Installation
On this page you install the Stackable operator for Apache Hive and all required dependencies.
For the installation of the dependencies and operators you can use Helm or stackablectl
.
The stackablectl
command line tool is the recommended way to interact with operators and dependencies.
Follow the installation steps for your platform if you choose to work with stackablectl
.
Dependencies
First you need to install MinIO and PostgreSQL instances for the Hive metastore. PostgreSQL is required as a database for Hive’s metadata, and MinIO is used as a data store, which the Hive metastore also needs access to.
There are two ways to install the dependencies:
-
Using stackablectl
-
Using Helm
The dependency installations in this guide are only intended for testing and not suitable for production! |
stackablectl
stackablectl
was designed to install Stackable components, but its Stacks feature can also be used to install arbitrary Helm Charts.
You can install MinIO and PostgreSQL using the Stacks feature as follows, but a simpler method via Helm is shown below.
stackablectl \
--stack-file stackablectl-hive-postgres-minio-stack.yaml \
--release-file release.yaml \
stack install hive-minio-postgres
Create a file called minio-stack.yaml
:
---
releaseName: minio
name: minio
repo:
name: minio
url: https://charts.min.io/
version: 4.0.2
options:
rootUser: root
rootPassword: rootroot
mode: standalone
users:
- accessKey: hive
secretKey: hivehive
policy: readwrite
buckets:
- name: hive
policy: public
resources:
requests:
memory: 2Gi
service:
type: NodePort
nodePort: null
consoleService:
type: NodePort
nodePort: null
As well as postgres-stack.yaml
:
---
releaseName: postgresql
name: postgresql
repo:
name: bitnami
url: https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami/
version: 12.1.5
options:
volumePermissions:
enabled: false
securityContext:
runAsUser: auto
primary:
extendedConfiguration: |
password_encryption=md5
auth:
username: hive
password: hive
database: hive
And then reference both files in another file called stackablectl-hive-postgres-minio-stack.yaml
:
---
stacks:
hive-minio-postgres:
stackableRelease: hive-getting-started
description: Stack for Hive getting started guide
stackableOperators:
- commons
- listener
- secret
- hive
labels:
- minio
- postgresql
manifests:
- helmChart: minio-stack.yaml
- helmChart: postgres-stack.yaml
Also create a release.yaml
file:
---
releases:
hive-getting-started:
releaseDate: 2023-03-14
description: Demo / Test release for Hive getting started guide
products:
commons:
operatorVersion: 24.11.1-rc2
hive:
operatorVersion: 24.11.1-rc2
listener:
operatorVersion: 24.11.1-rc2
secret:
operatorVersion: 24.11.1-rc2
The release definition already references the required operators for this Getting Started guide.
Now call stackablectl
and reference those two files:
stackablectl \
--stack-file stackablectl-hive-postgres-minio-stack.yaml \
--release-file release.yaml \
stack install hive-minio-postgres
This installs MinIO and PostgreSQL as defined in the Stacks, as well as the operators. You can now skip the Stackable Operators step that follows next.
Consult the Quickstart to learn more about how to use stackablectl .
|
Helm
In order to install the MinIO and PostgreSQL dependencies via Helm, you have to deploy two charts.
Minio
helm install minio \
--version 4.0.2 \
--namespace default \
--set mode=standalone \
--set replicas=1 \
--set persistence.enabled=false \
--set buckets[0].name=hive,buckets[0].policy=none \
--set users[0].accessKey=hive,users[0].secretKey=hivehive,users[0].policy=readwrite \
--set resources.requests.memory=1Gi \
--set service.type=NodePort,service.nodePort=null \
--set consoleService.type=NodePort,consoleService.nodePort=null \
--repo https://charts.min.io/ minio
PostgresSQL
helm install postgresql \
--version 12.1.5 \
--namespace default \
--set auth.username=hive \
--set auth.password=hive \
--set auth.database=hive \
--set primary.extendedConfiguration="password_encryption=md5" \
--repo https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami postgresql
After the dependencies are deployed, you can start to install the operators.
Stackable Operators
There are 2 ways to run Stackable Operators:
-
Using stackablectl
-
Using Helm
stackablectl
Run the following command to install all operators necessary for Apache Hive:
stackablectl operator install \
commons=24.11.1-rc2 \
secret=24.11.1-rc2 \
listener=24.11.1-rc2 \
hive=24.11.1-rc2
The tool prints
Installed commons=24.11.1-rc2 operator
Installed secret=24.11.1-rc2 operator
Installed listener=24.11.1-rc2 operator
Installed hive=24.11.1-rc2 operator
Helm
Run the following commands Helm to install the operators via Helm
Add the Stackable Helm repository:
helm repo add stackable-stable https://repo.stackable.tech/repository/helm-stable/
Then install the Stackable operators:
helm install --wait commons-operator stackable-stable/commons-operator --version 24.11.1-rc2
helm install --wait secret-operator stackable-stable/secret-operator --version 24.11.1-rc2
helm install --wait listener-operator stackable-stable/listener-operator --version 24.11.1-rc2
helm install --wait hive-operator stackable-stable/hive-operator --version 24.11.1-rc2
Helm deploys the operators in a Kubernetes Deployment and apply the CRDs for the Apache Hive service (as well as the CRDs for the required operators).