Also note that when you add parameters to the -cp flag on the JVM and want to include multiple jars, the only way to do that is by including an entire directory with "dir/*" -- you can't use "dir/*jar" or "dir/spark*jar" or anything else like that.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/219585/setting-multiple-jars-in-java-classpath On Sun, Dec 8, 2013 at 12:25 AM, Matei Zaharia <[email protected]>wrote: > I’m not sure you can have a star inside that quoted classpath argument > (the double quotes may cancel the *). Try using the JAR through its full > name, or link to Spark through Maven ( > http://spark.incubator.apache.org/docs/latest/quick-start.html#a-standalone-app-in-java > ). > > Matei > > On Dec 6, 2013, at 9:50 AM, Garrett Hamers <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello, > > I am new to the spark system, and I am trying to write a simple program to > get myself familiar with how spark works. I am currently having problem > with importing the spark package. I am getting the following compiler > error: package org.apache.spark.api.java does not exist. > > I have spark-0.8.0-incubating install. I ran the commands: sbt/sbt > compile, sbt/sbt assembly, and sbt/sbt publish-local without any errors. My > sql.java file is located in the spark-0.8.0-incubating root directory. I > tried to compile the code using “javac sql.java” and “javac -cp > "assembly/target/scala-2.9.3/spark-assembly_2.9.3-0.8.0-incubating*.jar" > sql.java”. > > Here is the code for sql.java: > > package shark; > > import java.io.Serializable; > > import java.util.List; > > import java.io.*; > > import org.apache.spark.api.java.*; //Issue is here > > public class sql implements Serializable { > > public static void main( String[] args) { > > System.out.println("Hello World”); > > } > > } > > > What do I need to do in order for java to import the spark code properly? > Any advice would be greatly appreciated. > > Thank you, > Garrett Hamers > > >
