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Hemanth Yamijala commented on HADOOP-4348: ------------------------------------------ Kan, is this understanding correct: - Service level authorization will check the initial connection of a client to verify if the user is a 'valid user' in this cluster. - The kind of authorization we added in HADOOP-3698 comes later, and is more fine grained. That is, the user is a 'valid user' in the cluster, but does he have rights to, for e.g., submit a job. I think it would be a requirement that we use similar interfaces (say, to the adminstrator and for any APIs we propose) for these different, but clearly related, types of authorization. Does this make sense ? > Adding service-level authorization to Hadoop > -------------------------------------------- > > Key: HADOOP-4348 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-4348 > Project: Hadoop Core > Issue Type: New Feature > Reporter: Kan Zhang > Assignee: Arun C Murthy > Fix For: 0.20.0 > > > Service-level authorization is the initial checking done by a Hadoop service > to find out if a connecting client is a pre-defined user of that service. If > not, the connection or service request will be declined. This feature allows > services to limit access to a clearly defined group of users. For example, > service-level authorization allows "world-readable" files on a HDFS cluster > to be readable only by the pre-defined users of that cluster, not by anyone > who can connect to the cluster. It also allows a M/R cluster to define its > group of users so that only those users can submit jobs to it. > Here is an initial list of requirements I came up with. > 1. Users of a cluster is defined by a flat list of usernames and groups. > A client is a user of the cluster if and only if her username is listed in > the flat list or one of her groups is explicitly listed in the flat list. > Nested groups are not supported. > 2. The flat list is stored in a conf file and pushed to every cluster > node so that services can access them. > 3. Services will monitor the modification of the conf file periodically > (5 mins interval by default) and reload the list if needed. > 4. Checking against the flat list is done as early as possible and before > any other authorization checking. Both HDFS and M/R clusters will implement > this feature. > 5. This feature can be switched off and is off by default. > I'm aware of interests in pulling user data from LDAP. For this JIRA, I > suggest we implement it using a conf file. Additional data sources may be > supported via new JIRA's. -- This message is automatically generated by JIRA. - You can reply to this email to add a comment to the issue online.