Normalizer

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Short Description
Ports
Metadata
Normalizer Attributes
Details
CTL Interface
Java Interface
Examples
Best Practices
See also

Short Description

Normalizer creates one or more output records from each single input record. Input records do not have to be sorted.

Component Same input metadata Sorted inputs Inputs Outputs Java CTL Auto-propagated metadata
Normalizer-
no
11
yes
yes
no

Icon

Ports

Port typeNumberRequiredDescriptionMetadata
Input0
yes
For input data recordsAny1
Output0
yes
For normalized data recordsAny2

Metadata

Normalizer does not propagate metadata.

Normalizer does not have any metadata template.

Normalizer does not require any specific metadata fields.

Normalizer Attributes

AttributeReqDescriptionPossible values
Basic
Normalize [1] Definition of the way how records should be normalized written in the graph in CTL or Java. 
Normalize URL[1]Name of external file, including path, containing the definition of the way how records should be normalized written in CTL or Java. 
Normalize class[1]Name of external class defining the way how records should be normalized. 
Normalize source charset 

Encoding of external file defining the transformation.

The default encoding depends on DEFAULT_SOURCE_CODE_CHARSET in defaultProperties.

E.g. UTF-8
Deprecated
Error actions Definition of the action that should be performed when the specified transformation returns some Error code. See Return Values of Transformations. 
Error log URL of the file to which error messages for specified Error actions should be written. If not set, they are written to Console. 

[1]  One of these must specified.

Details

Normalizer requires transformation. The transformation can be defined in CTL (see CTL Interface) or in Java (see Java Interface).

The transformation is defined using several functions. Each of them has it's own purpose. The order of function calls is depicted in diagram below.

Normalizer code workflow

Figure 50.3. Normalizer code workflow


Number of calls of transform() function depends on result of the count() (or countOnError()) function.

CTL Interface

CTL Templates for Normalizer
Access to input and output fields

The transformation written in CTL uses a CTL template for Normalizer. Only the functions count() and transform() are mandatory. Other functions are optionals.

Once you have written your transformation, you can also convert it to Java language code using the corresponding button in the upper right corner of the tab.

CTL Templates for Normalizer

Table 50.4. Functions in Normalizer

CTL Template Functions
boolean init()
RequiredNo
DescriptionInitialize the component, setup the environment, global variables
InvocationCalled before processing the first record
Returnstrue | false (in case of false graph fails)
integer count()
Requiredyes
Input Parametersnone
Returns

The returned number defines the number of new output records that will be created by the transform() function.

If the count() function returns 0, the subsequent call of transform() is skipped (transform() is called zero times).

InvocationCalled repeatedly, once for each input record
Description

For each input record it generates the number of output records that will be created from this input.

If count() fails and user has not defined any countOnError(), the whole graph will fail.

If any of the input records causes fail of the count() function, and if user has defined another function (countOnError()), processing continues in this countOnError() at the place where count() failed. The countOnError() function gets the information gathered by count() that was get from previously successfully processed input records. Also error message and stack trace are passed to countOnError().

Example
function integer count() {
   customers = split($in.0.customers,"-");
   return length(customers);
}
integer transform(integer idx)
Requiredyes
Input Parametersinteger idx integer numbers from 0 to count-1 (Here count is the number returned by the count() function.)
ReturnsInteger number. The number corresponds to the return value of transformation. See Return Values of Transformations.
InvocationCalled repeatedly, once for each output record. The number of calls is defined by return value of function count().
Description

It creates output records.

If transform() fails and user has not defined any transformOnError(), the whole graph will fail.

If any part of the transform() function for some output record causes fail of the transform() function, and if user has defined another function (transformOnError()), processing continues in this transformOnError() at the place where transform() failed. The transformOnError() function gets the information gathered by transform() that was get from previously successfully processed code. Also error message and stack trace are passed to transformOnError().

Example
function integer transform(integer idx) {
   myString = customers[idx];
   $out.0.OneCustomer = str2integer(myString);
   $out.0.RecordNo = $in.0.recordNo;
   $out.0.OrderWithinRecord = idx;	
   return OK;
}
void clean()
Requiredno
Input Parametersnone
Returnsvoid
Invocation

Called repeatedly, once for each input record.

The function is called after the corresponding call(s) of transform() function.

DescriptionReturns the component to the initial settings
Example
function void clean() {
   clear(customers);
}
integer countOnError(string errorMessage, string stackTrace)
Requiredno
Input Parametersstring errorMessage
string stackTrace
Returns

The returned number defines the number of new output records that will be created by the transform() function.

If the count() function returns 0 the subsequent call of transform() is skipped.

InvocationCalled if count() throws an exception.
Description

For each input record it generates the number of output records that will be created from this input.

If any of the input records causes fail of the count() function, and if user has defined another function (countOnError()), processing continues in this countOnError() at the place where count() failed.

Example
function integer countOnError(
                  string errorMessage, 
                  string stackTrace) {
   printErr(errorMessage);
   return 1;
}
integer transformOnError(string errorMessage, string stackTrace, integer idx)
Requiredno
Input Parametersstring errorMessage
string stackTrace
integer idx
ReturnsInteger numbers. See Return Values of Transformations for detailed information.
InvocationCalled if transform() throws an exception.
Description

It creates output records.

If any part of the transform() function for some output record causes fail of the transform() function, and if user has defined another function (transformOnError()), processing continues in this transformOnError() at the place where transform() failed.

The transformOnError() function gets the information gathered by transform() that was get from previously successfully processed code. Also error message and stack trace are passed to transformOnError().

Example
function integer transformOnError(
                  string errorMessage, 
                  string stackTrace, 
                  integer idx) {
   printErr(errorMessage);
   printErr(stackTrace);	
   $out.0.OneCustomerOnError = customers[idx];
   $out.0.RecordNo = $recordNo;
   $out.0.OrderWithinRecord = idx;	
   return OK;
}
string getMessage()
RequiredNo
DescriptionPrints error message specified and invoked by user
InvocationCalled in any time specified by user (called only when either count(), transform(), countOnError(), or transformOnError() returns value less than or equal to -2).
Returnsstring
void preExecute()
RequiredNo
Input parametersNone
Returnsvoid
DescriptionMay be used to allocate and initialize resources required by the transform. All resources allocated within this function should be released by the postExecute() function.
InvocationCalled during each graph run before the transform is executed.
void postExecute()
RequiredNo
Input parametersNone
Returnsvoid
DescriptionShould be used to free any resources allocated within the preExecute() function.
InvocationCalled during each graph run after the entire transform was executed.

Access to input and output fields

Input records or fields

Input records or fields are accessible within the count(), countOnError(), transform() and transformOnError() functions only.

Output records or fields

Output records or fields are accessible within the transform() and transformOnError() functions only.

[Warning]Warning

All of the other CTL template functions allow to access neither inputs nor outputs.

Remember that if you do not hold these rules, NPE will be thrown!

Java Interface

The transformation implements methods of the RecordNormalize interface and inherits other common methods from the Transform interface. See Common Java Interfaces. See Public Clover API.

Following are the methods of RecordNormalize interface:

  • boolean init(Properties parameters, DataRecordMetadata sourceMetadata, DataRecordMetadata targetMetadata)

    Initializes normalize class/function. This method is called only once at the beginning of normalization process. Any object allocation/initialization should happen here.

  • int count(DataRecord source)

    Returns the number of output records which will be created from specified input record.

  • int countOnError(Exception exception, DataRecord source)

    Called only if count(DataRecord) throws an exception.

  • int transform(DataRecord source, DataRecord target, int idx)

    idx is a sequential number of output record (starting from 0). See Return Values of Transformations for detailed information about return values and their meaning. In Normalizer, only ALL, 0, SKIP, and Error codes have some meaning.

  • int transformOnError(Exception exception, DataRecord source, DataRecord target, int idx)

    Called only if transform(DataRecord, DataRecord, int) throws an exception.

  • void clean()

    Finalizes current round/clean after current round - called after the transform method was called for the input record.

Examples

Converting multivalue fields to multiple records

Input records contain group name and list of users of the group. Convert records into tuples having group name and one username.

accounting  | [johnsmith, elisabethtaylor]
development | [georgegreen, janegreen, peterbrown]
Solution

Define the transformation using Normalize attribute.

//#CTL2

function integer count() {
 	return length($in.0.users);
}

function integer transform(integer idx) {
 	$out.0.group = $in.0.group;
 	$out.0.user = $in.0.users[idx];
 	return OK;
}

Normalizer will return following records:

accounting |johnsmith
accounting |elisabethtaylor
development|georgegreen
development|janegreen
development|peterbrown

Best Practices

If the transformation is specified in an external file (with Normalize URL), we recommend users to explicitly specify Normalize source charset.

See also

Denormalizer
Rollup
Common Properties of Components
Specific Attribute Types
Common Properties of Transformers
Transformers Comparison
Defining Transformations