I think you're misunderstanding the purpose of the key that you write out for each value that you've mapped. The purpose of the key is to group elements into particular calls to the reducer. Since you want all of the values in your code to be considered, at once, you need to use only a single key, as follows:
public class MyMapper<K extends WritableComparable, V extends Writable>
extends MapReduceBase implements Mapper<IntWriteable, WhateverTheInputTypeWas,
IntWriteable, Text> {
public void map(IntWriteable key, WhateverTheInputTypeWas val,
OutputCollector<IntWriteable, Text> output, Reporter reporter)
// do some processing
output.collect(new IntWriteable(1), ...);
}
}
The infrastructure gathers all of the values for a particular key automatically, and presents them in a single call to reduce
. That's why reduce
takes an Iterator
of values, not just a single value. All you need to do is iterate through the whole iterator, and when hasNext()
returns false, that's when you've reached the end of the reduce
function's input for that particular key.
public static class Reduce extends MapReduceBase
implements Reducer<IntWritable, Text,
IntWritable, Text> {
public void reduce(IntWritable key, Iterator<Text> values,
OutputCollector<IntWritable, Text> output,
Reporter reporter) throws IOException {
int i=0
Text[] outputValues = new Text[7];
while (values.hasNext() && i < 7) {
outputValues[i++] = values.next();
}
// now output the contents of outputValues to the OutputCollector
}
}
If you need different keys for some other computation that you're doing in the reducer, just output those from the mapper as well, and have a special sentinel value (maybe -1, depending on what your keys mean) that gets output for every data element mapped, and then just run this special logic only when the key equals the sentinel value.