With version 1.2.5 of MariaDB ColumnStore, there should be no version of MariaDB Server or MySQL installed on the OS before a MariaDB ColumnStore is installed on the system. If you have an installation of MariaDB Server or MySQL, uninstall it before proceeding.
Before installing MariaDB ColumnStore, there is some preparation necessary. You will need to determine the following. Please refer to the MariaDB ColumnStore Architecture Document for additional information.
MariaDB ColumnStore is certified to run on:
RHEL/CentOS v6, v7
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Debian v8, v9
SUSE 12
but it should run on any recent Linux system. Make sure all nodes are running the same OS.
Make sure the locale setting on all nodes is the same.
To set locale to en_US and UTf-8, as root run:
# localedef -i en_US -f UTF-8 en_US.UTF-8
Information your system administrator must provide before installing MariaDB ColumnStore:
Example for 3 PM, 1UM system, these are the steps required to configure PM-1 for password-less ssh. The equivalent steps must be repeated on every PM in the system. The equivalent steps must be repeated on every UM in the system if the MariaDB ColumnStore Data Replication feature is enabled during the install process.
[root@pm- 1 ~] $ ssh-keygen [root@pm- 1 ~] $ ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub pm-1 [root@pm- 1 ~] $ ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub pm-2 [root@pm- 1 ~] $ ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub pm-3 [root@pm- 1 ~] $ ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub um-1
If you will be using ssh keys...
MariaDB ColumnStore is quite flexible regarding networking. Some options are as follows:
The MariaDB ColumnStore daemon uses port 3306.
You must reserve the following ports to run the MariaDB ColumnStore software: 8600 - 8630, 8700, and 8800
MariaDB Columnstore requires that the software gets installed and the data paths in the configuration files don't get changed from their initial settings. The system will not function properly if they are changed or the software is install in the incorrect places.
For root user install, it is required that it gets installed and it runs in this location:
/usr/local/
For non-root user install, it is required that it gets installed and it runs in this location:
/home/'non-root-user-name'
Example if installed and running as 'mysq' user, is has to be installed here:
/home/mysql/
IMPORTANT: Don't change any of the configuration files, Columnstore.xml or my.cnf, to point to a different install or data location.
If you need to have the software or the data (dbroot backend data or the mysql data) placed in a different directory than what is required above, you can use soft-links.
To install in a different directory for root user, here is an example of setting up a softlink
# ln -s /mnt/columnstore /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore
To install in a different directory for non-root user, here is an example of setting up a softlink
# ln -s /mnt/columnstore /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore
To have the DBRoot data1 placed in a different directory, here is an example of setting up a softlink
# ln -s /mnt/data1 /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/data1
To have the MariaDB/MySQL aata placed in a different directory, here is an example of setting up a softlink
# ln -s /mnt/mysql /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/db
If you do setup softlinks, make sure the permissions and users are setup for the new directories that match the current directories.
'DBRoot' is a term used by ColumnStore to refer to a storage unit, located at mariadb/columnstore/data<N>, where N is the identifier for that storage unit. You will see that term throughout the documentation. The name of this location can't be changed. But you can use soft-links to point it to other locations.
MariaDB ColumnStore supports many storage options.
IMPORTANT: When using external storage, be sure that only whole DBRoots are on the external filesystem. Do not use higher level directories, which may include the ColumnStore binaries and libraries. For example, /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/data1 (aka DBRoot 1) would be a good candidate for external storage, but /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore would not be.
If you are using internal storage, the DBRoot directories will be created under the installation directory, for example /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/data<N> where N is the DBRoot number. There is no performance gain from assigning more than one DBRoot to a single storage device.
DBRoots can be linked to other locations with more capacity if necessary.
If you are using a SAN for storage, the following must be taken into account:
These lines are an example of an installation with 2 DBRoots configured.
/dev/sda1 /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/data1 ext2 noatime,nodiratime,noauto 0 0 /dev/sdd1 /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/data2 ext2 noatime,nodiratime,noauto 0 0
There are optimizations that should be made when using MariaDB ColumnStore listed below. As always, please consult with your network administrator for additional optimization considerations for your specific installation needs.
/sbin/ifconfig eth0 txqueuelen 10000
# increase TCP max buffer size net.core.rmem_max = 16777216 net.core.wmem_max = 16777216 # increase Linux autotuning TCP buffer limits # min, default, and max number of bytes to use net.ipv4.tcp_rmem = 4096 87380 16777216 net.ipv4.tcp_wmem = 4096 65536 16777216 # don't cache ssthresh from previous connection net.ipv4.tcp_no_metrics_save = 1 # recommended to increase this for 1000 BT or higher net.core.netdev_max_backlog = 2500 # for 10 GigE, use this net.core.netdev_max_backlog = 30000
NOTE: Make sure there is only 1 setting of net.core.netdev_max_backlog in the /etc/sysctl.conf file.
To check the current value:
cat /proc/sys/vm/vfs_cache_pressure
To set the current value until the next reboot:
sysctl -w vm.vfs_cache_pressure=10
To set the value permanently across reboots, add the following to /etc/sysctl.conf:
vm.vfs_cache_pressure = 10
The default setting of 022 is what is recommended. ColumnStore requires that it not end with a 7, like 077. For example, on a root installation, mysqld runs as the mysql user, and needs to be able to read the ColumnStore configuration file, which likely is not owned by mysql. If it were, then the other ColumnStore processes could not read it.
The current umask can be determined by running the 'umask' command: A value of 022 can be set in the current session or in /etc/profile with the command:
umask 022
The MariaDB ColumnStore uses TCP ports 3306, 8600 - 8630, 8700, and 8800. Port 3306 is the default port for clients to connect to the MariaDB server; the others are for internal communication and will need to be open between ColumnStore nodes.
To disable any local firewalls and SELinux on mutli-node installations, as root do the following.
CentOS 6 and systems using iptables
#service iptables save (Will save your existing IPTable Rules) #service iptables stop (It will disable firewall Temporary)
To Disable it Permanentely:
#chkconfig iptables off
CentOS 7 and systems using systemctl with firewalld
#systemctl status firewalld #systemctl stop firewalld #systemctl disable firewalld
Ubuntu and systems using ufw
#service ufw stop (It will disable firewall Temporary)
To Disable it Permanently:
#chkconfig ufw off
SUSE
#/sbin/rcSuSEfirewall2 status #/sbin/rcSuSEfirewall2 stop
To disable SELinux, edit "/etc/selinux/config" and find line:
SELINUX=enforcing
Now replace it with,
SELINUX=disabled
MariaDB ColumnStore can be installed in different user configurations.
MariaDB ColumnStore is installed by root and the MariaDB ColumnStore commands are run by root. With this installation type, you have the option of install using rpm, deb or binary packages. You can install the packages with the standard tools yum, apt, or zypper.
The default package installation directory is /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore The location of the temporary files created by MariaDB ColumnStore is /tmp/columnstore_tmp.
MariaDB ColumnStore is installed by an unprivileged user and the MariaDB ColumnStore commands are run by that user. With this installation type, you are required to install using the binary tarball, which can be downloaded from the MariaDB ColumnStore Downloads page: https://mariadb.com/downloads/#mariadbax
The default package installation directory is the home directory of the user account. The location of the temporary files created by MariaDB ColumnStore is $HOME/.tmp
MariaDB ColumnStore is installed by root user and the MariaDB ColumnStore commands are run by an unprivileged user. This document will show how to configure the system to run commands as an unprivileged user: https://mariadb.com/kb/en/library/mariadb-columnstore-system-usage/#non-root-user-mariadb-columnstore-admin-console
With this installation type, you have the option of install using rpm, deb or binary packages, which you can install with the standard tools yum, apt, zypper.
The default package installation directory is /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore The location of the temporary files created by MariaDB ColumnStore is /tmp/columnstore_tmp.
ColumnStore 1.2.3 onward requires libjemalloc to be installed. For Ubuntu & Debian based distributions this is installed using the package "libjemalloc1" in the standard repositories.
For CentOS the package is in RedHat's EPEL repository:
This does require either root user access or SUDO setup to install:
sudo yum -y install epel-release sudo yum install -y jemalloc
MariaDB ColumnStore requires that the boost package of 1.53 or newer is installed.
For Centos 7, Ubuntu 16, Debian 8, SUSE 12 and other newer OS's, you can just install the default boost package that comes with your distribution.
# yum -y install boost
or
# apt-get -y install libboost-all-dev
For SUSE 12, you will need to install the boost-devel package, which is part of the SLE-SDK package.
SUSEConnect -p sle-sdk/12.2/x86_64 zypper install boost-devel
For CentOS 6, you can either download and install the MariaDB Columnstore Centos 6 boost library package or build version 1.55 from source and deploy it to each ColumnStore node.
To download the pre-built libraries from MariaDB, go to binaries download page and download "centos6_boost_1_55.tar.gz"
https://mariadb.com/downloads/columnstore
Click All Versions - > 1.0.x -> centos -> x86_64
Install package on each server in the cluster.
wget https://downloads.mariadb.com/ColumnStore/1.0.14/centos/x86_64/centos6_boost_1_55.tar.gz tar xfz centos6_boost_1_55.tar.gz -C /usr/lib ldconfig
Downloading and build the boost libraries from source:
NOTE: This requires that the "Development Tools" group and cmake be installed prior to this.
yum groupinstall "Development Tools" yum install cmake
Here is the procedure to download and build the boost source. As root do the following:
cd /usr/ wget http://sourceforge.net/projects/boost/files/boost/1.55.0/boost_1_55_0.tar.gz tar zxvf boost_1_55_0.tar.gz cd boost_1_55_0 ./bootstrap.sh --with-libraries=atomic,date_time,exception,filesystem,iostreams,locale,program_options,regex,signals,system,test,thread,timer,log --prefix=/usr ./b2 install ldconfig
Additional packages are required on each ColumnStore node.
# yum -y install expect perl perl-DBI openssl zlib file sudo libaio rsync snappy net-tools numactl-libs nmap
# apt-get -y install tzdata libtcl8.6 expect perl openssl file sudo libdbi-perl libboost-all-dev libreadline-dev rsync libsnappy1v5 net-tools libnuma1 nmap
# apt-get install expect perl openssl file sudo libdbi-perl libboost-all-dev libreadline-dev rsync libsnappy1 net-tools libnuma1 nmap
# apt-get install expect perl openssl file sudo libdbi-perl libboost-all-dev libreadline-dev rsync net-tools libsnappy1v5 libreadline5 libaio1 libnuma1 nmap
zypper install expect perl perl-DBI openssl file sudo libaio1 rsync net-tools libsnappy1 libnuma1 nmap
To enable the Data Redundancy feature, install and enable GlusterFS version 3.3.1 or higher on each Performance Module.
# yum -y install centos-release-gluster # yum -y install glusterfs glusterfs-fuse glusterfs-server start / enable service: # systemctl enable glusterd.service # systemctl start glusterd.service
# apt-get install glusterfs-server attr start / enable service: # systemctl start glusterfs-server.service # systemctl enable glusterfs-server.service
# apt-get -y install glusterfs-server attr start / enable service: # update-rc.d glusterfs-server defaults
# apt-get install glusterfs-server attr start / enable service: # systemctl start glusterfs-server.service # systemctl enable glusterfs-server.service
# zypper install glusterfs start / enable service: # chkconfig glusterd on
MariaDB ColumnStore can use the following standard logging systems.
The standard ColumnStore RPM and DEB packages are available at https://mariadb.com/downloads/columnstore. If you need to install ColumnStore without root-level permissions, you must use the binary tarball, which is available at https://downloads.mariadb.com/ColumnStore/
Note: MariaDB ColumnStore will configure a root user with no password in the MariaDB server initially. Afterward, you may setup users and permissions within MariaDB as you normally would.
The default MariaDB ColumnStore installation process supports a Non-Distributed installation mode for multi-node deployments. With this option, the user will need to install the ColumnStore packages manually on each node.
This option would be used when Package Repo install of rpm/deb packages are the preferred method to install MariaDB ColumnStore. Its also used for MariaDB ColumnStore Docker images.
The Pre-install setup time will take longer with the Non-Distributed Installation, but the system Install and startup via the install app 'postConfigure' will be faster.
With the Distributed option, MariaDB ColumnStore will distribute and install the packages automatically on each node. The user installs ColumnStore on Performance Module 1, then during the postConfigure step, ColumnStore will handle the rest.
This option would be used on system with multi-nodes where the package only had to be installed on 1 node, the Performance Module 1, the app 'postConfigure' would distribute and all down to all of the other nodes.
The Pre-install setup time would be shorter with the Non-Distributed Installation, but the system Install and startup via the install app 'postConfigure' will be take longer.
The MariaDB ColumnStore RPM and DEB Packages can be installed using yum/apt-get commands. Check here for additional Information:
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/library/installing-mariadb-ax-from-the-package-repositories
The MariaDB ColumnStore RPM, DEB and binary packages can be installed along with the other packages that make up the AX package. Check here for additional Information:
Note: MariaDB ColumnStore will configure a root user with no password in the MariaDB server initially. Afterward, you may setup users and permissions within MariaDB as you normally would.
Note: The packages will be installed at /usr/local. This is required for root user installations.
rpm -ivh mariadb-columnstore*release#*.rpm
The MariaDB ColumnStore binary packages can be downloaded from https://downloads.mariadb.com/ColumnStore/. Select version 1.2.5, then navigate to the appropriate package for your system. The binary package will have the extension '.bin.tar.gz' rather than '.rpm.tar.gz' or '.deb.tar.gz'.
tar -zxf mariadb-columnstore-release#.x86_64.bin.tar.gz
Run the post-install script:
/usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/bin/post-install
tar -zxf mariadb-columnstore-release#.amd64.deb.tar.gz
dpkg -i mariadb-columnstore*release#*.deb
MariaDB Columnstore is installed to run as an unprivileged user using the binary package. It will need to be run on all MariaDB ColumnStore nodes.
For the purpose of these instructions, the following assumptions are:
Tasks involved:
Before beginning the binary tar file installation you will need your system administrator to set up accounts for you on every MariaDB Columnstore node. The account name & password must be the same on every node. If you change the password on one node, you must change it on every node. The user ID must be the same on every node as well. In the examples below we will use the account name 'mysql' and the password 'mariadb'.
Group ID is an example, can be different than 1000, but needs to be the same on all servers in the cluster
adduser mysql -u 1000
addgroup mysql moduser -g mysql mysql
The value for user-id must be the same for all nodes.
passwd mysql
su - mysql
IMPORTANT: It is required that the installation directory will be the home directory of the user account. So it would be '/home/mysql/' in this example. The installation directory must be the same on every node. In the examples below we will use the path '/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore'.
In the MariaDB ColumnStore 1.2.1 and later, sudo configuration is only required for certain system configurations.
These would include:
If your system is not configured with any of these, you can skip this section.
The sudo configuration on each node will need to allow the new user to run the gluster, mount, umount, and chmod commands. Add the following lines to your /etc/sudoers file, changing the paths to those commands if necessary on your system.
mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/gluster mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/mount mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/umount mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/chmod
Comment the following line, which will allow the user to login without a terminal:
#Defaults requiretty
The sudo configuration on each node will need to allow the new user to run the chmod, chown, mount, and umount commands. Add the following lines to your /etc/sudoers file, changing the path of each command if necessary on your system.
mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/chmod mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/chown mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/mount mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/umount
Comment the following line, which will allow the user to login without a terminal:
#Defaults requiretty
The sudo configuration on each node will need to allow the new user to run several commands. Add the following lines to your /etc/sudoers file, changing the path of each command if necessary on your system.
mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/mkfs.ext2 mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/chmod mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/chown mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/sed mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/mount mysql ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/umount
Comment the following line, which will allow the user to login without a terminal:
#Defaults requiretty
ColumnStore needs the open file limit to be increased for the new user. To do this edit the /etc/security/limits.conf file and make the following additions at the end of the file:
mysql hard nofile 65536 mysql soft nofile 65536
If you are already logged in as 'mysql' you will need to logout, then login for this change to take effect.
If you are using an 'external' storage configuration, you will need to allow the new user to mount and unmount those filesystems. Add the 'users' option to those filesystems in your /etc/fstab file.
Example entries:
/dev/sda1 /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/data1 ext2 noatime,nodiratime,noauto,users 0 0
/dev/sdd1 /home/mariadb/columnstore/data2 ext2 noatime,nodiratime,noauto,users 0 0
The external filesystems will need to be owned by the new user. This is an example command run as root setting the owner and group of dbroot /dev/sda1 to the mysql user:
mount /dev/sda1 /tmpdir chown -R mysql:mysql /tmpdir umount /tmpdir
ColumnStore uses POSIX shared memory segments. On some systems, the entry point /dev/shm does not allow regular users to create new segments. If necessary, permissions on /dev/shm should be set such that the new user or group has full access. The default on most systems is 777.
chmod 777 /dev/shm
For Data Redundancy using GlusterFS configured system:
chmod 777 -R /var/log/glusterfs
To allow external storage on an Amazon EC2 instance using EBS storage:
chmod 644 /etc/fstab
If MariaDB Columnstore has ever before been installed on any of the planned hosts as a root user install, you must have the system administrator verify that no remnants of that installation exist. The unprivileged installation will not be successful if there are MariaDB Columnstore files owned by root on any of the hosts.
You should be familiar with the general MariaDB Columnstore installation instructions in this guide as you will be asked the same questions during installation.
If performing the distributed-mode installation across multiple node, the binary package only needs to be installed on Performance Module #1 (pm1). If performing a non-distributed installation, the binary package is required to install the MariaDB ColumnStore on all the nodes in the system.
If performing the distributed-mode installation, post-install only needs to be run on Performance Module #1 (pm1). If performing non-distributed installations, post-install needs to be run on all the nodes in the system.
NOTE: $HOME is the same as /home/mysql in this example
./mariadb/columnstore/bin/post-install --installdir=$HOME/mariadb/columnstore
Here is an example of what is printed by the post-install command
NOTE: For non-root install, you will need to run the following commands as root user to setup the MariaDB ColumnStore System Logging export COLUMNSTORE_INSTALL_DIR=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/syslogSetup.sh --installdir=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore --user=mysql install The next steps are: If installing on a pm1 node using non-distributed install export COLUMNSTORE_INSTALL_DIR=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/postConfigure -i /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore If installing on a pm1 node using distributed install export COLUMNSTORE_INSTALL_DIR=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/postConfigure -i /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore -d If installing on a non-pm1 using the non-distributed option: export COLUMNSTORE_INSTALL_DIR=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/columnstore start
For an unprivileged user installation, you will need to run the following commands as root on all nodes after the post-install command is run to make log entries go to the right places:
export COLUMNSTORE_INSTALL_DIR=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/syslogSetup.sh --installdir=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore --user=mysql install
Without that, log entries will go to the main system log file, and low-severity logs may not be recorded at all.
If performing the non-distributed installation mode, the 'columnstore' service needs to be started on all nodes in the system except Performance Module #1 (pm1). postConfigure is on pm1, which is documented in the next section.
Starting the 'columnstore' service:
export COLUMNSTORE_INSTALL_DIR=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/columnstore start
On PM1, run the 2 export commands that were printed by the post-install command, then run postConfigure, which would look like the following:
export COLUMNSTORE_INSTALL_DIR=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/lib:/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/mysql/lib /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/postConfigure -i /home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore
To configure MariaDB Columnstore unprivileged installation to start automatically at boot time, perform the following steps on each Columnstore node:
runuser -l mysql -c "/home/mysql/mariadb/columnstore/bin/columnstore start"
Note: Make sure the above entry is added to the rc.local file that gets executed at boot time. Depending on the OS installation, rc.local could be in a different location.
If you plan to setup a root user password in the MariaDB server Database, remember to setup the Password Configuration file on each User Module and Performance Module that has User Modules functionality.
This tool can be run before installation. It will verify the setup of all servers that are going to be used in the Columnstore System.
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb/mariadb-columnstore-cluster-test-tool
There are 3 Quick Launch Tools that can be used to launch basic systems. These are 1 step command tool where you provide the number of modules or amazon instances and the tool will take care of the rest.
1. Single Server Quick Launch
2. Multi Server Quick Launch
3. Amazon AMI Quick Launch
MariaDB Columnstore System Configuration and Installation tool, 'postConfigure', will Configure the MariaDB Columnstore System and will perform a Package Installation of all of the Servers within the System that is being configured. It will prompt the user to for information like IP addresses, storage types, MariaDB Server, and system features. At the end, it will start the ColumnStore system.
NOTE: When prompted for password, enter the non-user account password OR just hit enter if you have configured password-less ssh keys on all nodes (Please see the “System Administration Information” section earlier in this guide for more information on ssh keys.)
This tool is always run on the Performance Module #1.
Example uses of this script are shown in the Single and Multi Server Installations Guides.
# /usr/local/mariadb/columnstore/bin/postConfigure -h This is the MariaDB ColumnStore System Configuration and Installation tool. It will Configure the MariaDB ColumnStore System based on Operator inputs and will perform a Package Installation of all of the Modules within the System that is being configured. IMPORTANT: This tool should only be run on a Performance Module Server, preferably Module #1 Instructions: Press 'enter' to accept a value in (), if available or Enter one of the options within [], if available, or Enter a new value Usage: postConfigure [-h][-c][-u][-p][-qs][-qm][-qa][-port][-i][-n][-d][-sn][-pm-ip-addrs][-um-ip-addrs][-pm-count][-um-count] -h Help -c Config File to use to extract configuration data, default is Columnstore.xml.rpmsave -u Upgrade, Install using the Config File from -c, default to Columnstore.xml.rpmsave If ssh-keys aren't setup, you should provide passwords as command line arguments -p Unix Password, used with no-prompting option -qs Quick Install - Single Server -qm Quick Install - Multi Server -port MariaDB ColumnStore Port Address -i Non-root Install directory, Only use for non-root installs -n Non-distributed install, meaning postConfigure will not install packages on remote nodes -d Distributed install, meaning postConfigure will install packages on remote nodes -sn System Name -pm-ip-addrs Performance Module IP Addresses xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx,xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx -um-ip-addrs User Module IP Addresses xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx,xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
© 2019 MariaDB
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License and the GNU Free Documentation License.
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/preparing-for-columnstore-installation-125/