HI Looking for APIs to write parquest with Pojos that I have. I was able to generate avro schema using reflection and then create parquet schema using AvroSchemaConverter.
I wasn't able to find an existing solution, so I implemented it myself. Here is the link to the implementation: https://gist.github.com/alexeygrigorev/eab72e40c6051e0163a6693054906d66
In short, it does the following:
GenericRecord
objectsDISCLAIMER: The following code was written when I was in a hurry. It is not efficient and future versions of parquet will surely fix this more directly. That being said, this is a lightweight inefficient approach to what you need. The strategy is POJO -> AVRO -> PARQUET
private static final Schema avroSchema = ReflectData.AllowNull.get().getSchema(YOURCLASS.class);
private static final ReflectDatumWriter<YOURCLASS> reflectDatumWriter = new ReflectDatumWriter<>(avroSchema);
private static final GenericDatumReader<Object> genericRecordReader = new GenericDatumReader<>(avroSchema);
public GenericRecord toAvroGenericRecord() throws IOException {
ByteArrayOutputStream bytes = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
reflectDatumWriter.write(this, EncoderFactory.get().directBinaryEncoder(bytes, null));
return (GenericRecord) genericRecordReader.read(null, DecoderFactory.get().binaryDecoder(bytes.toByteArray(), null));
}
One more thing: it seems the parquet writers are currently very strict about null fields. Make sure none of your fields are null before attempting to write to parquet
If you want to go through avro you have two options:
1) Let avro generate your pojos (see the tutorial here). The generated pojos extend SpecificRecord which can then be used with AvroParquetWriter.
2) Write the conversion from your pojo to GenericRecord yourself. You can do this either manually or a more generic solution would be to use reflection. However, I encountered difficulties with this approach when I tried to read the data. Based on the supplied schema avro found the pojo in the classpath and tried to instantiate a SpecificRecord instead of GenericRecord. Because of this reason I went with option 1.
Parquet also supports now writing pojo directly. Here is the pull request on parquet github page. However, I think this is not part of an official release yet. In another words, I did not find this code in maven.