Getting Started
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Splitting and Aggregation

  • SplitText: SplitText takes in a single FlowFile whose contents are textual and splits it into 1 or more FlowFiles based on the configured number of lines. For example, the Processor can be configured to split a FlowFile into many FlowFiles, each of which is only 1 line.

  • SplitJson: Allows the user to split a JSON object that is comprised of an array or many child objects into a FlowFile per JSON element.

  • SplitXml: Allows the user to split an XML message into many FlowFiles, each containing a segment of the original. This is generally used when several XML elements have been joined together with a "wrapper" element. This Processor then allows those elements to be split out into individual XML elements.

  • UnpackContent: Unpacks different types of archive formats, such as ZIP and TAR. Each file within the archive is then transferred as a single FlowFile.

  • MergeContent: This Processor is responsible for merging many FlowFiles into a single FlowFile. The FlowFiles can be merged by concatenating their content together along with optional header, footer, and demarcator, or by specifying an archive format, such as ZIP or TAR. FlowFiles can be binned together based on a common attribute, or can be "defragmented" if they were split apart by some other Splitting process. The minimum and maximum size of each bin is user-specified, based on number of elements or total size of FlowFiles' contents, and an optional Timeout can be assigned as well so that FlowFiles will only wait for their bin to become full for a certain amount of time.

  • SegmentContent: Segments a FlowFile into potentially many smaller FlowFiles based on some configured data size. The splitting is not performed against any sort of demarcator but rather just based on byte offsets. This is used before transmitting FlowFiles in order to provide lower latency by sending many different pieces in parallel. On the other side, these FlowFiles can then be reassembled by the MergeContent processor using the Defragment mode.

  • SplitContent: Splits a single FlowFile into potentially many FlowFiles, similarly to SegmentContent. However, with SplitContent, the splitting is not performed on arbitrary byte boundaries but rather a byte sequence is specified on which to split the content.