Minimal reproduction:

   - Fist option

```scala
case class C(x: Int)

val xs = benv.fromCollection(1 to 10)
val cs = xs.map{C(_)}

cs.count
```

defined class C xs: org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet[Int] =
org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet@39c713c6 cs:
org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet[C] =
org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet@205a35a
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: requirement failed: The class C is an
instance class, meaning it is not a member of a toplevel object, or of an
object contained in a toplevel object, therefore it requires an outer
instance to be instantiated, but we don't have a reference to the outer
instance. Please consider changing the outer class to an object. at
scala.Predef$.require(Predef.scala:224) at
org.apache.flink.api.scala.typeutils.ScalaCaseClassSerializer$.lookupConstructor(ScalaCaseClassSerializer.scala:90)
at
org.apache.flink.api.scala.typeutils.ScalaCaseClassSerializer.<init>(ScalaCaseClassSerializer.scala:46)
... 125 elided

   - Second option

```scala
object Types {
    case class C(x: Int)
}

val cs2 = xs.map{Types.C(_)}

cs2.count
```

defined object Types org.apache.flink.api.common.InvalidProgramException:
Task not serializable at
org.apache.flink.api.scala.ClosureCleaner$.ensureSerializable(ClosureCleaner.scala:408)
at
org.apache.flink.api.scala.ClosureCleaner$.org$apache$flink$api$scala$ClosureCleaner$$clean(ClosureCleaner.scala:400)
at
org.apache.flink.api.scala.ClosureCleaner$.clean(ClosureCleaner.scala:168)
at org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet.clean(DataSet.scala:125) at
org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet$$anon$1.<init>(DataSet.scala:489) at
org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet.map(DataSet.scala:488) ... 106 elided
Caused by: java.io.NotSerializableException:
org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet at
java.io.ObjectOutputStream.writeObject0(ObjectOutputStream.java:1184) at
java.io.ObjectOutputStream.defaultWriteFields(ObjectOutputStream.java:1548)
at java.io.ObjectOutputStream.writeSerialData(ObjectOutputStream.java:1509)
at
java.io.ObjectOutputStream.writeOrdinaryObject(ObjectOutputStream.java:1432)
at java.io.ObjectOutputStream.writeObject0(ObjectOutputStream.java:1178) at
java.io.ObjectOutputStream.defaultWriteFields(ObjectOutputStream.java:1548)
at java.io.ObjectOutputStream.writeSerialData(ObjectOutputStream.java:1509)
at
java.io.ObjectOutputStream.writeOrdinaryObject(ObjectOutputStream.java:1432)

Greetings,

Juan


On Sun, Apr 19, 2020 at 10:05 AM Juan Rodríguez Hortalá <
juan.rodriguez.hort...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I'm using the Flink interpreter and the benv environment. I'm reading some
> csv files using benv.readCsvFile and it works ok. I have also defined a
> case class C for the csv records. The problem happens when I apply a
> map operation on the DataSet of tuples returned by benv.readCsvFile, to
> convert it into a DataSet[C].
>
>    - If I define the case class C in some cell I get this error:
>
> java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: requirement failed: The class C is an
> instance class, meaning it is not a member of a toplevel object, or of an
> object contained in a toplevel object, therefore it requires an outer
> instance to be instantiated, but we don't have a reference to the outer
> instance. Please consider changing the outer class to an object.
>
>
>    - That sounds related to this
>    
> https://stackoverflow.com/questions/36042720/case-class-serialazation-in-flink,
>    it looks like the zeppelin flink interpreter is wrapping the case class
>    definition as an inner class. I tried defining the case class C inside an
>    object Types that I define in another cell. With that I also get a
>    serialization exception.
>
> org.apache.flink.api.common.InvalidProgramException: Task not serializable
> org.apache.flink.api.scala.ClosureCleaner$.ensureSerializable(ClosureCleaner.scala:408)
> org.apache.flink.api.scala.ClosureCleaner$.org$apache$flink$api$scala$ClosureCleaner$$clean(ClosureCleaner.scala:400)
> org.apache.flink.api.scala.ClosureCleaner$.clean(ClosureCleaner.scala:168)
> org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet.clean(DataSet.scala:125)
> org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet$$anon$1.<init>(DataSet.scala:489)
> org.apache.flink.api.scala.DataSet.map(DataSet.scala:488)
> $line163.$read$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$$$82b5b23cea489b2712a1db46c77e458$$$$w$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw.liftedTree1$1(<console>:135)
> $line163.$read$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$$$82b5b23cea489b2712a1db46c77e458$$$$w$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw$$iw.<init>(<console>:133)
>
> I guess that didn't work because the object Types is still defined inside
> some class implicitly defined by the interpreter.
>
> Any thoughs about how can I fix this? Also, I understand $line163 etc
> refer to the code in the cells, is there some convention I can use to
> understand to which line in the notebook those error messages are referring
> to?
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Juan
>

Reply via email to