This switches the default behavior of S3A output streams
to warning that Syncable.hsync() or hflush() have been
called; it's not considered an error unless the defaults
are overridden.
This avoids breaking applications which call the APIs,
at the risk of people trying to use S3 as a safe store
of streamed data (HBase WALs, audit logs etc).
Contributed by Steve Loughran.
Change-Id: I0a02ec1e622343619f147f94158c18928a73a885
This migrates the fs.s3a-server-side encryption configuration options
to a name which covers client-side encryption too.
fs.s3a.server-side-encryption-algorithm becomes fs.s3a.encryption.algorithm
fs.s3a.server-side-encryption.key becomes fs.s3a.encryption.key
The existing keys remain valid, simply deprecated and remapped
to the new values. If you want server-side encryption options
to be picked up regardless of hadoop versions, use
the old keys.
(the old key also works for CSE, though as no version of Hadoop
with CSE support has shipped without this remapping, it's less
relevant)
Contributed by: Mehakmeet Singh
Change-Id: I51804b21b287dbce18864f0a6ad17126aba2b281
This (big!) patch adds support for client side encryption in AWS S3,
with keys managed by AWS-KMS.
Read the documentation in encryption.md very, very carefully before
use and consider it unstable.
S3-CSE is enabled in the existing configuration option
"fs.s3a.server-side-encryption-algorithm":
fs.s3a.server-side-encryption-algorithm=CSE-KMS
fs.s3a.server-side-encryption.key=<KMS_KEY_ID>
You cannot enable CSE and SSE in the same client, although
you can still enable a default SSE option in the S3 console.
* Filesystem list/get status operations subtract 16 bytes from the length
of all files >= 16 bytes long to compensate for the padding which CSE
adds.
* The SDK always warns about the specific algorithm chosen being
deprecated. It is critical to use this algorithm for ranged
GET requests to work (i.e. random IO). Ignore.
* Unencrypted files CANNOT BE READ.
The entire bucket SHOULD be encrypted with S3-CSE.
* Uploading files may be a bit slower as blocks are now
written sequentially.
* The Multipart Upload API is disabled when S3-CSE is active.
Contributed by Mehakmeet Singh
Change-Id: Ie1a27a036a39db66a67e9c6d33bc78d54ea708a0
Addresses the problem of processes running out of memory when
there are many ABFS output streams queuing data to upload,
especially when the network upload bandwidth is less than the rate
data is generated.
ABFS Output streams now buffer their blocks of data to
"disk", "bytebuffer" or "array", as set in
"fs.azure.data.blocks.buffer"
When buffering via disk, the location for temporary storage
is set in "fs.azure.buffer.dir"
For safe scaling: use "disk" (default); for performance, when
confident that upload bandwidth will never be a bottleneck,
experiment with the memory options.
The number of blocks a single stream can have queued for uploading
is set in "fs.azure.block.upload.active.blocks".
The default value is 20.
Contributed by Mehakmeet Singh.
This adds a new class org.apache.hadoop.util.Preconditions which is
* @Private/@Unstable
* Intended to allow us to move off Google Guava
* Is designed to be trivially backportable
(i.e contains no references to guava classes internally)
Please use this instead of the guava equivalents, where possible.
Contributed by: Ahmed Hussein
Change-Id: Ic392451bcfe7d446184b7c995734bcca8c07286e
* CredentialProviderFactory to detect and report on recursion.
* S3AFS to remove incompatible providers.
* Integration Test for this.
Contributed by Steve Loughran.
Change-Id: Ia247b3c9fe8488ffdb7f57b40eb6e37c57e522ef
Fixes the regression caused by HADOOP-17511 by moving where the
option fs.s3a.acl.default is read -doing it before the RequestFactory
is created.
Adds
* A unit test in TestRequestFactory to verify the ACLs are set
on all file write operations.
* A new ITestS3ACannedACLs test which verifies that ACLs really
do get all the way through.
* S3A Assumed Role delegation tokens to include the IAM permission
s3:PutObjectAcl in the generated role.
Contributed by Steve Loughran
Change-Id: I3abac6a1b9e150b6b6df0af7c2c70093f8f518cb
This patch cuts down the size of directory trees used for
distcp contract tests against object stores, so making
them much faster against distant/slow stores.
On abfs, the test only runs with -Dscale (as was the case for s3a already),
and has the larger scale test timeout.
After every test case, the FileSystem IOStatistics are logged,
to provide information about what IO is taking place and
what it's performance is.
There are some test cases which upload files of 1+ MiB; you can
increase the size of the upload in the option
"scale.test.distcp.file.size.kb"
Set it to zero and the large file tests are skipped.
Contributed by Steve Loughran.