S3A region logic improved for better inference and
to be compatible with previous releases
1. If you are using an AWS S3 AccessPoint, its region is determined
from the ARN itself.
2. If fs.s3a.endpoint.region is set and non-empty, it is used.
3. If fs.s3a.endpoint is an s3.*.amazonaws.com url,
the region is determined by by parsing the URL
Note: vpce endpoints are not handled by this.
4. If fs.s3a.endpoint.region==null, and none could be determined
from the endpoint, use us-east-2 as default.
5. If fs.s3a.endpoint.region=="" then it is handed off to
The default AWS SDK resolution process.
Consult the AWS SDK documentation for the details on its resolution
process, knowing that it is complicated and may use environment variables,
entries in ~/.aws/config, IAM instance information within
EC2 deployments and possibly even JSON resources on the classpath.
Put differently: it is somewhat brittle across deployments.
Contributed by Ahmar Suhail
Tune AWS v2 SDK changes based on testing with third party stores
including GCS.
Contains HADOOP-18889. S3A v2 SDK error translations and troubleshooting docs
* Changes needed to work with multiple third party stores
* New third_party_stores document on how to bind to and test
third party stores, including google gcs (which works!)
* Troubleshooting docs mostly updated for v2 SDK
Exception translation/resilience
* New AWSUnsupportedFeatureException for unsupported/unavailable errors
* Handle 501 method unimplemented as one of these
* Error codes > 500 mapped to the AWSStatus500Exception if no explicit
handler.
* Precondition errors handled a bit better
* GCS throttle exception also recognized.
* GCS raises 404 on a delete of a file which doesn't exist: swallow it.
* Error translation uses reflection to create IOE of the right type.
All IOEs at the bottom of an AWS stack chain are regenerated.
then a new exception of that specific type is created, with the top level ex
its cause. This is done to retain the whole stack chain.
* Reduce the number of retries within the AWS SDK
* And those of s3a code.
* S3ARetryPolicy explicitly declare SocketException as connectivity failure
but subclasses BindException
* SocketTimeoutException also considered connectivity
* Log at debug whenever retry policies looked up
* Reorder exceptions to alphabetical order, with commentary
* Review use of the Invoke.retry() method
The reduction in retries is because its clear when you try to create a bucket
which doesn't resolve that the time for even an UnknownHostException to
eventually fail over 90s, which then hit the s3a retry code.
- Reducing the SDK retries means these escalate to our code better.
- Cutting back on our own retries makes it a bit more responsive for most real
deployments.
- maybeTranslateNetworkException() and s3a retry policy means that
unknown host exception is recognised and fails fast.
Contributed by Steve Loughran
Jobs which commit their work to S3 thr
magic committer now use a unique magic
containing the job ID:
__magic_job-${jobid}
This allows for multiple jobs to write
to the same destination simultaneously.
Contributed by Syed Shameerur Rahman
* The multipart flag fs.s3a.multipart.uploads.enabled is passed to the async client created
* s3A connector bypasses the transfer manager entirely if disabled or for small files.
Contributed by Steve Loughran
This patch migrates the S3A connector to use the V2 AWS SDK.
This is a significant change at the source code level.
Any applications using the internal extension/override points in
the filesystem connector are likely to break.
This includes but is not limited to:
- Code invoking methods on the S3AFileSystem class
which used classes from the V1 SDK.
- The ability to define the factory for the `AmazonS3` client, and
to retrieve it from the S3AFileSystem. There is a new factory
API and a special interface S3AInternals to access a limited
set of internal classes and operations.
- Delegation token and auditing extensions.
- Classes trying to integrate with the AWS SDK.
All standard V1 credential providers listed in the option
fs.s3a.aws.credentials.provider will be automatically remapped to their
V2 equivalent.
Other V1 Credential Providers are supported, but only if the V1 SDK is
added back to the classpath.
The SDK Signing plugin has changed; all v1 signers are incompatible.
There is no support for the S3 "v2" signing algorithm.
Finally, the aws-sdk-bundle JAR has been replaced by the shaded V2
equivalent, "bundle.jar", which is now exported by the hadoop-aws module.
Consult the document aws_sdk_upgrade for the full details.
Contributed by Ahmar Suhail + some bits by Steve Loughran
Adds a class DelegationBindingInfo which contains binding info
beyond just the AWS credential list.
The binding class can be expanded when needed. Until then, all existing
implementations will work, as the new method
DelegationBindingInfo deploy(AbstractS3ATokenIdentifier retrievedIdentifier)
falls back to the original methods.
This modifies the manifest committer so that the list of files
to rename is passed between stages as a file of
writeable entries on the local filesystem.
The map of directories to create is still passed in memory;
this map is built across all tasks, so even if many tasks
created files, if they all write into the same set of directories
the memory needed is O(directories) with the
task count not a factor.
The _SUCCESS file reports on heap size through gauges.
This should give a warning if there are problems.
Contributed by Steve Loughran
This
1. changes the default value of fs.s3a.directory.marker.retention
to "keep"
2. no longer prints a message when an S3A FS instances is
instantiated with any option other than delete.
Switching to marker retention improves performance
on any S3 bucket as there are no needless marker DELETE requests
-leading to a reduction in write IOPS and and any delays waiting
for the DELETE call to finish.
There are *very* significant improvements on versioned buckets,
where tombstone markers slow down LIST operations: the more
tombstones there are, the worse query planning gets.
Having versioning enabled on production stores is the foundation
of any data protection strategy, so this has tangible benefits
in production.
It is *not* compatible with older hadoop releases; specifically
- Hadoop branch 2 < 2.10.2
- Any release of Hadoop 3.0.x and Hadoop 3.1.x
- Hadoop 3.2.0 and 3.2.1
- Hadoop 3.3.0
Incompatible releases have no problems reading data in stores
where markers are retained, but can get confused when deleting
or renaming directories.
If you are still using older versions to write to data, and cannot
yet upgrade, switch the option back to "delete"
Contributed by Steve Loughran
This:
1. Adds optLong, optDouble, mustLong and mustDouble
methods to the FSBuilder interface to let callers explicitly
passin long and double arguments.
2. The opt() and must() builder calls which take float/double values
now only set long values instead, so as to avoid problems
related to overloaded methods resulting in a ".0" being appended
to a long value.
3. All of the relevant opt/must calls in the hadoop codebase move to
the new methods
4. And the s3a code is resilient to parse errors in is numeric options
-it will downgrade to the default.
This is nominally incompatible, but the floating-point builder methods
were never used: nothing currently expects floating point numbers.
For anyone who wants to safely set numeric builder options across all compatible
releases, convert the number to a string and then use the opt(String, String)
and must(String, String) methods.
Contributed by Steve Loughran
Explicitly sets the fs.s3a.endpoint.region to eu-west-1 so
the ARN-referenced fs creation fails with unknown store
rather than IllegalArgumentException.
Steve Loughran
This has triggered an OOM in a process which was churning through s3a fs
instances; the increased memory footprint of IOStatistics amplified what
must have been a long-standing issue with FS instances being created
and not closed()
* Makes sure instrumentation is closed when the FS is closed.
* Uses a weak reference from metrics to instrumentation, so even
if the FS wasn't closed (see HADOOP-18478), this back reference
would not cause the S3AInstrumentation reference to be retained.
* If S3AFileSystem is configured to log at TRACE it will log the
calling stack of initialize(), so help identify where the
instance is being created. This should help track down
the cause of instance leakage.
Contributed by Steve Loughran.
This fixes a race condition with the TemporaryAWSCredentialProvider
one which has existed for a long time but which only surfaced
(usually in Spark) when the bucket existence probe was disabled
by setting fs.s3a.bucket.probe to 0 -a performance speedup
which was made the default in HADOOP-17454.
Contributed by Jimmy Wong.
The option "fs.s3a.proxy.ssl.enabled" controls
whether the s3a connects to a proxy over HTTP (default) or HTTPS.
Set to "true" to use HTTPS.
Contributed by Mehakmeet Singh
The AWS SDKV2 upgrade log no longer warns about instantiation
of the v1 SDK credential providers which are commonly used in
s3a configurations:
* com.amazonaws.auth.EnvironmentVariableCredentialsProvider
* com.amazonaws.auth.EC2ContainerCredentialsProviderWrapper
* com.amazonaws.auth.InstanceProfileCredentialsProvider
When the hadoop-aws module moves to the v2 SDK, references to these
credential providers will be rewritten to their v2 equivalents.
Follow-on to HADOOP-18382. "Upgrade AWS SDK to V2 - Prerequisites"
Contributed by Ahmar Suhail
Make S3APrefetchingInputStream.seek() completely lazy. Calls to seek() will not affect the current buffer nor interfere with prefetching, until read() is called.
This change allows various usage patterns to benefit from prefetching, e.g. when calling readFully(position, buffer) in a loop for contiguous positions the intermediate internal calls to seek() will be noops and prefetching will have the same performance as in a sequential read.
Contributed by Alessandro Passaro.