Prepare the Environment
To deploy your HDP instance, you need to prepare your deployment environment:
Enable NTP on the Cluster
The clocks of all the nodes in your cluster must be able to synchronize with each other. If your system does not have access to the Internet, set up a master node as an NTP xserver. Use the following instructions to enable NTP for your cluster:
Configure NTP clients. Execute the following command on all nodes in your cluster:
For RHEL/CentOS/Oracle Linux 6:
yum install ntp
For RHEL/CentOS/Oracle Linux 7:
Configure the NTP clients:
yum install ntp
Enable the service:
systemctl enable ntpd
Start NTPD:
systemctl start ntpd
For SLES:
zypper install ntp
For Ubuntu and Debian:
HDP support for Debian 6 is deprecated with HDP 2.3.6. Future versions of HDP will no longer be supported on Debian 6.
apt-get install ntp
Enable the service. Execute the following command on all the nodes in your cluster.
For RHEL/CentOS/Oracle Linux:
chkconfig ntpd on
For SLES, Ubuntu, and Debian:
HDP support for Debian 6 is deprecated with HDP 2.3.6. Future versions of HDP will no longer be supported on Debian 6.
chkconfig ntp on
Start the NTP. Execute the following command on all the nodes in your cluster.
For RHEL/CentOS/Oracle Linux:
/etc/init.d/ntpd start
For SLES:
/etc/init.d/ntp start
For Ubuntu and Debian:
HDP support for Debian 6 is deprecated with HDP 2.3.6. Future versions of HDP will no longer be supported on Debian 6.
/etc/init.d/ntp start
If you want to use the existing NTP server in your environment, complete the following steps:
configure the firewall on the local NTP server to enable UDP input traffic on port 123 and replace 192.168.1.0/24 with the IP addresses in the cluster. For example on RHEL hosts you would use:
# iptables -A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -s 192.168.1.0/24 -m state --state NEW -p udp --dport 123 -j ACCEPT
Save and restart iptables. Execute the following command on all the nodes in your cluster:
# service iptables save
# service iptables restart
Finally, configure clients to use the local NTP server. Edit the
/etc/ntp.conf
file and add the following line:server $LOCAL_SERVER_IP OR HOSTNAME
Disable SELinux
The Security-Enhanced (SE) Linux feature should be disabled during the installation process.
Check the state of SELinux. On all the host machines, execute the following command:
getenforce
If the command returns "disabled" or "permissive" as the response, no further actions are required. If the result is enabled, proceed to Step 2.
Disable SELinux either temporarily for each session or permanently.
Option I: Disable SELinux temporarily by executing the following command:
setenforce 0
Option II: Disable SELinux permanently in the
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
file by changing the value of SELINUX field to permissive or disabled. Restart your system.
Disable IPTables
Certain ports must be open and available during installation. The easiest way to do this is to temporarily disable iptables. If the security protocols at your installation do not allow you to disable iptables, you can proceed with them on, as long as all of the relevant ports are open and available. See "Configuring Ports" in the HDP Reference Guide for more information.
On all RHEL/CentOS 6 host machines, execute the following commands to disable iptables:
chkconfig iptables off
service iptables stop
Restart iptables after your setup is complete.
On RHEL/CENTOS 7 host machines, execute the following commands to disable firewalld:
systemctl stop firewalld
systemctl mask firewalld
Restart firewalld after your setup is complete.
On Ubuntu and Debian host machines, execute the following command to disable iptables:
HDP support for Debian 6 is deprecated with HDP 2.3.6. Future versions of HDP will no longer be supported on Debian 6.
service ufw stop
Restart iptables after your setup is complete.
Important | |
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If you leave iptables enabled and do not set up the necessary ports, the cluster installation will fail. |