Files
ray/java
Qing Wang 94a286ef1d [Java] Add session_dir as temp_dir for logs, socket files like Python (#7044)
* Support

* Add gcs_server support

* Fix ut

* Fix

* Remove unused py code

* Fix linting

* Fix cross language ci

* Fix CI

* Add docstring

* Fix

* Fix linting

* Add a singleton for config

* Refine

* fix

* Fix

* linting

* Remove FileUnit

* Fix

* Fix

* Fix

* Update java/runtime/src/main/java/org/ray/runtime/config/RayConfig.java

Co-Authored-By: Hao Chen <chenh1024@gmail.com>

* Fix streaming singleprocess CI

* Fix checkstyle

Co-authored-by: Hao Chen <chenh1024@gmail.com>
2020-02-13 17:49:52 +08:00
..
2020-01-20 23:41:54 -08:00
2018-09-28 21:31:47 -05:00
2020-01-20 23:41:54 -08:00

Quick start
===========

Configuration
-------------
Ray will read your configurations in the following order:

* Java system properties: e.g., ``-Dray.run-mode=SINGLE_PROCESS``.
* A ``ray.conf`` file in the classpath: `example <https://github.com/ray-project/ray/blob/master/java/example.conf>`_.
* Customise your own ``ray.conf`` path using system property ``-Dray.config=/path/to/ray.conf``

For all available config items and default values, see `this file <https://github.com/ray-project/ray/blob/master/java/runtime/src/main/resources/ray.default.conf>`_.

Starting Ray
------------

.. code:: java

    Ray.init();

Read and write remote objects
-----------------------------

Each remote object is considered a ``RayObject<T>`` where ``T`` is the
type for this object. You can use ``Ray.put`` and ``RayObject<T>.get``
to write and read the objects.

.. code:: java

    Integer x = 1;
    RayObject<Integer> obj = Ray.put(x);
    Integer x1 = obj.get();
    assert (x.equals(x1));

Remote functions
----------------

Here is an ordinary java code piece for composing
``hello world example``.

.. code:: java

    public class ExampleClass {
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            String str1 = add("hello", "world");
            String str = add(str1, "example");
            System.out.println(str);
        }
        public static String add(String a, String b) {
            return a + " " + b;
        }
    }

We use ``@RayRemote`` to indicate that a function is remote, and use
``Ray.call`` to invoke it. The result from the latter is a
``RayObject<R>`` where ``R`` is the return type of the target function.
The following shows the changed example with ``add`` annotated, and
correspondent calls executed on remote machines.

.. code:: java

    public class ExampleClass {
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            Ray.init();
            RayObject<String> objStr1 = Ray.call(ExampleClass::add, "hello", "world");
            RayObject<String> objStr2 = Ray.call(ExampleClass::add, objStr1, "example");
            String str = objStr2.get();
            System.out.println(str);
        }

        @RayRemote
        public static String add(String a, String b) {
            return a + " " + b;
        }
    }

More information
================

- `Installation <https://github.com/ray-project/ray/tree/master/java/doc/installation.rst>`_
- `API document <https://github.com/ray-project/ray/tree/master/java/doc/api.rst>`_
- `Tutorial <https://github.com/ray-project/ray/tree/master/java/tutorial>`_