How to Set Up a Gateway Host to Restrict Access to the Cluster

The steps below configure a firewall-protected Hadoop cluster that allows access only through the host configured as the gateway. Clients access the cluster through the gateway using the REST API, for example, using HttpFS (which provides REST access to HDFS) or using Oozie, which allows REST access for submitting and monitoring jobs.

Installing and Configuring the Firewall and Gateway

Follow these steps:

  1. Choose a cluster host to be the gateway host.
  2. Following the instructions in Adding a Service or Role Instances, add the roles and services that you want to be available. For example, you can add the HttpFS role to the HDFS service, or add the Oozie service to your cluster.
  3. If you have not already done so, add the Oozie service to your cluster, following the instructions in Adding a Service. Assign the Oozie Server role to your selected gateway host.
  4. Configure your firewall to block access to all cluster nodes from outside the cluster, with the exception of the gateway host. Open the ports to the gateway host for the services you want to make available. In general, Cloudera recommends that you only allow access to the gateway host from clients that require access. For more information on the ports used by Cloudera software, see Ports.
  5. If you have not already done so, enable security for your cluster, including Kerberos authentication, Apache Ranger authorization, and encryption for data at rest or in transit. For more information, see Cloudera Security Overview.

Accessing HDFS

With the Hadoop client:

All of the standard hadoop fs commands work; just make sure to specify -fs webhdfs://HOSTNAME:14000. For example (where GATEWAYHOST is the hostname of the gateway machine):

$ hadoop fs -fs webhdfs://GATEWAYHOST:14000 -cat /user/me/myfile.txt
Hello World!

Without the Hadoop client:

You can run all of the standard hadoop fs commands by using the WebHDFS REST API and any program that can do GET , PUT, POST, and DELETE requests; for example:

$ curl "http://GATEWAYHOST:14000/webhdfs/v1/user/me/myfile.txt?op=OPEN&user.name=me"
Hello World!

In general, the command will look like this:

curl "http://GATEWAYHOST/webhdfs/v1/PATH?[user.name=USER&]op=…"

You can find a full explanation of the commands in the WebHDFS REST API documentation (see APIs for accessing HDFS).

Submitting and Monitoring Jobs

The Oozie REST API supports the direct submission of jobs for MapReduce, Pig, and Hive; Oozie automatically creates a workflow with a single action. For any other action types, or to run anything more complicated than a single job, you must create an actual workflow. Required files (JAR files, input data) must already exist on HDFS; if they do not, you can use HttpFS to upload the files.

With the Oozie client:

All of the standard Oozie commands will work. You can find a full explanation of the commands in the documentation for the command-line utilities (see Accessing the Oozie server with the Oozie Client).

Without the Oozie client:

You can run all of the standard Oozie commands by using the REST API and any program that can do GET, PUT, and POST requests. You can find a full explanation of the commands in the Oozie Web Services API documentation.