Updated HTrace version to 4.2
Created TraceUtil class to wrap htrace methods. Uses try with resources.
Signed-off-by: Balazs Meszaros <balazs.meszaros@cloudera.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
Includes partial backport of hbase-build-configuration module
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
Signed-off-by: Misty Stanley-Jones <misty@apache.org>
Do a pass with dependency:analyze; remove unused and
explicity list the dependencies we exploit.
Remove the parent dependencies set which had junit, mockito,
log4j, and findbugs annotations (had to put junit back
temporarily in subsequent version of this patch TODO). Listing in
parent set meant these libs were dependencies for all modules
which in practice was not the case. Edited all modules so
those that need any from this parent set now do explicit listing.
Ran the dependency:analyze over the project. Acted on most
suggested removals and requests for explicit listing. Some
grey areas remain around transitives that come in with
hadoop -needs better excludes, another project- and that
the dependency:analyze tool is not always accurate in its
reporting.
Pull in guava 22.0 by using the shaded version up in new hbase-thirdparty project.
In poms, exclude guava everywhere except on hadoop-common. Do this so
we minimize transitive includes. hadoop-common is needed because hadoop
Configuration uses guava doing preconditions.
Everywhere we used guava, instead use shaded so fix a load of imports.
Stopwatch API changed as did hashing and toStringHelper which is now
in MoreObjects class. Otherwise, minimal changes to come up on 22.0
M TestStressWALProcedureStore.java
Disable test that now runs that fails because of difference in pb3.1.0.
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
Summary: Missing a root index block is worse than missing a data block. We should know the difference
Test Plan: Tested on a local instance. All numbers looked reasonable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D55563
When we read from HDFS, we overread to pick up the next blocks header.
Doing this saves a seek as we move through the hfile; we save having to
do an explicit seek just to read the block header every time we need to
read the body. We used to read in the next header as part of the
current blocks buffer. This buffer was then what got persisted to
blockcache; so we were over-persisting: our block plus the next blocks'
header (33 bytes).
This patch undoes this over-persisting.
Removes support for version 1 blocks (0.2 was added in hbase-0.92.0).
Not needed any more.
There is an open question on whether checksums should be persisted
when caching. The code seems to say no but if cache is SSD backed or
backed by anything that does not do error correction, we'll want
checksums.
Adds loads of documentation.
M hbase-common/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/io/hfile/BlockType.java
(write) Add writing from a ByteBuff.
M hbase-common/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/nio/ByteBuff.java
(toString) Add one so ByteBuff looks like ByteBuffer when you click on
it in IDE
M hbase-server/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/io/hfile/HFileBlock.java
Remove support for version 1 blocks.
Cleaned up handling of metadata added when we serialize a block to
caches. Metadata is smaller now.
When we serialize (used when caching), do not persist the next blocks
header if present.
Removed a bunch of methods, a few of which had overlapping
functionality and others that exposed too much of our internals.
Also removed a bunch of constructors and unified the constructors we
had left over making them share a common init method.
Shutdown access to defines that should only be used internally here.
Renamed all to do w/ 'EXTRA' and 'extraSerialization' to instead talk
about metadata saved to caches; was unclear previously what EXTRA was
about.
Renamed static final declarations as all uppercase.
(readBlockDataInternal): Redid. Couldn't make sense of it previously.
Undid heavy-duty parse of header by constructing HFileBlock. Other
cleanups. Its 1/3rd the length it used to be. More to do in here.
When we read from HDFS, we overread to pick up the next blocks header.
Doing this saves a seek as we move through the hfile; we save having to
do an explicit seek just to read the block header every time we need to
read the body. We used to read in the next header as part of the
current blocks buffer. This buffer was then what got persisted to
blockcache; so we were over-persisting: our block plus the next blocks'
header (33 bytes).
This patch undoes this over-persisting.
Removes support for version 1 blocks (0.2 was added in hbase-0.92.0).
Not needed any more.
There is an open question on whether checksums should be persisted
when caching. The code seems to say no but if cache is SSD backed or
backed by anything that does not do error correction, we'll want
checksums.
Adds loads of documentation.
M hbase-common/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/io/hfile/BlockType.java
(write) Add writing from a ByteBuff.
M hbase-common/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/nio/ByteBuff.java
(toString) Add one so ByteBuff looks like ByteBuffer when you click on
it in IDE
M hbase-server/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/io/hfile/HFileBlock.java
Remove support for version 1 blocks.
Cleaned up handling of metadata added when we serialize a block to
caches. Metadata is smaller now.
When we serialize (used when caching), do not persist the next blocks
header if present.
Removed a bunch of methods, a few of which had overlapping
functionality and others that exposed too much of our internals.
Also removed a bunch of constructors and unified the constructors we
had left over making them share a common init method.
Shutdown access to defines that should only be used internally here.
Renamed all to do w/ 'EXTRA' and 'extraSerialization' to instead talk
about metadata saved to caches; was unclear previously what EXTRA was
about.
Renamed static final declarations as all uppercase.
(readBlockDataInternal): Redid. Couldn't make sense of it previously.
Undid heavy-duty parse of header by constructing HFileBlock. Other
cleanups. Its 1/3rd the length it used to be. More to do in here.