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.
- Moves out o.a.h.h.{mapred, mapreduce} to new hbase-mapreduce module which depends
on hbase-server because of classes like *Snapshot{Input,Output}Format.java, WALs, replication, etc
- hbase-backup depends on it for WALPlayer and MR job stuff
- A bunch of tools needed to be pulled into hbase-mapreduce becuase of their dependencies on MR.
These are: CompactionTool, LoadTestTool, PerformanceEvaluation, ExportSnapshot
This is better place of them than hbase-server. But ideal place would be in separate hbase-tools module.
- There were some tests in hbase-server which were digging into these tools for static util funtions or
confs. Moved these to better/easily shared place. For eg. security related stuff to HBaseKerberosUtils.
- Note that hbase-mapreduce has secondPartExecution tests. On my machine they took like 20 min, so maybe
more on apache jenkins. That's basically equal reduction of runtime of hbase-server tests, which is a
big win!
Change-Id: Ieeb7235014717ca83ee5cb13b2a27fddfa6838e8
This patch removes jersey1 dependencies form hbase REST project also
removes dead code in hbase-rest/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/rest/ResourceConfig.java and prevents jersey1 jars in lib dir. RESTApiClusterManager.java is modified to use jersey2.
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
Selective add of dependency on hbase-thirdparty jars.
Update to READMEs on how protobuf is done (and update to refguide).
Removed all checked in generated protobuf files. They are generated
on the fly now as part of mainline build.
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
Upgrade jquery from 1.8.3 to 3.2.1 in hbase-server and hbase-thrift modules
Change-Id: I92d479e9802d954f607ba409077bc98581e9e5ca
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
hbase-thirdparty jars. Update to READMEs on how protobuf is done (and update to
refguide) Removed all checked in generated protobuf files. They are generatedon
the fly now as part of mainline build.
This reverts commit 0ac5d4a717.
This is a revert of a revert; i.e. a reapplication!
Fixes for breakage that comes in with this patch is in a follow-on.
Rely on the new plugin to do all proto generation. No need of an
external protoc setup anymore. Mvn will do it all for you.
Updated all READMEs appropriately.
Signed-off-by: Michael Stack <stack@apache.org>
This patch changes poms to use protobuf-maven-plugin instaed of
hadoop-maven-plugins generating protos. Adds a few missing READMEs too
as well as purge of unused protos turned up by the new plugin.
Which includes
HBASE-16742 Add chapter for devs on how we do protobufs going forward
HBASE-16741 Amend the generate protobufs out-of-band build step
to include shade, pulling in protobuf source and a hook for patching protobuf
Removed ByteStringer from hbase-protocol-shaded. Use the protobuf-3.1.0
trick directly instead. Makes stuff cleaner. All under 'shaded' dir is
now generated.
HBASE-16567 Upgrade to protobuf-3.1.x
Regenerate all protos in this module with protoc3.
Redo ByteStringer to use new pb3.1.0 unsafebytesutil
instead of HBaseZeroCopyByteString
HBASE-16264 Figure how to deal with endpoints and shaded pb Shade our protobufs.
Do it in a manner that makes it so we can still have in our API references to
com.google.protobuf (and in REST). The c.g.p in API is for Coprocessor Endpoints (CPEP)
This patch is Tactic #4 from Shading Doc attached to the referenced issue.
Figuring an appoach took a while because we have Coprocessor Endpoints
mixed in with the core of HBase that are tough to untangle (FIX).
Tactic #4 (the fourth attempt at addressing this issue) is COPY all but
the CPEP .proto files currently in hbase-protocol to a new module named
hbase-protocol-shaded. Generate .protos again in the new location and
then relocate/shade the generated files. Let CPEPs keep on with the
old references at com.google.protobuf.* and
org.apache.hadoop.hbase.protobuf.* but change the hbase core so all
instead refer to the relocated files in their new location at
org.apache.hadoop.hbase.shaded.com.google.protobuf.*.
Let the new module also shade protobufs themselves and change hbase
core to pick up this shaded protobuf rather than directly reference
com.google.protobuf.
This approach allows us to explicitly refer to either the shaded or
non-shaded version of a protobuf class in any particular context (though
usually context dictates one or the other). Core runs on shaded protobuf.
CPEPs continue to use whatever is on the classpath with
com.google.protobuf.* which is pb2.5.0 for the near future at least.
See above cited doc for follow-ons and downsides. In short, IDEs will complain
about not being able to find the shaded protobufs since shading happens at package
time; will fix by checking in all generated classes and relocated protobuf in
a follow-on. Also, CPEPs currently suffer an extra-copy as marshalled from
non-shaded to shaded. To fix. Finally, our .protos are duplicated; once
shaded, and once not. Pain, but how else to reveal our protos to CPEPs or
C++ client that wants to talk with HBase AND shade protobuf.
Details:
Add a new hbase-protocol-shaded module. It is a copy of hbase-protocol
i with all relocated offset from o.a.h.h. to o.a.h.h.shaded. The new module
also includes the relocated pb. It does not include CPEPs. They stay in
their old location.
Add another module hbase-endpoint which has in it all the endpoints
that ship as part of hbase -- at least the ones that are not
entangled with core such as AccessControl and Auth. Move all protos
for these CPEPs here as well as their unit tests (mostly moving a
bunch of stuff out of hbase-server module)
Much of the change looks like this:
-import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.protobuf.ProtobufUtil;
-import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.protobuf.generated.ClusterIdProtos;
+import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.protobuf.shaded.ProtobufUtil;
+import org.apache.hadoop.hbase.shaded.protobuf.generated.ClusterIdProtos;
In HTable and in HBaseAdmin, regularize the way Callables are used and also hide
protobuf usage as much as possible moving it up into Callable super classes or out
to utility classes. Still TODO is adding in of retries, etc., but can wait on
procedure which will redo all this.
Also in HTable and HBaseAdmin as well as in HRegionServer and Server, be explicit
when using non-shaded protobuf. Do the full-path so it is clear. This is around
endpoint coprocessors registration of services and execution of CPEP methods.
Shrunk ProtobufUtil by moving methods used by one CPEP only back to the CPEP either
into Client class or as new Util class; e.g. AccessControlUtil.
There are actually two versions of ProtobufUtil now; a shaded one and a subset
that is used by CPEPs doing non-shaded work.
Made it so hbase-common no longer depends on hbase-protocol (with Matteo's help)
R*Converter classes got moved down under shaded package -- they are for internal
use only. There are no non-shaded versions of these classes.
D hbase-client/src/main/java/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/client/AbstractRegionServerCallable
D RetryingCallableBase
Not used anymore and we have too many tiers of Callables so removed/cleaned-up.
A ClientServicecallable
Had to add this one. RegionServerCallable was made generic so it could be used
for a few Interfaces (Client and Admin). Then added ClientServiceCallable to
implement RegionServerCallable with the Client Interface.
We have an awesome community resource in our online book. It's maintained and looked after with
diligence. We also have an HBase section on the hadoop wiki that hasn't been updated since 2012.
Let's sift through the pages of the wiki, bring over any content that's still relevant and
not already present in the book, and kill the wiki.
* corrects license/notice for source distribution
* adds inception year to correct copyright in generated NOTICE files for jars
* updates project names in poms to use "Apache HBase" instead of "HBase" so jar NOTICE files will be correct
* uses append-resources to include supplemental info on jars with 3rd party works in source
* adds an hbase specific resource bundle for jars that include 3rd party works for binaries
** uses supplemental-model to fill in license gaps
** uses the above and a shade plugin transformation to build proper files for shaded jars.
** uses the above and the assembly plugin to build the proper files for bin assembly
* adds a NOTICE item for things copied out of Hadoop (TODO legal-discuss)
* IA.Public accessible logger instances deprecated
* logger instances modified by tests left in place
* all others made private static final
Signed-off-by: Sean Busbey <busbey@apache.org>
Adds a number of lifecycle-mapping entries which
prevent errors from showing up in Eclipse on a fresh
import of HBase. For plugins defined in the top-level
pom, the mapping is added there; otherwise, the mapping
is pushed down to the child pom.
Signed-off-by: Sean Busbey <busbey@apache.org>
In our pre-1.0 API, HTable is considered a light-weight object that consumed by
a single thread at a time. The HTablePool class provided a means of sharing
multiple HTable instances across a number of threads. As an optimization,
HTable managed a "write buffer", accumulating edits and sending a "batch" all
at once. By default the batch was sent as the last step in invocations of
put(Put) and put(List<Put>). The user could disable the automatic flushing of
the write buffer, retaining edits locally and only sending the whole "batch"
once the write buffer has filled or when the flushCommits() method in invoked
explicitly. Explicit or implicit batch writing was controlled by the
setAutoFlushTo(boolean) method. A value of true (the default) had the write
buffer flushed at the completion of a call to put(Put) or put(List<Put>). A
value of false allowed for explicit buffer management. HTable also exposed the
buffer to consumers via getWriteBuffer().
The combination of HTable with setAutoFlushTo(false) and the HTablePool
provided a convenient mechanism by which multiple "Put-producing" threads could
share a common write buffer. Both HTablePool and HTable are deprecated, and
they are officially replaced in The new 1.0 API by Table and BufferedMutator.
Table, which replaces HTable, no longer exposes explicit write-buffer
management. Instead, explicit buffer management is exposed via BufferedMutator.
BufferedMutator is made safe for concurrent use. Where code would previously
retrieve and return HTables from an HTablePool, now that code creates and
shares a single BufferedMutator instance across all threads.