:

Python

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Python:

Ruby

The following list contains links to more resources related to the client library for Ruby: