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Finally, the aws-sdk-bundle JAR has been replaced by the shaded V2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
As well as the POM update, this patch moves to the (renamed) verify methods.
Backporting mockito test changes may now require cherrypicking this patch, otherwise
use the old method names.
Contributed by Anmol Asrani
To avoid the ABFS instance getting closed due to GC while the streams are working, attach the ABFS instance to a backReference opaque object and passing down to the streams so that we have a hard reference while the streams are working.
Contributed by: Mehakmeet Singh
* Add jdiff xml files from 3.3.6 release.
* Declare 3.3.6 as the latest stable release.
* Copy release notes.
(cherry picked from commit 7db9895000)
(cherry picked from commit cc121e2124aa01458dc296a060edc5e21a295268)
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. 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
The HDFS lease APIs have been replicated as interfaces in hadoop-common so other filesystems can
also implement them. Applications which use the leasing APIs should migrate to the new
interface where possible.
Contributed by Stephen Wu
* HADOOP-18587. Fixing jettison vulnerability of hadoop-common lib
* no need for excluding, let it come
Change-Id: Ia6e4ad351158dd4b0510dec34bbde531a60e7654
The log level can only be set on Log4J log implementations;
probes are used to downgrade to a warning when other
logging back ends are used
Contributed by Viraj Jasani
Even though DiskChecker.mkdirsWithExistsCheck() will create the directory tree,
it is only called *after* the enumeration of directories with available
space has completed.
Directories which don't exist are reported as having 0 space, therefore
the mkdirs code is never reached.
Adding a simple mkdirs() -without bothering to check the outcome-
ensures that if a dir has been deleted then it will be reconstructed
if possible. If it can't it will still have 0 bytes of space
reported and so be excluded from the allocation.
Contributed by Steve Loughran
Expands on the comments in cluster config to tell people
they shouldn't be running a cluster without a private VLAN
in cloud, that Knox is good here, and unsecured clusters
without a VLAN are just computation-as-a-service to crypto miners
Contributed by Steve Loughran
Changes method name of RPC.Builder#setnumReaders to setNumReaders()
The original method is still there, just marked deprecated.
It is the one which should be used when working with older branches.
Contributed by Haiyang Hu
When closing we need to wrap the flush() in a try .. finally, otherwise
when flush throws it will stop completion of the remainder of the
close activities and in particular the close of the underlying wrapped
stream object resulting in a resource leak.
Contributed by Colm Dougan
Contributed by Viraj Jasani <vjasani@apache.org>
Signed-off-by: Chris Nauroth <cnauroth@apache.org>
Signed-off-by: Steve Loughran <stevel@apache.org>
Signed-off-by: Mingliang Liu <liuml07@apache.org>
Part of HADOOP-18469 and the hardening of XML/XSL parsers.
Followup to the main HADOOP-18575 patch, to improve performance when
working with xml/xsl engines which don't support the relevant attributes.
Include this change when backporting.
Contributed by PJ Fanning.
The kerberos RPC does not declare any restriction on
characters used in kerberos names, though
implementations MAY be more restrictive.
If the kerberos controller supports use non-conventional
principal names *and the kerberos admin chooses to use them*
this can confuse some of the parsing.
The obvious solution is for the enterprise admins to "not do that"
as a lot of things break, bits of hadoop included.
Harden the hadoop code slightly so at least we fail more gracefully,
so people can then get in touch with their sysadmin and tell them
to stop it.