Member since
07-29-2019
640
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113
Kudos Received
48
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My Accepted Solutions
Title | Views | Posted |
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6849 | 12-01-2022 05:40 PM | |
1906 | 11-24-2022 08:44 AM | |
2716 | 11-12-2022 12:38 PM | |
896 | 10-10-2022 06:58 AM | |
1328 | 09-11-2022 05:43 PM |
10-10-2022
06:58 AM
Hi @Mehdikhak ,
A very similar question to yours above was previously asked and answered in this thread:
Free Version of CDH → 6.3.2
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10-04-2022
04:38 PM
Hi @Sunilkumarks
The single best way to get a timely answer to your questions would be to reach out to your Cloudera Account Team which is handling the license upgrade from HDP to CDP and ask them.
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09-21-2022
09:35 AM
Hi @cxk
While the link in the document that @Chaos offered apparently does work, unless you are going to try to duplicate the issue they are experiencing in order to offer assistance, I'd like to discourage you from installing the Quickstart VM.
The last publicly available version of the Cloudera Quickstart VM — the same version referred to in that PDF document within the Google drive they linked to — was based on CDH 5.13, which was old, outdated and in fact that version of CDH went out of support in the Fall of 2020. The Cloudera Quickstart VM hasn't been readily available for download from Cloudera's website for at least a couple of years now just that reason.
Cloudera's current distribution, since the Fall of 2020, is Cloudera Data Platform (or CDP); a Trial Version of CDP Private Cloud Base Edition of Cloudera Data Platform can easily be downloaded from the "downloads" section of Cloudera's website.
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09-11-2022
05:43 PM
1 Kudo
Hi @Poul
For gaining a better understanding of the issues surrounding this architectural question, I would begin by watching the recording of the "Demo Jam" from January before last during which Pierre Villard, Sr. Product Manager for NiFi at Cloudera, touched on Cloudera's recommendations in this area.
You can also read his much earlier blog post: Automate workflow deployment in Apache NiFi with the NiFi Registry …to gain a bit more background.
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09-08-2022
12:43 PM
Hi @MaxineLLL ,
It would help members of the community in offering possible answers to your questions if you included a link here to the specific instructions you are following "to deploy HDP 2.6.5 via docker". Are you trying to install the HDP Sandbox or the full HDP 2.6.5 distribution?
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09-05-2022
04:52 PM
1 Kudo
Hi @ravi_tadepally
Thanks for your interest in NiFi. Your question seems to indicate you misunderstand some of the finer details around how open source projects such as Apache NiFi operate, or the difference between Apache's software projects and the products and services that Cloudera offers, so I'm going to attempt to shed some light on that.
As a a 501(c)3 non-profit public charity organization incorporated in the USA, The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) exists to provide a vendor-neutral foundation for open, collaborative software development projects. Many companies that have employees who happen to contribute to Apache projects, such as NiFi, take the software developed from the project or projects and package them up to sell them as part of a larger software offering, provide support to enterprises, offer professional services or some combination of all three. Cloudera is one such company.
There are many professionals who are actively involved with the development and maintenance of Apache NiFi who also happen to work for Cloudera and develop software for it. There are also many Cloudera employees who provide professional services, including providing support and/or troubleshooting for new deployments of Cloudera's products in production to other companies. That does not mean, however, that Cloudera provides either professional services or support for any given version of NiFi that you can download from the Apache site. Instead, Apache NiFi underpins software products that you can purchase a subscription for from Cloudera.
Those products come in various "form factors" which vary in appropriateness depending on where you want to deploy them. For use with public cloud providers, NiFi is now available as part of Cloudera DataFlow for the Public Cloud (CDF-PC). For use in on premises clusters on top of the Private Cloud Base Edition of Cloudera Data Platform, NiFi powers Cloudera Flow Management (CFM).
As I alluded to above, there'a always some differences between the versions released by Cloudera in products such as CFM and the release of "upstream" component projects, such as NiFi, from Apache. This is analogous to how there are differences between what mainline kernel is "current" in the open source Linux world and what RedHat, for example, releases as part of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. For this reason, I think it's highly unlikely that you are going to be able to secure a subscription for a "vanilla" version of NiFi or obtain professional services around an Apache release, from Cloudera.
You can find out more about the current packages that Cloudera is offering and the pricing for them by contacting the Cloudera Sales Team to find out more about subscription options.
You can read about the professional services offerings from Cloudera by visiting the Cloudera Professional Services page.
You might get results closer to what you're after by trying to find support or professional services from a third party, such as one of Cloudera's partners.
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09-05-2022
06:50 AM
Hi @ahlicoding
It would help members of the community in offering possible answers to your questions if you were a little more specific about what you or your client mean by "install with docker". That can mean more than one thing.
I'm doing a bit of guessing here, but one thing that could mean is deploying into a set of docker containers, where each container takes the place of what would ordinarily be a "bare metal" node in the target cluster. Or you could be referring to the common practice of collecting all the software dependencies necessary for completing the installation (e.g., a specific version of Python and version-appropriate libraries) into a Docker Container so that the process is faster and more convenient.
The redacted screen shot you've included above indicates that you're licensed for Ambari 2.7.4 and HDP 3.x (when most community members refer to Cloudera Enterprise, they usually mean the legacy releases of CDH and CDH is not interchangeable with HDP.).
I should mention that the current Enterprise Data Platform offered by Cloudera is Cloudera Data Platform (CDP), which in it's on-premises "form factor" is now called CDP Private Cloud. CDP superseded CDH as of 2021, which is important if your client is expecting support going forward.
You can read about how to access the Ambari 2.7.4.x binaries from Cloudera's private repositories as well as obtaining authentication credentials for customers and partners (implicitly verifying your license key) here: Accessing Ambari Repositories.
As far as your last question:
And which is the best for me, install on my local machine or install on Cloud VPS?
Assuming that you are talking about where to install Docker and not where to install Ambari, I think the answer depends on what OS your local machine is running and what the underlying hardware is vs what is available on your virtual private servers in the cloud.
One example of a situation where I would avoid installing Docker on my local machine and use the cloud instead is if I only had a Mac with an Apple silicon CPU. Docker has made great strides in supporting ARM architectures recently, but there's still a lot of hoops to jump through to use Docker on Apple silicon machines and some very common operations flat out still don't work. In the cloud you can spin up Linux-based instances running on commodity hardware and have the flexibility to use them as both a host for Docker and for the target nodes in the cluster you are building/installing on.
We welcome your questions, and this thread will remain visible here in the hope that some other member of the Cloudera Community will reply with more specific assistance.
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08-02-2022
02:01 AM
HI @Christ
If you'd like more details about data model design and implementing them using Cloudera Data Warehouse over and above the documentation @shehbazk provided links to, I'd recommend you watch the recording of a webinar Cloudera held on the topic quite some time ago, Data Modeling for Hadoop and the subsequent blog post Common Questions on Data Modeling for Big Data.
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07-29-2022
12:34 AM
Your best first step would be to contact the Cloudera Sales Team to find out more about subscription options.
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07-23-2022
05:30 PM
1 Kudo
@Ploeplse For some reason that is a mystery to me, they were being miscategorized as spam. If I were to guess, it's the partial page shots, but again I don't know. I would try cutting and pasting the text of the error messages into your posts as opposed to the page shots as images.
One of the other moderators might weigh in here and tell me why I am wrong. In any case, I took action on it; your reply should now be visible in the thread.
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