I'm having some major issues with trying to scan a table using HBase Stargate. My HBase row schema is basically objectidnumber_languagecode_date_randomhash, ie.
1_en_2014-12-12_1432ae341
1_en_2014-13-13_234fe321
2_en_2014-01-14_243a43fe
...
342342_uk_2014-01-14_2234af3
I want to scan the table for all items starting with an objectidnumber. I think the issue is that the objectidnumbers are serial and have a different number of digits, but I'm not totally sure.
When using HBase shell, the command I'm using is:
scan 'object_articles', { STARTROW => '33_', ENDROW => '34' }
This should give me every row that starts with 33_ and stop as soon as it hits 34, as the results indicate:
hbase(main):012:0> scan 'object_articles', { STARTROW => '33_', ENDROW => '34' }
ROW COLUMN+CELL
33_en_2004_zdfasdf column=cf:articleId, timestamp=1398803544834, value=en_2004_zdfasdf
33_en_2004_zdfasdf column=cf:articleTitle, timestamp=1398803544834, value=Testing
33_en_2004_zdfasdf column=cf:index, timestamp=1398803544834, value=en_2004
1 row(s) in 0.0120 seconds
However, when I set up my Stargate scanner with this simple XML:
<Scanner startRow="33_" endRow="34" />
It is giving me back every row in the entire table. Another behavior is that a 4-digit startRow/endRow yields a 204 No Content response, but any 3-digit startRow/endRow brings back the entire table.
All results:
<Scanner startRow="999_" endRow="1000" />
204 No Content:
I'm pretty perplexed as to why it seems Shell is working fine, however the Stargate XML isn't.
I suppose it was posting at 2AM, but this was really simple. I wasn't quite wrapping my head around lexicographic ordering.
Since 99_ < 9_, my original idea wasn't going to work. I ended up adding a PrefixFilter for the startRow and getting rid of the endRow, that way it is only grabbing rows starting with the OOID:
In Java:
xml.append("<Scanner startRow=\"").append(startRow).append("\">");
// Prefix Filter
PrefixFilter test = new PrefixFilter(Bytes.toBytes(startRow));
xml.append("<filter>").append(ScannerModel.stringifyFilter(test)).append("</filter>");
xml.append("</Scanner>");
How it looks with "99_" as the startRow:
<Scanner startRow="99_">
<filter>
{"type":"PrefixFilter","value":"OTlf"}
</filter>
</Scanner>