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09-29-2015
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11
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My Accepted Solutions
Title | Views | Posted |
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1452 | 10-06-2017 06:59 PM | |
1248 | 01-19-2017 05:08 PM | |
1385 | 07-22-2016 01:26 PM | |
2147 | 07-12-2016 11:34 AM | |
1433 | 06-19-2016 01:52 PM |
01-29-2018
07:31 PM
What version of Oozie and HDP is this support available in?
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12-20-2017
07:11 PM
2 Kudos
The KnoxShell release artifact provides a small footprint client environment that removes all unnecessary server dependencies, configuration, binary scripts, etc. It is comprised of a couple different things that empower different sorts of users.
A set of SDK type classes for providing access to Hadoop resources over HTTP A Groovy based DSL for scripting access to Hadoop resources based on the underlying SDK classes Token based Sessions to provide a CLI SSO session for executing multiple script While testing the KnoxShell examples for the 0.14.0 Apache Knox release, I realized that using the KnoxShell for access to HiveServer2 was not easily done. This is due to the fact that we are leveraging the knoxshell executable jar which makes is difficult to add additional classes and jars to the classpath for the executing script. I needed to create a launch script that called the main class of the executable jar while also being able to set the classpath with additional jars for Apache Hive clients. This article will go over the creation of a simple SQL client that we will call "knoxline" by using the KnoxShell Groovy based DSL. This particular article should work using the 0.14.0 knoxshell download and with previous gateway server releases as well. We will show how to use a simple groovy script to write a SQL client that can do something like the following: Download In the 0.14.0 release, you may get to the knoxshell download through the Apache Knox site. From the above page click the Gateway client binary archive link or just use the one here. Unzip this file into your preferred location which will result in a knoxshell-0.14.0 directory and we will refer to that location as the {GATEWAY_HOME}. CD {GATEWAY_HOME} You should see something similar to the following:
bash-3.2$ ls -l total 160 -r--r--r--@ 1 larry staff 71714 Dec 6 18:32 LICENSE -r--r--r--@ 1 larry staff 164 Dec 6 18:32 NOTICE -rw-r--r--@ 1 larry staff 1452 Dec 6 18:32 README drwxr-xr-x@ 6 larry staff 204 Dec 14 18:06 bin drwxr--r--@ 3 larry staff 102 Dec 14 18:06 conf drwxr-xr-x@ 19 larry staff 646 Dec 14 18:06 samples Directory
Description
bin
contains the main knoxshell jar and related shell scripts
conf
only contains log4j config
logs
contains the knoxshell.log file
samples
has numerous examples to help you get started
Setup Truststore for Client Get/setup truststore for the target Knox instance or fronting load balancer
if you have access to the server you may use the command
knoxcli.sh export-cert --type JKS
copy the resulting gateway-client-identity.jks to your user home directory you may also ask your Knox administrator to provide you with the public cert for the gateway and create your own truststore within your user home directory NOTE: if you see errors related to SSL and PKIX your truststore is not properly setup Add Hive Client Libraries
In order to add the client libraries that provide the HiveDriver and others, we will add an additional directory to the above structure. Directory
Description
lib
To contain external jars to add to the classpath for things like HiveDriver
Next we will download the hive standalone client jar which will contain nearly everything we need. For this article, we will download Hive 1.2.1 standalone jar and copy it to the newly created lib directory. You can use whatever version client jar is appropriate for your Hive deployment. Add Commons Logging Jar Download commons logging jar and copy to the libs directory as well. Add Launch Script As I mentioned earlier, we need to add a launch script that will execute the main class of the knoxshell executable jar while allowing us to set
additional jars on the classpath.
Save the following to a file named knoxline.sh within the bin directory: java -Dlog4j.configuration=conf/knoxshell-log4j.properties -cp bin/knoxshell.jar:lib/* org.apache.hadoop.gateway.shell.Shell bin/hive2.groovy "$@"
and save the following to another script in the bin directory called hive2.groovy:
import java.sql.DriverManager
import java.sql.SQLException
import org.apache.hadoop.gateway.shell.Credentials
gatewayHost = "localhost";
gatewayPort = 8443;
trustStore = System.getProperty('user.home') + "/gateway-client-trust.jks";
trustStorePassword = "changeit";
contextPath = "gateway/sandbox/hive";
sql = ""
if (args.length == 0) {
// accept defaults
System.out.println(String.format("\nDefault connection args: %s, %d, %s, %s, %s", gatewayHost, gatewayPort, trustStore, trustStorePassword, contextPath))
} else if (args[0] == "?" || args[0] == "help") {
System.out.println("\nExpected arguments: {host, port, truststore, truststore-pass, context-path}\n")
System.exit(0);
} else if (args.length == 5) {
gatewayHost = args[0];
gatewayPort = args[1].toInteger();
trustStore = args[2];
trustStorePassword = args[3];
contextPath = args[4];
System.out.println(String.format("\nProvided connection args: %s, %d, %s, %s, %s", gatewayHost, gatewayPort, trustStore, trustStorePassword, contextPath))
} else if (args.length > 0) {
System.out.println("\nERROR: Expected arguments: NONE for defaults or {host, port, truststore, truststore-pass, context-path}\n")
System.exit(1);
}
connectionString = String.format( "jdbc:hive2://%s:%d/;ssl=true;sslTrustStore=%s;trustStorePassword=%s?hive.server2.transport.mode=http;hive.server2.thrift.http.path=/%s", gatewayHost, gatewayPort, trustStore, trustStorePassword, contextPath );
System.out.println(" _ _ _ ");
System.out.println("| | ___ __ _____ _| (_)_ __ ___ ");
System.out.println("| |/ / '_ \\ / _ \\ \\/ / | | '_ \\ / _ \\");
System.out.println("| <| | | | (_) > <| | | | | | __/");
System.out.println("|_|\\_\\_| |_|\\___/_/\\\\_\\_|_|_| |_|\\\\___|");
System.out.println("powered by Apache Knox");
System.out.println("");
credentials = new Credentials()
credentials.add("ClearInput", "Enter username: ", "user")
.add("HiddenInput", "Enter pas" + "sword: ", "pass")
credentials.collect()
user = credentials.get("user").string()
pass = credentials.get("pass").string()
// Load Hive JDBC Driver
Class.forName( "org.apache.hive.jdbc.HiveDriver" );
// Configure JDBC connection
connection = DriverManager.getConnection( connectionString, user, pass );
while(1) {
sql = System.console().readLine 'knoxline> '
if (!sql.equals("")) {
System.out.println(sql)
rs = true;
statement = connection.createStatement();
try {
if (statement.execute( sql )) {
resultSet = statement.getResultSet()
int colcount = 0
colcount = resultSet.getMetaData().getColumnCount();
row = 0
header = "| "
while ( resultSet.next() ) {
line = "| "
for (int i = 1; i <= colcount; i++) {
colvalue = resultSet.getString( i )
if (colvalue == null) colvalue = ""
colsize = colvalue.length()
headerSize = resultSet.getMetaData().getColumnLabel( i ).length()
if (headerSize > colsize) colsize = headerSize
if (row == 0) {
header += resultSet.getMetaData().getColumnLabel( i ).center(colsize) + " | ";
}
line += colvalue.center(colsize) + " | ";
}
if (row == 0) {
System.out.println("".padLeft(header.length()-1, "="))
System.out.println(header);
System.out.println("".padLeft(header.length()-1, "="))
}
System.out.println(line);
row++
}
System.out.println("\nRows: " + row + "\n");
resultSet.close();
}
}
catch(SQLException e) {
//e.printStackTrace()
System.out.println("SQL Exception encountered... " + e.getMessage())
if (e.getMessage().contains("org.apache.thrift.transport.TTransportException")) {
System.out.println("reconnecting... ")
connection = DriverManager.getConnection( connectionString, user, pass );
}
}
statement.close();
}
}
connection.close();
Execute a SQL Commands using KnoxLine Enter the knoxline sql client at the command line: I will use the defaults for the arguments in the script:
Default connection args: localhost, 8443, /Users/larry/gateway-client-trust.jks, changeit, gateway/sandbox/hive Depending on your deployment, you may want to set the above arguments on the CLI below:
knoxshell-0.14.0 larry$ bin/knoxline.sh Let's check for existing tables:
knoxline> show tables Let's create a table by loading file from the local disk of the cluster machine:
knoxline> CREATE TABLE logs(column1 string, column2 string, column3 string, column4 string, column5 string, column6 string, column7 string) ROW FORMAT DELIMITED FIELDS TERMINATED BY ' ' Show the created table: Show the table description:
knoxline> desc logs Load the data from the samples.log file in /tmp (copy the sample.log file from ./samples/hive/sample.log to the /tmp directory on your hiveserver2 host):
knoxline> LOAD DATA LOCAL INPATH '/tmp/sample.log' OVERWRITE INTO TABLE logs Do a select from the table: knoxline> select * from logs where column2='20:11:56' and column4='[TRACE]'
Some things to note about this sample:
The gateway URL defaults to the sandbox topology
alternatives would be passing it as an argument to the script Credential collectors are used to gather credentials or other input from various sources. In this sample the HiddenInput and ClearInput collectors prompt the user for the input with the provided prompt text and the values are acquired by a subsequent get call with the provided name value. The standard Java classes for JDBC are used rather than the Hadoop session object used for access to the pure REST APIs The resultSet is rendered in the familiar table format of other command line interfaces but shows how to access it for doing whatever scripting needs you have Error handling is more or less non-existent in this example I hope to bring "knoxline" to the KnoxShell module in a future release just as a simple way to do some quick queries from your KnoxShell environment.
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Labels:
12-20-2017
07:09 PM
An example of using KnoxShell to develop a simple SQL client for access to HiveServer2 through Apache Knox Gateway.
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Labels:
10-09-2017
03:32 PM
The JOBTRACKER and NAMENODE services are a bit odd at first glance. Don't confuse their use with proxying of RPC services. These are used in order to realize the rewrite requirements for Oozie. Oozie responses include some host and port information that we need to be able to identify internally through the ServiceRegistryService gateway service.
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10-06-2017
06:59 PM
Apache Knox is an HTTP Gateway - it doesn't proxy RPC calls to platform components. I will proxy REST API calls for many of the same components and provide you access to resources that you otherwise couldn't due to authentication requirements, etc. I assume by data encryption in this context you mean on the wire. Wire level encryption for Knox interactions is based on TLS/SSL.
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09-13-2017
08:11 PM
This is a great article and is immediately relevant to work going on in the community for KIP-8! https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KNOX/KIP-8+Service+Discovery+and+Topology+Generation
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03-22-2017
09:02 PM
2 Kudos
@Roland Simonis - I believe that @Robert Levas is generally correct but you are talking about a keytab being compromised. In that case, I believe it is generally gameover. Keytab management is extremely important. They should only be readable by root and not even backed up. If you want to protect clusters from keytabs that are compromised from other clusters then they should be for different realms - IMO.
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02-24-2017
04:46 PM
This is a great article, Sandeep!
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01-19-2017
05:08 PM
1 Kudo
The PROXY_USER_NAME is actually poorly named. This value is only populated if principal mapping within identity assertion is done to map the authenticated user to another username to proxy to the backend service. It should probably be called MAPPED_USER or something like that. See: http://knox.apache.org/books/knox-0-11-0/user-guide.html#Audit
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01-18-2017
06:14 PM
1 Kudo
More than likely, you do not have group lookup configured in Knox. If you check the {GATEWAY_HOME}/logs/gateway-audit.log you will likely notice an empty array "[]" for groups with the authentication entries. The groups need to be looked up by the Knox code and made available to the Ranger Knox plugin. The plugin doesn't do its own group lookup. HTH
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