Installing DataStax Enterprise 5.1 on RHEL-based systems using Yum
Use these instructions for installing DataStax Enterprise (DSE) 5.1 on RHEL-based systems using Yum.
Some things to know about installing DSE
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When installed with Yum, DataStax Enterprise runs as a service. The service initialization script is located in
/etc/init.d/dse. Run levels are not set by the package. -
This procedure installs DataStax Enterprise 5.1 and the DataStax Agent. It does not install OpsCenter, Studio, or Graph Loader.
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If using OpsCenter 6.0, override the default DataStax Agent. See compatibility of OpsCenter with DSE.
sudo yum install dse-full datastax-agent-6.0.supported_version-1 #during installationsudo yum install datastax-agent-6.0.supported_version-1 #after installation
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SECURITY RISK When DSE is installed, it creates a superuser called |
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For more information about managing Java, see Managing Java installs. |
Prerequisites
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Root or sudo access.
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Yum Package Management application.
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Configure your operating system to use the latest version of Java 8:
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Recommended. The latest build of a TCK (Technology Compatibility Kit) Certified OpenJDK version 8. For example, OpenJDK 8 (1.8.0_151 minimum). DataStax’s recommendation changed due to the end of public updates for Oracle JRE/JDK 8. See Oracle Java SE Support Roadmap.
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Supported. Oracle Java SE 8 (JRE or JDK) (1.8.0_151 minimum)
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RedHat-compatible distributions require EPEL (Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux).
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Python 3.6 through 3.11, or Python 2.7.x. Each listed version provides support for
cqlsh, but DataStax recommends using Python 3.11. For older RHEL distributions, see Installing Python 2.7 on older RHEL-based package installations.
Procedure
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End User License Agreement (EULA). By downloading this DataStax product, you agree to the terms of the EULA. |
In a terminal window:
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Verify that a required version of Java is installed:
java -versionDataStax recommends the latest build of a Technology Compatibility Kit (TCK) Certified OpenJDK version 8.
If OpenJDK, the results should look like:
openjdk version "1.8.0_171" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_171-8u171-b11-0ubuntu0.16.04.1-b11) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.171-b11, mixed mode)If Oracle Java, the results should look like:
java version "1.8.0_181" Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_181-b13) Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.181-b13, mixed mode)If not OpenJDK 8 or Oracle Java 8, see Installing the JDK.
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Add the DataStax Yum repository to a file called
/etc/yum.repos.d/datastax.repo:Set the
gpgcheck=1to perform a GPG signature check.[datastax] name=DataStax Repo for DataStax Enterprise baseurl=https://rpm.datastax.com/enterprise enabled=1 gpgcheck=0 -
If you have enabled signature verification (
gpgcheck=1), import the DataStax Enterprise repository key:sudo rpm --import https://rpm.datastax.com/rpm/repo_key -
Install the DataStax Enterprise packages:
Specify all packages; otherwise, the installation fails.
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Install any 5.1.x version:
To view the available versions, see the Release notes.
sudo yum install dse-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-full-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-libgraph-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-libcassandra-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-libhadoop2-client-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-libsolr-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-libtomcat-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-liblog4j-5.1.version_number-1 \ dse-libspark-5.1.version_number-1For example:
sudo yum install dse-5.1-1 \ dse-full-5.1-1 \ dse-libgraph-5.1-1 \ dse-libcassandra-5.1-1 \ dse-libhadoop2-client-5.1-1 \ dse-libsolr-5.11 \ dse-libtomcat-5.1-1 \ dse-liblog4j-5.1-1 \ dse-libspark-5.1-1 -
Optional: Install the demos:
Installing the DSE demos is not recommended for production. Only install the demos in development environments to run tutorials.
sudo yum install dse-demos-version_number-1
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Result
DataStax Enterprise is ready for additional configuration:
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For production, be sure to change the
cassandrauser. Failing to do so is a security risk. See Creating superuser accounts. -
DataStax Enterprise provides several types of workloads (default is transactional). See startup options for service or stand-alone installations.
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The Next steps section below provides links to related tasks and information.
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Optional: Configure
systemdunits: RedHatsystemdconfiguration. -
Optional: Single-node cluster installations only:
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If DataStax Enterprise is not already running:
sudo service dse startFor more start options, see Starting DataStax Enterprise as a service.
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Verify that DataStax Enterprise is running:
nodetool statusResults using vnodes:
Datacenter: Cassandra ===================== Status=Up/Down |/ State=Normal/Leaving/Joining/Moving -- Address Load Tokens Owns Host ID Rack UN 127.0.0.1 82.43 KB 128 ? 40725dc8-7843-43ae-9c98-7c532b1f517e rack1
Results not using vnodes:
Datacenter: Analytics ===================== Status=Up/Down |/ State=Normal/Leaving/Joining/Moving -- Address Load Owns Host ID Token Rack UN 172.16.222.136 103.24 KB ? 3c1d0657-0990-4f78-a3c0-3e0c37fc3a06 1647352612226902707 rack1
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If your OpsCenter version is not compatible with DSE 5.1, upgrade OpsCenter to a compatible version.
Next steps
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You must change or delete the
cassandrauser created on installation. See Creating superuser accounts. -
Configure startup options: service | stand-alone.
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If performing an upgrade, go to the next step in the Upgrade Guide.
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Configuring DataStax Enterprise - Settings for DSE Advanced Security, In-Memory, DSE Advanced Replication, DSE Multi-Instance, DSE Tiered Storage, and more.
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Configuration and log file locations - Services and package installations.
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Configuration and log file locations - No Services and tarball installations.
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Changing logging locations after installation.
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Planning and testing DSE and Apache Cassandra™ cluster deployments.
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Configuring the heap dump directory to avoid server crashes.
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DataStax Studio documentation.