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pentaho-mongo-utils

A library for simplifying the creation and management of MongoDB connections.

Example

Create new MongoClientWrappers via the factory method below, passing in the properties required.

MongoClientWrapper mongo = MongoClientWrapperFactory.createMongoClientWrapper(
      new MongoProperties.Builder()
        .set( MongoProp.HOST, "localhost" )
        .set( MongoProp.PORT, "27017" )
        .set( MongoProp.USER, "user" )
        .set( MongoProp.PASSWORD, "password" )
        .set( MongoProp.DBNAME, "databaseName" ).build(),
      null );
MongoCollectionWrapper collection  = 
    mongo.getCollection( "databaseName", "collectionName" );
MongoCursorWrapper cursor = collection.find();
      

MongoProperties

For the most part, the expected values of MongoProperties are consistent with their corresponding properties in the MongoClientUri specification (http://api.mongodb.org/java/2.12/com/mongodb/MongoClientURI.html). Some exceptions include:

  • JOURNALED: a true|false property indicating how WriteConcern should be configured
  • KERBEROS: a true|false property indicating whether the GSSAPI auth mechanism should be used
  • TAG_SET: A comma seperated, ordered list of JSON docs defining the tag sets to be used for configuring readPreference. For example: { "disk": "ssd", "use": "reporting", "rack": "a" },{ "disk": "ssd", "use": "reporting", "rack": "d" }

See org.pentaho.mongo.MongoProp for the full set of configuration properties.

Authentication

The factory method will instantiate a MongoClientWrapper that is appropriate for the requested authentication context. Currently supported mechanisms includes:

  • GSSAPI (Kerberos): Kerberos connections will be attempted if the KERBEROS property is set to "true". All interaction with MongoDB will be performed under the authentication context of the KERBEROS principal.
  • Plain: Clear-text user/pass.
  • NoAuth: fallback if the USER, PASSWORD, and KERBEROS properties are all unset.

Setting up a dev environment for Kerberos

The test suite of this project runs a series of tests using Kerberos authentication, both with cached credentials as well as a keytab file. To setup your environment to run these tests:

  1. Install the kerberos client (for debian linux: apt-get install krb5-user)
  2. Configure your /etc/krb5.conf file with the kerberos server's information. E.g.
    [realms]
     PENTAHO.QA = {
      kdc = bad-badkdc-cent.pentaho.qa
      admin_server = bad-badkdc-cent.pentaho.qa
     }

    [domain_realm]
     .pentaho.qa = PENTAHO.QA
     pentaho.qa = PENTAHO.QA
  1. Retrieve Kerberos credentials by running "kinit " (e.g. "kinit buildguy@PENTAHO.QA"). This will prompt for a password, and assuming authentication succeeds, will generate credentials. You can verify credentials were actually created by running "klist", which should show something like this:
Ticket cache: FILE:/tmp/krb5cc_1000
Default principal: buildguy@PENTAHO.QA

Valid starting    Expires           Service principal
23/03/2014 06:06  24/03/2014 06:06  krbtgt/PENTAHO.QA@PENTAHO.QA
	renew until 23/03/2014 06:06

  1. Run the "ktutil" command. This will bring up a ktutil command shell. From within ktutil, run the following (replacing with the username):
ktutil:  addent -password -p <principal> -k 1 -e rc4-hmac\r

This will prompt for a password. After entering it, run the command

ktutil:  wkt  kerberos.keytab

That should write out a file in cwd with the name "kerberos.keytab".

  1. Install JCE. This is required for using Kerberos with AES256. http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jce-7-download-432124.html
    hint: on Ubuntu if you are using the webupd8 ppa for Java you can install oracle-java8-unlimited-jce-policy
  2. If authenticating with kerberos in biserver, make sure to set the USE_KERBEROS property to true in your olap4j.properties file. If using a keytab file, also specify PENTAHO_JAAS_AUTH_MODE=KERBEROS_KEYTAB and PENTAHO_JAAS_KEYTAB_FILE=<path/to/keytabfile>. See MongoProps for more detail.

How to build

pentaho-mongo-utils uses the maven framework.

Pre-requisites for building the project:

  • Maven, version 3+
  • Java JDK 1.8
  • This settings.xml in your /.m2 directory

Building it

This is a maven project, and to build it use the following command

$ mvn clean install

Optionally you can specify -Drelease to trigger obfuscation and/or uglification (as needed)

Optionally you can specify -Dmaven.test.skip=true to skip the tests (even though you shouldn't as you know)

The build result will be a Pentaho package located in target.

Running the tests

Unit tests

This will run all unit tests in the project (and sub-modules). To run integration tests as well, see Integration Tests below.

$ mvn test

If you want to remote debug a single java unit test (default port is 5005):

$ cd core
$ mvn test -Dtest=<<YourTest>> -Dmaven.surefire.debug

Running Integration Tests

In addition to the unit tests, there are integration tests in the core project.

$ mvn verify -DrunITs

The integration tests will connect to MongoDB servers using plain authentication, kerberos authentication, and SSL. The kerberos tests require generating a keytab file, which is done during the pre-integration-test phase of the mvn build. The kerberos user and password need to be specified on the command line as follows:

mvn -DrunITs -Dkerberos.principal=user@domain -Dkerberos.password=password install

Troubleshooting Kerberos

Kerberos can be tricky to get working. Pentaho infocenter has good information on initial setup: http://infocenter.pentaho.com/help/index.jsp?topic=%2Fpdi_admin_guide%2Ftask_kerberos_mongodb.html

Adding the java property sun.security.krb5.debug=true provides some debug level logging to standard out. If AES256 encryption is being used, a common error is the following, which indicates the JVM does not have JCE available.

IntelliJ

  • Don't use IntelliJ's built-in maven. Make it use the same one you use from the commandline.
    • Project Preferences -> Build, Execution, Deployment -> Build Tools -> Maven ==> Maven home directory