Member since
10-14-2014
73
Posts
13
Kudos Received
10
Solutions
My Accepted Solutions
Title | Views | Posted |
---|---|---|
2726 | 01-03-2018 08:11 AM | |
9178 | 07-12-2017 06:47 AM | |
3178 | 02-09-2017 08:09 AM | |
5537 | 01-27-2017 07:01 AM | |
2553 | 09-15-2016 04:37 PM |
07-18-2017
01:09 PM
It looks as though the user authentication is still the problem. Can you try provisioning an instance of the AMI you're trying to use manually and attempting to connect using the credentials you're providing to Director? i.e. Launch an instance using the EC2 console and just attempting to SSH into it.
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07-12-2017
08:31 AM
Yes, so long as you're able to login with it, you can specify it within Director. We'll allow you to specify any arbitrary username to make sure we cover as many edge cases as possible. 🙂 Let me know if this works for you!
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07-12-2017
06:47 AM
1 Kudo
It looks as though you're specifying the incorrect credentials for the instance that you're using. Often the intended initial username can differ with the AMI, e.g. many CentOS images use "centos" as the username, RHEL often use "ec2-user", etc. Are you using EC2 for this deployment? If so, what AMI are you using and on what region?
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02-09-2017
10:06 AM
1 Kudo
Just a heads up -- can confirm that this does indeed do the trick!
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02-09-2017
08:09 AM
2 Kudos
Funny enough, I actually just ran into this myself. You should be able to do this by setting this hue_service_safety_valve service level config for Hue. If you're using a config file: cluster { .... configs { .... HUE: { hue_service_safety_valve: """ [desktop] allowed_hosts=* """ } } .... } Note that I haven't totally tested this myself yet, but I'll actually go ahead and do this right after this reply and confirm.
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01-27-2017
07:01 AM
It's good to hear that you're looking into this. I don't think we have a lot of API users at the moment, so your feedback will be very useful to us. So you'll really need PUT for the cluster template in order to make an update rather than the cluster object. The cluster object is a bit more ephemeral in nature and reflects the current active state of the cluster. Are you using one of the SDKs (https://github.com/cloudera/director-sdk, only available in Java/Python)? It sounds like you're doing something a little more manual, but I'd encourage you to use those if possible. Otherwise, the API console is probably your best bet for documentation at the moment. Assuming Director is running on your local machine, you'd navigate to: http://localhost:7189/api-console Let me know if that points you in the right direction.
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01-24-2017
06:45 AM
Drake, the BYON plugin frankly hasn't been in development for some time, and is totally unsupported for any sort of production use. Right now it exists solely for demonstration/illustrative purposes. If it does still work, we can't make any guarantees on how well it will work or if it will continue to work in the future.
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11-22-2016
10:14 AM
All, I'm very sorry about this, but it looks like this thread got lost in the shuffle when we were preparing to release our most recent version of Cloudera Director. I haven't experienced this error myself, but perusing some of our internal scripts, you may be able to get around this by setting JAVA_HOME, potentially with a Director bootstrap script. Here's an untested example: echo "export JAVA_HOME=/your/java/location" >> /etc/profile.d/java_home_setup That being said, this question may be better suited for the Cloudera Manager forum. However, why set up Zookeeper using CM directly when you can set it up using Director itself?
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09-15-2016
04:37 PM
1 Kudo
There is, actually! In the cloudera-manager section, you can set javaInstallationStrategy to NONE: ...
cloudera-manager {
javaInstallationStrategy: NONE
...
} Keep in mind that you'll need to install Java yourself, either by including it with your AMI of choice or using a bootstrap script. If you use a bootstrap script, you may be interested in this instance bootstrap script sample, which will install Java 8 on your Cloudera Manager/cluster.
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09-15-2016
07:04 AM
Give that Cloudera Manager was provisioned using Director, I don't think we want to go down the route of supplying a CM URL. What @jadair was saying is that instead of deploymentName: My_Test" Deployment"
environmentName: myCM" Environment" try: deploymentName: "My_Test Deployment"
environmentName: "myCM Environment" Also, the question about verifying the names of the deployment/environment are still relevant here. The name of the deployment and environment aren't necessarily suffixed with Deployment and Environment -- they can be named arbitrarily. By default, however, the Director client suffixes deployment and environment names with those strings. Finally, you may have to specify an image for this CM, even though it won't get used. This is due to a limitation on how we do our validation. For example: deploymentName: "My_Test Deployment"
environmentName: "myCM Environment"
...
instances {
cm-image {
type: m3.xlarge
image: ami-6283a827
}
}
....
cloudera-manager {
instance: ${instances.cm-image} {
tags {
application: "Cloudera Manager 5"
}
}
....
username: "my_username"
password: "my_password"
} Let me know if any of this helps.
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