$ find /usr/include/kudu -type f -name *.h
Kudu provides C++ and Java client APIs, as well as reference examples to illustrate their use. A Python API is included, but it is currently considered experimental, unstable, and subject to change at any time.
Use of server-side or private interfaces is not supported, and interfaces which are not part of public APIs have no stability guarantees. |
The documentation for the C++ client APIs is included in the header files in
/usr/include/kudu/
if you installed Kudu using packages or subdirectories
of src/kudu/client/
if you built Kudu from source. If you installed Kudu using parcels,
no headers are included in your installation. and you will need to build
Kudu from source in order to have access to the headers and shared libraries.
The following command is a naive approach to finding relevant header files. Use of any APIs other than the client APIs is unsupported.
$ find /usr/include/kudu -type f -name *.h
You can view the Java API documentation online. Alternatively,
after building the Java client, Java API documentation is available
in java/kudu-client/target/apidocs/index.html
.
Several example applications are provided in the
kudu-examples Github
repository. Each example includes a README
that shows how to compile and run
it. These examples illustrate correct usage of the Kudu APIs, as well as how to
set up a virtual machine to run Kudu. The following list includes some of the
examples that are available today. Check the repository itself in case this list goes
out of date.
java-example
A simple Java application which connects to a Kudu instance, creates a table, writes data to it, then drops the table.
collectl
A small Java application which listens on a TCP socket for time series data corresponding to the Collectl wire protocol. The commonly-available collectl tool can be used to send example data to the server.
clients/python
An experimental Python client for Kudu.
demo-vm-setup
Scripts to download and run a VirtualBox virtual machine with Kudu already installed. See Quickstart for more information.
These examples should serve as helpful starting points for your own Kudu applications and integrations.
The following Maven <dependency>
element is valid for the Kudu public beta:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.kududb</groupId>
<artifactId>kudu-client</artifactId>
<version>0.5.0</version>
</dependency>
Because the Maven artifacts are not in Maven Central, use the following <repository>
element:
<repository>
<id>cdh.repo</id>
<name>Cloudera Repositories</name>
<url>https://repository.cloudera.com/artifactory/cloudera-repos</url>
<snapshots>
<enabled>false</enabled>
</snapshots>
</repository>
See subdirectories of https://github.com/cloudera/kudu-examples/tree/master/java for example Maven pom.xml files.
See Using Impala With Kudu for guidance on installing
and using Impala with Kudu, including several impala-shell
examples.
Kudu was designed to integrate with MapReduce, YARN, Spark, and other frameworks in the Hadoop ecosystem. See RowCounter.java and ImportCsv.java for examples which you can model your own integrations on. Stay tuned for more examples using YARN and Spark in the future.