mirror of https://github.com/apache/druid.git
363 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
363 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: doc_page
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---
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# Clustering
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Druid is designed to be deployed as a scalable, fault-tolerant cluster.
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In this document, we'll set up a simple cluster and discuss how it can be further configured to meet
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your needs. This simple cluster will feature scalable, fault-tolerant servers for Historicals and MiddleManagers, and a single
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coordination server to host the Coordinator and Overlord processes. In production, we recommend deploying Coordinators and Overlords in a fault-tolerant
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configuration as well.
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## Select hardware
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The Coordinator and Overlord processes can be co-located on a single server that is responsible for handling the metadata and coordination needs of your cluster.
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The equivalent of an AWS [m3.xlarge](https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types/#M3) is sufficient for most clusters. This
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hardware offers:
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- 4 vCPUs
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- 15 GB RAM
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- 80 GB SSD storage
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Historicals and MiddleManagers can be colocated on a single server to handle the actual data in your cluster. These servers benefit greatly from CPU, RAM,
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and SSDs. The equivalent of an AWS [r3.2xlarge](https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types/#r3) is a
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good starting point. This hardware offers:
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- 8 vCPUs
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- 61 GB RAM
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- 160 GB SSD storage
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Druid Brokers accept queries and farm them out to the rest of the cluster. They also optionally maintain an
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in-memory query cache. These servers benefit greatly from CPU and RAM, and can also be deployed on
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the equivalent of an AWS [r3.2xlarge](https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types/#r3). This hardware
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offers:
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- 8 vCPUs
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- 61 GB RAM
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- 160 GB SSD storage
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You can consider co-locating any open source UIs or query libraries on the same server that the Broker is running on.
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Very large clusters should consider selecting larger servers.
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## Select OS
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We recommend running your favorite Linux distribution. You will also need:
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* Java 8 or better
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Your OS package manager should be able to help for both Java. If your Ubuntu-based OS
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does not have a recent enough version of Java, WebUpd8 offers [packages for those
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OSes](http://www.webupd8.org/2012/09/install-oracle-java-8-in-ubuntu-via-ppa.html).
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## Download the distribution
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First, download and unpack the release archive. It's best to do this on a single machine at first,
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since you will be editing the configurations and then copying the modified distribution out to all
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of your servers.
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```bash
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curl -O http://static.druid.io/artifacts/releases/druid-#{DRUIDVERSION}-bin.tar.gz
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tar -xzf druid-#{DRUIDVERSION}-bin.tar.gz
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cd druid-#{DRUIDVERSION}
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```
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In this package, you'll find:
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* `LICENSE` - the license files.
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* `bin/` - scripts related to the [single-machine quickstart](quickstart.html).
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* `conf/*` - template configurations for a clustered setup.
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* `conf-quickstart/*` - configurations for the [single-machine quickstart](quickstart.html).
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* `extensions/*` - all Druid extensions.
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* `hadoop-dependencies/*` - Druid Hadoop dependencies.
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* `lib/*` - all included software packages for core Druid.
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* `quickstart/*` - files related to the [single-machine quickstart](quickstart.html).
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We'll be editing the files in `conf/` in order to get things running.
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## Configure deep storage
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Druid relies on a distributed filesystem or large object (blob) store for data storage. The most
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commonly used deep storage implementations are S3 (popular for those on AWS) and HDFS (popular if
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you already have a Hadoop deployment).
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### S3
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In `conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.properties`,
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- Set `druid.extensions.loadList=["druid-s3-extensions"]`.
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- Comment out the configurations for local storage under "Deep Storage" and "Indexing service logs".
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- Uncomment and configure appropriate values in the "For S3" sections of "Deep Storage" and
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"Indexing service logs".
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After this, you should have made the following changes:
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```
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druid.extensions.loadList=["druid-s3-extensions"]
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#druid.storage.type=local
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#druid.storage.storageDirectory=var/druid/segments
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druid.storage.type=s3
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druid.storage.bucket=your-bucket
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druid.storage.baseKey=druid/segments
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druid.s3.accessKey=...
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druid.s3.secretKey=...
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#druid.indexer.logs.type=file
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#druid.indexer.logs.directory=var/druid/indexing-logs
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druid.indexer.logs.type=s3
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druid.indexer.logs.s3Bucket=your-bucket
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druid.indexer.logs.s3Prefix=druid/indexing-logs
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```
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### HDFS
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In `conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.properties`,
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- Set `druid.extensions.loadList=["druid-hdfs-storage"]`.
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- Comment out the configurations for local storage under "Deep Storage" and "Indexing service logs".
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- Uncomment and configure appropriate values in the "For HDFS" sections of "Deep Storage" and
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"Indexing service logs".
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After this, you should have made the following changes:
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```
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druid.extensions.loadList=["druid-hdfs-storage"]
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#druid.storage.type=local
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#druid.storage.storageDirectory=var/druid/segments
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druid.storage.type=hdfs
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druid.storage.storageDirectory=/druid/segments
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#druid.indexer.logs.type=file
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#druid.indexer.logs.directory=var/druid/indexing-logs
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druid.indexer.logs.type=hdfs
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druid.indexer.logs.directory=/druid/indexing-logs
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```
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Also,
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- Place your Hadoop configuration XMLs (core-site.xml, hdfs-site.xml, yarn-site.xml,
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mapred-site.xml) on the classpath of your Druid nodes. You can do this by copying them into
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`conf/druid/_common/`.
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## Configure Tranquility Server (optional)
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Data streams can be sent to Druid through a simple HTTP API powered by Tranquility
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Server. If you will be using this functionality, then at this point you should [configure
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Tranquility Server](../ingestion/stream-ingestion.html#server).
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## Configure Tranquility Kafka (optional)
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Druid can consuming streams from Kafka through Tranquility Kafka. If you will be
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using this functionality, then at this point you should
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[configure Tranquility Kafka](../ingestion/stream-ingestion.html#kafka).
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## Configure for connecting to Hadoop (optional)
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If you will be loading data from a Hadoop cluster, then at this point you should configure Druid to be aware
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of your cluster:
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- Update `druid.indexer.task.hadoopWorkingPath` in `conf/middleManager/runtime.properties` to
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a path on HDFS that you'd like to use for temporary files required during the indexing process.
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`druid.indexer.task.hadoopWorkingPath=/tmp/druid-indexing` is a common choice.
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- Place your Hadoop configuration XMLs (core-site.xml, hdfs-site.xml, yarn-site.xml,
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mapred-site.xml) on the classpath of your Druid nodes. You can do this by copying them into
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`conf/druid/_common/core-site.xml`, `conf/druid/_common/hdfs-site.xml`, and so on.
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Note that you don't need to use HDFS deep storage in order to load data from Hadoop. For example, if
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your cluster is running on Amazon Web Services, we recommend using S3 for deep storage even if you
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are loading data using Hadoop or Elastic MapReduce.
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For more info, please see [batch ingestion](../ingestion/batch-ingestion.html).
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## Configure addresses for Druid coordination
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In this simple cluster, you will deploy a single Druid Coordinator, a
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single Druid Overlord, a single ZooKeeper instance, and an embedded Derby metadata store on the same server.
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In `conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.properties`, replace
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"zk.service.host" with the address of the machine that runs your ZK instance:
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- `druid.zk.service.host`
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In `conf/druid/_common/common.runtime.properties`, replace
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"metadata.storage.*" with the address of the machine that you will use as your metadata store:
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- `druid.metadata.storage.connector.connectURI`
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- `druid.metadata.storage.connector.host`
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<div class="note caution">
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In production, we recommend running 2 servers, each running a Druid Coordinator
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and a Druid Overlord. We also recommend running a ZooKeeper cluster on its own dedicated hardware,
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as well as replicated [metadata
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storage](http://druid.io/docs/latest/dependencies/metadata-storage.html) such as MySQL or
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PostgreSQL, on its own dedicated hardware.
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</div>
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## Tune Druid processes that serve queries
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Druid Historicals and MiddleManagers can be co-located on the same hardware. Both Druid processes benefit greatly from
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being tuned to the hardware they run on. If you are running Tranquility Server or Kafka, you can also colocate Tranquility with these two Druid processes.
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If you are using [r3.2xlarge](https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types/#r3)
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EC2 instances, or similar hardware, the configuration in the distribution is a
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reasonable starting point.
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If you are using different hardware, we recommend adjusting configurations for your specific
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hardware. The most commonly adjusted configurations are:
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- `-Xmx` and `-Xms`
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- `druid.server.http.numThreads`
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- `druid.processing.buffer.sizeBytes`
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- `druid.processing.numThreads`
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- `druid.query.groupBy.maxIntermediateRows`
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- `druid.query.groupBy.maxResults`
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- `druid.server.maxSize` and `druid.segmentCache.locations` on Historical Nodes
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- `druid.worker.capacity` on MiddleManagers
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<div class="note info">
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Keep -XX:MaxDirectMemory >= numThreads*sizeBytes, otherwise Druid will fail to start up..
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</div>
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Please see the Druid [configuration documentation](../configuration/index.html) for a full description of all
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possible configuration options.
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## Tune Druid Brokers
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Druid Brokers also benefit greatly from being tuned to the hardware they
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run on. If you are using [r3.2xlarge](https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types/#r3) EC2 instances,
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or similar hardware, the configuration in the distribution is a reasonable starting point.
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If you are using different hardware, we recommend adjusting configurations for your specific
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hardware. The most commonly adjusted configurations are:
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- `-Xmx` and `-Xms`
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- `druid.server.http.numThreads`
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- `druid.cache.sizeInBytes`
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- `druid.processing.buffer.sizeBytes`
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- `druid.processing.numThreads`
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- `druid.query.groupBy.maxIntermediateRows`
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- `druid.query.groupBy.maxResults`
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<div class="note caution">
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Keep -XX:MaxDirectMemory >= numThreads*sizeBytes, otherwise Druid will fail to start up.
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</div>
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Please see the Druid [configuration documentation](../configuration/index.html) for a full description of all
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possible configuration options.
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## Open ports (if using a firewall)
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If you're using a firewall or some other system that only allows traffic on specific ports, allow
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inbound connections on the following:
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- 1527 (Derby on your Coordinator; not needed if you are using a separate metadata store like MySQL or PostgreSQL)
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- 2181 (ZooKeeper; not needed if you are using a separate ZooKeeper cluster)
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- 8081 (Coordinator)
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- 8082 (Broker)
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- 8083 (Historical)
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- 8084 (Standalone Realtime, if used)
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- 8088 (Router, if used)
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- 8090 (Overlord)
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- 8091, 8100–8199 (Druid Middle Manager; you may need higher than port 8199 if you have a very high `druid.worker.capacity`)
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- 8200 (Tranquility Server, if used)
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<div class="note caution">
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In production, we recommend deploying ZooKeeper and your metadata store on their own dedicated hardware,
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rather than on the Coordinator server.
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</div>
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## Start Coordinator, Overlord, Zookeeper, and metadata store
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Copy the Druid distribution and your edited configurations to your coordination
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server. If you have been editing the configurations on your local machine, you can use *rsync* to
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copy them:
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```bash
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rsync -az druid-#{DRUIDVERSION}/ COORDINATION_SERVER:druid-#{DRUIDVERSION}/
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```
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Log on to your coordination server and install Zookeeper:
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```bash
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curl http://www.gtlib.gatech.edu/pub/apache/zookeeper/zookeeper-3.4.9/zookeeper-3.4.9.tar.gz -o zookeeper-3.4.9.tar.gz
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tar -xzf zookeeper-3.4.9.tar.gz
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cd zookeeper-3.4.9
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cp conf/zoo_sample.cfg conf/zoo.cfg
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./bin/zkServer.sh start
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```
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<div class="note caution">
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In production, we also recommend running a ZooKeeper cluster on its own dedicated hardware.
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</div>
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On your coordination server, *cd* into the distribution and start up the coordination services (you should do this in different windows or pipe the log to a file):
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```bash
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java `cat conf/druid/coordinator/jvm.config | xargs` -cp conf/druid/_common:conf/druid/coordinator:lib/* io.druid.cli.Main server coordinator
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java `cat conf/druid/overlord/jvm.config | xargs` -cp conf/druid/_common:conf/druid/overlord:lib/* io.druid.cli.Main server overlord
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```
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You should see a log message printed out for each service that starts up. You can view detailed logs
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for any service by looking in the `var/log/druid` directory using another terminal.
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## Start Historicals and MiddleManagers
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Copy the Druid distribution and your edited configurations to your servers set aside for the Druid Historicals and MiddleManagers.
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On each one, *cd* into the distribution and run this command to start a Data server:
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```bash
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java `cat conf/druid/historical/jvm.config | xargs` -cp conf/druid/_common:conf/druid/historical:lib/* io.druid.cli.Main server historical
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java `cat conf/druid/middleManager/jvm.config | xargs` -cp conf/druid/_common:conf/druid/middleManager:lib/* io.druid.cli.Main server middleManager
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```
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You can add more servers with Druid Historicals and MiddleManagers as needed.
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<div class="note info">
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For clusters with complex resource allocation needs, you can break apart Historicals and MiddleManagers and scale the components individually.
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This also allows you take advantage of Druid's built-in MiddleManager
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autoscaling facility.
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</div>
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If you are doing push-based stream ingestion with Kafka or over HTTP, you can also start Tranquility Server on the same
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hardware that holds MiddleManagers and Historicals. For large scale production, MiddleManagers and Tranquility Server
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can still be co-located. If you are running Tranquility (not server) with a stream processor, you can co-locate
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Tranquility with the stream processor and not require Tranquility Server.
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```bash
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curl -O http://static.druid.io/tranquility/releases/tranquility-distribution-0.8.0.tgz
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tar -xzf tranquility-distribution-0.8.0.tgz
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cd tranquility-distribution-0.8.0
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bin/tranquility <server or kafka> -configFile <path_to_druid_distro>/conf/tranquility/<server or kafka>.json
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```
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## Start Druid Broker
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Copy the Druid distribution and your edited configurations to your servers set aside for the Druid Brokers.
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On each one, *cd* into the distribution and run this command to start a Broker (you may want to pipe the output to a log file):
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```bash
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java `cat conf/druid/broker/jvm.config | xargs` -cp conf/druid/_common:conf/druid/broker:lib/* io.druid.cli.Main server broker
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```
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You can add more Brokers as needed based on query load.
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## Loading data
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Congratulations, you now have a Druid cluster! The next step is to learn about recommended ways to load data into
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Druid based on your use case. Read more about [loading data](ingestion.html).
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