~~ Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more ~~ contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with ~~ this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. ~~ The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 ~~ (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with ~~ the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at ~~ ~~ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 ~~ ~~ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software ~~ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, ~~ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. ~~ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and ~~ limitations under the License. --- File System Shell Guide --- --- ${maven.build.timestamp} %{toc} Overview The File System (FS) shell includes various shell-like commands that directly interact with the Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS) as well as other file systems that Hadoop supports, such as Local FS, HFTP FS, S3 FS, and others. The FS shell is invoked by: +--- bin/hadoop fs +--- All FS shell commands take path URIs as arguments. The URI format is <<>>. For HDFS the scheme is <<>>, and for the Local FS the scheme is <<>>. The scheme and authority are optional. If not specified, the default scheme specified in the configuration is used. An HDFS file or directory such as /parent/child can be specified as <<>> or simply as <<>> (given that your configuration is set to point to <<>>). Most of the commands in FS shell behave like corresponding Unix commands. Differences are described with each of the commands. Error information is sent to stderr and the output is sent to stdout. appendToFile Usage: << ... >>> Append single src, or multiple srcs from local file system to the destination file system. Also reads input from stdin and appends to destination file system. * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> Reads the input from stdin. Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and 1 on error. cat Usage: <<>> Copies source paths to stdout. Example: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. chgrp Usage: <<>> Change group association of files. The user must be the owner of files, or else a super-user. Additional information is in the {{{../hadoop-hdfs/HdfsPermissionsGuide.html}Permissions Guide}}. Options * The -R option will make the change recursively through the directory structure. chmod Usage: << URI [URI ...]>>> Change the permissions of files. With -R, make the change recursively through the directory structure. The user must be the owner of the file, or else a super-user. Additional information is in the {{{../hadoop-hdfs/HdfsPermissionsGuide.html}Permissions Guide}}. Options * The -R option will make the change recursively through the directory structure. chown Usage: <<>> Change the owner of files. The user must be a super-user. Additional information is in the {{{../hadoop-hdfs/HdfsPermissionsGuide.html}Permissions Guide}}. Options * The -R option will make the change recursively through the directory structure. copyFromLocal Usage: << URI>>> Similar to put command, except that the source is restricted to a local file reference. Options: * The -f option will overwrite the destination if it already exists. copyToLocal Usage: << >>> Similar to get command, except that the destination is restricted to a local file reference. count Usage: << >>> Count the number of directories, files and bytes under the paths that match the specified file pattern. The output columns with -count are: DIR_COUNT, FILE_COUNT, CONTENT_SIZE FILE_NAME The output columns with -count -q are: QUOTA, REMAINING_QUATA, SPACE_QUOTA, REMAINING_SPACE_QUOTA, DIR_COUNT, FILE_COUNT, CONTENT_SIZE, FILE_NAME The -h option shows sizes in human readable format. Example: * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. cp Usage: << >>> Copy files from source to destination. This command allows multiple sources as well in which case the destination must be a directory. 'raw.*' namespace extended attributes are preserved if (1) the source and destination filesystems support them (HDFS only), and (2) all source and destination pathnames are in the /.reserved/raw hierarchy. Determination of whether raw.* namespace xattrs are preserved is independent of the -p (preserve) flag. Options: * The -f option will overwrite the destination if it already exists. * The -p option will preserve file attributes [topx] (timestamps, ownership, permission, ACL, XAttr). If -p is specified with no , then preserves timestamps, ownership, permission. If -pa is specified, then preserves permission also because ACL is a super-set of permission. Determination of whether raw namespace extended attributes are preserved is independent of the -p flag. Example: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. du Usage: <<>> Displays sizes of files and directories contained in the given directory or the length of a file in case its just a file. Options: * The -s option will result in an aggregate summary of file lengths being displayed, rather than the individual files. * The -h option will format file sizes in a "human-readable" fashion (e.g 64.0m instead of 67108864) Example: * hdfs dfs -du /user/hadoop/dir1 /user/hadoop/file1 hdfs://nn.example.com/user/hadoop/dir1 Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. dus Usage: << >>> Displays a summary of file lengths. This is an alternate form of hdfs dfs -du -s. expunge Usage: <<>> Empty the Trash. Refer to the {{{../hadoop-hdfs/HdfsDesign.html} HDFS Architecture Guide}} for more information on the Trash feature. get Usage: << >>> Copy files to the local file system. Files that fail the CRC check may be copied with the -ignorecrc option. Files and CRCs may be copied using the -crc option. Example: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. getfacl Usage: << >>> Displays the Access Control Lists (ACLs) of files and directories. If a directory has a default ACL, then getfacl also displays the default ACL. Options: * -R: List the ACLs of all files and directories recursively. * : File or directory to list. Examples: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and non-zero on error. getfattr Usage: << >>> Displays the extended attribute names and values (if any) for a file or directory. Options: * -R: Recursively list the attributes for all files and directories. * -n name: Dump the named extended attribute value. * -d: Dump all extended attribute values associated with pathname. * -e : Encode values after retrieving them. Valid encodings are "text", "hex", and "base64". Values encoded as text strings are enclosed in double quotes ("), and values encoded as hexadecimal and base64 are prefixed with 0x and 0s, respectively. * : The file or directory. Examples: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and non-zero on error. getmerge Usage: << [addnl]>>> Takes a source directory and a destination file as input and concatenates files in src into the destination local file. Optionally addnl can be set to enable adding a newline character at the end of each file. ls Usage: << >>> For a file returns stat on the file with the following format: +---+ permissions number_of_replicas userid groupid filesize modification_date modification_time filename +---+ For a directory it returns list of its direct children as in Unix. A directory is listed as: +---+ permissions userid groupid modification_date modification_time dirname +---+ Example: * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. lsr Usage: << >>> Recursive version of ls. Similar to Unix ls -R. mkdir Usage: << >>> Takes path uri's as argument and creates directories. Options: * The -p option behavior is much like Unix mkdir -p, creating parent directories along the path. Example: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. moveFromLocal Usage: << >>> Similar to put command, except that the source localsrc is deleted after it's copied. moveToLocal Usage: << >>> Displays a "Not implemented yet" message. mv Usage: << >>> Moves files from source to destination. This command allows multiple sources as well in which case the destination needs to be a directory. Moving files across file systems is not permitted. Example: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. put Usage: << ... >>> Copy single src, or multiple srcs from local file system to the destination file system. Also reads input from stdin and writes to destination file system. * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> Reads the input from stdin. Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. rm Usage: <<>> Delete files specified as args. Only deletes non empty directory and files. If the -skipTrash option is specified, the trash, if enabled, will be bypassed and the specified file(s) deleted immediately. This can be useful when it is necessary to delete files from an over-quota directory. Refer to rmr for recursive deletes. Example: * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. rmr Usage: <<>> Recursive version of delete. If the -skipTrash option is specified, the trash, if enabled, will be bypassed and the specified file(s) deleted immediately. This can be useful when it is necessary to delete files from an over-quota directory. Example: * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. setfacl Usage: <<} ]|[--set ] >>> Sets Access Control Lists (ACLs) of files and directories. Options: * -b: Remove all but the base ACL entries. The entries for user, group and others are retained for compatibility with permission bits. * -k: Remove the default ACL. * -R: Apply operations to all files and directories recursively. * -m: Modify ACL. New entries are added to the ACL, and existing entries are retained. * -x: Remove specified ACL entries. Other ACL entries are retained. * --set: Fully replace the ACL, discarding all existing entries. The must include entries for user, group, and others for compatibility with permission bits. * : Comma separated list of ACL entries. * : File or directory to modify. Examples: * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and non-zero on error. setfattr Usage: << >>> Sets an extended attribute name and value for a file or directory. Options: * -b: Remove all but the base ACL entries. The entries for user, group and others are retained for compatibility with permission bits. * -n name: The extended attribute name. * -v value: The extended attribute value. There are three different encoding methods for the value. If the argument is enclosed in double quotes, then the value is the string inside the quotes. If the argument is prefixed with 0x or 0X, then it is taken as a hexadecimal number. If the argument begins with 0s or 0S, then it is taken as a base64 encoding. * -x name: Remove the extended attribute. * : The file or directory. Examples: * <<>> * <<>> * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and non-zero on error. setrep Usage: << >>> Changes the replication factor of a file. If is a directory then the command recursively changes the replication factor of all files under the directory tree rooted at . Options: * The -w flag requests that the command wait for the replication to complete. This can potentially take a very long time. * The -R flag is accepted for backwards compatibility. It has no effect. Example: * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. stat Usage: <<>> Returns the stat information on the path. Example: * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. tail Usage: <<>> Displays last kilobyte of the file to stdout. Options: * The -f option will output appended data as the file grows, as in Unix. Example: * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error. test Usage: <<>> Options: * The -e option will check to see if the file exists, returning 0 if true. * The -z option will check to see if the file is zero length, returning 0 if true. * The -d option will check to see if the path is directory, returning 0 if true. Example: * <<>> text Usage: << >>> Takes a source file and outputs the file in text format. The allowed formats are zip and TextRecordInputStream. touchz Usage: <<>> Create a file of zero length. Example: * <<>> Exit Code: Returns 0 on success and -1 on error.