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Table of Contents

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  • Tables in the corresponding HBase namespace to create Table-based datasets
    • If you provide a custom HBase namespace when creating the namespace, it is your responsibility to ensure that every application principal can create tables in this namespace. 
      • in hbase shell: grant '<user>', 'AC', '@<namespace>'
      • or grant '@<group>', 'AC', '@<namespace>'
    • If you let CDAP create the namespace, it will use the group name specified in the namespace configuration to issue the grant '@<group>', 'AC', '@<namespace>'. In this case it is necessary that all application owners are in that group. 
  • Tables in the namespace's Hive database, to be able to enable Explore for datasets. Depending on the Hive authorization settings:L
    • The application user must be privileged to create tables in the database
    • Hive must be configured to grant all privileges to the user that creates a table (depending on Hive configuration, this may not be the case)
    • For any sharing between applications that requires additional permissions, these must be granted manually.

...

  • FileSetProperties.setUseExisting(true) (or DATA_USE_EXISTING / "data.use.existing") to reuse an existing location and Hive table. The dataset will assume that it does not own the existing data in that location and Hive table, and therefore, when you delete or truncate the dataset, the data will not be deleted. 
  • FileSetProperties.setPossessExisting(true) (or DATA_POSSESS_EXISTING / "data.possess.existing") to assume ownership an existing location and Hive table. The dataset will assume that it owns the existing data in that location and Hive table, and therefore, when you delete or truncate the dataset, all data will be deleted, including the previously existing data and Hive partitions.  

Note that in both cases, the existing partitions in the Hive table are not known to CDAP and therefore only accessible via Hive, not through PartitionedFileSet APIs. 

 

Cluster Configuration and Setup

To use application level impersonation in CDAP you will need to tweak some configuration of your cluster. Below is the list of changes you might have to do to ensure you cluster can run support app level impersonation in CDAP. Note some of these configuration might already exist in your environment in which case you can ignore them.

 

Enable Hbase Authorization (if needed)

Add the following to your hbase-site.xml

Code Block
languagexml
titlehbase-site.xml
<property>
	<name>hbase.security.exec.permission.checks</name>
   	<value>true</value>
 </property>
 <property>
   	<name>hbase.coprocessor.master.classes</name>
   	<value>org.apache.hadoop.hbase.security.access.AccessController</value>
 </property>
 <property>
   	<name>hbase.coprocessor.region.classes</name>
	<value>org.apache.hadoop.hbase.security.token.TokenProvider,org.apache.hadoop.hbase.security.access.AccessController</value>
 </property>

You will need to restart HBase after the above configuration changes. 

Configure CDAP for App level impersonation

To support app level impersonation wherein applications, datasets and streams can have their own owner and the operations performed in CDAP should impersonate their respective owners, CDAP should have access to the owner principal and their associated keytabs. Owner principal of an entity is provided during the entity creation step (see REST APIs documentation in next section).

For user's keytab access CDAP uses the following conventions:

  • All keytabs must be present on the local filesystem on which CDAP Master is running. 
  • These keytabs must be present under a path which can be in one of the following formats and cdap should have read access on all the keytabs:
    1. /dir1>/<dir2>/${name}.keytab
    2. /dir1>/<dir2>/${name}/${name}.keytab
  • The above path is provided to CDAP as a configuration parameter in cdap-site.xml for example:

    Code Block
    languagexml
    titlecdap-site.xml
    <property>
    	<name>security.keytab.path</name>
        <value>/etc/security/keytabs/${name}.keytab</value>
    </property>

     

    Where ${name} will be replaced by CDAP by the short user name of the kerberos principal CDAP is impersonating. 
    Note: You will need to restart CDAP for the configuration changes to take effect.

Enable Hive SQL-based authorization (if needed):

Add the following to your hive-site.xml and restart hive:

Code Block
languagexml
titlehive-site.xml
<property>
	<name>hive.server2.enable.doAs</name>
	<value>false</value>
</property>
<property>
	<name>hive.security.authorization.manager</name>
	<value>org.apache.hadoop.hive.ql.security.authorization.plugin.sqlstd.SQLStdHiveAuthorizerFactory</value>
</property>
<property>
	<name>hive.security.authorization.enabled</name>
	<value>true</value>
</property>
<property>
	<name>hive.security.authenticator.manager</name>
	<value>org.apache.hadoop.hive.ql.security.ProxyUserAuthenticator</value>
</property>

 

Note your hive-site.xml should also be configured to support modifying properties at runtime. Specifically, you will need the following configuration in your hive-site.xml 

Code Block
languagexml
titlehive-site.xml
<property>
	<name>hive.security.authorization.sqlstd.confwhitelist.append</name>
	<value>explore.*|mapreduce.job.queuename|mapreduce.job.complete.cancel.delegation.tokens|spark.hadoop.mapreduce.job.complete.cancel.delegation.tokens|mapreduce.job.credentials.binary|hive.exec.submit.local.task.via.child|hive.exec.submitviachild|hive.lock.*</value>
</property>

Hive Proxy Users

If you do not use SQL-based authorization, you may want to configure Hive to be able to impersonate other users. Set the following in hive-site.xml

Code Block
languagexml
titlehive-site.xml
<property>
	<name>hive.server2.enable.doAs</name>
	<value>true</value>
</property>


Note that CDAP's Explore service ignores this setting and needs to be able to impersonate users who can create/access entities in CDAP. This can by done by adding the following property in your core-site.xml. The first option allows CDAP to impersonate users belonging to "group1" and "group2" and the second option allows Hive to impersonate on all hosts.

Code Block
languagexml
titlecore-site.xml
<property>
	<name>hadoop.proxyuser.hive.groups</name>
	<value>group1,group2</value>
</property>

<property>
	<name>hadoop.proxyuser.hive.hosts</name>
	<value>*</value>
</property>

See http://www.cloudera.com/documentation/enterprise/5-2-x/topics/cdh_sg_hive_metastore_security.html details.

CDAP Authorization (if needed):

Additionally, you might want to enable CDAP authorization. For details on how to enable authorization in CDAP and manage privileges please refer to our documentation here: http://docs.cask.co/cdap/current/en/admin-manual/security/authorization.html?highlight=authorization

Note

Please note that the above cluster configuration is not a comprehensive guide for enabling authorization and/or impersonation on Hadoop cluster. You might need to add/remove configuration depending on your environment.

Operational APIs

Namespaces

Creating a Namespace

Code Block
titlecreating namespace from cli
create namespace testns principal rsinha/<host-name>@<realm> group-name deployers keytab-URI /etc/security/keytabs/rsinha.keytab

Application Lifecycle 

Loading an artifact:

Code Block
titleloading artifact from cli
load artifact SportResults-4.1.0-SNAPSHOT.jar 

Creating application from an existing artifact:

Code Block
languagebash
titlecreating application REST API
curl -v -X PUT http://hostname.net:11015/v3/namespaces/{namespace-id}/apps/{app-id} -d '{"artifact":{"name":"{artifact-name}","version":"{artifact-version}","scope":"USER"},"principal":"someuser/somehost.net@SOMEKDC.NET"}' -H "Authorization: Bearer your_access_token"

Querying application detail for owner information:

Existing REST API. Please see: http://docs.cask.co/cdap/current/en/reference-manual/http-restful-api/lifecycle.html#details-of-a-deployed-application

Streams

Creating a stream with an owner:

Code Block
languagebash
titlecreating stream REST API
curl -X PUT -v http://somehost.net:11015/v3/namespaces/{namespace-id}/streams/{stream-name} -d '{ "ttl": 1, "principal": "someuser/somehost.net@SOMEKDC.NET" }' -H "Authorization: Bearer your_access_token"

Querying stream properties for owner information:

Existing REST API. Please see: http://docs.cask.co/cdap/current/en/reference-manual/http-restful-api/stream.html#getting-and-setting-stream-properties

Datasets

Creating a dataset with owner:

Code Block
languagebash
titlecreating dataset REST API
curl -v -X PUT http://somehost.net:11015/v3/namespaces/{namespace-id}/data/datasets/{dataset-id} -d '{ "typeName": "table", "properties": {}, "principal": "someuser/somehost.net@SOMEKDC.NET" }' -H "Authorization: Bearer your_access_token"

Querying dataset properties for owner information:

Code Block
languagebash
titlequerying dataset REST API
curl -v http://hostname.net:11015/v3/namespaces/{namespace-id}/data/datasets/{dataset-name} -H "Authorization: Bearer your_access_token"