I think you are mixing up 2 things here, following 2 types of splitting are completely separate:
- Splitting files into HDFS blocks
- Splitting files to be distributed to the mappers
And, no, split position wasn't calculated in a data aware way.
Now, by default if you are using FileInputFormat
, then these both types of splitting kind-of overlaps (and hence are identical).
But you can always have a custom way of splitting for the second point above(or even have no splitting at all, i.e. have one complete file go to a single mapper).
Also you can change the hdfs block size independent of the way your InputFormat
is splitting input data.
Another important point to note here is that, while the files are actually broken physically when getting stored in HDFS, but for the split in order to distribute to mappers, there is no actual physical split of files, rather it is only logical split.
Taking example from here :
Suppose we want to load a 110MB text file to hdfs. hdfs block size and
Input split size is set to 64MB.
Number of mappers is based on number of Input splits not number of hdfs block splits.
When we set hdfs block to 64MB, it is exactly 67108864(64*1024*1024) bytes. I mean it doesn't matter the file will
be split from middle of the line.
Now we have 2 input split (so two maps). Last line of first block and first line of second block is not meaningful. TextInputFormat is
responsible for reading meaningful lines and giving them to map jobs.
What TextInputFormat does is:
- In second block it will seek to second line which is a complete line and read from there and gives it to second mapper.
- First mapper will read until the end of first block and also it will process the (last incomplete line of first block + first
incomplete line of second block).
Read more here.