# # Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one # or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file # distributed with this work for additional information # regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file # to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the # "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance # with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. # Set Hadoop-specific environment variables here. ## ## THIS FILE ACTS AS THE MASTER FILE FOR ALL HADOOP PROJECTS. ## SETTINGS HERE WILL BE READ BY ALL HADOOP COMMANDS. THEREFORE, ## ONE CAN USE THIS FILE TO SET YARN, HDFS, AND MAPREDUCE ## CONFIGURATION OPTIONS INSTEAD OF xxx-env.sh. ## ## Precedence rules: ## ## {yarn-env.sh|hdfs-env.sh} > hadoop-env.sh > hard-coded defaults ## ## {YARN_xyz|HDFS_xyz} > HADOOP_xyz > hard-coded defaults ## # Many of the options here are built from the perspective that users # may want to provide OVERWRITING values on the command line. # For example: # # JAVA_HOME=/usr/java/testing hdfs dfs -ls # # Therefore, the vast majority (BUT NOT ALL!) of these defaults # are configured for substitution and not append. If append # is preferable, modify this file accordingly. ### # Generic settings for HADOOP ### # Technically, the only required environment variable is JAVA_HOME. # All others are optional. However, the defaults are probably not # preferred. Many sites configure these options outside of Hadoop, # such as in /etc/profile.d # The java implementation to use. By default, this environment # variable is REQUIRED on ALL platforms except OS X! # export JAVA_HOME= # Location of Hadoop. By default, Hadoop will attempt to determine # this location based upon its execution path. # export HADOOP_HOME= # Location of Hadoop's configuration information. i.e., where this # file is probably living. Many sites will also set this in the # same location where JAVA_HOME is defined. If this is not defined # Hadoop will attempt to locate it based upon its execution # path. # export HADOOP_CONF_DIR=${HADOOP_HOME}/etc/hadoop # The maximum amount of heap to use (Java -Xmx). If no unit # is provided, it will be converted to MB. Daemons will # prefer any Xmx setting in their respective _OPT variable. # There is no default; the JVM will autoscale based upon machine # memory size. # export HADOOP_HEAPSIZE_MAX= # The minimum amount of heap to use (Java -Xms). If no unit # is provided, it will be converted to MB. Daemons will # prefer any Xms setting in their respective _OPT variable. # There is no default; the JVM will autoscale based upon machine # memory size. # export HADOOP_HEAPSIZE_MIN= # Enable extra debugging of Hadoop's JAAS binding, used to set up # Kerberos security. # export HADOOP_JAAS_DEBUG=true # Extra Java runtime options for all Hadoop commands. We don't support # IPv6 yet/still, so by default the preference is set to IPv4. # export HADOOP_OPTS="-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true" # For Kerberos debugging, an extended option set logs more invormation # export HADOOP_OPTS="-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true -Dsun.security.krb5.debug=true -Dsun.security.spnego.debug" # Some parts of the shell code may do special things dependent upon # the operating system. We have to set this here. See the next # section as to why.... export HADOOP_OS_TYPE=${HADOOP_OS_TYPE:-$(uname -s)} # Under certain conditions, Java on OS X will throw SCDynamicStore errors # in the system logs. # See HADOOP-8719 for more information. If one needs Kerberos # support on OS X, one will want to change/remove this extra bit. case ${HADOOP_OS_TYPE} in Darwin*) export HADOOP_OPTS="${HADOOP_OPTS} -Djava.security.krb5.realm= " export HADOOP_OPTS="${HADOOP_OPTS} -Djava.security.krb5.kdc= " export HADOOP_OPTS="${HADOOP_OPTS} -Djava.security.krb5.conf= " ;; esac # Extra Java runtime options for some Hadoop commands # and clients (i.e., hdfs dfs -blah). These get appended to HADOOP_OPTS for # such commands. In most cases, # this should be left empty and # let users supply it on the command line. # export HADOOP_CLIENT_OPTS="" # # A note about classpaths. # # By default, Apache Hadoop overrides Java's CLASSPATH # environment variable. It is configured such # that it sarts out blank with new entries added after passing # a series of checks (file/dir exists, not already listed aka # de-deduplication). During de-depulication, wildcards and/or # directories are *NOT* expanded to keep it simple. Therefore, # if the computed classpath has two specific mentions of # awesome-methods-1.0.jar, only the first one added will be seen. # If two directories are in the classpath that both contain # awesome-methods-1.0.jar, then Java will pick up both versions. # An additional, custom CLASSPATH. Site-wide configs should be # handled via the shellprofile functionality, utilizing the # hadoop_add_classpath function for greater control and much # harder for apps/end-users to accidentally override. # Similarly, end users should utilize ${HOME}/.hadooprc . # This variable should ideally only be used as a short-cut, # interactive way for temporary additions on the command line. # export HADOOP_CLASSPATH="/some/cool/path/on/your/machine" # Should HADOOP_CLASSPATH be first in the official CLASSPATH? # export HADOOP_USER_CLASSPATH_FIRST="yes" # If HADOOP_USE_CLIENT_CLASSLOADER is set, the classpath along # with the main jar are handled by a separate isolated # client classloader when 'hadoop jar', 'yarn jar', or 'mapred job' # is utilized. If it is set, HADOOP_CLASSPATH and # HADOOP_USER_CLASSPATH_FIRST are ignored. # export HADOOP_USE_CLIENT_CLASSLOADER=true # HADOOP_CLIENT_CLASSLOADER_SYSTEM_CLASSES overrides the default definition of # system classes for the client classloader when HADOOP_USE_CLIENT_CLASSLOADER # is enabled. Names ending in '.' (period) are treated as package names, and # names starting with a '-' are treated as negative matches. For example, # export HADOOP_CLIENT_CLASSLOADER_SYSTEM_CLASSES="-org.apache.hadoop.UserClass,java.,javax.,org.apache.hadoop." # Enable optional, bundled Hadoop features # This is a comma delimited list. It may NOT be overridden via .hadooprc # Entries may be added/removed as needed. # export HADOOP_OPTIONAL_TOOLS="@@@HADOOP_OPTIONAL_TOOLS@@@" ### # Options for remote shell connectivity ### # There are some optional components of hadoop that allow for # command and control of remote hosts. For example, # start-dfs.sh will attempt to bring up all NNs, DNS, etc. # Options to pass to SSH when one of the "log into a host and # start/stop daemons" scripts is executed # export HADOOP_SSH_OPTS="-o BatchMode=yes -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -o ConnectTimeout=10s" # The built-in ssh handler will limit itself to 10 simultaneous connections. # For pdsh users, this sets the fanout size ( -f ) # Change this to increase/decrease as necessary. # export HADOOP_SSH_PARALLEL=10 # Filename which contains all of the hosts for any remote execution # helper scripts # such as workers.sh, start-dfs.sh, etc. # export HADOOP_WORKERS="${HADOOP_CONF_DIR}/workers" ### # Options for all daemons ### # # # Many options may also be specified as Java properties. It is # very common, and in many cases, desirable, to hard-set these # in daemon _OPTS variables. Where applicable, the appropriate # Java property is also identified. Note that many are re-used # or set differently in certain contexts (e.g., secure vs # non-secure) # # Where (primarily) daemon log files are stored. # ${HADOOP_HOME}/logs by default. # Java property: hadoop.log.dir # export HADOOP_LOG_DIR=${HADOOP_HOME}/logs # A string representing this instance of hadoop. $USER by default. # This is used in writing log and pid files, so keep that in mind! # Java property: hadoop.id.str # export HADOOP_IDENT_STRING=$USER # How many seconds to pause after stopping a daemon # export HADOOP_STOP_TIMEOUT=5 # Where pid files are stored. /tmp by default. # export HADOOP_PID_DIR=/tmp # Default log4j setting for interactive commands # Java property: hadoop.root.logger # export HADOOP_ROOT_LOGGER=INFO,console # Default log4j setting for daemons spawned explicitly by # --daemon option of hadoop, hdfs, mapred and yarn command. # Java property: hadoop.root.logger # export HADOOP_DAEMON_ROOT_LOGGER=INFO,RFA # Default log level and output location for security-related messages. # You will almost certainly want to change this on a per-daemon basis via # the Java property (i.e., -Dhadoop.security.logger=foo). (Note that the # defaults for the NN and 2NN override this by default.) # Java property: hadoop.security.logger # export HADOOP_SECURITY_LOGGER=INFO,NullAppender # Default process priority level # Note that sub-processes will also run at this level! # export HADOOP_NICENESS=0 # Default name for the service level authorization file # Java property: hadoop.policy.file # export HADOOP_POLICYFILE="hadoop-policy.xml" # # NOTE: this is not used by default! <----- # You can define variables right here and then re-use them later on. # For example, it is common to use the same garbage collection settings # for all the daemons. So one could define: # # export HADOOP_GC_SETTINGS="-verbose:gc -XX:+PrintGCDetails -XX:+PrintGCTimeStamps -XX:+PrintGCDateStamps" # # .. and then use it as per the b option under the namenode. ### # Secure/privileged execution ### # # Out of the box, Hadoop uses jsvc from Apache Commons to launch daemons # on privileged ports. This functionality can be replaced by providing # custom functions. See hadoop-functions.sh for more information. # # The jsvc implementation to use. Jsvc is required to run secure datanodes # that bind to privileged ports to provide authentication of data transfer # protocol. Jsvc is not required if SASL is configured for authentication of # data transfer protocol using non-privileged ports. # export JSVC_HOME=/usr/bin # # This directory contains pids for secure and privileged processes. #export HADOOP_SECURE_PID_DIR=${HADOOP_PID_DIR} # # This directory contains the logs for secure and privileged processes. # Java property: hadoop.log.dir # export HADOOP_SECURE_LOG=${HADOOP_LOG_DIR} # # When running a secure daemon, the default value of HADOOP_IDENT_STRING # ends up being a bit bogus. Therefore, by default, the code will # replace HADOOP_IDENT_STRING with HADOOP_xx_SECURE_USER. If one wants # to keep HADOOP_IDENT_STRING untouched, then uncomment this line. # export HADOOP_SECURE_IDENT_PRESERVE="true" ### # NameNode specific parameters ### # Default log level and output location for file system related change # messages. For non-namenode daemons, the Java property must be set in # the appropriate _OPTS if one wants something other than INFO,NullAppender # Java property: hdfs.audit.logger # export HDFS_AUDIT_LOGGER=INFO,NullAppender # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the NameNode. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # a) Set JMX options # export HDFS_NAMENODE_OPTS="-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote=true -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=1026" # # b) Set garbage collection logs # export HDFS_NAMENODE_OPTS="${HADOOP_GC_SETTINGS} -Xloggc:${HADOOP_LOG_DIR}/gc-rm.log-$(date +'%Y%m%d%H%M')" # # c) ... or set them directly # export HDFS_NAMENODE_OPTS="-verbose:gc -XX:+PrintGCDetails -XX:+PrintGCTimeStamps -XX:+PrintGCDateStamps -Xloggc:${HADOOP_LOG_DIR}/gc-rm.log-$(date +'%Y%m%d%H%M')" # this is the default: # export HDFS_NAMENODE_OPTS="-Dhadoop.security.logger=INFO,RFAS" ### # SecondaryNameNode specific parameters ### # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the SecondaryNameNode. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # This is the default: # export HDFS_SECONDARYNAMENODE_OPTS="-Dhadoop.security.logger=INFO,RFAS" ### # DataNode specific parameters ### # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the DataNode. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # This is the default: # export HDFS_DATANODE_OPTS="-Dhadoop.security.logger=ERROR,RFAS" # On secure datanodes, user to run the datanode as after dropping privileges. # This **MUST** be uncommented to enable secure HDFS if using privileged ports # to provide authentication of data transfer protocol. This **MUST NOT** be # defined if SASL is configured for authentication of data transfer protocol # using non-privileged ports. # This will replace the hadoop.id.str Java property in secure mode. # export HDFS_DATANODE_SECURE_USER=hdfs # Supplemental options for secure datanodes # By default, Hadoop uses jsvc which needs to know to launch a # server jvm. # export HDFS_DATANODE_SECURE_EXTRA_OPTS="-jvm server" ### # NFS3 Gateway specific parameters ### # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the NFS3 Gateway. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # export HDFS_NFS3_OPTS="" # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the Hadoop portmapper. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # export HDFS_PORTMAP_OPTS="-Xmx512m" # Supplemental options for priviliged gateways # By default, Hadoop uses jsvc which needs to know to launch a # server jvm. # export HDFS_NFS3_SECURE_EXTRA_OPTS="-jvm server" # On privileged gateways, user to run the gateway as after dropping privileges # This will replace the hadoop.id.str Java property in secure mode. # export HDFS_NFS3_SECURE_USER=nfsserver ### # ZKFailoverController specific parameters ### # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the ZKFailoverController. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # export HDFS_ZKFC_OPTS="" ### # QuorumJournalNode specific parameters ### # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the QuorumJournalNode. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # export HDFS_JOURNALNODE_OPTS="" ### # HDFS Balancer specific parameters ### # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the HDFS Balancer. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # export HDFS_BALANCER_OPTS="" ### # HDFS Mover specific parameters ### # Specify the JVM options to be used when starting the HDFS Mover. # These options will be appended to the options specified as HADOOP_OPTS # and therefore may override any similar flags set in HADOOP_OPTS # # export HDFS_MOVER_OPTS="" ### # Advanced Users Only! ### # # When building Hadoop, one can add the class paths to the commands # via this special env var: # export HADOOP_ENABLE_BUILD_PATHS="true" # # To prevent accidents, shell commands be (superficially) locked # to only allow certain users to execute certain subcommands. # It uses the format of (command)_(subcommand)_USER. # # For example, to limit who can execute the namenode command, # export HDFS_NAMENODE_USER=hdfs