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Cloudera Enterprise 6.3.x | Other versions

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  • Getting Started
    • Cloudera Personas
    • Planning a New Cloudera Enterprise Deployment
    • CDH
      • Hive
      • Impala
      • Kudu
      • Sentry
      • Spark
      • External Documentation
    • Cloudera Manager
      • Software Management
        • Parcels
    • Navigator
      • Getting Started
      • FAQ
    • Navigator Encryption
      • Navigator Key Trustee Server
      • Navigator Key HSM
      • Navigator HSM KMS
      • Navigator Encrypt
    • Proof-of-Concept Installation Guide
      • Before You Begin
      • Installing a Proof-of-Concept Cluster
        • Step 1: Run the Cloudera Manager Installer
        • Step 2: Install CDH Using the Wizard
        • Step 3: Set Up a Cluster
      • Managing the Embedded Database
      • Migrating Embedded PostgreSQL Database to External PostgreSQL Database
    • Getting Support
    • FAQ
  • Release Notes
  • Requirements and Supported Versions
  • Installation
    • Before You Install
      • Storage Space Planning for Cloudera Manager
      • Configure Network Names
      • Disabling the Firewall
      • Setting SELinux mode
      • Enable an NTP Service
      • Install Python 2.7 on Hue Hosts
      • Impala Requirements
      • Required Privileges
      • Ports
        • Cloudera Manager and Navigator
        • Navigator Encryption
        • CDH Components
        • DistCp
        • Third-Party Components
      • Recommended Role Distribution
      • Custom Installation Solutions
        • Configuring a Local Parcel Repository
        • Configuring a Local Package Repository
        • Manually Install Cloudera Software Packages
        • Creating Virtual Images of Cluster Hosts
        • Configuring a Custom Java Home Location
        • Creating a CDH Cluster Using a Cloudera Manager Template
      • Service Dependencies in Cloudera Manager
    • Installing Cloudera Manager and CDH
      • Step 1: Configure a Repository
      • Step 2: Install JDK
      • Step 3: Install Cloudera Manager Server
      • Step 4: Install Databases
        • Install and Configure MariaDB
        • Install and Configure MySQL
        • Install and Configure PostgreSQL
        • Install and Configure Oracle Database
      • Step 5: Set up the Cloudera Manager Database
      • Step 6: Install CDH and Other Software
      • Step 7: Set Up a Cluster
    • Installing Navigator Data Management
    • Installing Navigator Encryption
      • Installing Cloudera Navigator Key Trustee Server
      • Installing Cloudera Navigator Key HSM
      • Installing Key Trustee KMS
      • Installing Navigator HSM KMS Backed by Thales HSM
      • Installing Navigator HSM KMS Backed by Luna HSM
      • Installing Cloudera Navigator Encrypt
    • After Installation
      • Deploying Clients
      • Testing the Installation
      • Installing the GPL Extras Parcel
      • Migrating from Packages to Parcels
      • Migrating from Parcels to Packages
      • Secure Your Cluster
    • Troubleshooting Installation Problems
    • Uninstalling Cloudera Software
      • Uninstalling a CDH Component From a Single Host
  • Upgrade Guide
  • Cluster Management
    • Cloudera Manager
      • Cloudera Manager Admin Console
        • Home Page
        • Documentation
        • Automatic Logout
      • FAQ
      • Cloudera Manager API
        • Cluster Automation
      • Cloudera Manager Administration
        • Starting, Stopping, and Restarting the Cloudera Manager Server
        • Configuring Cloudera Manager Server Ports
        • Moving the Cloudera Manager Server to a New Host
        • Migrating Embedded PostgreSQL Database to External PostgreSQL Database
        • Migrating from PostgreSQL Database Server to MySQL/Oracle Database Server
        • Managing the Cloudera Manager Server Log
        • Cloudera Manager Agents
          • Starting, Stopping, and Restarting Cloudera Manager Agents
          • Configuring Cloudera Manager Agents
          • Managing Cloudera Manager Agent Logs
        • Configuring Network Settings
        • Managing Licenses
        • Sending Usage and Diagnostic Data to Cloudera
        • Exporting and Importing Cloudera Manager Configuration
        • Backing Up Cloudera Manager
        • Other Tasks and Settings
        • Cloudera Management Service
      • Extending Cloudera Manager
    • Cluster Configuration Overview
      • Modifying Configuration Properties Using Cloudera Manager
      • Autoconfiguration
      • Custom Configuration
      • Stale Configurations
      • Client Configuration Files
      • Viewing and Reverting Configuration Changes
      • Exporting and Importing Cloudera Manager Configuration
      • Cloudera Manager Configuration Properties Reference
    • Managing Clusters
      • Adding and Deleting Clusters
      • Starting, Stopping, Refreshing, and Restarting a Cluster
      • Pausing a Cluster in AWS
      • Renaming a Cluster
      • Cluster-Wide Configuration
      • Virtual Private Clusters and Cloudera SDX
        • Compatibility Considerations for Virtual Private Clusters
        • Tutorial: Using Impala, Hive and Hue with Virtual Private Clusters
        • Networking Considerations for Virtual Private Clusters
      • Managing Services
        • HBase
        • HDFS
          • Data Durability
            • Enabling Erasure Coding
          • NameNodes
            • Backing Up and Restoring HDFS Metadata
            • Moving NameNode Roles
            • Sizing NameNode Heap Memory
            • Backing Up and Restoring NameNode Metadata
          • DataNodes
            • Configuring Storage Directories for DataNodes
            • Configuring Storage Balancing for DataNodes
            • Performing Disk Hot Swap for DataNodes
          • JournalNodes
          • Configuring Short-Circuit Reads
          • Configuring HDFS Trash
          • Preventing Inadvertent Deletion of Directories
          • HDFS Balancers
          • Enabling WebHDFS
          • Adding HttpFS
          • Adding and Configuring an NFS Gateway
          • Setting HDFS Quotas
          • Configuring Mountable HDFS
          • Configuring Centralized Cache Management in HDFS
          • Configuring Proxy Users to Access HDFS
          • Using CDH with Isilon Storage
          • Configuring Heterogeneous Storage in HDFS
        • Hive
        • Hue
          • Adding a Hue Service and Role Instance
          • Managing Hue Analytics Data Collection
          • Enabling Hue Applications Using Cloudera Manager
        • Impala
          • The Impala Service
          • Modifying Impala Startup Options
          • Post-Installation Configuration for Impala
          • Configuring Impala to Work with ODBC
          • Configuring Impala to Work with JDBC
        • Key-Value Store Indexer
        • Kudu
        • Solr
        • Spark
          • Managing Spark Using Cloudera Manager
          • Managing the Spark History Server
        • Sqoop 1 Client
        • YARN (MRv2) and MapReduce (MRv1)
          • Managing YARN
          • Managing YARN ACLs
          • Managing MapReduce
        • Managing ZooKeeper
        • Configuring Services to Use the GPL Extras Parcel
    • Managing Hosts
      • Viewing Host Details
      • Using the Host Inspector
      • Adding a Host to the Cluster
      • Specifying Racks for Hosts
      • Host Templates
      • Performing Maintenance on a Cluster Host
        • Tuning and Troubleshooting Host Decommissioning
        • Maintenance Mode
      • Changing Hostnames
      • Deleting Hosts
      • Moving a Host Between Clusters
    • Managing Services
      • Adding a Service
      • Comparing Configurations for a Service Between Clusters
      • Add-on Services
      • Starting, Stopping, and Restarting Services
      • Rolling Restart
      • Aborting a Pending Command
      • Deleting Services
      • Renaming a Service
      • Configuring Maximum File Descriptors
      • Exposing Hadoop Metrics to Graphite
      • Exposing Hadoop Metrics to Ganglia
    • Managing Roles
      • Role Instances
      • Role Groups
    • Monitoring and Diagnostics
      • Introduction to Cloudera Manager Monitoring
        • Time Line
        • Health Tests
        • Home Page
        • Viewing Charts for Cluster, Service, Role, and Host Instances
        • Configuring Monitoring Settings
      • Monitoring Clusters
      • Inspecting Network Performance
      • Monitoring Services
        • Monitoring Service Status
        • Viewing Service Status
        • Viewing Service Instance Details
        • Viewing Role Instance Status
          • The Processes Tab
        • Running Diagnostic Commands for Roles
        • Periodic Stacks Collection
        • Viewing Running and Recent Commands
        • Monitoring Resource Management
      • Monitoring Hosts
        • Host Details
        • Host Inspector
      • Monitoring Activities
        • Monitoring MapReduce Jobs
          • Viewing and Filtering MapReduce Activities
          • Viewing the Jobs in a Pig, Oozie, or Hive Activity
          • Task Attempts
          • Viewing Activity Details in a Report Format
          • Comparing Similar Activities
          • Viewing the Distribution of Task Attempts
        • Monitoring Impala Queries
          • Query Details
        • Monitoring YARN Applications
        • Monitoring Spark Applications
      • Events
      • Alerts
        • Managing Alerts
          • Configuring Alert Email Delivery
          • Configuring Alert SNMP Delivery
          • Configuring Custom Alert Scripts
      • Triggers
        • Cloudera Manager Trigger Use Cases
      • Lifecycle and Security Auditing
      • Charting Time-Series Data
        • Dashboards
        • tsquery Language
        • Metric Aggregation
      • Logs
        • Viewing the Cloudera Manager Server Log
        • Viewing the Cloudera Manager Agent Logs
        • Managing Disk Space for Log Files
      • Reports
        • Directory Usage Report
        • Disk Usage Reports
        • Activity, Application, and Query Reports
        • The File Browser
        • Downloading HDFS Directory Access Permission Reports
      • Troubleshooting Cluster Configuration and Operation
      • Monitoring Reference
        • Cloudera Manager Entity Types
        • Cloudera Manager Entity Type Attributes
        • Cloudera Manager Events
          • HEALTH_CHECK Category
          • SYSTEM Category
          • AUDIT_EVENT Category
          • HBASE Category
          • LOG_MESSAGE Category
          • ACTIVITY_EVENT Category
        • Cloudera Manager Health Tests
          • Active Database Health Tests
          • Active Key Trustee Server Health Tests
          • Activity Monitor Health Tests
          • Alert Publisher Health Tests
          • Authentication Server Health Tests
          • Authentication Server Load Balancer Health Tests
          • Authentication Service Health Tests
          • Cloudera Management Service Health Tests
          • DataNode Health Tests
          • Event Server Health Tests
          • Failover Controller Health Tests
          • Flume Health Tests
          • Flume Agent Health Tests
          • Garbage Collector Health Tests
          • HBase Health Tests
          • HBase REST Server Health Tests
          • HBase Thrift Server Health Tests
          • HDFS Health Tests
          • History Server Health Tests
          • Hive Health Tests
          • Hive Execution Health Tests
          • Hive Metastore Server Health Tests
          • HiveServer2 Health Tests
          • Host Health Tests
          • Host Monitor Health Tests
          • HttpFS Health Tests
          • Hue Health Tests
          • Hue Server Health Tests
          • Impala Health Tests
          • Impala Catalog Server Health Tests
          • Impala Daemon Health Tests
          • Impala Llama ApplicationMaster Health Tests
          • Impala StateStore Health Tests
          • JobHistory Server Health Tests
          • JobTracker Health Tests
          • JournalNode Health Tests
          • Kafka Health Tests
          • Kafka Broker Health Tests
          • Kafka MirrorMaker Health Tests
          • Kerberos Ticket Renewer Health Tests
          • Key Management Server Health Tests
          • Key Management Server Proxy Health Tests
          • Key-Value Store Indexer Health Tests
          • Kudu Health Tests
          • Lily HBase Indexer Health Tests
          • Load Balancer Health Tests
          • MapReduce Health Tests
          • Master Health Tests
          • Monitor Health Tests
          • NFS Gateway Health Tests
          • NameNode Health Tests
          • Navigator Audit Server Health Tests
          • Navigator Luna KMS Metastore Health Tests
          • Navigator Luna KMS Proxy Health Tests
          • Navigator Metadata Server Health Tests
          • Navigator Thales KMS Metastore Health Tests
          • Navigator Thales KMS Proxy Health Tests
          • NodeManager Health Tests
          • Oozie Health Tests
          • Oozie Server Health Tests
          • Passive Database Health Tests
          • Passive Key Trustee Server Health Tests
          • RegionServer Health Tests
          • Reports Manager Health Tests
          • ResourceManager Health Tests
          • SecondaryNameNode Health Tests
          • Sentry Health Tests
          • Sentry Server Health Tests
          • Service Monitor Health Tests
          • Solr Health Tests
          • Solr Server Health Tests
          • Spark Health Tests
          • Spark (Standalone) Health Tests
          • Tablet Server Health Tests
          • TaskTracker Health Tests
          • Telemetry Publisher Health Tests
          • Tracer Health Tests
          • WebHCat Server Health Tests
          • Worker Health Tests
          • YARN (MR2 Included) Health Tests
          • ZooKeeper Health Tests
          • ZooKeeper Server Health Tests
        • Cloudera Manager Metrics
          • Accumulo Metrics
          • Active Database Metrics
          • Active Key Trustee Server Metrics
          • Activity Metrics
          • Activity Monitor Metrics
          • Agent Metrics
          • Alert Publisher Metrics
          • Attempt Metrics
          • Authentication Server Metrics
          • Authentication Server Load Balancer Metrics
          • Authentication Service Metrics
          • Cloudera Management Service Metrics
          • Cloudera Manager Server Metrics
          • Cluster Metrics
          • DSSD DataNode Metrics
          • DataNode Metrics
          • Directory Metrics
          • Disk Metrics
          • Event Server Metrics
          • Failover Controller Metrics
          • Filesystem Metrics
          • Flume Metrics
          • Flume Channel Metrics
          • Flume Sink Metrics
          • Flume Source Metrics
          • Garbage Collector Metrics
          • HBase Metrics
          • HBase REST Server Metrics
          • HBase RegionServer Replication Peer Metrics
          • HBase Thrift Server Metrics
          • HDFS Metrics
          • HDFS Cache Directive Metrics
          • HDFS Cache Pool Metrics
          • HRegion Metrics
          • HTable Metrics
          • History Server Metrics
          • Hive Metrics
          • Hive Execution Metrics
          • Hive Metastore Server Metrics
          • HiveServer2 Metrics
          • Host Metrics
          • Host Monitor Metrics
          • HttpFS Metrics
          • Hue Metrics
          • Hue Server Metrics
          • Impala Metrics
          • Impala Catalog Server Metrics
          • Impala Daemon Metrics
          • Impala Daemon Resource Pool Metrics
          • Impala Llama ApplicationMaster Metrics
          • Impala Pool Metrics
          • Impala Pool User Metrics
          • Impala Query Metrics
          • Impala StateStore Metrics
          • Isilon Metrics
          • Java KeyStore KMS Metrics
          • JobHistory Server Metrics
          • JobTracker Metrics
          • JournalNode Metrics
          • Kafka Metrics
          • Kafka Broker Metrics
          • Kafka Broker Topic Metrics
          • Kafka Broker Topic Partition Metrics
          • Kafka Consumer Metrics
          • Kafka Consumer Group Metrics
          • Kafka MirrorMaker Metrics
          • Kafka Producer Metrics
          • Kafka Replica Metrics
          • Kerberos Ticket Renewer Metrics
          • Key Management Server Metrics
          • Key Management Server Proxy Metrics
          • Key Trustee KMS Metrics
          • Key Trustee Server Metrics
          • Key-Value Store Indexer Metrics
          • Kudu Metrics
          • Kudu Replica Metrics
          • Lily HBase Indexer Metrics
          • Load Balancer Metrics
          • MapReduce Metrics
          • Master Metrics
          • Monitor Metrics
          • NFS Gateway Metrics
          • NameNode Metrics
          • Navigator Audit Server Metrics
          • Navigator HSM KMS backed by SafeNet Luna HSM Metrics
          • Navigator HSM KMS backed by Thales HSM Metrics
          • Navigator Luna KMS Metastore Metrics
          • Navigator Luna KMS Proxy Metrics
          • Navigator Metadata Server Metrics
          • Navigator Thales KMS Metastore Metrics
          • Navigator Thales KMS Proxy Metrics
          • Network Interface Metrics
          • NodeManager Metrics
          • Oozie Metrics
          • Oozie Server Metrics
          • Passive Database Metrics
          • Passive Key Trustee Server Metrics
          • RegionServer Metrics
          • Reports Manager Metrics
          • ResourceManager Metrics
          • SecondaryNameNode Metrics
          • Sentry Metrics
          • Sentry Server Metrics
          • Server Metrics
          • Service Monitor Metrics
          • Solr Metrics
          • Solr Replica Metrics
          • Solr Server Metrics
          • Solr Shard Metrics
          • Spark Metrics
          • Spark (Standalone) Metrics
          • Sqoop 1 Client Metrics
          • Tablet Server Metrics
          • TaskTracker Metrics
          • Telemetry Publisher Metrics
          • Time Series Table Metrics
          • Tracer Metrics
          • User Metrics
          • WebHCat Server Metrics
          • Worker Metrics
          • YARN (MR2 Included) Metrics
          • YARN Pool Metrics
          • YARN Pool User Metrics
          • ZooKeeper Metrics
          • Disabling Metrics for Specific Roles
    • Performance Management
      • Optimizing Performance in CDH
      • Choosing and Configuring Data Compression
      • Tuning the Solr Server
      • Tuning Spark Applications
      • Tuning YARN
      • Tuning JVM Garbage Collection
    • Resource Management
      • Static Service Pools
        • Linux Control Groups (cgroups)
      • Dynamic Resource Pools
      • YARN (MRv2) and MapReduce (MRv1) Schedulers
        • Configuring the Fair Scheduler
        • Enabling and Disabling Fair Scheduler Preemption
      • Data Storage for Monitoring Data
      • Cluster Utilization Reports
        • Creating a Custom Cluster Utilization Report
    • High Availability
      • HDFS High Availability
        • Introduction to HDFS High Availability
        • Configuring Hardware for HDFS HA
        • Enabling HDFS HA
        • Disabling and Redeploying HDFS HA
        • Configuring Other CDH Components to Use HDFS HA
        • Administering an HDFS High Availability Cluster
        • Changing a Nameservice Name for Highly Available HDFS Using Cloudera Manager
      • MapReduce (MRv1) and YARN (MRv2) High Availability
        • YARN (MRv2) ResourceManager High Availability
        • Work Preserving Recovery for YARN Components
        • MapReduce (MRv1) JobTracker High Availability
      • Cloudera Navigator Key Trustee Server High Availability
      • Enabling Key Trustee KMS High Availability
      • Enabling Navigator HSM KMS High Availability
      • High Availability for Other CDH Components
        • HBase High Availability
          • HBase Read Replicas
        • Oozie High Availability
        • Search High Availability
      • Navigator Data Management in a High Availability Environment
      • Configuring Cloudera Manager for High Availability With a Load Balancer
        • Introduction to Cloudera Manager Deployment Architecture
        • Prerequisites for Setting up Cloudera Manager High Availability
        • Cloudera Manager Failover Protection
        • High-Level Steps to Configure Cloudera Manager High Availability
          • Step 1: Setting Up Hosts and the Load Balancer
          • Step 2: Installing and Configuring Cloudera Manager Server for High Availability
          • Step 3: Installing and Configuring Cloudera Management Service for High Availability
          • Step 4: Automating Failover with Corosync and Pacemaker
        • Database High Availability Configuration
        • TLS and Kerberos Configuration for Cloudera Manager High Availability
    • Backup and Disaster Recovery
      • Port Requirements for Backup and Disaster Recovery
      • Data Replication
        • Designating a Replication Source
        • HDFS Replication
          • Monitoring the Performance of HDFS Replications
        • Hive/Impala Replication
          • Monitoring the Performance of Hive/Impala Replications
        • Replicating Data to Impala Clusters
        • Using Snapshots with Replication
        • Enabling Replication Between Clusters with Kerberos Authentication
        • Replication of Encrypted Data
        • HBase Replication
      • Snapshots
        • Cloudera Manager Snapshot Policies
        • Managing HBase Snapshots
        • Managing HDFS Snapshots
      • BDR Tutorials
        • How To Back Up and Restore Apache Hive Data Using Cloudera Enterprise BDR
        • How To Back Up and Restore HDFS Data Using Cloudera Enterprise BDR
        • BDR Automation Examples
      • Migrating Data between Clusters Using distcp
        • Copying Cluster Data Using DistCp
        • Copying Data between a Secure and an Insecure Cluster using DistCp and WebHDFS
        • Post-migration Verification
    • Backing Up Databases
    • Cloudera Navigator Administration
    • Accessing Storage Using Amazon S3
      • Configuring the Amazon S3 Connector
        • Using S3 Credentials with YARN, MapReduce, or Spark
      • Using Fast Upload with Amazon S3
      • Configuring and Managing S3Guard
      • How to Configure a MapReduce Job to Access S3 with an HDFS Credstore
      • Importing Data into Amazon S3 Using Sqoop
    • Accessing Storage Using Microsoft ADLS
      • Configuring ADLS Access Using Cloudera Manager
      • Configuring ADLS Gen1 Connectivity
      • Configuring ADLS Gen2 Connectivity
      • Importing Data into Microsoft Azure Data Lake Store Using Sqoop
    • Configuring Google Cloud Storage Connectivity
    • How To Create a Multitenant Enterprise Data Hub
  • Security
    • Overview
      • Authentication Overview
      • Encryption Overview
        • Encryption Mechanisms
      • Authorization Overview
      • Auditing and Data Governance
    • Authentication
      • Kerberos Security Artifacts Overview
      • Configuring Authentication in Cloudera Manager
        • Cloudera Manager User Accounts
        • Configuring External Authentication and Authorization for Cloudera Manager
        • Enabling Kerberos Authentication for CDH
          • Step 1: Install Cloudera Manager and CDH
          • Step 2: Install JCE Policy Files for AES-256 Encryption
          • Step 3: Create the Kerberos Principal for Cloudera Manager Server
          • Step 4: Enabling Kerberos Using the Wizard
          • Step 5: Create the HDFS Superuser
          • Step 6: Get or Create a Kerberos Principal for Each User Account
          • Step 7: Prepare the Cluster for Each User
          • Step 8: Verify that Kerberos Security is Working
          • Step 9: (Optional) Enable Authentication for HTTP Web Consoles for Hadoop Roles
        • Kerberos Authentication for Non-Default Users
        • Customizing Kerberos Principals
        • Managing Kerberos Credentials Using Cloudera Manager
        • Using a Custom Kerberos Keytab Retrieval Script
        • Adding Trusted Realms to the Cluster
        • Using Auth-to-Local Rules to Isolate Cluster Users
      • Configuring Authentication for Cloudera Navigator
        • Cloudera Navigator and External Authentication
          • Configuring Cloudera Navigator for Active Directory
          • Configuring Cloudera Navigator for LDAP
          • Configuring Cloudera Navigator for SAML
        • Configuring Groups for Cloudera Navigator
      • Configuring Authentication for Other Components
        • Flume Authentication
          • Configuring Kerberos for Flume Thrift Source and Sink Using Cloudera Manager
          • Writing to a Secure HBase Cluster
          • Using Substitution Variables with Flume for Kerberos Artifacts
        • HBase Authentication
          • Configuring Kerberos Authentication for HBase
          • Configuring Secure HBase Replication
          • Configuring the HBase Client TGT Renewal Period
        • Hive Authentication
          • HiveServer2 Security Configuration
          • Using Hive to Run Queries on a Secure HBase Server
        • HttpFS Authentication
        • Hue Authentication
          • Enable Hue to Use Kerberos for Authentication
        • Impala Authentication
          • Enabling Kerberos Authentication for Impala
          • Enabling LDAP Authentication for Impala
          • Using Multiple Authentication Methods with Impala
          • Configuring Impala Delegation for Hue and BI Tools
        • Cloudera Search Authentication
          • Using Kerberos with Cloudera Search
        • Spark Authentication
        • Sqoop1 Authentication
        • ZooKeeper Authentication
      • Configuring a Dedicated MIT KDC for Cross-Realm Trust
      • Integrating MIT Kerberos and Active Directory
      • Hadoop Users (user:group) and Kerberos Principals
      • Mapping Kerberos Principals to Short Names
    • Authorization
      • Cloudera Manager User Roles
      • HDFS Extended ACLs
      • Authorization for HDFS Web UIs
      • Configuring LDAP Group Mappings
      • Authorization With Apache Sentry
      • Configuring HBase Authorization
    • Encrypting Data in Transit
      • Understanding Keystores and Truststores
      • Configuring TLS Encryption for Cloudera Manager and CDH Using Auto-TLS
      • Manually Configuring TLS Encryption for Cloudera Manager
      • Manually Configuring TLS Encryption on the Agent Listening Port
      • Manually Configuring TLS/SSL Encryption for CDH Services
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for HDFS, YARN and MapReduce
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for HBase
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for Flume
        • Configuring Encrypted Communication Between HiveServer2 and Client Drivers
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for Hue
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for Impala
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for Oozie
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for Solr
        • Spark Encryption
        • Configuring TLS/SSL for HttpFS
      • Configuring TLS/SSL for Navigator Audit Server
      • Configuring TLS/SSL for Navigator Metadata Server
      • Configuring TLS/SSL for Kafka (Navigator Event Broker)
      • Configuring Encrypted Transport for HDFS
      • Configuring Encrypted Transport for HBase
    • Encrypting Data at Rest
      • Data at Rest Encryption Reference Architecture
      • Data at Rest Encryption Requirements
      • Resource Planning for Data at Rest Encryption
      • HDFS Transparent Encryption
        • Optimizing Performance for HDFS Transparent Encryption
        • Enabling HDFS Encryption Using the Wizard
        • Managing Encryption Keys and Zones
        • Configuring the Key Management Server (KMS)
        • Securing the Key Management Server (KMS)
          • Configuring KMS Access Control Lists (ACLs)
        • Migrating from a Key Trustee KMS to an HSM KMS
        • Migrating Keys from a Java KeyStore to Cloudera Navigator Key Trustee Server
        • Migrating a Key Trustee KMS Server Role Instance to a New Host
        • Configuring CDH Services for HDFS Encryption
    • Cloudera Navigator Key Trustee Server
      • Backing Up and Restoring Key Trustee Server and Clients
      • Initializing Standalone Key Trustee Server
      • Configuring a Mail Transfer Agent for Key Trustee Server
      • Verifying Cloudera Navigator Key Trustee Server Operations
      • Managing Key Trustee Server Organizations
      • Managing Key Trustee Server Certificates
    • Cloudera Navigator Key HSM
      • Initializing Navigator Key HSM
      • HSM-Specific Setup for Cloudera Navigator Key HSM
      • Validating Key HSM Settings
      • Managing the Navigator Key HSM Service
      • Integrating Key HSM with Key Trustee Server
    • Cloudera Navigator Encrypt
      • Registering Cloudera Navigator Encrypt with Key Trustee Server
      • Preparing for Encryption Using Cloudera Navigator Encrypt
      • Encrypting and Decrypting Data Using Cloudera Navigator Encrypt
      • Converting from Device Names to UUIDs for Encrypted Devices
      • Navigator Encrypt Access Control List
      • Maintaining Cloudera Navigator Encrypt
    • Configuring Encryption for Data Spills
      • Configuring Encrypted On-disk File Channels for Flume
    • Impala Security Overview
      • Security Guidelines for Impala
      • Securing Impala Data and Log Files
      • Installation Considerations for Impala Security
      • Securing the Hive Metastore Database
      • Securing the Impala Web User Interface
    • Kudu Security Overview
    • How-To Guides
      • Add Root and Intermediate CAs to Truststore for TLS/SSL
      • Amazon S3 Security
      • Authenticate Kerberos Principals Using Java
      • Check Cluster Security Settings
      • Configure Antivirus Software on CDH Hosts
      • Configure Browser-based Interfaces to Require Authentication (SPNEGO)
      • Configure Browsers for Kerberos Authentication (SPNEGO)
      • Configure Cluster to Use Kerberos Authentication
      • Convert DER, JKS, PEM Files for TLS/SSL Artifacts
      • Configure Authentication for Amazon S3
      • Configure Encryption for Amazon S3
      • Configure AWS Credentials
      • Enable Sensitive Data Redaction
      • Log a Security Support Case
      • Obtain and Deploy Keys and Certificates for TLS/SSL
      • Renew and Redistribute Certificates
      • Set Up a Gateway Host to Restrict Access to the Cluster
      • Set Up Access to Cloudera EDH or Altus Director (Microsoft Azure Marketplace)
      • Use Self-Signed Certificates for TLS
    • Troubleshooting Security Issues
      • Error Messages
      • Authentication and Kerberos Issues
      • HDFS Encryption Issues
      • Key Trustee KMS Encryption Issues
      • TLS/SSL Issues
      • YARN, MRv1, and Linux OS Security
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  • Cloudera Navigator Data Management
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    • Impala
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  • Glossary

Using Cloudera Navigator with Amazon S3

Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) is a storage solution offered by Amazon Web Services (AWS) that provides highly available storage in the cloud. Clusters deployed not only in the AWS cloud but also on-premises are using Amazon S3 as persistent storage. Common use cases include BDR (backup and disaster recovery) and persistent storage for transient clusters deployed to the cloud, such as storage for ETL workload input and output.

As with data stored on HDFS and processed using compute engines like Hive and Impala, Cloudera Navigator can obtain metadata and lineage from Amazon S3 storage. There are some limitations and constraints as discussed below, and some setup is required to enable this capability (see Configuring Extraction for Amazon S3).
Note: Cloudera Navigator does not audit Amazon S3 storage buckets. Only Cloudera Navigator metadata and lineage are supported.

This section provides conceptual information about Amazon S3 storage and shows you how to configure Cloudera Navigator to extract metadata and lineage from an Amazon S3 bucket.

Fastpath: To start working with metadata and lineage extracted from an Amazon S3 bucket:
  • Log in to the Cloudera Navigator console.
  • Under the Source Type filter, click the S3 selector to display all S3 entities.
  • Click the Region filter to display any AWS regions that can be selected (only if S3 entities are from more than one region).
  • To remove implicit folders from the S3 entities displayed, enter implicit:false in the Search field. Or enter implicit:true to display implicit entities.
  • See S3 Properties for more information about entity properties displayed for Amazon S3 objects.
Continue reading:
  • Amazon S3 Storage Characteristics
  • Cloudera Navigator and Amazon S3
    • Extraction from Unnamed Directories
    • Object Lifecycle Rules Constraints
    • Amazon SQS and Amazon SNS Constraints
    • Object Storage Hierarchy
  • Overview of Amazon S3 Extraction Processes
    • API Usage and Setting Limits

Amazon S3 Storage Characteristics

Amazon S3 is an object store rather than a file store or block store. It does not have the hierarchy found in typical filesystems. Amazon S3 uses the construct of a bucket as a container for objects. An object can be any kind of file—text file, image, photo, graphic, video, an ETL bundle to be ingested into a cluster, and so on.

Files can be added to Amazon S3 through the AWS Management Console, by using the AWS CLI, or by using scripts that invoke the CLI.

Amazon S3 storage is highly available because Amazon replicates data across multiple servers within its data centers and uses an eventual consistency model—not all accesses of an object on Amazon S3 may be reflected concurrently or instantaneously. However, eventually, all updates to data across servers are synchronized. The eventual consistency model can result in a short delay between the time objects are uploaded to Amazon S3 and the time their metadata is available in Cloudera Navigator. This is expected behavior and simply how eventual consistency works.

Note: The eventual consistency model of Amazon S3 can be augmented by using S3Guard, which leverages Amazon DynamoDB to provide support for transactions. See Configuring and Managing S3Guard in the Cloudera Administration guide for details.

For more information about Amazon S3, see Amazon S3 documentation.

Cloudera Navigator and Amazon S3

Cloudera Navigator collects metadata for Amazon S3 entities in much the same way as for HDFS entities, with some exceptions shown in the table below.

Note: In addition to metadata, Cloudera Navigator extracts lineage from Hive, Impala, and MapReduce (except for MapReduce Glob paths) on Amazon S3.
The following table lists some differences between object types and supported features offered by Amazon S3 and how those are supported by Cloudera Navigator:
Feature Amazon S3 Cloudera Navigator
User-defined metadata consists of custom key-value pairs (in which each key is prefixed with x-amz-meta-) that can be used to describe objects on Amazon S3.
System-defined metadata includes properties such as Date, Content-Length, Last-Modified. Some system-defined properties comprise the Technical Metadata for the object in Cloudera Navigator.
Tags for buckets and objects
Versioning is not supported. Cloudera Navigator extracts metadata and lineage from the latest version only.
Unnamed directories. See Extraction from Unnamed Directories for details.
Object lifecycle rules. See Object Lifecycle Rules Constraints for more information.
Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS). See Amazon SQS and Amazon SNS Constraints for usage limitations and requirements.
Amazon Simple Notification Service (SNS). See Amazon SQS and Amazon SNS Constraints for usage limitations and requirements.
Hierarchy in object storage. See Object Storage Hierarchy for more information and behavior.

Refreshing AWS Credentials

After configuring Cloudera Navigator with a specific set of AWS Credentials for Amazon S3, future changes to the credentials, such as when credentials are rotated regularly, must be for the same AWS account (IAM user). If a new key is provided to Navigator, the key must belong to the same AWS account as the original key.

Extraction from Unnamed Directories

Unnamed folders on Amazon S3 are not extracted by Navigator, but the content of the folders is extracted. For example, a top-level folder the top level folder in the bucket has no name (for example, /bucket//folder/file), it is extracted as /bucket/folder/file.

Object Lifecycle Rules Constraints

Cloudera Navigator does not support lifecycle rules that remove objects from Amazon S3. For example, an object lifecycle rule that removes objects older than n days deletes the object from Amazon S3 but the event is not tracked by Cloudera Navigator. This limitation applies to removing objects only. Using lifecycle rules requires using bulk-only extraction. See Custom Configurations for details about configuring the necessary AWS Policy and applying it to the Amazon S3 bucket for use by Cloudera Navigator.

Amazon SQS and Amazon SNS Constraints

Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS) is a distributed, highly scalable hosted queue for storing messages. Amazon Simple Notification Service (SNS) is publish-subscribe notification service that coordinates message delivery. Both services can be configured for use with Amazon S3 storage buckets. For example, Amazon S3 storage buckets can send notification messages to one or more queues or to email addresses whenever specified events occur, such as creating, renaming, updating, or deleting data on the Amazon S3 bucket.

During the default configuration process, Cloudera Navigator transparently sets up an Amazon SQS queue and configures Amazon S3 event notification for each bucket. The queue is used to hold event messages that are subsequently collected by the Cloudera Navigator S3 extractor process, for incremental extracts. Use the default configuration process only for Amazon S3 buckets that do not have existing queues or notifications configured.

For Amazon S3 buckets that are already configured for queues, use the custom configuration process—sometimes referred to as "Bring Your Own Queue" (BYOQ)—to manually configure queues for Cloudera Navigator. For Amazon S3 buckets that are already configured for notifications, use the BYOQ custom configuration in conjunction with Amazon SNS in a fan-out configuration. In a fan-out scenario, an Amazon SNS message is sent to a topic and then replicated and pushed to multiple Amazon SQS queues, HTTP endpoints, or email addresses. See Common Amazon SNS Scenarios for more information about fan-out configuration, and see Custom Configurations for details about configuring Cloudera Navigator when the Amazon S3 bucket is already set up for either Amazon SQS or Amazon SNS.

Object Storage Hierarchy

Amazon S3 storage does not use a directory structure or other hierarchy as found in a traditional file system. Each object has an object key name that identifies the object by its S3 URI location—the path to the object. This path includes the object, prefix if any, and bucket name. Including the S3 protocol specifier, the pattern is as follows:

s3://bucketname/prefix/objectkey

There can be more than one prefix in an object key name. Prefixes are separated by the forward slash character (/). Although Amazon S3 provides a folder metaphor for organizing objects in an S3 bucket, the folder does not provide actual containment or structure: it is the object key name and its S3Uri location that identifies the object.

Cloudera Navigator mimics file system behavior by mapping elements of the object key name to implicit folders. For example, for an Amazon S3 file with the object key name 2017/08_AUG/data-raw.csv, Cloudera Navigator creates an entity with the path 2017/08_AUG/data-raw.csv and also creates two directories: 2017 and 2017/08_AUG.

Cloudera Navigator Amazon S3




Cloudera Navigator console Lineage tab for the file with object key 2017/08_AUG/data-raw.csv shows it in the context of implicit folders:



Cloudera Navigator has some limitations specifically for deleted objects and implicit folders as follows:

  • Cloudera Navigator does not mark an implicit folder as deleted even after all its child objects have been deleted.
  • Cloudera Navigator does not mark as deleted any objects and folders deleted using Amazon S3 tools, such as the AWS CLI (aws s3 commands) or the AWS Management Console.
Note: To filter out implicit folders from the S3 entities displayed, enter implicit:false in the Search field. Conversely, to find implicit entities enter implicit:true in the Search field.

For more details about the properties shown by Cloudera Navigator, see S3 Properties in the Reference section of this guide.

Despite the differences between an object store and a hierarchical store, data engineers can work with Amazon S3 using the Cloudera Navigator in much the same way as for HDFS and other entities.

Overview of Amazon S3 Extraction Processes

By default, Cloudera Navigator uses combined bulk and incremental extraction processes. An initial bulk process extracts all metadata from an Amazon S3 bucket during the configuration process. Subsequent extracts are incremental. Changes are collected from an Amazon SQS queue created by Cloudera Navigator during the default configuration process.

Note that when Cloudera Navigator extraction encounters inconsistencies in AWS (for example, due to eventual consistency), it can delay Navigator extraction of metadata and lineage from Amazon S3. When Navigator detects an inconsistency, extraction may stop until the inconsistency is resolved in AWS. Navigator will retry at the next scheduled extraction.

This bulk-plus-incremental extraction combination provides the optimal performance for production systems and is also the most cost-effective in terms of Amazon API usage:
  • For the bulk extract, Cloudera Navigator invokes the Amazon S3 API.
  • For the incremental extract, Cloudera Navigator invokes the Amazon SQS API.

Amazon meters usage and charges differently for each of these APIs.

API Usage and Setting Limits

Amazon bills on a monthly basis and resets the billing cycle each month. To help manage the monthly cost of using these APIs, Cloudera Navigator provides a safety valve property that can be set to limit its use of the AWS APIs. If you decide to configure this property to set a limit on API usage, keep the following in mind:
  • If the limit is set is reached in any given 30-day interval, Cloudera Navigator suspends extraction from the configured Amazon S3 buckets until the next 30-day interval begins.
  • When the new 30-day interval begins, Cloudera Navigator extracts any data that was not extracted while extraction was suspended.
To set a limit on the AWS API usage:
  • Use Cloudera Manager Admin Console to access the Navigator Metadata Server Advanced Configuration Snippet (Safety Valve) for cloudera-navigator.properties.
  • Set the value of any_int to your chosen limit.
    nav.aws.api.limit=any_int
See Setting Properties with Advanced Configuration Snippets for details about using Cloudera Manager Admin Console for this task.
Note: Cloudera Navigator does not notify you if extraction is ever suspended due to the limit you have set in the safety valve. Cloudera recommends setting a billing alarm in the AWS Management Console to get notified by Amazon when your monthly use of the APIs exceeds the limit you have set in the safety valve.

Categories: Data Management | Governance | Metadata | Navigator | S3 | All Categories

Configuring Extraction for Altus Clusters on AWS
Configuring Extraction for Amazon S3
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