This document is for an old version of the former Hazelcast IMDG product.

We've combined the in-memory storage of IMDG with the stream processing power of Jet to bring you an all new platform: Hazelcast 5.0

Use the following links to try it:

For this example we'll build a simple Jet job that monitors trading events on a stock market, categorizes the events by stock ticker, and reports the number of trades per time unit (the time window). In terms of DAG design, not much changes going from batch to streaming. This is how it looks:

Trade monitoring DAG

We have the same cascade of source, two-stage aggregation, and sink. The source part consists of ticker-source that loads stock names (tickers) from a Hazelcast IMap and generate-trades that retains this list and randomly generates an infinite stream of trade events. A separate vertex is inserting watermark items needed by the aggregation stage and on the sink side there's another mapping vertex, format-output, that transforms the window result items into lines of text. The sink vertex writes these lines to a file.

Before we go on, let us point out that in the 0.5 release of Hazelcast Jet, the Pipeline API is still in infancy and doesn't support all the features needed for stream processing. Therefore the following example is given only in the Core API; with the next release we'll be able to present the much simpler code to do it in the Pipelines API.

If you studied the DAG-building code for the Word Count job, this code should look generally familiar:

WindowDefinition windowDef = WindowDefinition.slidingWindowDef(
        SLIDING_WINDOW_LENGTH_MILLIS, SLIDE_STEP_MILLIS);
Vertex tickerSource = dag.newVertex("ticker-source",
        SourceProcessors.readMapP(GenerateTradesP.TICKER_MAP_NAME));
Vertex generateTrades = dag.newVertex("generate-trades",
        GenerateTradesP.generateTradesP(TRADES_PER_SEC_PER_MEMBER));
Vertex insertWatermarks = dag.newVertex("insert-watermarks",
        Processors.insertWatermarksP(
                Trade::getTime,
                withFixedLag(GenerateTradesP.MAX_LAG),
                emitByFrame(windowDef)));
Vertex slidingStage1 = dag.newVertex("sliding-stage-1",
        Processors.accumulateByFrameP(
                Trade::getTicker,
                Trade::getTime, TimestampKind.EVENT,
                windowDef,
                counting()));
Vertex slidingStage2 = dag.newVertex("sliding-stage-2",
        Processors.combineToSlidingWindowP(windowDef, counting()));
Vertex formatOutput = dag.newVertex("format-output",
        formatOutput());
Vertex sink = dag.newVertex("sink",
        SinkProcessors.writeFileP(OUTPUT_DIR_NAME));

tickerSource.localParallelism(1);
generateTrades.localParallelism(1);

return dag
        .edge(between(tickerSource, generateTrades)
                .distributed().broadcast())
        .edge(between(generateTrades, insertWatermarks)
                .isolated())
        .edge(between(insertWatermarks, slidingStage1)
                .partitioned(Trade::getTicker, HASH_CODE))
        .edge(between(slidingStage1, slidingStage2)
                .partitioned(Entry<String, Long>::getKey, HASH_CODE)
                .distributed())
        .edge(between(slidingStage2, formatOutput)
                .isolated())
        .edge(between(formatOutput, sink)
                .isolated());

The source vertex reads a Hazelcast IMap, just like it did in the word counting example. Trade generating vertex uses a custom processor that generates mock trades. It can be reviewed here. The implementation of complete() is non-trivial, but most of the complexity just deals with precision timing of events. For simplicity's sake the processor must be configured with a local parallelism of 1; generating a precise amount of mock traffic from parallel processors would take more code and coordination.

The major novelty is the watermark-inserting vertex. It must be added in front of the windowing vertex and will insert watermark items according to the configured policy. In this case we use the simplest one, withFixedLag, which will make the watermark lag behind the top observed event timestamp by a fixed amount. Emission of watermarks is additionally throttled, so that only one watermark item per frame is emitted. The windowing processors emit data only when the watermark reaches the next frame, so inserting it more often than that would be just overhead.

The edge from insertWatermarks to slidingStage1 is partitioned; you may wonder how that works with watermark items, since

  1. their type is different from the "main" stream item type and they don't have a partitioning key
  2. each of them must reach all downstream processors.

It turns out that Jet must treat them as a special case: regardless of the configured edge type, watermarks are routed using the broadcast policy.

The stage-1 processor will just forward the watermark it receives, along with any aggregation results whose emission it triggers, to stage 2.

The full code of this sample is in StockExchange.java and running it you'll get an endless stream of data accumulating on the disk. To spare your filesystem we've limited the execution time to 10 seconds.