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Hadoop 2.x Administration Cookbook

You're reading from   Hadoop 2.x Administration Cookbook Administer and maintain large Apache Hadoop clusters

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787126732
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Aman Singh Aman Singh
Author Profile Icon Aman Singh
Aman Singh
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hadoop Architecture and Deployment FREE CHAPTER 2. Maintaining Hadoop Cluster HDFS 3. Maintaining Hadoop Cluster – YARN and MapReduce 4. High Availability 5. Schedulers 6. Backup and Recovery 7. Data Ingestion and Workflow 8. Performance Tuning 9. HBase Administration 10. Cluster Planning 11. Troubleshooting, Diagnostics, and Best Practices 12. Security Index

Introduction

As Hadoop is a distributed system with many components, and has a reputation of getting quite complex, it is important to understand the basic Architecture before we start with the deployments.

In this chapter, we will take a look at the Architecture and the recipes to deploy a Hadoop cluster in various modes. This chapter will also cover recipes on commissioning and decommissioning nodes in a cluster.

The recipes in this chapter will primarily focus on deploying a cluster based on an Apache Hadoop distribution, as it is the best way to learn and explore Hadoop.

Note

While the recipes in this chapter will give you an overview of a typical configuration, we encourage you to adapt this design according to your needs. The deployment directory structure varies according to IT policies within an organization. All our deployments will be based on the Linux operating system, as it is the most commonly used platform for Hadoop in production. You can use any flavor of Linux; the recipes are very generic in nature and should work on all Linux flavors, with the appropriate changes in path and installation methods, such as yum or apt-get.

Overview of Hadoop Architecture

Hadoop is a framework and not a tool. It is a combination of various components, such as a filesystem, processing engine, data ingestion tools, databases, workflow execution tools, and so on. Hadoop is based on client-server Architecture with a master node for each storage layer and processing layer.

Namenode is the master for Hadoop distributed file system (HDFS) storage and ResourceManager is the master for YARN (Yet Another Resource Negotiator). The Namenode stores the file metadata and the actual blocks/data reside on the slave nodes called Datanodes. All the jobs are submitted to the ResourceManager and it then assigns tasks to its slaves, called NodeManagers. In a highly available cluster, we can have more than one Namenode and ResourceManager.

Both masters are each a single point of failure, which makes them very critical components of the cluster and so care must be taken to make them highly available.

Although there are many concepts to learn, such as application masters, containers, schedulers, and so on, as this is a recipe book, we will keep the theory to a minimum.

You have been reading a chapter from
Hadoop 2.x Administration Cookbook
Published in: May 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781787126732
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