55

I want to debug a mapreduce script, and without going into much trouble tried to put some print statements in my program. But I cant seem to find them in any of the logs.

5 Answers 5

61

Actually stdout only shows the System.out.println() of the non-map reduce classes.

The System.out.println() for map and reduce phases can be seen in the logs. Easy way to access the logs is

http://localhost:50030/jobtracker.jsp->click on the completed job->click on map or reduce task->click on tasknumber->task logs->stdout logs.

Hope this helps

3
  • The same approach applies also using Oozie under Hue. Oozie schedules MR2 map jobs, but does not show logs properly. To see them, you should go under jobtracker.jsp. Jul 1, 2016 at 9:19
  • JobTracker doesn't existe in Hadoop 2 Dec 2, 2017 at 3:50
  • I found mine on: localhost:9870/logs/userlogs
    – Jan D.M.
    Apr 11, 2021 at 15:12
26

Another way is through the terminal:

1) Go into your Hadoop_Installtion directory, then into "logs/userlogs".
2) Open your job_id directory.
3) Check directories with _m_ if you want the mapper output or _r_ if you're looking for reducers.

Example: In Hadoop-20.2.0:

> ls ~/hadoop-0.20.2/logs/userlogs/attempt_201209031127_0002_m_000000_0/
log.index   stderr      stdout      syslog

The above means:
Hadoop_Installation: ~/hadoop-0.20.2
job_id: job_201209031127_0002
_m_: map task , "map number": _000000_

4) open stdout if you used "system.out.println" or stderr if you used "system.err.append".

PS. other hadoop versions might have a sight different hierarchy but they're all should be under $Hadoop_Installtion/logs/userlogs.

16

On a Hadoop cluster with yarn, you can fetch the logs, including stdout, with:

yarn logs -applicationId application_1383601692319_0008

For some reason, I've found this to be more complete than what I see in the webinterface. The webinterface did not list the output of System.out.println() for me.

2
  • 4
    Thanks for giving answer for hadoop2. can you tell me why I am getting this error after executing that command? Logs not available at /tmp/logs/hadoopuser/logs/application_1441282624447_3854 and Log aggregation has not completed or is not enabled Nov 23, 2015 at 16:25
  • The job history interface corresponding to hadoop 2.7 also does not list System.out.println for me whereas the command provided here does.
    – Paul
    Nov 5, 2021 at 17:53
8

to get your stdout and log message on the console you can use apache commons logging framework in to your mapper and reducer.

public class MyMapper extends Mapper<..,...,..,...> {

    public static final Log log = LogFactory.getLog(MyMapper.class)

    public void map() throws Exception{
        // Log to stdout file
        System.out.println("Map key "+ key);

        //log to the syslog file
        log.info("Map key "+ key);

        if(log.isDebugEanbled()){
            log.debug("Map key "+ key);
        }

        context.write(key,value);
    }
}
0

After most of the options above did not work for me, I realized that on my single node cluster, I can use this simple method:

static private PrintStream console_log;
  static private boolean node_was_initialized = false;
  private static void logPrint(String line){
    if(!node_was_initialized){
      try{
        console_log = new PrintStream(new FileOutputStream("/tmp/my_mapred_log.txt", true));
      } catch (FileNotFoundException e){
        return;
      }
      node_was_initialized = true;
    }
    console_log.println(line);
  }

Which, for example, can be used like:

public void map(Text key, Text value, OutputCollector<Text, Text> output, Reporter reporter) throws IOException {
      logPrint("map input: key-" + key.toString() + ", value-" + value.toString());
      //actual impl of 'map'...
    }

After that, the prints can be viewed with: cat /tmp/my_mapred_log.txt. To get rid of prints from prior hadoop runs you can simple use rm /tmp/my_mapred_log.txt before running hadoop again.

notes:

  • The solution by Rajkumar Singh is likely better if you have the time to download and integrate a new library.
  • This could work for multi-node clusters if you have a way to access "/tmp/my_mapred_log.txt" on each worker node machine.
  • If for some strange reason you already have a file named "/tmp/my_mapred_log.txt", consider changing the name (just make sure to give an absolute path).

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