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| Title | Views | Posted |
|---|---|---|
| 11216 | 12-01-2022 05:40 PM | |
| 2769 | 11-24-2022 08:44 AM | |
| 4111 | 11-12-2022 12:38 PM | |
| 1463 | 10-10-2022 06:58 AM | |
| 2105 | 09-11-2022 05:43 PM |
04-04-2021
09:04 PM
1 Kudo
Hi @TonyDi , I think I can help clarify things at least a little bit. Cloudera Express was discontinued over a year ago now, please see the announcement here: Cloudera Enterprise 6.3.3 Released …scroll down to the subsection Important Note About Cloudera Express. In that announcement, (see the subheading Important Note About Installation), Cloudera wrote: Beginning with Cloudera Manager 6.3.3 and CDH 6.3.3, downloading the software will require a valid Cloudera Enterprise license file and/or a username and password obtained from Cloudera. All Cloudera Manager package, CDH parcel and CDH package repositories now require authentication with valid credentials to access any version labeled 6.3.3 or higher. Some folks interpreted this last sentence to mean that versions of CDH prior to 6.3.3 would be free to download with no subscription agreement going forward. This turned out to not be the case, as just this last February, Cloudera relocated (or changed, if you prefer) the download location and only made CDH and CDH-related assets, including versions prior to 6.3.3, only available from a private repository. Please see the announcement here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF. Now, to download any version of CDH or CDH-related assets you need a valid subscription. This announcement effectively superseded the February 2020 announcement, and perhaps the fact that both announcements are available on the web with no annotation indicating that the latter is more recent and overrides the former is confusing, but I don't read them as contradictory. I can't speak to whether someone having a mirror of the Cloudera archive from when it was public is in violation of the license or not, so I'll leave that aspect of your question to other members of the community to answer. I have not seen any official document that addresses that specific question.
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04-03-2021
09:18 AM
Hi @Phantom Yes, earlier in 2021, Cloudera moved binary releases of CDH to a private repository so now to download any CDH binary releases (or to upgrade using Cloudera’s repositories as a source for Cloudera Manager to access the upgrade files) you need a valid subscription. Please see the announcement here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF
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03-30-2021
08:08 AM
Hi @vishal_ Cloudera Express is no longer available, please see the announcement here: Cloudera Enterprise 6.3.3 Released …and scroll down to the section titled Important Note About Cloudera Express. With regard to your other questions, "how do I get the enterprise edition with the credentials. And what will be the cost for it", you can see answers to those two questions in this recent thread: Hadoop vendors. What @Daming Xue wrote above will be your best option if you're looking for a trial of an up-to-date Hadoop distribution.
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03-26-2021
08:06 AM
1 Kudo
Hi @emeric You are receiving these messages because earlier this year, Cloudera modified its policies and the binaries you are seeking to download are now only available in private repositories. Please see the announcement here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF There is no simple, single dollar amount for the cost of a subscription because the price can differ depending upon the environment you're deploying into and what features you want to purchase. You can find out the cost of a Cloudera subscription (which would be required for downloading HDP as well) by contacting sales, via this page: Contact us This is where you would start to obtain a license in order to generate a username and password which would allow you to download either older versions of CDH or the latest version. The credentials to access this private repository are not generally the same ones to access Cloudera's website or the Cloudera community. In order to gain access to this private repository, people with a valid Cloudera subscription can generate the necessary repository credentials from a CDH license key. The background and detailed procedure to obtain the necessary credentials can be found on this page: CDH 6 Download Information …scroll down to the section headed Authentication to the Cloudera Archive The difference between the Sandbox and Hortonworks Data Platform is that the former is a more self-contained, pre-configured, learning environment based on Hortonworks Data Platform (HDP) that one can run on a single machine, if desired. Hortonworks Data Platform (HDP) is a full distribution of Hadoop and various Hadoop ecosystem projects that's intended for deployment on a cluster of machines. Both HDP and CDH have been superseded, in terms of being up-to-date on the included software components, by Cloudera Data Platform (CDP). You can download a trial of CDP Private Cloud base here:Trial Version CDP Private Cloud
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03-18-2021
09:05 PM
Hi @balo Cloudera recently changed the download policy and now to download Ambari (and/or HDP) you need a valid subscription. Please see the announcement here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF Toward the middle of that announcement, you will see a paragraph that begins "The links below provide all the details required to update your environment" which explains the credentials and how to properly obtain them if you don't have them already.
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03-11-2021
08:27 AM
Hello @vkrish Yes, Cloudera recently changed the download policy and now to download Cloudera Manager and CDH 6 from Cloudera's repositories you need a valid subscription. Please see the announcement here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF As far as a product evaluation for PoC, etc. you are welcome to download the current product, CDP Private Cloud Base for those purposes.
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03-11-2021
07:13 AM
Hi @gracenote Yes, Cloudera recently changed the download policy and HDP and Ambari binaries and associated files are now only available from a private repository. Now to download Ambari and HDP from Cloudera's repositories you need a valid subscription. Please see the announcement here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF If you are not yet a customer and interested in obtaining a subscription to any Cloudera Product, the first step would be to contact the Cloudera sales team.
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03-08-2021
08:36 AM
Hello @vmettu You can obtain the subscription pricing details by contacting Cloudera sales using the form provided here: https://www.cloudera.com/contact-sales.html and a sales person will get in touch with you.
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03-07-2021
07:55 AM
@nadinebh I recommend you keep reading the available documentation. The Hortonworks Sandbox is somewhat dated by now, but can still be a useful pre-configured version of Hortonworks Data Platform (HDP) for exploration and learning that you can run in the cloud or on your personal machine. Docker is one popular way to support running the Sandbox. There's an extensive set of tutorials on running the HDP Sandbox starting here: Learning the Ropes of the HDP Sandbox The HDP Sandbox comes with Ambari and a fairly complete HDP "stack", including Hive and Spark. You can confirm which versions by reading the HDP release notes. For example, here are the Apache versions of all the HDP 3.0.1 components (the version of HDP will vary with the various releases of the HDP Sandbox): Hortonworks Data Platform - Component Versions As far as downloading the complete HDP Distribution and installing it on one PC running centos7 using Ambari, if you are a beginner, that will be quite challenging for a number of reasons. Before you go too far down that road be sure to read and understand the recent announcement regarding the availability of Ambari and HDP from Cloudera's public repositories here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF
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03-04-2021
09:39 AM
1 Kudo
Hi @nileshp Yes, Apache Ambari "is a completely open source management platform for provisioning, managing, monitoring and securing Apache Hadoop clusters", licensed under the open source Apache License. My understanding is that any source code contributions that Cloudera has made to Ambari are always contributed back to Apache and can therefore be obtained from Apache's source code repository if they can't be retrieved from Cloudera's. Some members of the Cloudera Community have reported success building or upgrading Ambari themselves from source. When you write that you "used to be able to download freely from public repo but not now", that is because in the early months of 2021 Cloudera modified its download policies and the binaries are now only available in a private repository. Please see the announcement here: Transition to private repositories for CDH, HDP and HDF However this change in how Cloudera makes binaries available doesn't change the fact that Ambari is an open source project licensed under the the open source Apache License. According to the Frequently Asked Questions list, Is source code behind the paywall? No. Currently, only the binaries are secured behind the paywall.
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