Here is an overview of the four main steps for installing Ambari and HDP using VirtualBox and Vagrant:
- Install VirtualBox and Vagrant. (Installation only needs to be done once unless you want to upgrade VirtualBox and/or Vagrant.)
- Start one or more Linux virtual machines. Each machine represents a node in a cluster.
- Download, install, and deploy the version of Ambari you wish to use.
- Using Ambari, deploy the version of HDP you wish to use.
Once VirtualBox and Vagrant have been installed, steps 2 through 4 can be done multiple times (to change versions, create a larger cluster, etc.).
Note: these steps have been tested on MacOS 10.9.5.
Install VirtualBox and Vagrant
VirtualBox allows you to run multiple operating systems (inside multiple virtual machines) at the same time. Your Mac is the "host" machine, and the virtual machines are called "guest" machines.
In this Quick Start you will use VirtualBox to run Linux nodes within VirtualBox on OS X: consider iterating/revising the image
Vagrant is a tool that makes it easier to work with virtual machines. It helps automate the work of setting up, running, and removing virtual machine environments. Using Vagrant, you can install and run a preconfigured cluster environment with Ambari and the HDP stack.
- Download and install VirtualBox from https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads. Note: as of 4/25/16 Vagrant doesn't work with the latest version of VirtualBox. We recommend installing an older (4.x) version of VirtualBox. This Quick Start has been tested on 4.3.34.
- Download and install Vagrant from https://www.vagrantup.com/downloads.html.
Clone the
ambari-vagrant
GitHub repository into a convenient folder on your Mac. From the command-line:git clone https://github.com/u39kun/ambari-vagrant.git
The repository contains scripts for setting up Ambari virtual machines on several Linux distributions.
Add virtual machine hostnames and addresses to the
/etc/hosts
file on your computer. The following command copies a set of host names and addresses fromambari-vagrant/append-to-etc-hosts.txt
to the end of the/etc/hosts
files:sudo -s 'cat ambari-vagrant/append-to-etc-hosts.txt >> /etc/hosts'
Use the
vagrant
command to create a private key to use with Ambari:vagrant
The
vagrant
command displays Vagrant command information, and then it creates a private key in the file~/.vagrant.d/insecure_private_key
.
Start Linux Virtual Machines
The ambari-vagrant
directory (cloned from GitHub) contains several subdirectories, each for a specific Linux distribution. Each subdirectory has scripts and configuration files for running Ambari and HDP on that version of Linux.
To start one or more virtual machines:
Change your current directory to
ambari-vagrant
:cd ambari-vagrant
If you run an
ls
command on theambari-vagrant
directory, you will see subdirectories for several different operating systems and operating system versions.cd
into the OS subdirectory for the OS you wish to use. CentOS is recommended, because it is quicker to launch than other operating systems.
The remainder of this Quick Start uses CentOS 6.4 (7.0). To install and use another version or distribution of Linux, specify the other directory name in place of centos6.4cd centos6.4 (7.0)
Important: All VM
vagrant
commands operate within your current directory. Be sure to run them from the local (Mac) subdirectory associated with the VM operating system that you have chosen to use. If you attempt to run avagrant
command from another directory, it will not find the VM.Copy the private key into the directory associated with the chosen operating system. In this example, from within the
centos6.4
directory, issue the following command:cp ~/.vagrant.d/insecure_private_key .
(Optional) If you have at least 16 GB of memory on your Mac, consider increasing the amount of memory allocated to the VMs. Edit the following line in
Vagrantfile
, increasing 3072 to 4096 or more:vb.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--memory", 3072] # RAM allocated to each VM
- Every virtual machine will have a directory called
/vagrant
inside the VM. This corresponds to theambari-vagrant/<os>
directory on your local computer, making it easy to transfer files back and forth between your host Mac and the virtual machine. If you have any files to access from within the VM, you can place them in this shared directory. Start one or more VMs, using the
./up.sh
command. Each VM will run one HDP node.
Three nodes can run well if you have 16GB of RAM on your Mac../up.sh <# of VMs to launch>
Additional notes:
- With the defaultVagrantfile
(in each OS subdirectory) you can specify up to 10 VMs. (If your computer can handle it; you can even add more.)
- The fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) for each VM will have the format<os-code>[01-10].ambari.apache.org
, where<os-code>
isc59
(CentOS 5.9),c64
(CentOS 6.4), etc. For example,c5901.ambari.apache.org
will be the FQDN for node 01 running CentOS 5.9.
- The IP address for each VM will have the format192.168.<os-subnet>.1[01-10]
, where<os-subnet>
is59
for CentOS 5.9,64
for CentOS 6.4, etc. For example,192.168.59.101
will be the IP address for CentOS 5.9 nodec5901
.
For example, the following command starts 3 VMs:
./up.sh 3
Note:up.sh 3
is equivalent tovagrant up c640{1..3}
. For CentOS 6.4, the associated hostnames will bec6401
,c6402
, andc6403
.Check the status of your VM(s). The following example shows the results of
./upsh 3
for three VMs running with CentOS 6.4:hw100:centos6.4 lkg$ vagrant status Current machine states: c6401 running (virtualbox) c6402 running (virtualbox) c6403 running (virtualbox) c6404 not created (virtualbox) c6405 not created (virtualbox) c6406 not created (virtualbox) c6407 not created (virtualbox) c6408 not created (virtualbox) c6409 not created (virtualbox) c6410 not created (virtualbox)
(You can use the
vagrant init
command to initialize your current directory as a Vagrant environment, but this step should already be handled by the preceding steps.)Next, log into one of your VMs. For example:
vagrant ssh c6401 c7001 LMBP:centos7.0 lkg$ vagrant ssh c7001 Last login: Tue Jan 12 11:20:28 2016 [vagrant@c7001 ~]$
From this point onward, this terminal window will operate within the VM until you exit the VM. All commands will go to the VM, not your Mac.
Tip: It can be very helpful to open a second terminal window for your Mac. This is useful when accessing the Ambari Web UI. Terminal windows typically list the computer name or VM hostname on each command-line prompt and at the top of the window.When you first access the VM you will be logged in as user
vagrant
. Switch to theroot
user:sudo su -
- When you are finished using the VM, use the exit command to return to your host machine (Mac). If you plan to use the VMs again later you can suspend each VM for later use (
vagrant suspend <VM>)
, or snapshot their current state, described later in this post.
Install Ambari
Prerequisites: Before installing Ambari, the following software must be installed on your VM:
yum
rpm
scp
curl
wget
pdsh
- ntpd?
(how to check)
From the terminal window on your VM (where the main ambari service should run?), download the Ambari repository. The following commands download Ambari version 2.2.1.0 and install
ambari-server
:OS Commands CentOS 6 wget -O /etc/yum.repos.d/ambari.repo http://public-repo-1.hortonworks.com/ambari/centos6/2.x/updates/2.2.1.0/ambari.repo yum install ambari-server -y
CentOS 7 wget -O /etc/yum.repos.d/ambari.repo http://public-repo-1.hortonworks.com/ambari/centos7/2.x/updates/2.2.1.0/ambari.repo
yum install ambari-server -yUbuntu 12 wget -O /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ambari.list http://public-repo-1.hortonworks.com/ambari/ubuntu12/2.x/updates/2.2.1.0/ambari.list
apt-key adv --recv-keys --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com B9733A7A07513CAD apt-get update apt-get install ambari-server -yUbuntu 14 wget -O /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ambari.list http://public-repo-1.hortonworks.com/ambari/ubuntu14/2.x/updates/2.2.1.0/ambari.list
apt-key adv --recv-keys --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com B9733A7A07513CAD
apt-get update
apt-get install ambari-server -yNote: to run a different version of Ambari, specify the repo URL for the version.
To install Ambari with default settings, set up and start
ambari-server
:ambari-server setup -s ambari-server start
For more information about installation options, see Ambari User Guides.
(Optional) For frontend developers only: see "Frontend Development" (later on this page) for extra setup instructions.
Once Ambari Server is started, access the Ambari Web UI at
http://<hostname>.ambari.apache.org:8080
. For example:http://c6401.ambari.apache.org:8080
The URL depends on the OS and the node where you installed Ambari.
Note: The Ambari Server can take some time to launch and be ready to accept connections. Keep trying the URL until you see the login page.Login using default username
admin
, passwordadmin
.Choose "Launch Install Wizard."
Name your cluster.
On the Install Options page, list the FQDNs of the VMs. For example:
c6401.ambari.apache.org c6402.ambari.apache.org c6403.ambari.apache.org
Alternatively, you can use a range expression:
c64[01-03].ambari.apache.org
Upload the
insecure_private_key
file that you created earlier.Specify non-root SSH user
vagrant
.Follow the onscreen instructions to install your cluster.
Install the HDP Stack
Next, install HDP on your cluster.
Choose which HDP version, Choose services, Assign master and slave processes, Customize services (here I assigned admin/admin to Hive and Oozie)
Timeline for installing HDP, and mac hardware
Troubleshooting
Other tips:
- yum failed? install yum on your VMs.
- Ambari message about THPs? fix transparent huge page setting in /etc/rc.loca (CentOS7)
- ntpd not installed?
Basic Vagrant Commands
Command | Description |
---|---|
vagrant up <vm-name> | Starts a specific VM. ( Example: Note: if you do not specify the |
vagrant status [<vm-name>] | Shows which VMs are running, suspended, etc. |
vagrant destroy -f [<vm-name>] | Destroys all VMs launched from the current directory, and deletes them from disk. Optional: Specify a specific VM to destroy. |
vagrant suspend [<vm-name>] | Suspends (snapshot) all VMs launched from the current directory so that you can resume them later Optional: Specify a specific VM to suspend. |
vagrant resume [<vm-name>] | Resumes all suspended VMs launched from the current directory Optional: Specify a specific VM to resume. |
vagrant ssh <vm-name> | Starts a SSH session to the host. Example: |
vagrant --help | List information about Vagrant commands. |
Taking Snapshots
A Vagrant snapshot saves the current state of a VM, so that you can re-run the VM from the same point at a future time.
Vagrant makes it easy to take snapshots of the entire cluster.
First, install the snapshot plugin:
vagrant plugin install vagrant-vbox-snapshot --plugin-version=0.0.2
This enables the “vagrant snapshot” command. Note that the above installs vesion 0.0.2. if you install the latest plugin version 0.0.3 does not allow taking snapshots of the whole cluster at the same time (you have to specify a VM name).
Run vagrant snapshot to see the syntax.
Note that the plugin tries to take a snapshot of all VMs configured in Vagrantfile. If you are always using 3 VMs, for example, you can comment out c64[04-10] in Vagrantfile so that the snapshot commands only operate on c64[01-03].
Note: Upon resuming a snapshot, you may find that time-sensitive services may be down (e.g, HBase RegionServer is down, etc.)
Tip: After starting the VMs but before you do anything on the VMs, run "vagrant snapshot take init". This way, you can go back to the initial state of the VMs by running "vagrant snapshot go init"; this only takes seconds (much faster than starting the VMs up from scratch by using up.sh or "vagrant up"). Another advantage of this is that you can always go back to the initial state without destroying other named snapshots that you created.
Misc
To test OS’s other than what’s currently in the ambari-vagrant repo, please see http://www.vagrantbox.es/ for the readily available OS images you can test. Note that Ambari currently works on RHEL 5/6, CentOS 5/6, Oracle Linux 5/6, SUSE 11, and SLES 11. Ubuntu support is work in progress.
Pre-Configured Development Environment
Simply edit Vagrantfile to launch a VM with all the tools necessary to build Ambari from source.
cd ambari-vagrant/centos6.4 vi Vagrantfile <- uncomment the line with "dev-bootstrap.sh" vagrant up c6401
To build from source, follow the instructions in Ambari Development.
Frontend Development
You can use this set up to develop and test out Ambari Web frontend code against a real Ambari Server on a multi-node environment.
On the host machine:
cd ambari-vagrant/centos6.4 git clone https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/ambari.git ambari cd ambari/ambari-web npm install brunch w
On c6401 (where Ambari Server is installed):
cd /usr/lib/ambari-server mv web web-orig ln -s /vagrant/ambari/ambari-web/public web ambari-server restart
With this setup, whenever you change the content of ambari-web files (under ambari-vagrant/ambari/) on the host machine, brunch will pick up changes in the background and update ambari-vagrant/ambari/ambari-web/public. Because of the symbolic link, the changes are automatically picked up by Ambari Server. All you have to do is hit refresh on the browser to see the frontend code changes reflected.
Not seeing code changes as expected? If you have run the maven command to build Ambari previously, you will see files called app.js.gz and vendor.js.gz under the public folder. You need to delete these files for the frontend code changes to be effective, as the app.js.gz and vendor.js.gz files take precedence over app.js and vendor.js, respectively.