Configuring Sqoop 2
Configuring which Hadoop Version to Use
The Sqoop 2 client does not interact directly with Hadoop MapReduce, and so it does not require any MapReduce configuration.
- To use YARN:
alternatives --set sqoop2-tomcat-conf /etc/sqoop2/tomcat-conf.dist
- To use MRv1:
alternatives --set sqoop2-tomcat-conf /etc/sqoop2/tomcat-conf.mr1
Configuring Sqoop 2 to Use PostgreSQL instead of Apache Derby
Deciding which Database to Use
- Derby runs in embedded mode and it is not possible to monitor its health.
- It is not clear how to implement a live backup strategy for the embedded Derby database, though it may be possible.
- Under load, Cloudera has observed locks and rollbacks with the embedded Derby database that do not happen with server-based databases.
Use the procedure that follows to configure Sqoop 2 to use PostgreSQL instead of Apache Derby.
Create the Sqoop User and Sqoop Database
For example, using the PostgreSQL psql command-line tool:
$ psql -U postgres Password for user postgres: ***** postgres=# CREATE ROLE sqoop LOGIN ENCRYPTED PASSWORD 'sqoop' NOSUPERUSER INHERIT CREATEDB NOCREATEROLE; CREATE ROLE postgres=# CREATE DATABASE "sqoop" WITH OWNER = sqoop ENCODING = 'UTF8' TABLESPACE = pg_default LC_COLLATE = 'en_US.UTF8' LC_CTYPE = 'en_US.UTF8' CONNECTION LIMIT = -1; CREATE DATABASE postgres=# \q
Configure Sqoop 2 to use PostgreSQL
Edit the sqoop.properties file (normally /etc/sqoop2/conf) as follows:
org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.handler=org.apache.sqoop.repository.postgresql.PostgresqlRepositoryHandler org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.transaction.isolation=isolation level org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.maximum.connections=max connections org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.url=jdbc URL org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.driver=org.postgresql.Driver org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.user=username org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.password=password org.apache.sqoop.repository.jdbc.properties.property=value
Installing the JDBC Drivers
Installing the MySQL JDBC Driver
Download the MySQL JDBC driver here. You must sign up for an account if you do not already have one, then log in before you can download the driver. Copy it to the /var/lib/sqoop2/ directory. For example:
$ sudo cp mysql-connector-java-version/mysql-connector-java-version-bin.jar /var/lib/sqoop2/At the time of publication, version was 5.1.31, but the version might change by the time you read this.
Installing the Oracle JDBC Driver
You can download the JDBC Driver from the Oracle website, for example here. You must accept the license agreement before you can download the driver. Download the ojdbc6.jar file and copy it to /var/lib/sqoop2/ directory:
$ sudo cp ojdbc6.jar /var/lib/sqoop2/
Installing the Microsoft SQL Server JDBC Driver
Download the Microsoft SQL Server JDBC driver here and copy it to the /var/lib/sqoop2/ directory. For example:
$ curl -L 'http://download.microsoft.com/download/0/2/A/02AAE597-3865-456C-AE7F-613F99F850A8/sqljdbc_4.0.2206.100_enu.tar.gz' | tar xz $ sudo cp sqljdbc_4.0/enu/sqljdbc4.jar /var/lib/sqoop2/
Installing the PostgreSQL JDBC Driver
Download the PostgreSQL JDBC driver here and copy it to the /var/lib/sqoop2/ directory. For example:
$ curl -L 'http://jdbc.postgresql.org/download/postgresql-9.2-1002.jdbc4.jar' -o postgresql-9.2-1002.jdbc4.jar $ sudo cp postgresql-9.2-1002.jdbc4.jar /var/lib/sqoop2/