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I tried installing Hadoop following this http://hadoop.apache.org/common/docs/stable/single_node_setup.html document. When I tried executing this

bin/hadoop jar hadoop-examples-*.jar grep input output 'dfs[a-z.]+' 

I am getting the following Exception

java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space

Please suggest a solution so that i can try out the example. The entire Exception is listed below. I am new to Hadoop I might have done something dump . Any suggestion will be highly appreciated.

anuj@anuj-VPCEA13EN:~/hadoop$ bin/hadoop jar hadoop-examples-*.jar grep input output 'dfs[a-z.]+'
11/12/11 17:38:22 INFO util.NativeCodeLoader: Loaded the native-hadoop library
11/12/11 17:38:22 INFO mapred.FileInputFormat: Total input paths to process : 7
11/12/11 17:38:22 INFO mapred.JobClient: Running job: job_local_0001
11/12/11 17:38:22 INFO util.ProcessTree: setsid exited with exit code 0
11/12/11 17:38:22 INFO mapred.Task:  Using ResourceCalculatorPlugin : org.apache.hadoop.util.LinuxResourceCalculatorPlugin@e49dcd
11/12/11 17:38:22 INFO mapred.MapTask: numReduceTasks: 1
11/12/11 17:38:22 INFO mapred.MapTask: io.sort.mb = 100
11/12/11 17:38:22 WARN mapred.LocalJobRunner: job_local_0001
java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space
    at org.apache.hadoop.mapred.MapTask$MapOutputBuffer.<init>(MapTask.java:949)
    at org.apache.hadoop.mapred.MapTask.runOldMapper(MapTask.java:428)
    at org.apache.hadoop.mapred.MapTask.run(MapTask.java:372)
    at org.apache.hadoop.mapred.LocalJobRunner$Job.run(LocalJobRunner.java:212)
11/12/11 17:38:23 INFO mapred.JobClient:  map 0% reduce 0%
11/12/11 17:38:23 INFO mapred.JobClient: Job complete: job_local_0001
11/12/11 17:38:23 INFO mapred.JobClient: Counters: 0
11/12/11 17:38:23 INFO mapred.JobClient: Job Failed: NA
java.io.IOException: Job failed!
    at org.apache.hadoop.mapred.JobClient.runJob(JobClient.java:1257)
    at org.apache.hadoop.examples.Grep.run(Grep.java:69)
    at org.apache.hadoop.util.ToolRunner.run(ToolRunner.java:65)
    at org.apache.hadoop.examples.Grep.main(Grep.java:93)
    at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
    at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
    at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
    at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
    at org.apache.hadoop.util.ProgramDriver$ProgramDescription.invoke(ProgramDriver.java:68)
    at org.apache.hadoop.util.ProgramDriver.driver(ProgramDriver.java:139)
    at org.apache.hadoop.examples.ExampleDriver.main(ExampleDriver.java:64)
    at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
    at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
    at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
    at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
    at org.apache.hadoop.util.RunJar.main(RunJar.java:156)
share|improve this question
What does your input file contain? – Tudor Dec 11 '11 at 14:12
I also suspect that file have one huge line – David Gruzman Dec 11 '11 at 20:04
I'm having this same issue with Hadoop 1.0.0, input is as per getting started wiki page - wiki.apache.org/hadoop/GettingStartedWithHadoop. Tried all three solutions here, none of which seem to have any impact at all. – tbroberg Feb 7 '12 at 8:45
2  
Solved my problem. hadoop was giving /etc/hadoop config directory precedence over conf directory which messed me all up. I debugged this by modifying the bin/hadoop script to print out the java command line at the bottom instead of executing it. – tbroberg Feb 8 '12 at 2:57

8 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

You can assign more memory be editing the conf/mapred-site.xml file and adding the property:

  <property>
    <name>mapred.child.java.opts</name>
    <value>-Xmx1024m</value>
  </property>

This will start the hadoop JVMs with more heap space.

share|improve this answer
I tried it but the same exception repeats :( – Anuj Dec 11 '11 at 13:03
@Anuj, try setting the number even higher. If not even 2048m is enough, there must a problem with the implementation. – Tudor Dec 11 '11 at 13:03
I use an i3 3GB laptop . – Anuj Dec 11 '11 at 13:04
I need to edit mapred-site.xml and re execute the command right .. but that didnt work :( – Anuj Dec 11 '11 at 13:05
@Anuj: yes that's what you need to do. – Tudor Dec 11 '11 at 13:06
show 4 more comments

For anyone using RPM or DEB packages, the documentation and common advice is misleading. These packages install hadoop configuration files into /etc/hadoop. These will take priority over other settings.

The /etc/hadoop/hadoop-env.sh sets the maximum java heap memory for Hadoop, by Default it is:

   export HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS="-Xmx128m $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS"

This Xmx setting is too low, simply change it to this and rerun

   export HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS="-Xmx2048m $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS"
share|improve this answer
that fixes the issue... – polerto Apr 7 at 22:36

Another possibility is editing hadoop-env.sh, which contains export HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS="-Xmx128m $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS". Changing 128m to 1024m helped in my case (Hadoop 1.0.0.1 on Debian).

share|improve this answer

You can solve this problem by editting the file /etc/hadoop/hadoop-env.sh.

Hadoop was giving /etc/hadoop config directory precedence over conf directory.

I also met with the same situation.

share|improve this answer

After trying so many combinations, finally I concluded the same error on my environment (Ubuntu 12.04, Hadoop 1.0.4) is due to two issues.

  1. Same as Zach Gamer mentioned above.
  2. don't forget to execute "ssh localhost" first. Believe or not! No ssh would throw an error message on Java heap space as well.
share|improve this answer

I installed hadoop 1.0.4 from the binary tar and had the out of memory problem. I tried Tudor's, Zach Garner's, Nishant Nagwani's and Andris Birkmanis's solutions but none of them worked for me.

Editing the bin/hadoop to ignore $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS worked for me:

...
elif [ "$COMMAND" = "jar" ] ; then
     CLASS=org.apache.hadoop.util.RunJar
    #Line changed this line to avoid out of memory error:
    #HADOOP_OPTS="$HADOOP_OPTS $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS"
    # changed to:
     HADOOP_OPTS="$HADOOP_OPTS "
...

I'm assuming that there is a better way to do this but I could not find it.

share|improve this answer
are you running on a Virtual Machine. Most of OOM is caused when running hadoop on a VM with very less memory. removing $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS is not a good idea if its production coz you will have to keep a check on the memory being used. give a bigger value rather than totally removing HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS .. eg: export HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS="-Xmx2048m $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS" – Anuj Nov 14 '12 at 8:53

The same exception with Ubuntu, Hadoop 1.1.1. The solution was simple - edit shell variable $HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS set by some init script. But it took long time to find it =(

share|improve this answer
Got it! It's /etc/profile.d/hadoop-env.sh linked to /etc/conf/hadoop-env.sh – Odysseus Jan 10 at 20:57

Run your job like the one below:

bin/hadoop jar hadoop-examples-*.jar grep -D mapred.child.java.opts=-Xmx1024M input output 'dfs[a-z.]+' 

The heap space, by default is set to 32MB or 64MB. You can increase the heap space in properties file as, Tudor pointed out, or you can change it for this particular job by setting this property for this particular job.

share|improve this answer
thanks 'eeerahul' for formating the code. I am new to this. – Nishant Nagwani Dec 13 '11 at 7:53
@Anuj: did this solve your problem? If yes, please accept the answer. – Nishant Nagwani Dec 13 '11 at 7:54

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