Help Center> CloudTable Service> Getting Started> Getting Started with HBase
Updated on 2024-04-29 GMT+08:00

Getting Started with HBase

HBase is a column-based distributed storage system that features high reliability, performance, and scalability. This section describes how to use HBase from scratch. For example, how to run the HBase shell command to create tables, insert data into tables, modify tables, read and delete table data, and delete tables.

Background Information

Suppose a user develops an application to manage users who use service A in an enterprise. The procedure of operating service A on the HBase client is as follows:

  • Create the user_info table.
  • Add users' educational backgrounds and professional titles to the table.
  • Query user names and addresses by user ID.
  • Query information by user name.
  • Deregister users and delete user data from the user information table.
  • Delete the user information table after service A ends.
Table 1 User information

ID

Name

Gender

Age

Address

12005000201

A

Male

19

Shenzhen, Guangdong

12005000202

B

Female

23

Shijiazhuang, Hebei

12005000203

C

Male

26

Ningbo, Zhejiang

12005000204

D

Male

18

Xiangyang, Hubei

12005000205

E

Female

21

Shangrao, Jiangxi

12005000206

F

Male

32

Zhuzhou, Hunan

12005000207

G

Female

29

Nanyang, Henan

12005000208

H

Female

30

Kaixian, Chongqing

12005000209

I

Male

26

Weinan, Shaanxi

12005000210

J

Male

25

Dalian, Liaoning

Buying an HBase Cluster

  1. Log in to the CloudTable console.
  2. Select a region in the upper left corner.
  3. Click Cluster Management.
  4. Click Buy Cluster in the upper right corner of the Cluster Management page and set related parameters. For details about how to configure ports for security group rules, see Table 2.
  5. Click Buy Now. On the displayed page, confirm the specifications and click Finish.
  6. Return to the cluster list to view the cluster creation progress. If the cluster status is In service, the cluster is created. For details, see Creating an HBase Cluster.
    Table 2 Custom security rules

    Direction

    Protocol

    Port/Range

    Source/Security Group

    Usage

    Outbound

    All

    All

    0.0.0.0/0

    Permit in the outbound direction

    Inbound

    TCP

    16000

    Security group of the CloudTable HBase cluster

    HMaster RPC port

    TCP

    16020

    RegionServer RPC port

    TCP

    2181

    ZooKeeper client connection monitoring port

    TCP

    2888

    Follower connection monitoring port

    TCP

    3888

    ZooKeeper election port

    TCP

    2000

    HAgent access port

Downloading the HBase Client

  1. Log in to the CloudTable console.
  2. Select a region in the upper left corner.
  3. Click Help in the navigation pane.
  4. Choose Download the HBasex.x Client under Helpful Links (choose the version that you need) on the right of the help page to download the client installation package.

Preparing an ECS

  1. Buy an ECS.
    1. Log in to the ECS console.
    2. Click in the upper left corner to select a region.
    3. Click the service list icon and choose Compute > Elastic Cloud Server.
    4. Click Buy ECS.
    5. Configure ECS parameters.
      1. Select the CPU architecture and specifications.
        Figure 1 Configuring basic settings
      2. Select the image and disk specifications.
        Figure 2 Selecting the image and disk specifications
  2. Click Next: Configure Network.
    1. Select a VPC and a security group.
      Figure 3 Configuring network
    2. Select Auto assign and set Billed By to Traffic.
      Figure 4 Configuring EIP type and bandwidth billing type
  3. Click Next: Configure Advanced Settings.

    Configure the ECS name and password.

    Figure 5 Configuring advanced settings
  4. Click Next: Confirm to confirm the configuration information.
    Figure 6 Confirming the configuration information
  5. Select an enterprise project, select the sentence in the Agreement area, confirm the configuration information, and click Submit.
  6. Return to the ECS list page and view the ECS creation progress.

    When the ECS status changes to Running, the ECS is created.

Installing the Client

This part introduces how to manually install the client. You can also choose the one-click client deployment method.

  1. Use the SSH login tool (such as PuTTY) to log in to the Linux ECS through the EIP.

    For details about how to log in to the ECS, see "Remotely Logging In to a Linux ECS (Using an SSH Password)" in Logging In to a Linux ECS of the Elastic Cloud Server User Guide.

  2. Transfer the client downloaded in 2 to the Linux ECS.
  3. Decompress the client installation package.
    cd <Path of the client installation package>
    tar xzvf hbase-1.3.1-bin.tar.gz
    cd <Path of the client installation package>
    tar xzvf hbase-2.4.14-bin.tar.gz

    <Path of the client installation package>: Replace it with the actual path.

  4. Configure the ZooKeeper address in a configuration file.

    In the decompression directory of the client installation package, open the hbase/conf/hbase-site.xml file and set the following parameters:

    1. hbase.zookeeper.quorum: The value of this parameter is the ZooKeeper link of the cluster found in the cluster list.

      Log in to the CloudTable console and choose Cluster Management. In the cluster list, locate the required cluster and obtain its ZooKeeper link in the ZK Link column. Add this link address to the hbase/conf/hbase-site.xml file, as shown in Figure 8.

      Figure 7 Viewing the ZooKeeper link
      Figure 8 Configuring the ZooKeeper address
    2. mapreduce.cluster.local.dir: Check whether the configuration item exists. If the configuration item does not exist, add it.
      The configuration example is as follows:
      <configuration>
      <property>
      <name>hbase.zookeeper.quorum</name>
      <value>xxx-zk1.cloudtable.com,xxx-zk2.cloudtable.com,xxx-zk3.cloudtable.com</value>
      </property>
      
      <property>
      <name>mapreduce.cluster.local.dir</name>
      <value>${hadoop.tmp.dir}/mapred/local</value>
      </property>
      </configuration>
  5. Start the shell to access the cluster. Run the bin/hbase shell command to start the shell to access the cluster.

Running the HBase Client Command to Implement Service A

  1. Create the user_info table according to Table 1 and add related data to it.
    create 'user_info',{NAME => 'i'}

    For example, to add information about the user whose ID is 12005000201, run the following commands:

    put 'user_info','12005000201','i:name','A'
    put 'user_info','12005000201','i:gender','Male'
    put 'user_info','12005000201','i:age','19'
    put 'user_info','12005000201','i:address','Shenzhen, Guangdong'
  2. Add users' educational backgrounds and titles to the user_info table.

    For example, to add educational background and title information about user 12005000201, run the following commands:

    put 'user_info','12005000201','i:degree','master'
    put 'user_info','12005000201','i:pose','manager'
  3. Query user names and addresses by user ID.

    For example, to query the name and address of user 12005000201, run the following command:

    scan 'user_info',{STARTROW=>'12005000201',STOPROW=>'12005000201',COLUMNS=>['i:name','i:address']}
  4. Query information by user name.

    For example, to query information about user A, run the following command:

    scan 'user_info',{FILTER=>"SingleColumnValueFilter('i','name',=,'binary:A')"}
  5. Delete user data from the user information table.

    All user data needs to be deleted. For example, to delete data of user 12005000201, run the following command:

    delete 'user_info','12005000201','i'
  6. Delete the user information table.
    disable 'user_info';drop 'user_info'