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I want to know if I can compare two consecutive jobs in Hadoop. If not I would appreciate if anyone can tell me how to proceed with that. To be precise, I want to compare the jobs in terms of what exactly two jobs did? The reason behind doing this is to create a statistics about how many jobs executed on Hadoop were similar in terms of the behavior. For example how many times same sorting function was executed on the same input.

For example if first job did something like SortList(A) and some other job did SortList(A)+Group(result(SortList(A)). Now, I am wondering if in Hadoop there is some mapping being stored somewhere like JobID X-> SortList(A).

So far, I thought of this problem as finding the entry point in Hadoop and try to understand how job is created and what information is being kept with a jobID and in what form (in a code form or some description) , but I was not able to figure it out successfully.

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Hadoop's Counters might be a good place to start. You can define your own counter names (like each counter name is a data set you are working on) and increment that counter each time you perform a sort on it. Finding which data set you are working on, however, may be the more difficult task.

Here's a tutorial I found: http://philippeadjiman.com/blog/2010/01/07/hadoop-tutorial-series-issue-3-counters-in-action/

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No. Hadoop jobs are just programs. They can have any side effects. They can write ordinary files, hdfs file, or a database. Nothing in hadoop is recording all of their activities. All hadoop is manage the schedule and the flow of data.

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  • Actually, I found it maintains bit of information about the job, but I dont think It is of any use for me. But, what is important me is if I can do it somehow before it start this execution. I mean if I can get to know what is the entry point of hadoop. then I would like to modify the code so that i can do what I need... If you can tell something about that.. Also, I would like to thank you for your reply.. It really helped to some extent, atleast it has given me some orientation...
    – user722856
    Apr 24, 2011 at 19:16
  • Hadoop is after all open source, so you can read every line of it. The 'entrypoint' would be the hadoop command shell script, which runs a particular java class, and off it goes.
    – bmargulies
    Apr 24, 2011 at 19:21

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