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b2-sdk-java is a Java sdk for B2 clients. See the B2 API docs to get some context.
The SDK is being used in production at Backblaze. All new internal b2 client code is being written with it. We are in the process of slowly transitioning our existing code to the library.
We don't expect to make many incompatible changes to the API or behavior in the near future.
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The SDK exposes B2 functionality to Java clients.
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The SDK makes it easy to follow the primary recommendations from the integration checklist, including:
- Multithreading uploads:
- Parts of large files are automatically uploaded in parallel.
- The B2StorageClient is safe to use in multiple threads, so you can upload multiple files at a time.
- automatically retries properly in response to errors.
- adds these metadata fields on uploads:
- X-Bz-Info-src_last_modified_millis
- X-Bz-Info-large_file_sha1
- provides a simple testMode setting to enable various tests.
- Multithreading uploads:
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The SDK requires Java 8.
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The SDK provides three jars:
- b2-sdk-core provides almost all of the SDK. it does not contain the code for making HTTP requests (B2WebApiClient).
- b2-sdk-httpclient provides an implementation of B2WebApiClient built on Apache Commons HttpClient.
- b2-sdk-samples has some samples.
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If you're in a hurry, and you understand the B2 API already, you can probably learn everything you need to know about by looking at B2Sample.java.
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To run B2Sample, you will need to add your credentials to your environment in these environment variables:
- B2_APPLICATION_KEY_ID
- B2_APPLICATION_KEY
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Be sure to add the jars to your class path along with their dependencies.
If you put all the jar files into one directory and change to the directory, here's a sample command line to run (after replacing 'N.N.N' with the version of the sdk you're using):java -cp b2-sdk-samples-N.N.N.jar:b2-sdk-httpclient-N.N.N.jar:b2-sdk-core-0.0.1.jar:httpclient-4.5.3.jar:httpcore-4.4.4.jar:commons-logging-1.2.jar com.backblaze.b2.sample.B2Sample
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Add the jars to your build. In the following examples, replace N.N.N with the version of the sdk you're using:
- If you're using gradle, here are the dependency lines to use the sdk with our Apache HttpClient-based B2WebApiClient:
compile 'com.backblaze.b2:b2-sdk-core:N.N.N' compile 'com.backblaze.b2:b2-sdk-httpclient:N.N.N'
- If you're using maven, here are the dependency tags to use the sdk with our Apache Commons HttpClient-based B2WebApiClient:
<dependency> <groupId>com.backblaze.b2</groupId> <artifactId>b2-sdk-core</artifactId> <version>N.N.N</version> <scope>compile</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>com.backblaze.b2</groupId> <artifactId>b2-sdk-httpclient</artifactId> <version>N.N.N</version> <scope>compile</scope> </dependency>
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create a B2StorageClient.
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if your code has access to the applicationKeyId and applicationKey, here's the simplest way to do it:
B2StorageClient client = B2StorageClientFactory .createDefaultFactory() .create(APP_KEY_ID, APP_KEY, USER_AGENT);
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if you want to get the credentials from the environment, as B2Sample does, here's how to create your client:
B2StorageClient client = B2StorageClientFactory.createDefaultFactory().create(USER_AGENT);
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There's a very straight-forward mapping from B2 API calls to methods on the B2StorageClient.
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Each API call takes a similarly-named "request" structure which specifies all of the arguments to the call. To provide flexibility and long-term source-code compatibility, we use the Builder pattern. Builders take all required parameters when they are constructed and then you may set optional values. See the javadocs for the builder classes to learn about their defaults.
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For some of the simplest calls, we provide methods that just take the required parameters and perform the call. These are 'default' methods in the B2StorageClient interface, so you can see exactly what they're doing.
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Each API call returns a "response" structure with the results, returns an Iterable, or throws a B2Exception.
See Calling the API to learn what exceptions may happen. The SDK will retry retryable exceptions, so if you see them, it means that a reasonable number of retry attempts have already failed.
When the SDK returns an Iterable, the SDK cannot throw B2Exception from iterator(), because Iterable does not allow it. Similarly, Iterator does not allow hasNext() or next() to throw a B2Exception. In these cases, instead of throwing a B2Exception, the SDK throws a B2RuntimeException.
Like any Java code, it may also throw any RuntimeException. For instance, you might get an error caused by an IOException. Similarly, you might get an IllegalArgumentException or IllegalStateException if you call the API with inappropriate arguments or at inappropriate times. That said, we try to funnel 'normal' b2-related exceptions into B2Exceptions.
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Some B2 APIs allow you to list items from an unbounded list. Examples include b2_list_file_versions, b2_list_file_names, and b2_list_unfinished_files. B2StorageClient provides iterators which handle fetching batches of answers as they're needed. This relieves your code from having to do the iteration "manually".
For instance, you can use the fileVersions() iterable:
final B2ListFileVersionsRequest request = B2ListFileVersionsRequest .builder(bucketId) .build(); for (B2FileVersion version : client.fileVersions(request)) { writer.println("fileVersion: " + version); }
Similar to other methods, there is a convenience version of the fileVersions() which just takes a bucketId:
for (B2FileVersion version : client.fileVersions(bucketId)) { writer.println("fileVersion: " + version); }
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To get upload progress notifications, implement the B2UploadListener interface and call setListener() with an instance of your listener class while building your B2UploadFileRequest.
Uploads are broken into "parts" which may be uploaded in parallel for greater throughput. When uploading a "small file" (using uploadSmallFile()), there is only one part. When uploading a "large file" (using uploadLargeFile() or finishUploadingLargeFile()) there will be more than one part and they may be uploaded in parallel and they may be started and completed in any order.
B2UploadListener has one required method, progress(), which is passed an immutable B2UploadProgress object periodically. Each B2UploadProgress object says the overall state of the upload (state), how many parts the upload consists of (partCount), which of those parts it represents (partIndex, a zero-based index), the range of the overall upload that the part represents (startByte and length), and how many bytes have been uploaded so far (bytesSoFar).
For small file uploads, many of the B2UploadProgress values are constant. For instance, for small files, partCount is always 1, partIndex is always 0 and startByte is always 0. For large file uploads, all B2UploadProgress objects will have the same partCount, but the other values will vary.
The B2UploadState of each part upload is one of these: WAITING_TO_START, STARTING, UPLOADING, FAILED, SUCCEEDED. See the javadocs for more details.
The B2UploadListener just receives progress() calls for parts. It does not receive notifications about the overall success of the upload. The upload methods on B2StorageClient are synchronous. As with other methods in the API, overall success is indicated by a normal return from the method (with the B2FileVersion of the uploaded file) and overall failure is indicated by throwing an exception.
Take a look at the example progress listener in B2Sample.java and run it to see an example of the notifications you'll get.
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How do I get the accountId?
You can use B2StorageClient.getAccountId() to get the accountId.
In previous versions of the SDK you were able to get the accountId from B2AuthorizeAccountRequest.getAccountId() and B2Credentials.getAccountId(). Now that the SDK supports B2 Application Keys, those structures no longer always have access to the accountId. The accountId is always available in the response to b2_authorize_account.
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Can I add metadata to the files I upload? How?
You can add some immutable name-value pairs to each file at the time you upload it. See the "File Info" section of the B2 Files documentation for details. In the SDK, you can add pairs by calling setCustomField(), as seen in this example from B2Sample.java:
B2UploadFileRequest request = B2UploadFileRequest .builder(bucketId, fileName, B2ContentTypes.APPLICATION_OCTET, source) .setCustomField("color", "green") .build();
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Do I have to iterate over all of the buckets in an account to find the one I'm looking for?
For buckets, the b2_list_buckets web call always gives a list. Since there are at most 100 buckets and once we've found one of them, we've got all of them, the servers always return the whole list to the caller, so the SDK always provides all of them to the Java caller.
As Java programmers, that was driving us nuts, so we provided a simple helper. B2StorageClient.getBucketOrNullByName() grabs the list and does the loop for you, if you're looking up a bucket by name. It really depends on context whether that's useful or good for you. If you're going to be doing lots of the lookups, it'd be much better to get them once and cache the answer, but we didn't want the SDK to make assumptions about how long the cache would be valid.
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Do I have to iterate over all of the files in a bucket to find the one I'm looking for?
Nope. You can add filters to the B2ListFileVersionsRequest or B2ListFileNamesRequest. See the builders for those classes for details. Here's an example:
B2ListFileVersionsRequest request = B2ListFileVersionsRequest .builder(bucketId) .setStartFileName(fileName) .build();
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Why do I get more answers from fileVersions() and fileNames() than I expect?
Those two methods return Iterables that will return answers from the server as long as there are more answers to return. There are a few reasons developers have been surprised by this:
(1) Calling setMaxFileCount() on the request sets the maximum number of answers the server will return each time the SDK asks for answers. It does NOT control the number of answers the iterable will yield because the iterables always keep going until there are no more answers. (This is a confusing thing in the API naming. I apologize.)
(2) Calling setStart() or setStartFileName() determines the position in the list where the response starts. Sometimes developers are confused and think that they'll only get results that start with those values. See setPrefix() for that behavior.
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Can I control how many answers are fetched at once for the iterables?
Yes. If the request structure you provide specifies a maxCount (or similar field), the SDK will use that in its requests to B2. If you do not specify a maxCount, the SDK will default to requesting the maximum number that counts as "one transaction" for billing purposes. The iterable will continue to iterate as long as there are answer, but each fetched page will be limited by the maxCount you provide. (This gives you some control over the fetched page size so if you only plan to look at a few results, you can ask for fewer than the default. Similarly, if you're in non-interactive application, and you want to visit all items in the list, you may want to use 10,000 to minimize roundtrips to the server.)
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Is there a way to access the payload of reads as a memory-friendly InputStream?
Yep. Take a look at the B2ContentSink interface. It is passed the responseHeaders and an InputStream to read from. B2ContentMemoryWriter and B2ContentFileWriter are just two possible implementations of B2ContentSink. The main consideration with writing a B2ContentSink is handling exceptions, but that's normal right? :) If there's an exception, you'll want to clean up anything you've done before returning, and you might get called again if the SDK retries.
The two existing sink classes have a few nice features related to checking the SHA-1 after the download which you may want to mimic in your implementation.
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What are those @B2Json annotations?
The B2 SDK uses our B2Json library to read and write JSON. The @B2Json annotations on classes provide information B2Json to tell it how to construct instances of classes and how to handle members.
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Why B2Json instead of [insert your favorite Java JSON library]?
There are many, many Java packages available for working with JSON. See [json.org] for a list. We've looked at many and we liked and used Google's GSON. One of the main things that we struggled with in GSON was that it was hard to make members 'final'. Similarly, it was hard to do overall checking of the values in a structure after they'd all been set. Since we really like immutability and validation, we were sad. We chose to make B2Json.
B2Json requires that we make a constructor for each class that takes all of the parameters, so that we can assign values for final members and validate the values as needed.
This section is mostly for developers who work on the SDK.
Layering
To simplify implementation and testing, the B2StorageClient has three main layers and a few helpers.
The top-most layer consists of the B2StorageClientImpl and the various Request and Response classes. This layer provides the main interface for developers. The B2StorageClientImpl is responsible for acquiring account authorizations, upload urls and upload authorizations, as needed. It is also responsible for retrying operations that fail for retryable reasons. The B2StorageClientImpl uses a B2Retryer to do the retrying. An implementation of the B2RetryPolicy controls the number of retries that are attempted and the amount of waiting between attempts; the B2DefaultRetryPolicy follows our recommendations and should be suitable for almost all users. A few operations are complicated enough that they are handled by a separate class; the most prominent example is the B2LargeFileUploader.
The middle layer, consists of the B2StorageClientWebifier. The webifier's job is to translate logical B2 API calls (such as "list file names", or "upload a file") into the appropriate HTTP requests and to interpret the responses. The webifier isolates the B2StorageClientImpl from having to do this mapping. We stub the webifier layer to test B2StorageClientImpl.
The bottom layer is the B2WebApiClient. It provides a few simple methods, such as postJsonReturnJson(), postDataReturnJson(), and getContent(). We stub B2WebApiClient to test the B2StorageClientImpl. This layer isolates the rest of the SDK from the HTTPS implementation so that developers can provide their own web client if they want. The b2-sdk-httpclient jar provides an implementation that uses the Apache HttpClient.
One of the main helpers is our B2Json class. It uses annotations on class members and constructors to convert between Java classes and JSON.
Caching
Each B2StorageClientImpl has a B2AccountAuthorizationCache and a B2UploadUrlCache.
Whenever the SDK needs an account authorization, it gets it from the B2AccountAuthorizationCache. If the cache doesn't have one, it will use its B2AccountAuthorizer to get one. When there's an authorization error, the B2Retryer clears the cache so a new authorization will be fetched the next time it's needed.
Whenever the SDK needs an upload url it gets one from its B2UploadUrlCache, which can hold multiple urls (and upload auth tokens) per bucket. When there's no upload url for a given bucket, the cache requests one from the B2 service. When the SDK uses one of them, it is removed from the cache. If the upload succeeds, the url is put back in the cache for later use. If the upload fails, the url is not put back in the cache, so it will not be reused. The B2LoadFileUploader, which encapsulates large file uploads, uses an instance of B2UploadPartUrlCache in a similar fashion.
Retrying
B2 clients may need to retry operations while using the B2 API. The most common time is when an upload is interrupted and the client needs to fetch a new upload URL and try again. Long-running B2 clients may also have their B2 authTokens expire; when that happens, the client needs to reauthenticate. Additionally, network issues between the client and the B2 service can cause errors that should be retried. Periodically, there are B2 service issues which could result in retryable errors. The SDK handles most of this retrying transparently to the client.
For each high-level call, the B2StorageClient uses an instance of B2Retryer; each B2Retryer is given a B2RetryPolicy object. When the retrier catches an error, it clears cached authTokens (and upload urls are not put back in the upload url cache). The retryer uses information in the error objects to categorize errors as unretryable, retryable immediately, or retryable after a delay. The B2Retryer then notifies the B2RetryPolicy what has happened and, for retryable errors and takes the policy's guidance about whether to retry and, for retries that need a delay, how long to sleep.
SDK users can customize their retry policy by providing a B2RetryPolicy factory. By default, a factory that returns instances of B2DefaultRetryPolicy is used. The B2DefaultRetryPolicy implements the policy described in the B2 documentation using the retry specified in the B2 response or an exponential backoff if none is provided.
We have lots of unit tests to verify that each of the classes performs as expected. As mentioned in the "Structure" section, we stub lower layers to test the layer above it. The B2WebApiClient doesn't have unit tests yet (volunteers?). We exercise the whole client, including the B2WebApiClient during development and during the official builds by running B2Sample against the B2 servers.
I'd also like to test more with InterruptedException.
I'd like to verify that it's possible to replace the B2WebApiClient implementation in an environment that doesn't have the Apache HttpClient we use. I want to be sure we're not inadvertently pulling in classes that won't exist in such an environment. The first step of this was to remove the HttpClient implementation from the core jar. (We would be interested in an implementation that uses built-in java classes instead of HttpClient to reduce external dependencies.)
For developers who are building on the SDK, we have a provided an initial implementation of B2StorageClient which simulates the service. So far, it has a minimal feature set. Let us know if you'd like to work on it. (Actually, it's not in the repo yet.)
Here are some things we could do someday, in no particular order:
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implement a WebApiClient that uses java.net instead of HttpComponents and make sure the SDK can be used without HttpComponents.
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any good way to exercise all the exception handling in B2WebApiClient implementations?
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check public/default/private protection levels! (reduce access where possible)
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eliminate javadocs warnings from the build. eliminate classes (and methods?) from the javadocs which are only public to be visible to other parts of the SDK.
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make notes for developers about JVM's TTL for DNS?
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provide easy support for resuming iterables.
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maybe make B2Json's method for finding JsonTypeHandlers more flexible. (probably mostly needed for compatibility with earlier Java 6 and/or 7 which don't have java.time classes and we're not supporting those initially.)
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Parallelizing downloads of large files. (how should we handle the ContentHandler interface? should we download all before processing any? i'd like to discuss what's really desired.) (BrianB notes that the b2 CLI hasn't done this either. I'm gonna note that with Range-based downloads, someone could add it on top of B2StorageClient.)
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An upload queue. This first version of the SDK is thread-safe and you can build whatever orchestration you want above it.
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deleting all versions of one filename. that's pretty easy with the SDK, so i don't think it needs a built-in method. See B2Sample.java.
XXX: actually it's slightly more annoying than i thought because we don't have a way to get only versions of a given file name. here's my implementation for discussion. an alternative would be to make another optional filter parameter 'fileName' on the list file apis to simplify the request and the loop:
B2ListFileVersionsRequest request = B2ListFileVersionsRequest .builder(bucketId) .setStartFileName(fileNameToDelete) .setPrefix(fileNameToDelete) .build(); for (B2FileVersion version : client.fileVersions(request)) { if (version.getFileName().equals(fileNameToDelete)) { client.deleteFileVersion(version); } else { break; } }
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teach B2ContentFileWriter to use a temporary file name during download and to not move the file until the verification is complete. meanwhile, write to a .tmp file yourself and move to the real name only after success.
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perhaps take advantage of the "Java Concurrency In Practice"-type annotations. So far, we haven't done this because it would add another dependency or require importing the code for those annotations.
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Should we have some other higher-level operations in the SDK? My initial feeling is that we can always add those later. candidates so far:
- delete all file versions with given name in a given bucket.
- upload files from a list or queue.
- download files from a list or queue.
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Seriously-non-goal: detecting that an interrupted small file upload actually finished (upload idempotency). (this is something that ab wants for one of his exercisers, but he hasn't heard anyone else even ask for it.)
In addition to the team at Backblaze, the following people have contributed to the SDK:
- Kyle Hughart: questions and feedback
- Valentin Popov (valenpo): implemented getFileInfoByName() and deleteAllFilesInBucket().