程序代写代做代考 Java database AWS hadoop data structure algorithm RMIT Classification: Trusted

RMIT Classification: Trusted
Big Data Processing COSC 2637/2633 Assignment 1
Assessment Type
Individual assignment. Submit online via Canvas → Assignment 1. Marks awarded for meeting requirements as closely as possible. Clarifications/updates may be made via announcements or relevant discussion forums.
Due Date
Week 7, Friday 13rd September 2020, 23:59
Marks
40
1. Overview
Write MapReduce programs which gives your chance to understand the complexity of MapReduce programing, the essential components you learned in lectures, the unique debugging method, the impact of performance using different size clusters.
2. Learning Outcomes
The key course learning outcomes are:
CLO 1. CLO 2. CLO 3. CLO 4. CLO 5. CLO 6.
Model and implement efficient big data solutions for various application areas using appropriately selected algorithms and data structures.
Analyze methods and algorithms, to compare and evaluate them with respect to time and space requirements and make appropriate design choices when solving real-world problems.
Motivate and explain trade-offs in big data processing technique design and analysis in written and oral form.
Explain the Big Data Fundamentals, including the evolution of Big Data, the characteristics of Big Data and the challenges introduced.
Apply non-relational databases, the techniques for storing and processing large volumes of structured and unstructured data, as well as streaming data.
Apply the novel architectures and platforms introduced for Big data, in particular Hadoop and MapReduce.
3. Assessment details
In Task 2 of Lab 3 (week 4), you have developed a MapReduce program and run it in Hadoop. It is the basic version of word count. In this assignment, you are asked to extend the functions based on the MapReduce program using what you learned in this course.
You should use Java to develop your MapReduce program over AWS EMR (if you want to use other code language, please contact lecturer for approval).
Task 1 – Count words by lengths (8 marks)
Write a MapReduce program to count number of short words (1-4 letters), medium words (5-7 letters) words, long words (8-10 letters) and extra-long words (More than 10 letters).
Task 2 – Count words by the first character (8 marks)
Write a MapReduce program that outputs a count of all words that begin with a vowel and count of all how many words that begin with a consonant.
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RMIT Classification: Trusted
Task 3 – Count word with in-mapper combining (12 marks)
Write a MapReduce program to count the number of each word where the in-mapper combining is implemented rather than an independent combiner.
Task 4 – Count word with partitioner (12 marks)
Extend the MapReduce code in Task 1 by using partitioner such that
– short words (1-4 letters) and extra-long words (More than 10 letters) are processed in one reducer, – medium words (5-7 letters) and long words (8-10 letters) are processed in another reducer.
4. Submission
Your assignment should follow the requirement below and submit via Canvas > Assignment 1.
Assessment declaration: when you submit work electronically, you agree to the assessment declaration:
https://www.rmit.edu.au/students/student-essentials/assessment-and-exams/assessment/assessment-declaration
5. Requirement
(a) The codes for all four tasks are entailed in a single Maven project. (2 marks)
(b) Submit the complete Maven project source code in a .zip file (including a standalone jar file). The zip
file should be named as sxxxxx_BDP_S2_2020.zip (replace sxxxxx by your student ID). (2 marks)
(c) You need include a “README” file in the zip file. In the README, you are asked to specify how
to run each task using the standalone jar in Hadoop. (1 mark)
(d) Paths of input file and output file should not be hard-coded. (1 mark)
(e) For all tasks, use the text file “Melbourne” “RMIT” and “3littlepigs” as the input files and process
them together in the same run (don’t process them separately); output file must be stored in /user/sxxxxx/output# in HDFS (i.e., /user/sxxxxx/output1 for Task 1, /user/sxxxxx/output2 for Task 2, and so on). (4×1 marks)
(f) For each task, using Apache log4j log information: (4×1 marks)
– In the MAP tasks, the log should be “The mapper task of ,
– In the REDUCE tasks, the log should be “The reducer task of ,
(g) Conduct performance analysis on different numbers of nodes in EMR clusters. To this end, run the code in Task 1 to process a large data set
s3a://commoncrawl/crawl-data/CC-MAIN-2018-17/segments/1524125936833.6
when the number of nodes in EMR clusters is 3, 5, 7 respectively. Show the CPU_MILLISECONDS for each MAP task and each REDUCE task in the README file (the same one mentioned in (c)); and analyze what you observed (250-500 words). (3 marks)
(h) Your MapReduce program(s) must be well written, using good coding style and including appropriate use of comments. (4×2 marks)
6. Marking Guide
(a) If one task cannot be run using the submitted jar file, no mark for this task.
(b) If one task can run but the output is incorrect. At least half mark will be deducted for this task. If the
code has major issues (such as logically incorrect), 0 mark for this task.
7. Academic integrity and plagiarism (standard warning)
Academic integrity is about honest presentation of your academic work. It means acknowledging the work of others while developing your own insights, knowledge and ideas. You should take extreme care that you have:
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RMIT Classification: Trusted
• Acknowledged words, data, diagrams, models, frameworks and/or ideas of others you have quoted (i.e. directly copied), summarized, paraphrased, discussed or mentioned in your assessment through the appropriate referencing methods,
• Provided a reference list of the publication details so your reader can locate the source if necessary. This includes material taken from Internet sites.
If you do not acknowledge the sources of your material, you may be accused of plagiarism because you have passed off the work and ideas of another person without appropriate referencing, as if they were your own.
RMIT University treats plagiarism as a very serious offence constituting misconduct. Plagiarism covers a variety of inappropriate behaviors, including:
• Failure to properly document a source
• Copyright material from the internet or databases
• Collusion between students
For further information on our policies and procedures, please refer to
https://www.rmit.edu.au/students/student-essentials/rights-and-responsibilities/academic-integrity
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