Following are the configurations files required to be copied over to Druid conf folders:
Choose any folder name for the druid deep storage, for example ‘druid’
Create the folder in hdfs under the required parent folder. For example, hdfs dfs -mkdir /druid OR hdfs dfs -mkdir /apps/druid
Give druid processes appropriate permissions for the druid processes to access this folder. This would ensure that druid is able to create necessary folders like data and indexing_log in HDFS. For example, if druid processes run as user ‘root’, then
hdfs dfs -chown root:root /apps/druid
OR
hdfs dfs -chmod 777 /apps/druid
Druid creates necessary sub-folders to store data and index under this newly created folder.
Edit common.runtime.properties at conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.properties to include the HDFS properties. Folders used for the location are same as the ones used for example above.
# Deep storage # # For HDFS: druid.storage.type=hdfs druid.storage.storageDirectory=/druid/segments # OR # druid.storage.storageDirectory=/apps/druid/segments # # Indexing service logs # # For HDFS: druid.indexer.logs.type=hdfs druid.indexer.logs.directory=/druid/indexing-logs # OR # druid.storage.storageDirectory=/apps/druid/indexing-logs
Note: Comment out Local storage and S3 Storage parameters in the file
Also include hdfs-storage core extension to conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.properties
# # Extensions # druid.extensions.directory=dist/druid/extensions druid.extensions.hadoopDependenciesDir=dist/druid/hadoop-dependencies druid.extensions.loadList=["mysql-metadata-storage", "druid-hdfs-storage", "druid-kerberos"]
Ensure that Druid has necessary jars to support the Hadoop version.
Find the hadoop version using command, hadoop version
In case there is other software used with hadoop, like WanDisco, ensure that
druid.extensions.loadlist in conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.propertiesCreate a headless keytab which would have access to the druid data and index.
Edit conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.properties and add the following properties:
druid.hadoop.security.kerberos.principal druid.hadoop.security.kerberos.keytab
For example
druid.hadoop.security.kerberos.principal=hdfs-test@EXAMPLE.IO druid.hadoop.security.kerberos.keytab=/etc/security/keytabs/hdfs.headless.keytab
With the above changes, restart Druid. This would ensure that Druid works with Kerberized Hadoop