--- title: Simple Single Ozone --- {{< requirements >}} * Working docker setup * AWS CLI (optional) {{< /requirements >}} # Ozone in a Single Container The easiest way to start up an all-in-one ozone container is to use the latest docker image from docker hub: ```bash docker run -p 9878:9878 -p 9876:9876 apache/ozone ``` This command will pull down the ozone image from docker hub and start all ozone services in a single container.
This container will run the required metadata servers (Ozone Manager, Storage Container Manager) one data node and the S3 compatible REST server (S3 Gateway). # Local multi-container cluster If you would like to use a more realistic pseudo-cluster where each components run in own containers, you can start it with a docker-compose file. We have shipped a docker-compose and an enviorment file as part of the container image that is uploaded to docker hub. The following commands can be used to extract these files from the image in the docker hub. ```bash docker run apache/ozone cat docker-compose.yaml > docker-compose.yaml docker run apache/ozone cat docker-config > docker-config ``` Now you can start the cluster with docker-compose: ```bash docker-compose up -d ``` If you need multiple datanodes, we can just scale it up: ```bash docker-compose scale datanode=3 ``` # Running S3 Clients Once the cluster is booted up and ready, you can verify its status by connecting to the SCM's UI at [http://localhost:9876](http://localhost:9876). The S3 gateway endpoint will be exposed at port 9878. You can use Ozone's S3 support as if you are working against the real S3. Here is how you create buckets from command line: ```bash aws s3api --endpoint http://localhost:9878/ create-bucket --bucket=bucket1 ``` Only notable difference in the above command line is the fact that you have to tell the _endpoint_ address to the aws s3api command. Now let us put a simple file into the S3 Bucket hosted by Ozone. We will start by creating a temporary file that we can upload to Ozone via S3 support. ```bash ls -1 > /tmp/testfile ``` This command creates a temporary file that we can upload to Ozone. The next command actually uploads to Ozone's S3 bucket using the standard aws s3 command line interface. ```bash aws s3 --endpoint http://localhost:9878 cp --storage-class REDUCED_REDUNDANCY /tmp/testfile s3://bucket1/testfile ``` We can now verify that file got uploaded by running the list command against our bucket. ```bash aws s3 --endpoint http://localhost:9878 ls s3://bucket1/testfile ``` http://localhost:9878/bucket1?browser