HADOOP-18470. index.md update for 3.3.5 release

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@ -22,7 +22,17 @@ Purpose
This document describes how to install and configure Hadoop clusters ranging from a few nodes to extremely large clusters with thousands of nodes. To play with Hadoop, you may first want to install it on a single machine (see [Single Node Setup](./SingleCluster.html)).
This document does not cover advanced topics such as [Security](./SecureMode.html) or High Availability.
This document does not cover advanced topics such as High Availability.
*Important*: all production Hadoop clusters use Kerberos to authenticate callers
and secure access to HDFS data as well as restriction access to computation
services (YARN etc.).
These instructions do not cover integration with any Kerberos services,
-everyone bringing up a production cluster should include connecting to their
organisation's Kerberos infrastructure as a key part of the deployment.
See [Security](./SecureMode.html) for details on how to secure a cluster.
Prerequisites
-------------

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@ -26,6 +26,15 @@ Purpose
This document describes how to set up and configure a single-node Hadoop installation so that you can quickly perform simple operations using Hadoop MapReduce and the Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS).
*Important*: all production Hadoop clusters use Kerberos to authenticate callers
and secure access to HDFS data as well as restriction access to computation
services (YARN etc.).
These instructions do not cover integration with any Kerberos services,
-everyone bringing up a production cluster should include connecting to their
organisation's Kerberos infrastructure as a key part of the deployment.
Prerequisites
-------------
@ -33,8 +42,6 @@ $H3 Supported Platforms
* GNU/Linux is supported as a development and production platform. Hadoop has been demonstrated on GNU/Linux clusters with 2000 nodes.
* Windows is also a supported platform but the followings steps are for Linux only. To set up Hadoop on Windows, see [wiki page](http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/Hadoop2OnWindows).
$H3 Required Software
Required software for Linux include:

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Apache Hadoop ${project.version}
================================
Apache Hadoop ${project.version} incorporates a number of significant
enhancements over the previous major release line (hadoop-2.x).
Apache Hadoop ${project.version} is an update to the Hadoop 3.3.x release branch.
This release is generally available (GA), meaning that it represents a point of
API stability and quality that we consider production-ready.
Overview
========
Overview of Changes
===================
Users are encouraged to read the full set of release notes.
This page provides an overview of the major changes.
Minimum required Java version increased from Java 7 to Java 8
------------------
All Hadoop JARs are now compiled targeting a runtime version of Java 8.
Users still using Java 7 or below must upgrade to Java 8.
Support for erasure coding in HDFS
------------------
Erasure coding is a method for durably storing data with significant space
savings compared to replication. Standard encodings like Reed-Solomon (10,4)
have a 1.4x space overhead, compared to the 3x overhead of standard HDFS
replication.
Since erasure coding imposes additional overhead during reconstruction
and performs mostly remote reads, it has traditionally been used for
storing colder, less frequently accessed data. Users should consider
the network and CPU overheads of erasure coding when deploying this
feature.
More details are available in the
[HDFS Erasure Coding](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs/HDFSErasureCoding.html)
documentation.
YARN Timeline Service v.2
-------------------
We are introducing an early preview (alpha 2) of a major revision of YARN
Timeline Service: v.2. YARN Timeline Service v.2 addresses two major
challenges: improving scalability and reliability of Timeline Service, and
enhancing usability by introducing flows and aggregation.
YARN Timeline Service v.2 alpha 2 is provided so that users and developers
can test it and provide feedback and suggestions for making it a ready
replacement for Timeline Service v.1.x. It should be used only in a test
capacity.
More details are available in the
[YARN Timeline Service v.2](./hadoop-yarn/hadoop-yarn-site/TimelineServiceV2.html)
documentation.
Shell script rewrite
-------------------
The Hadoop shell scripts have been rewritten to fix many long-standing
bugs and include some new features. While an eye has been kept towards
compatibility, some changes may break existing installations.
Incompatible changes are documented in the release notes, with related
discussion on [HADOOP-9902](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-9902).
More details are available in the
[Unix Shell Guide](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-common/UnixShellGuide.html)
documentation. Power users will also be pleased by the
[Unix Shell API](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-common/UnixShellAPI.html)
documentation, which describes much of the new functionality, particularly
related to extensibility.
Shaded client jars
------------------
The `hadoop-client` Maven artifact available in 2.x releases pulls
Hadoop's transitive dependencies onto a Hadoop application's classpath.
This can be problematic if the versions of these transitive dependencies
conflict with the versions used by the application.
[HADOOP-11804](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-11804) adds
new `hadoop-client-api` and `hadoop-client-runtime` artifacts that
shade Hadoop's dependencies into a single jar. This avoids leaking
Hadoop's dependencies onto the application's classpath.
Support for Opportunistic Containers and Distributed Scheduling.
--------------------
A notion of `ExecutionType` has been introduced, whereby Applications can
now request for containers with an execution type of `Opportunistic`.
Containers of this type can be dispatched for execution at an NM even if
there are no resources available at the moment of scheduling. In such a
case, these containers will be queued at the NM, waiting for resources to
be available for it to start. Opportunistic containers are of lower priority
than the default `Guaranteed` containers and are therefore preempted,
if needed, to make room for Guaranteed containers. This should
improve cluster utilization.
Opportunistic containers are by default allocated by the central RM, but
support has also been added to allow opportunistic containers to be
allocated by a distributed scheduler which is implemented as an
AMRMProtocol interceptor.
Please see [documentation](./hadoop-yarn/hadoop-yarn-site/OpportunisticContainers.html)
for more details.
MapReduce task-level native optimization
--------------------
MapReduce has added support for a native implementation of the map output
collector. For shuffle-intensive jobs, this can lead to a performance
improvement of 30% or more.
See the release notes for
[MAPREDUCE-2841](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MAPREDUCE-2841)
for more detail.
Support for more than 2 NameNodes.
--------------------
The initial implementation of HDFS NameNode high-availability provided
for a single active NameNode and a single Standby NameNode. By replicating
edits to a quorum of three JournalNodes, this architecture is able to
tolerate the failure of any one node in the system.
However, some deployments require higher degrees of fault-tolerance.
This is enabled by this new feature, which allows users to run multiple
standby NameNodes. For instance, by configuring three NameNodes and
five JournalNodes, the cluster is able to tolerate the failure of two
nodes rather than just one.
The [HDFS high-availability documentation](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs/HDFSHighAvailabilityWithQJM.html)
has been updated with instructions on how to configure more than two
NameNodes.
Default ports of multiple services have been changed.
------------------------
Previously, the default ports of multiple Hadoop services were in the
Linux ephemeral port range (32768-61000). This meant that at startup,
services would sometimes fail to bind to the port due to a conflict
with another application.
These conflicting ports have been moved out of the ephemeral range,
affecting the NameNode, Secondary NameNode, DataNode, and KMS. Our
documentation has been updated appropriately, but see the release
notes for [HDFS-9427](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-9427) and
[HADOOP-12811](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-12811)
for a list of port changes.
Support for Microsoft Azure Data Lake and Aliyun Object Storage System filesystem connectors
---------------------
Hadoop now supports integration with Microsoft Azure Data Lake and
Aliyun Object Storage System as alternative Hadoop-compatible filesystems.
Intra-datanode balancer
-------------------
A single DataNode manages multiple disks. During normal write operation,
disks will be filled up evenly. However, adding or replacing disks can
lead to significant skew within a DataNode. This situation is not handled
by the existing HDFS balancer, which concerns itself with inter-, not intra-,
DN skew.
This situation is handled by the new intra-DataNode balancing
functionality, which is invoked via the `hdfs diskbalancer` CLI.
See the disk balancer section in the
[HDFS Commands Guide](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs/HDFSCommands.html)
for more information.
Reworked daemon and task heap management
---------------------
A series of changes have been made to heap management for Hadoop daemons
as well as MapReduce tasks.
[HADOOP-10950](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-10950) introduces
new methods for configuring daemon heap sizes.
Notably, auto-tuning is now possible based on the memory size of the host,
and the `HADOOP_HEAPSIZE` variable has been deprecated.
See the full release notes of HADOOP-10950 for more detail.
[MAPREDUCE-5785](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MAPREDUCE-5785)
simplifies the configuration of map and reduce task
heap sizes, so the desired heap size no longer needs to be specified
in both the task configuration and as a Java option.
Existing configs that already specify both are not affected by this change.
See the full release notes of MAPREDUCE-5785 for more details.
HDFS Router-Based Federation
---------------------
HDFS Router-Based Federation adds a RPC routing layer that provides a federated
view of multiple HDFS namespaces. This is similar to the existing
[ViewFs](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs/ViewFs.html)) and
[HDFS Federation](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs/Federation.html)
functionality, except the mount table is managed on the server-side by the
routing layer rather than on the client. This simplifies access to a federated
cluster for existing HDFS clients.
See [HDFS-10467](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-10467) and the
HDFS Router-based Federation
[documentation](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs-rbf/HDFSRouterFederation.html) for
more details.
API-based configuration of Capacity Scheduler queue configuration
----------------------
The OrgQueue extension to the capacity scheduler provides a programmatic way to
change configurations by providing a REST API that users can call to modify
queue configurations. This enables automation of queue configuration management
by administrators in the queue's `administer_queue` ACL.
See [YARN-5734](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/YARN-5734) and the
[Capacity Scheduler documentation](./hadoop-yarn/hadoop-yarn-site/CapacityScheduler.html) for more information.
YARN Resource Types
Vectored IO API
---------------
The YARN resource model has been generalized to support user-defined countable resource types beyond CPU and memory. For instance, the cluster administrator could define resources like GPUs, software licenses, or locally-attached storage. YARN tasks can then be scheduled based on the availability of these resources.
The `PositionedReadable` interface has now added an operation for
Vectored (also known as Scatter/Gather IO):
See [YARN-3926](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/YARN-3926) and the [YARN resource model documentation](./hadoop-yarn/hadoop-yarn-site/ResourceModel.html) for more information.
```java
void readVectored(List<? extends FileRange> ranges, IntFunction<ByteBuffer> allocate)
```
All the requested ranges will be retrieved into the supplied byte buffers -possibly asynchronously,
possibly in parallel, with results potentially coming in out-of-order.
1. The default implementation uses a series of `readFully()` calls, so delivers
equivalent performance.
2. The local filesystem uses java native IO calls for higher performance reads than `readFully()`
3. The S3A filesystem issues parallel HTTP GET requests in different threads.
Benchmarking of (modified) ORC and Parquet clients through `file://` and `s3a://`
show tangible improvements in query times.
Further Reading: [FsDataInputStream](./hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-common/filesystem/fsdatainputstream.html).
Manifest Committer for Azure ABFS and google GCS performance
------------------------------------------------------------
A new "intermediate manifest committer" uses a manifest file
to commit the work of successful task attempts, rather than
renaming directories.
Job commit is matter of reading all the manifests, creating the
destination directories (parallelized) and renaming the files,
again in parallel.
This is fast and correct on Azure Storage and Google GCS,
and should be used there instead of the classic v1/v2 file
output committers.
It is also safe to use on HDFS, where it should be faster
than the v1 committer. It is however optimized for
cloud storage where list and rename operations are significantly
slower; the benefits may be less.
More details are available in the
[manifest committer](./hadoop-mapreduce-client/hadoop-mapreduce-client-core/manifest_committer.html).
documentation.
Transitive CVE fixes
--------------------
A lot of dependencies have been upgraded to address recent CVEs.
Many of the CVEs were not actually exploitable through the Hadoop
so much of this work is just due diligence.
However applications which have all the library is on a class path may
be vulnerable, and the ugprades should also reduce the number of false
positives security scanners report.
We have not been able to upgrade every single dependency to the latest
version there is. Some of those changes are just going to be incompatible.
If you have concerns about the state of a specific library, consult the apache JIRA
issue tracker to see what discussions have taken place about the library in question.
As an open source project, contributions in this area are always welcome,
especially in testing the active branches, testing applications downstream of
those branches and of whether updated dependencies trigger regressions.
HDFS: Router Based Federation
-----------------------------
A lot of effort has been invested into stabilizing/improving the HDFS Router Based Federation feature.
1. HDFS-13522, HDFS-16767 & Related Jiras: Allow Observer Reads in HDFS Router Based Federation.
2. HDFS-13248: RBF supports Client Locality
HDFS: Dynamic Datanode Reconfiguration
--------------------------------------
HDFS-16400, HDFS-16399, HDFS-16396, HDFS-16397, HDFS-16413, HDFS-16457.
A number of Datanode configuration options can be changed without having to restart
the datanode. This makes it possible to tune deployment configurations without
cluster-wide Datanode Restarts.
See [DataNode.java](https://github.com/apache/hadoop/blob/branch-3.3.5/hadoop-hdfs-project/hadoop-hdfs/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hdfs/server/datanode/DataNode.java#L346-L361)
for the list of dynamically reconfigurable attributes.
Getting Started
===============