Installation Path B - Manual Installation Using Cloudera Manager Packages

Before proceeding with this path for a new installation, review Cloudera Manager Deployment. If you are upgrading a Cloudera Manager existing installation, see Upgrading Cloudera Manager.

During Cloudera Manager installation you can choose to install CDH and managed service as parcels or packages. For packages, you can choose to have Cloudera Manager install the packages or install them yourself.

Before You Begin

Install and Configure Databases

Read Cloudera Manager and Managed Service Data Stores. If you are using an external database, install and configure a database as described in MySQL Database, Oracle Database, or External PostgreSQL Database.

Perform Configuration Required by Single User Mode

If you choose to create a Cloudera Manager deployment that employs single user mode, perform the configuration steps described in Single User Mode Requirements.

(CDH 5 only) On RHEL 5 and CentOS 5, Install Python 2.6 or 2.7

CDH 5 Hue will only work with the default Python version of the operating system on which it is being installed. For example, on RHEL/CentOS 6 you will need Python 2.6 to start Hue. However, RHEL 5 and CentOS 5 users will have to download Python 2.6 from the EPEL repository as described below.
To install packages from the EPEL repository, download the appropriate repository rpm packages to your machine and then install Python using yum. For example, use the following commands for RHEL 5 or CentOS 5:
$ su -c 'rpm -Uvh http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/5/i386/epel-release-5-4.noarch.rpm'
...
$ yum install python26

Establish Your Cloudera Manager Repository Strategy

Cloudera recommends installing products using package management tools such as yum for Red Hat compatible systems, zypper for SLES, and apt-get for Debian/Ubuntu. These tools depend on access to repositories to install software. For example, Cloudera maintains Internet-accessible repositories for CDH and Cloudera Manager installation files. Strategies for installing Cloudera Manager include:

  • Standard Cloudera repositories. For this method, ensure you have added the required repository information to your systems.For Cloudera Manager repository locations and client repository files, see Cloudera Manager Version and Download Information.
  • Internally hosted repositories. You might use internal repositories for environments where hosts do not have access to the Internet. For information about preparing your environment, see Understanding Custom Installation Solutions. When using an internal repository, you must copy the repo or list file to the Cloudera Manager Server host and update the repository properties to point to internal repository URLs.

Red Hat-compatible

  1. Save the appropriate Cloudera Manager repo file (cloudera-manager.repo) for your system:
  2. Copy the repo file to the /etc/yum.repos.d/ directory.

SLES

  1. Run the following command:
    $ sudo zypper addrepo -f https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cm5/sles/11/x86_64/cm/cloudera-manager.repo
  2. Update your system package index by running:
    $ sudo zypper refresh

Ubuntu or Debian

  1. Save the appropriate Cloudera Manager list file (cloudera.list) for your system:
  2. Copy the content of that file and append it to the content of the cloudera.list in the /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ directory.
  3. Update your system package index by running:
    $ sudo apt-get update

Install the Oracle JDK

Install the Oracle Java Development Kit (JDK) on the Cloudera Manager Server host.

The JDK is included in the Cloudera Manager 5 repositories. After downloading and editing the repo or list file, install the JDK as follows:
OS Command
RHEL
$ sudo yum install oracle-j2sdk1.7
SLES
$ sudo zypper install oracle-j2sdk1.7
Ubuntu or Debian
$ sudo apt-get install oracle-j2sdk1.7

Install the Cloudera Manager Server Packages

  1. Install the Cloudera Manager Server packages either on the host where the database is installed, or on a host that has access to the database. This host need not be a host in the cluster that you want to manage with Cloudera Manager. On the Cloudera Manager Server host, type the following commands to install the Cloudera Manager packages.
    OS Command
    RHEL, if you have a yum repo configured
    $ sudo yum install cloudera-manager-daemons cloudera-manager-server
    RHEL,if you're manually transferring RPMs
    $ sudo yum --nogpgcheck localinstall cloudera-manager-daemons-*.rpm
    $ sudo yum --nogpgcheck localinstall cloudera-manager-server-*.rpm
    SLES
    $ sudo zypper install cloudera-manager-daemons cloudera-manager-server 
    Ubuntu or Debian
    $ sudo apt-get install cloudera-manager-daemons cloudera-manager-server 
  2. If you choose an Oracle database for use with Cloudera Manager, edit the /etc/default/cloudera-scm-server file on the Cloudera Manager server host. Locate the line that begins with export CM_JAVA_OPTS and change the -Xmx2G option to -Xmx4G.

Set up a Database for the Cloudera Manager Server

Depending on whether you are using an external database, or the embedded PostgreSQL database, do one of the following:

(Optional) Install Cloudera Manager Agent, CDH, and Managed Service Software

You can use Cloudera Manager to install Cloudera Manager Agent packages, CDH, and managed service software, or you can install them manually.

To use Cloudera Manager to install the software (in Choose the Software Installation Method and Install Software), you must meet the requirements described in Cloudera Manager Deployment. If you use Cloudera Manager to install software, go to Start the Cloudera Manager Server. Otherwise, proceed with the following sections.

Install the Oracle JDK

Install the Oracle JDK on the cluster hosts. Cloudera Manager 5 can manage both CDH 5 and CDH 4, and the required JDK version varies accordingly:

Install Cloudera Manager Agent Packages

To install the packages manually, do the following on every Cloudera Manager Agent host (including those that will run one or more of the Cloudera Management Service roles: Service Monitor, Activity Monitor, Event Server, Alert Publisher, or Reports Manager):
  1. Use one of the following commands to install the Cloudera Manager Agent packages:
    OS Command
    RHEL, if you have a yum repo configured:
    $ sudo yum install cloudera-manager-agent cloudera-manager-daemons
    RHEL, if you're manually transferring RPMs:
    $ sudo yum --nogpgcheck localinstall cloudera-manager-agent-package.*.x86_64.rpm cloudera-manager-daemons
    SLES
    $ sudo zypper install cloudera-manager-agent cloudera-manager-daemons
    Ubuntu or Debian
    $ sudo apt-get install cloudera-manager-agent cloudera-manager-daemons
  2. On every Cloudera Manager Agent host, configure the Cloudera Manager Agent to point to the Cloudera Manager Server by setting the following properties in the /etc/cloudera-scm-agent/config.ini configuration file:
    Property Description
    server_host Name of the host where Cloudera Manager Server is running.
    server_port Port on the host where Cloudera Manager Server is running.
    For more information on Agent configuration options, see Agent Configuration File.

Install CDH and Managed Service Packages

For more information about manually installing CDH packages, see CDH 4 Installation Guideor Cloudera Installation Guide.

  1. Choose a repository strategy:
    • Standard Cloudera repositories. For this method, ensure you have added the required repository information to your systems.
    • Internally hosted repositories. You might use internal repositories for environments where hosts do not have access to the Internet. For information about preparing your environment, see Understanding Custom Installation Solutions. When using an internal repository, you must copy the repo or list file to the Cloudera Manager Server host and update the repository properties to point to internal repository URLs.
  2. Install packages:
    CDH Version Procedure
    CDH 5
    • Red Hat
      1. Download and install the "1-click Install" package.
        1. Download the CDH 5 "1-click Install" package.

          Click the entry in the table below that matches your Red Hat or CentOS system, choose Save File, and save the file to a directory to which you have write access (for example, your home directory).

          OS Version Click this Link
          Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 5 Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 5 link
          Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 6 Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 6 link
        2. Install the RPM:
          • Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 5
            $ sudo yum --nogpgcheck localinstall cloudera-cdh-5-0.x86_64.rpm 
          • Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 6
            $ sudo yum --nogpgcheck localinstall cloudera-cdh-5-0.x86_64.rpm
      2. (Optionally) add a repository key:
        • Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 5
          $ sudo rpm --import https://archive.cloudera.com/cdh5/redhat/5/x86_64/cdh/RPM-GPG-KEY-cloudera
        • Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 6
          $ sudo rpm --import https://archive.cloudera.com/cdh5/redhat/6/x86_64/cdh/RPM-GPG-KEY-cloudera
      3. Install the CDH packages:
        $ sudo yum clean all
        $ sudo yum install avro-tools crunch flume-ng hadoop-hdfs-fuse hadoop-hdfs-nfs3 hadoop-httpfs hadoop-kms hbase-solr hive-hbase hive-webhcat hue-beeswax hue-hbase hue-impala hue-pig hue-plugins hue-rdbms hue-search hue-spark hue-sqoop hue-zookeeper impala impala-shell kite llama mahout oozie pig pig-udf-datafu search sentry solr-mapreduce spark-python sqoop sqoop2 whirr
    • SLES
      1. Download and install the "1-click Install" package.
        1. Download the CDH 5 "1-click Install" package.

          Click this link, choose Save File, and save it to a directory to which you have write access (for example, your home directory).

        2. Install the RPM:
          $ sudo rpm -i cloudera-cdh-5-0.x86_64.rpm
        3. Update your system package index by running:
          $ sudo zypper refresh
      2. (Optionally) add a repository key:
        $ sudo rpm --import https://archive.cloudera.com/cdh5/sles/11/x86_64/cdh/RPM-GPG-KEY-cloudera
      3. Install the CDH packages:
        $ sudo zypper clean --all
        $ sudo zypper install avro-tools crunch flume-ng hadoop-hdfs-fuse hadoop-hdfs-nfs3 hadoop-httpfs hadoop-kms hbase-solr hive-hbase hive-webhcat hue-beeswax hue-hbase hue-impala hue-pig hue-plugins hue-rdbms hue-search hue-spark hue-sqoop hue-zookeeper impala impala-shell kite llama mahout oozie pig pig-udf-datafu search sentry solr-mapreduce spark-python sqoop sqoop2 whirr
    • Ubuntu and Debian
      1. Download and install the "1-click Install" package
        1. Download the CDH 5 "1-click Install" package:
          OS Version Click this Link
          Wheezy Wheezy link
          Precise Precise link
          Trusty Trusty link
        2. Install the package by doing one of the following:
          • Choose Open with in the download window to use the package manager.
          • Choose Save File, save the package to a directory to which you have write access (for example, your home directory), and install it from the command line. For example:
            sudo dpkg -i cdh5-repository_1.0_all.deb
      2. Optionally add a repository key:
        • Debian Wheezy
          $ curl -s https://archive.cloudera.com/cdh5/debian/wheezy/amd64/cdh/archive.key | sudo apt-key add -
        • Ubuntu Precise
          $ curl -s https://archive.cloudera.com/cdh5/ubuntu/precise/amd64/cdh/archive.key | sudo apt-key add -
      3. Install the CDH packages:
        $ sudo apt-get update
        $ sudo apt-get install avro-tools crunch flume-ng hadoop-hdfs-fuse hadoop-hdfs-nfs3 hadoop-httpfs hadoop-kms hbase-solr hive-hbase hive-webhcat hue-beeswax hue-hbase hue-impala hue-pig hue-plugins hue-rdbms hue-search hue-spark hue-sqoop hue-zookeeper impala impala-shell kite llama mahout oozie pig pig-udf-datafu search sentry solr-mapreduce spark-python sqoop sqoop2 whirr
    CDH 4, Impala, and Solr
    • Red Hat-compatible
      1. Click the entry in the table at CDH Download Information that matches your Red Hat or CentOS system.
      2. Navigate to the repo file (cloudera-cdh4.repo) for your system and save it in the /etc/yum.repos.d/ directory.
      3. Optionally add a repository key:
        • Red Hat/CentOS/Oracle 5
          $ sudo rpm --import https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/redhat/5/x86_64/cdh/RPM-GPG-KEY-cloudera
        • Red Hat/CentOS 6
          $ sudo rpm --import https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/redhat/6/x86_64/cdh/RPM-GPG-KEY-cloudera
      4. Install packages on every host in your cluster:
        1. Install CDH 4 packages:
          $ sudo yum -y install bigtop-utils bigtop-jsvc bigtop-tomcat hadoop hadoop-hdfs hadoop-httpfs hadoop-mapreduce hadoop-yarn hadoop-client hadoop-0.20-mapreduce hue-plugins hbase hive oozie oozie-client pig zookeeper
        2. To install the hue-common package and all Hue applications on the Hue host, install the hue meta-package:
          $ sudo yum install hue 
      5. (Requires CDH 4.2 or later) Install Impala
        1. In the table at Cloudera Impala Version and Download Information, click the entry that matches your Red Hat or CentOS system.
        2. Navigate to the repo file for your system and save it in the /etc/yum.repos.d/ directory.
        3. Install Impala and the Impala Shell on Impala machines:
          $ sudo yum -y install impala impala-shell
      6. (Requires CDH 4.3 or later) Install Search
        1. In the table at Cloudera Search Version and Download Information, click the entry that matches your Red Hat or CentOS system.
        2. Navigate to the repo file for your system and save it in the /etc/yum.repos.d/ directory.
        3. Install the Solr Server on machines where you want Cloudera Search.
          $ sudo yum -y install solr-server
    • SLES
      1. Run the following command:
        $ sudo zypper addrepo -f https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/sles/11/x86_64/cdh/cloudera-cdh4.repo
      2. Update your system package index by running:
        $ sudo zypper refresh
      3. Optionally add a repository key:
        $ sudo rpm --import https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/sles/11/x86_64/cdh/RPM-GPG-KEY-cloudera  
      4. Install packages on every host in your cluster:
        1. Install CDH 4 packages:
          $ sudo zypper install bigtop-utils bigtop-jsvc bigtop-tomcat hadoop hadoop-hdfs hadoop-httpfs hadoop-mapreduce hadoop-yarn hadoop-client hadoop-0.20-mapreduce hue-plugins hbase hive oozie oozie-client pig zookeeper
        2. To install the hue-common package and all Hue applications on the Hue host, install the hue meta-package:
          $ sudo zypper install hue 
        3. (Requires CDH 4.2 or later) Install Impala
          1. Run the following command:
            $ sudo zypper addrepo -f https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/impala/sles/11/x86_64/impala/cloudera-impala.repo
          2. Install Impala and the Impala Shell on Impala machines:
            $ sudo zypper install impala impala-shell
        4. (Requires CDH 4.3 or later) Install Search
          1. Run the following command:
            $ sudo zypper addrepo -f https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/search/sles/11/x86_64/search/cloudera-search.repo
          2. Install the Solr Server on machines where you want Cloudera Search.
            $ sudo zypper install solr-server
    • Ubuntu or Debian
      1. In the table at CDH Version and Packaging Information, click the entry that matches your Ubuntu or Debian system.
      2. Navigate to the list file (cloudera.list) for your system and save it in the /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ directory. For example, to install CDH 4 for 64-bit Ubuntu Lucid, your cloudera.list file should look like:
        deb [arch=amd64] https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/ubuntu/lucid/amd64/cdh lucid-cdh4 contrib
        deb-src https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/ubuntu/lucid/amd64/cdh lucid-cdh4 contrib
      3. Optionally add a repository key:
        • Ubuntu Lucid
          $ curl -s https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/ubuntu/lucid/amd64/cdh/archive.key | sudo apt-key add -
        • Ubuntu Precise
          $ curl -s https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/ubuntu/precise/amd64/cdh/archive.key | sudo apt-key add -
        • Debian Squeeze
          $ curl -s https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/debian/squeeze/amd64/cdh/archive.key | sudo apt-key add -
      4. Install packages on every host in your cluster:
        1. Install CDH 4 packages:
          $ sudo apt-get install bigtop-utils bigtop-jsvc bigtop-tomcat hadoop hadoop-hdfs hadoop-httpfs hadoop-mapreduce hadoop-yarn hadoop-client hadoop-0.20-mapreduce hue-plugins hbase hive oozie oozie-client pig zookeeper
        2. To install the hue-common package and all Hue applications on the Hue host, install the hue meta-package:
          $ sudo apt-get install hue 
        3. (Requires CDH 4.2 or later) Install Impala
          1. In the table at Cloudera Impala Version and Download Information, click the entry that matches your Ubuntu or Debian system.
          2. Navigate to the list file for your system and save it in the /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ directory.
          3. Install Impala and the Impala Shell on Impala machines:
            $ sudo apt-get install impala impala-shell
        4. (Requires CDH 4.3 or later) Install Search
          1. In the table at Cloudera Search Version and Download Information, click the entry that matches your Ubuntu or Debian system.
          2. Install Solr Server on machines where you want Cloudera Search:
            $ sudo apt-get install solr-server

(Optional) Install Key Trustee Key Provider

If you want to use Cloudera Navigator Key Trustee Server as the underlying key store for HDFS Data At Rest Encryption, you must install the Key Trustee Key Provider.

To install the Key Trustee Key Provider:
  1. Identify the appropriate repository for your operating system, and copy the repository URL:
    OS Version Repository URL
    RHEL-compatible 6 RHEL 6 Repository
    RHEL-compatible 5 RHEL 5 Repository
    SLES 11 SLES 11 Repository
    Ubuntu Trusty (14.04) Ubuntu Trusty Repository
    Ubuntu Precise (12.04) Ubuntu Precise Repository
    Debian Wheezy (7.0 and 7.1) Debian Wheezy Repository
  2. Add the repository to your system, using the appropriate procedure for your operating system:
    • RHEL-compatible

      Download the repository and copy it to the /etc/yum.repos.d/ directory. Refresh the package index by running sudo yum clean all.

    • SLES
      Add the repository to your system using the following command:
      $ sudo zypper addrepo -f <repository_url>

      Refresh the package index by running sudo zypper refresh.

    • Ubuntu or Debian

      Copy the content of the appropriate cloudera.list file from the above repository table and append it to the /etc/apt/sources.list.d/cloudera.list file. Create the file if it does not exist. Refresh the package index by running sudo apt-get update.

  3. Install the keytrustee-keyprovider package, using the appropriate command for your operating system:
    • RHEL-compatible
      $ sudo yum install keytrustee-keyprovider
    • SLES
      $ sudo zypper install keytrustee-keyprovider
    • Ubuntu or Debian
      $ sudo apt-get install keytrustee-keyprovider

Start the Cloudera Manager Server

  1. Run this command on the Cloudera Manager Server host:
    $ sudo service cloudera-scm-server start
    If the Cloudera Manager Server does not start, see Troubleshooting Installation and Upgrade Problems.

(Optional) Start the Cloudera Manager Agents

If you installed the Cloudera Manager Agent packages in Install Cloudera Manager Agent Packages, run this command on each Agent host:
sudo service cloudera-scm-agent start
When the Agent starts, it contacts the Cloudera Manager Server. If communication fails between a Cloudera Manager Agent and Cloudera Manager Server, see Troubleshooting Installation and Upgrade Problems.

When the Agent hosts reboot, cloudera-scm-agent starts automatically.

Start and Log into the Cloudera Manager Admin Console

The Cloudera Manager Server URL takes the following form http://Server host:port, where Server host is the fully-qualified domain name or IP address of the host where the Cloudera Manager Server is installed and port is the port configured for the Cloudera Manager Server. The default port is 7180.
  1. Wait several minutes for the Cloudera Manager Server to complete its startup. To observe the startup process you can perform tail -f /var/log/cloudera-scm-server/cloudera-scm-server.log on the Cloudera Manager Server host. If the Cloudera Manager Server does not start, see Troubleshooting Installation and Upgrade Problems.
  2. In a web browser, enter http://Server host:7180, where Server host is the fully-qualified domain name or IP address of the host where the Cloudera Manager Server is running. The login screen for Cloudera Manager Admin Console displays.
  3. Log into Cloudera Manager Admin Console. The default credentials are: Username: admin Password: admin. Cloudera Manager does not support changing the admin username for the installed account. You can change the password using Cloudera Manager after you run the installation wizard. While you cannot change the admin username, you can add a new user, assign administrative privileges to the new user, and then delete the default admin account.

Choose Cloudera Manager Edition and Hosts

You can use the Cloudera Manager wizard to choose which edition of Cloudera Manager you are using and which hosts will run CDH and managed services.

  1. When you start the Cloudera Manager Admin Console, the install wizard starts up. Click Continue to get started.
  2. Choose which edition to install:
    • Cloudera Express, which does not require a license, but provides a somewhat limited set of features.
    • Cloudera Enterprise Data Hub Edition Trial, which does not require a license, but expires after 60 days and cannot be renewed
    • Cloudera Enterprise with one of the following license types:
      • Basic Edition
      • Flex Edition
      • Data Hub Edition
    If you choose Cloudera Express or Cloudera Enterprise Data Hub Edition Trial, you can elect to upgrade the license at a later time. See Managing Licenses.
  3. If you have elected Cloudera Enterprise, install a license:
    1. Click Upload License.
    2. Click the document icon to the left of the Select a License File text field.
    3. Navigate to the location of your license file, click the file, and click Open.
    4. Click Upload.
    Click Continue to proceed with the installation.
  4. Click Continue in the next screen. The Specify Hosts page displays.
  5. Do one of the following:
    • If you installed Cloudera Agent packages in Install Cloudera Manager Agent Packages, choose from among hosts with the packages installed:
      1. Click the Currently Managed Hosts tab.
      2. Choose the hosts to add to the cluster.
    • Search for and choose hosts:
      1. To enable Cloudera Manager to automatically discover hosts on which to install CDH and managed services, enter the cluster hostnames or IP addresses. You can also specify hostname and IP address ranges. For example:
        Range Definition Matching Hosts
        10.1.1.[1-4] 10.1.1.1, 10.1.1.2, 10.1.1.3, 10.1.1.4
        host[1-3].company.com host1.company.com, host2.company.com, host3.company.com
        host[07-10].company.com host07.company.com, host08.company.com, host09.company.com, host10.company.com

        You can specify multiple addresses and address ranges by separating them by commas, semicolons, tabs, or blank spaces, or by placing them on separate lines. Use this technique to make more specific searches instead of searching overly wide ranges. The scan results will include all addresses scanned, but only scans that reach hosts running SSH will be selected for inclusion in your cluster by default. If you don't know the IP addresses of all of the hosts, you can enter an address range that spans over unused addresses and then deselect the hosts that do not exist (and are not discovered) later in this procedure. However, keep in mind that wider ranges will require more time to scan.

      2. Click Search. Cloudera Manager identifies the hosts on your cluster to allow you to configure them for services. If there are a large number of hosts on your cluster, wait a few moments to allow them to be discovered and shown in the wizard. If the search is taking too long, you can stop the scan by clicking Abort Scan. To find additional hosts, click New Search, add the host names or IP addresses and click Search again. Cloudera Manager scans hosts by checking for network connectivity. If there are some hosts where you want to install services that are not shown in the list, make sure you have network connectivity between the Cloudera Manager Server host and those hosts. Common causes of loss of connectivity are firewalls and interference from SELinux.
      3. Verify that the number of hosts shown matches the number of hosts where you want to install services. Deselect host entries that do not exist and deselect the hosts where you do not want to install services. Click Continue. The Select Repository screen displays.
  6. Click Continue. The Select Repository page displays.

Choose the Software Installation Method and Install Software

The following instructions describe how to use the Cloudera Manager wizard to install Cloudera Manager Agent, CDH, and managed service software.

  1. Install CDH and managed service software using either packages or parcels:
    • Use Packages - If you did not install packages in Install CDH and Managed Service Packages, click the package versions to install. Otherwise, select the CDH version (CDH 4 or CDH 5) that matches the packages that you installed manually.
    • Use Parcels
      1. Choose the parcels to install. The choices you see depend on the repositories you have chosen – a repository may contain multiple parcels. Only the parcels for the latest supported service versions are configured by default.
        You can add additional parcels for previous versions by specifying custom repositories. For example, you can find the locations of the previous CDH 4 parcels at https://username:password@archive.cloudera.com/p/cdh4/parcels/. Or, if you are installing CDH 4.3 and want to use policy-file authorization, you can add the Sentry parcel using this mechanism.
        1. To specify the parcel directory, local parcel repository, add a parcel repository, or specify the properties of a proxy server through which parcels are downloaded, click the More Options button and do one or more of the following:
          • Parcel Directory and Local Parcel Repository Path - Specify the location of parcels on cluster hosts and the Cloudera Manager Server host. If you change the default value for Parcel Directory and have already installed and started Cloudera Manager Agents, restart the Agents:
            $ sudo service cloudera-scm-agent restart
          • Parcel Repository - In the Remote Parcel Repository URLs field, click the button and enter the URL of the repository. The URL you specify is added to the list of repositories listed in the Configuring Cloudera Manager Server Parcel Settings page and a parcel is added to the list of parcels on the Select Repository page. If you have multiple repositories configured, you will see all the unique parcels contained in all your repositories.
          • Proxy Server - Specify the properties of a proxy server.
        2. Click OK.
  2. If you did not install Cloudera Manager Agent packages in Install Cloudera Manager Agent Packages, do the following:
    1. Select the release of Cloudera Manager Agent to install. You can choose either the version that matches the Cloudera Manager Server you are currently using or specify a version in a custom repository. If you opted to use custom repositories for installation files, you can provide a GPG key URL that applies for all repositories. Click Continue. The JDK Installation Options screen displays.
  3. Select the Install Oracle Java SE Development Kit (JDK) checkbox to allow Cloudera Manager to install the JDK on each cluster host or leave deselected if you plan to install it yourself. If checked, your local laws permit you to deploy unlimited strength encryption, and you are running a secure cluster, select the Install Java Unlimited Strength Encryption Policy Files checkbox. Click Continue. The Enable Single User Mode screen displays.
  4. (Optional) Select Single User Mode to configure the Cloudera Manager Agent and all service processes to run as the same user. This mode requires extra configuration steps that must be done manually on all hosts in the cluster. If you have not performed the steps, directory creation will fail in the installation wizard. In most cases, you can create the directories but the steps performed by the installation wizard may have to be continued manually. Click Continue. The Provide SSH login credentials screen displays.
  5. If you chose to have Cloudera Manager install packages, specify host installation properties:
    • Select root or enter the user name for an account that has password-less sudo permission.
    • Select an authentication method:
      • If you choose to use password authentication, enter and confirm the password.
      • If you choose to use public-key authentication provide a passphrase and path to the required key files.
    • You can choose to specify an alternate SSH port. The default value is 22.
    • You can specify the maximum number of host installations to run at once. The default value is 10.
  6. Click Continue. If you did not install packages in (Optional) Install Cloudera Manager Agent, CDH, and Managed Service Software, Cloudera Manager installs the Oracle JDK, Cloudera Manager Agent, packages and CDH and managed service packages or parcels. During the parcel installation, progress is indicated for the phases of the parcel installation process in separate progress bars. If you are installing multiple parcels you will see progress bars for each parcel. When the Continue button at the bottom of the screen turns blue, the installation process is completed. Click Continue.
  7. Click Continue. The Host Inspector runs to validate the installation, and provides a summary of what it finds, including all the versions of the installed components. If the validation is successful, click Finish. The Cluster Setup screen displays.

Add Services

The following instructions describe how to use the Cloudera Manager wizard to configure and start CDH and managed services.

  1. In the first page of the Add Services wizard you choose the combination of services to install and whether to install Cloudera Navigator:
    • Click the radio button next to the combination of services to install:
      CDH 4 CDH 5
      • Core Hadoop - HDFS, MapReduce, ZooKeeper, Oozie, Hive, and Hue
      • Core with HBase
      • Core with Impala
      • All Services - HDFS, MapReduce, ZooKeeper, HBase, Impala, Oozie, Hive, Hue, and Sqoop
      • Custom Services - Any combination of services.
      • Core Hadoop - HDFS, YARN (includes MapReduce 2), ZooKeeper, Oozie, Hive, Hue, and Sqoop
      • Core with HBase
      • Core with Impala
      • Core with Search
      • Core with Spark
      • All Services - HDFS, YARN (includes MapReduce 2), ZooKeeper, Oozie, Hive, Hue, Sqoop, HBase, Impala, Solr, Spark, and Key-Value Store Indexer
      • Custom Services - Any combination of services.
      As you select the services, keep the following in mind:
      • Some services depend on other services; for example, HBase requires HDFS and ZooKeeper. Cloudera Manager tracks dependencies and installs the correct combination of services.
      • In a Cloudera Manager deployment of a CDH 4 cluster, the MapReduce service is the default MapReduce computation framework. Choose Custom Services to install YARN or use the Add Service functionality to add YARN after installation completes.
      • In a Cloudera Manager deployment of a CDH 5 cluster, the YARN service is the default MapReduce computation framework. Choose Custom Services to install MapReduce or use the Add Service functionality to add MapReduce after installation completes.
      • The Flume service can be added only after your cluster has been set up.
    • If you have chosen Data Hub Edition Trial or Cloudera Enterprise, optionally select the Include Cloudera Navigator checkbox to enable Cloudera Navigator. See the Cloudera Navigator Documentation.
    Click Continue. The Customize Role Assignments screen displays.
  2. Customize the assignment of role instances to hosts. The wizard evaluates the hardware configurations of the hosts to determine the best hosts for each role. The wizard assigns all worker roles to the same set of hosts to which the HDFS DataNode role is assigned. These assignments are typically acceptable, but you can reassign them if necessary.

    Click a field below a role to display a dialog containing a list of hosts. If you click a field containing multiple hosts, you can also select All Hosts to assign the role to all hosts or Custom to display the pageable hosts dialog.

    The following shortcuts for specifying hostname patterns are supported:
    • Range of hostnames (without the domain portion)
      Range Definition Matching Hosts
      10.1.1.[1-4] 10.1.1.1, 10.1.1.2, 10.1.1.3, 10.1.1.4
      host[1-3].company.com host1.company.com, host2.company.com, host3.company.com
      host[07-10].company.com host07.company.com, host08.company.com, host09.company.com, host10.company.com
    • IP addresses
    • Rack name

    Click the View By Host button for an overview of the role assignment by hostname ranges.

  3. When you are satisfied with the assignments, click Continue. The Database Setup screen displays.
  4. On the Database Setup page, configure settings for required databases:
    1. Enter the database host, database type, database name, username, and password for the database that you created when you set up the database.
    2. Click Test Connection to confirm that Cloudera Manager can communicate with the database using the information you have supplied. If the test succeeds in all cases, click Continue; otherwise check and correct the information you have provided for the database and then try the test again. (For some servers, if you are using the embedded database, you will see a message saying the database will be created at a later step in the installation process.) The Review Changes screen displays.
  5. Review the configuration changes to be applied. Confirm the settings entered for file system paths. The file paths required vary based on the services to be installed. Click Continue. The wizard starts the services.
  6. When all of the services are started, click Continue. You will see a success message indicating that your cluster has been successfully started.
  7. Click Finish to proceed to the Cloudera Manager Admin Console Home Page.

Change the Default Administrator Password

As soon as possible after running the wizard and beginning to use Cloudera Manager, change the default administrator password:
  1. Right-click the logged-in username at the far right of the top navigation bar and select Change Password.
  2. Enter the current password and a new password twice, and then click Update.

Test the Installation

You can test the installation following the instructions in Testing the Installation.