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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/YARN-1228?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Sandy Ryza updated YARN-1228:
-----------------------------

    Attachment: YARN-1228.patch
    
> Clean up Fair Scheduler configuration loading
> ---------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: YARN-1228
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/YARN-1228
>             Project: Hadoop YARN
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: scheduler
>    Affects Versions: 2.1.1-beta
>            Reporter: Sandy Ryza
>         Attachments: YARN-1228.patch
>
>
> Currently the Fair Scheduler is configured in two ways
> * An allocations file that has a different format than the standard Hadoop 
> configuration file, which makes it easier to specify hierarchical objects 
> like queues and their properties. 
> * With properties like yarn.scheduler.fair.max.assign that are specified in 
> the standard Hadoop configuration format.
> The standard and default way of configuring it is to use fair-scheduler.xml 
> as the allocations file and to put the yarn.scheduler properties in 
> yarn-site.xml.
> It is also possible to specify a different file as the allocations file, and 
> to place the yarn.scheduler properties in fair-scheduler.xml, which will be 
> interpreted as in the standard Hadoop configuration format.  This flexibility 
> is both confusing and unnecessary.
> Additionally, the allocation file is loaded as fair-scheduler.xml from the 
> classpath if it is not specified, but is loaded as a File if it is.  This 
> causes two problems
> 1. We see different behavior when not setting the 
> yarn.scheduler.fair.allocation.file, and setting it to fair-scheduler.xml, 
> which is its default.
> 2. Classloaders may choose to cache resources, which can break the reload 
> logic when yarn.scheduler.fair.allocation.file is not specified.
> We should never allow the yarn.scheduler properties to go into 
> fair-scheduler.xml.  And we should always load the allocations file as a 
> file, not as a resource on the classpath.  To preserve existing behavior and 
> allow loading files from the classpath, we can look for files on the 
> classpath, but strip of their scheme and interpret them as Files.

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