/DataflowTemplates

Google-provided Cloud Dataflow template pipelines for solving simple in-Cloud data tasks

Primary LanguageJavaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Google Cloud Dataflow Template Pipelines

These Dataflow templates are an effort to solve simple, but large, in-Cloud data tasks, including data import/export/backup/restore and bulk API operations, without a development environment. The technology under the hood which makes these operations possible is the Google Cloud Dataflow service combined with a set of Apache Beam SDK templated pipelines.

Google is providing this collection of pre-implemented Dataflow templates as a reference and to provide easy customization for developers wanting to extend their functionality.

Open in Cloud Shell

Template Pipelines

* Supports user-defined functions (UDFs).

For documentation on each template's usage and parameters, please see the official docs.

Getting Started

Requirements

  • Java 8
  • Maven 3

Building the Project

Build the entire project using the maven compile command.

mvn clean compile

Creating a Template File

Dataflow templates can be created using a maven command which builds the project and stages the template file on Google Cloud Storage. Any parameters passed at template build time will not be able to be overwritten at execution time.

mvn compile exec:java \
-Dexec.mainClass=com.google.cloud.teleport.templates.<template-class> \
-Dexec.cleanupDaemonThreads=false \
-Dexec.args=" \
--project=<project-id> \
--stagingLocation=gs://<bucket-name>/staging \
--tempLocation=gs://<bucket-name>/temp \
--templateLocation=gs://<bucket-name>/templates/<template-name>.json \
--runner=DataflowRunner"

Executing a Template File

Once the template is staged on Google Cloud Storage, it can then be executed using the gcloud CLI tool. The runtime parameters required by the template can be passed in the parameters field via comma-separated list of paramName=Value.

gcloud dataflow jobs run <job-name> \
--gcs-location=<template-location> \
--zone=<zone> \
--parameters <parameters>

Using UDFs

User-defined functions (UDFs) allow you to customize a template's functionality by providing a short JavaScript function without having to maintain the entire codebase. This is useful in situations which you'd like to rename fields, filter values, or even transform data formats before output to the destination. All UDFs are executed by providing the payload of the element as a string to the JavaScript function. You can then use JavaScript's in-built JSON parser or other system functions to transform the data prior to the pipeline's output. The return statement of a UDF specifies the payload to pass forward in the pipeline. This should always return a string value. If no value is returned or the function returns undefined, the incoming record will be filtered from the output.

UDF Function Specification

Template UDF Input Type Input Description UDF Output Type Output Description
Datastore Bulk Delete String A JSON string of the entity String A JSON string of the entity to delete; filter entities by returning undefined
Datastore to Pub/Sub String A JSON string of the entity String The payload to publish to Pub/Sub
Datastore to GCS Text String A JSON string of the entity String A single-line within the output file
GCS Text to BigQuery String A single-line within the input file String A JSON string which matches the destination table's schema
Pub/Sub to BigQuery String A string representation of the incoming payload String A JSON string which matches the destination table's schema
Pub/Sub to Datastore String A string representation of the incoming payload String A JSON string of the entity to write to Datastore
Pub/Sub to Splunk String A string representation of the incoming payload String The event data to be sent to Splunk HEC events endpoint. Must be a string or a stringified JSON object

UDF Examples

Adding fields

/**
 * A transform which adds a field to the incoming data.
 * @param {string} inJson
 * @return {string} outJson
 */
function transform(inJson) {
  var obj = JSON.parse(inJson);
  obj.dataFeed = "Real-time Transactions";
  obj.dataSource = "POS";
  return JSON.stringify(obj);
}

Filtering records

/**
 * A transform function which only accepts 42 as the answer to life.
 * @param {string} inJson
 * @return {string} outJson
 */
function transform(inJson) {
  var obj = JSON.parse(inJson);
  // only output objects which have an answer to life of 42.
  if (obj.hasOwnProperty('answerToLife') && obj.answerToLife === 42) {
    return JSON.stringify(obj);
  }
}