Thanks for your detailed response, Nick! > I think that none of my comments address your intended topic: how do we publish our configuration points as an API that can be consumed by user applications? (Do I have that correct?)
This is a good summary, and I appreciate the other thoughts/clarifications as well. I also realize this is probably hard to get perfect and any choice must be weighed against the effort necessary to change/maintain. One example I know is Hadoop/HDFS, and I bet some on this list have much more knowledge of that project's history than I do. For HDFS they have DFSConfigKeys which in my experience does seem to include most configs. I believe they even have unit tests which verify that all configs in the various site.xml files are represented in code. In more recent versions they have split that class up into smaller groupings, for example DfsClientConf and the various inner classes there. In a vacuum, from a code design perspective, I'm not commenting on whether that's a good or bad pattern. I also don't know of the politics of the project or what sorts of pain points they've discovered in that pattern over the years. But from *user's perspective*, this is a handy way to handle things in my opinion. At my company, in general we try to avoid "magic strings" [1] and instead always try to use constants. We can and do define our own constants to try to mirror some of the "private" magic strings in the hbase client. This is better than nothing but even better would be to use hbase-provided constants so that we can build more defensive applications, using the compiler to verify that the configs we reference still do anything. I unfortunately can't speak to the original issues with HConstants that turned it into an anti-pattern. What I do notice is there are definitely examples in the hbase codebase of duplicated config strings, one of which is called out in one of the jiras I linked in my original email. These are just bugs waiting to happen in my opinion, either for hbase itself or for users which may reference them. [1] https://deviq.com/antipatterns/magic-strings On Wed, Mar 16, 2022 at 10:52 AM Nick Dimiduk <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Bryan, > > Thanks for bringing this up. > > I agree with Duo (and I think we have this settled as project-wide > consensus) that HConstants is/was an anti-pattern, that we are actively > against adding new fields there, and opportunistically removing fields when > we can. Further, the documented meaning of the > HBaseInterfaceAudience.CONFIG field is "Denotes class names that appear in > user facing configuration files", so this isn't really appropriate for > marking a field that exposes a configuration key to user applications. I > will also note that there appears to be two categories of tunable > parameters -- configuration points that we expect users to tweak are > catalogued and documented in the book [0] and everything else is left to > the obscurity of code-grep. > > While we are actively squashing use of fields in HConstants, I don't know > that we have proposed some alternative to the user community. For my part, > when I write and review code that involves configuration keys, I generally > implement the key constant string as a private field in an appropriate > class, and the unit test coverage for that configuration key replicates the > string in the test. My reasoning being that the string is a part of our > public API and making a change to the public API should be detected from > the unit test. I also have (on occasion) gone out of my way to write about > the configuration keys in the package or class-level javadoc. > > I think that none of my comments address your intended topic: how do we > publish our configuration points as an API that can be consumed by user > applications? (Do I have that correct?) > > I am of the mind that we don't need/want an API of configurations ; we want > a catalogue, i.e., what has been started in our book. Perhaps accompanied > by/generated from an authoritative hbase-defaults.xml file. In fact, we > already do generate from hbase-default.xml, the result is [1] ; I don't > believe it is authoritative. > > If we did have an AP thoughI, what would be better than the HConstants > approach of key-strings as public fields ? What if we had a > ConfigurationBuilder type of class, which had methods tied to configuration > keys? I would think that such a globally applicable class would have the > same maintenance issues as HConstants. But what if we had some kind of > ConfigurationSetter class, perhaps per package, that performed this > function? That might be maintainable for us and useful for users. > > I'm keen to hear what other ideas are out there, or better, examples and > counter-examples from other projects. > > Thanks, > Nick > > [0]: https://hbase.apache.org/book.html#important_configurations > <https://hbase.apache.org/book.html#important_configurations> > [1]: https://hbase.apache.org/book.html#hbase_default_configurations > <https://hbase.apache.org/book.html#hbase_default_configurations> > > On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 4:28 PM Bryan Beaudreault > <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Hi devs, > > > > As a major user of hbase, my company has thousands of clients deployed > > which use the hbase client to connect to a variety of hbase clusters. We > > have a common library which handles configuring all clients by setting up > > the Configuration object prior to creating a Connection. Our library sets > > configurations using the various configs in HConstants, but there are > also > > a bunch of configs which don't exist in HConstants. For these we have > > hardcoded config strings in our client. > > > > We're now working on an hbase upgrade and need to go through our client > > library and check how the configs may have changed in the new version. > This > > is relatively easy to do for those HConstants cases -- configs may be > > marked @Deprecated which will show up in one's editor, they may be > removed > > entirely which would show up is a compile error, and otherwise one can > > easily click through or bring up the javadoc. For the others that don't > > exist in HConstants, we need to go manually search the hbase codebase for > > those strings. > > > > Without doing this painstaking manual process, we would potentially > deploy > > the upgraded client with configs which are no longer used or deprecated > by > > the hbase client. For those using HConstants, this is immediately obvious > > because the HConstant field may have been removed. This is a clear > > indication of needing to investigate the config. In this case it's > > preferred to face the compile failure because it's clearer than having > > something silently disappear or change. > > > > I opened 3 jiras to move some fields to HConstants, but got some > reasonable > > pushback from Duo: > > > > https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-26845 > <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-26845> > > https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-26846 > <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-26846> > > https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-26847 > <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-26847> > > > > Duo's pushback is that HConstants is an anti-pattern and these configs > are > > not part of our public API. I can agree that a catch-all constants class > > might be an anti-pattern, but would argue that consolidating configs > there > > is very useful for end-users. I can also potentially agree that exposing > > these as part of our public API might limit the flexibility of > development > > due to compatibility constraints about IA.Public. > > > > To me it seems odd to add a configuration, whose whole point is to make > > something tuneable, but then bury it in a private class despite having > real > > implications for how the application runs. If a configuration is not > meant > > to be tuned, it shouldn't be a configuration at all. Otherwise it should > be > > exposed for reference. > > > > I'm wondering if there is some compromise we can achieve which makes it > > easier for end-users to integrate with tunable configs. > > > > One can imagine a large project to clean up all of our configs under some > > new class with maybe IA.LimitedPrivate(CONFIG), but I fear making perfect > > (needing to migrate all configs) the enemy of good. > > > > A better option might be to make those classes which expose configs > > LimitedPrivate(CONFIG) -- for example AsyncProcess and > > ConnectionImplementation. That might be the most incremental change we > > could make. We could handle this on a case-by-case basis. > > > > Does anyone have any thoughts? > > >
