Configuring Clusters
Accessing the Cloudera Manager Admin Console
Modifying Configuration Properties Using Cloudera Manager
Changing the Configuration of a Service or Role Instance
Searching for Properties
Validation of Configuration Properties
Overriding Configuration Properties
Viewing and Editing Overridden Configuration Properties
Resetting Configuration Properties to the Default Value
Viewing and Editing Host Overrides
Restarting Services and Instances after Configuration Changes
Suppressing Configuration and Parameter Validation Warnings
Suppressing a Configuration Validation in Cloudera Manager
Managing Suppressed Validations
Suppressing Configuration Validations Before They Trigger Warnings
Viewing a List of All Suppressed Validations
Cluster-Wide Configuration
Custom Configuration
Setting an Advanced Configuration Snippet for a Cloudera Runtime Service
Setting an Advanced Configuration Snippet for a Cluster
Stale Configurations
Client Configuration Files
How Client Configurations are Deployed
Downloading Client Configuration Files
Manually Redeploying Client Configuration Files
Viewing and Reverting Configuration Changes
Changes for a service, role, or host
Changes for a cluster
Autoconfiguration
Using the Cloudera Manager API
Using the Cloudera Manager API to backup and restore clusters
Backing up the Cloudera Manager configuration
Restoring the Cloudera Manager configuration
Using the Cloudera Manager API to Manage and Configure Clusters
Using the Cloudera Manager API for Cluster Automation
Using the Cloudera Manager API to Obtain Configuration Files
Using the Cloudera Manager API to Set Advanced Configuration Snippets (Safety Valves)
Using Tags in Cloudera Manager
Initiating HDFS failover using the Cloudera Manager API
Creating a Runtime Cluster Using a Cloudera Manager Template
Exporting the cluster configuration
Preparing a New Cluster
Creating the Template
Importing the Template to a New Cluster
Sample Python Code
Disabling Redaction of sensitive information when using the Cloudera Manager API