Describes how to prepare your operating system environment for Greenplum Database software installation.
Perform the following tasks in order:
- Make sure your host systems meet the requirements described in Platform Requirements.
- Deactivate or configure SELinux.
- Deactivate or configure firewall software.
- Set the required operating system parameters.
- Synchronize system clocks.
- Create the gpadmin account.
Unless noted, these tasks should be performed for all hosts in your Greenplum Database array (master, standby master, and segment hosts).
The Greenplum Database host naming convention for the master host is mdw
and for the standby master host is smdw
.
The segment host naming convention is sdwN where sdw is a prefix and N is an integer. For example, segment host names would be sdw1
, sdw2
and so on. NIC bonding is recommended for hosts with multiple interfaces, but when the interfaces are not bonded, the convention is to append a dash (-
) and number to the host name. For example, sdw1-1
and sdw1-2
are the two interface names for host sdw1
.
For information about running VMware Greenplum Database in the cloud see Cloud Services in the VMware Greenplum Partner Marketplace.
Important
When data loss is not acceptable for a Greenplum Database cluster, Greenplum master and segment mirroring is recommended. If mirroring is not enabled then Greenplum stores only one copy of the data, so the underlying storage media provides the only guarantee for data availability and correctness in the event of a hardware failure.
The VMware Greenplum on vSphere virtualized environment ensures the enforcement of anti-affinity rules required for Greenplum mirroring solutions and fully supports mirrorless deployments. Other virtualized or containerized deployment environments are generally not supported for production use unless both Greenplum master and segment mirroring are enabled.
Note
For information about upgrading VMware Greenplum from a previous version, see the VMware Greenplum Database Release Notes for the release that you are installing.
Note
Automating the configuration steps described in this topic and Installing the Greenplum Database Software with a system provisioning tool, such as Ansible, Chef, or Puppet, can save time and ensure a reliable and repeatable Greenplum Database installation.
Parent topic: Installing and Upgrading Greenplum
Deactivate or Configure SELinux
For all Greenplum Database host systems running RHEL or CentOS, SELinux must either be Disabled
or configured to allow unconfined access to Greenplum processes, directories, and the gpadmin user.
If you choose to deactivate SELinux:
As the root user, check the status of SELinux:
# sestatus
SELinuxstatus: disabled
If SELinux is not deactivated, deactivate it by editing the
/etc/selinux/config
file. As root, change the value of theSELINUX
parameter in theconfig
file as follows:SELINUX=disabled
If the System Security Services Daemon (SSSD) is installed on your systems, edit the SSSD configuration file and set the
selinux_provider
parameter tonone
to prevent SELinux-related SSH authentication denials that could occur even with SELinux deactivated. As root, edit/etc/sssd/sssd.conf
and add this parameter:selinux_provider=none
Reboot the system to apply any changes that you made and verify that SELinux is deactivated.
If you choose to enable SELinux in Enforcing
mode, then Greenplum processes and users can operate successfully in the default Unconfined
context. If you require increased SELinux confinement for Greenplum processes and users, you must test your configuration to ensure that there are no functionality or performance impacts to Greenplum Database. See the SELinux User’s and Administrator’s Guide for detailed information about configuring SELinux and SELinux users.
Deactivate or Configure Firewall Software
You should also deactivate firewall software such as iptables
(on systems such as RHEL 6.x and CentOS 6.x ), firewalld
(on systems such as RHEL 7.x and CentOS 7.x), or ufw
(on Ubuntu systems, deactivated by default). If firewall software is not deactivated, you must instead configure your software to allow required communication between Greenplum hosts.
To deactivate iptables
:
As the root user, check the status of
iptables
:# /sbin/chkconfig --list iptables
If
iptables
is deactivated, the command output is:iptables 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off
If necessary, run this command as root to deactivate
iptables
:/sbin/chkconfig iptables off
You will need to reboot your system after applying the change.
For systems with
firewalld
, check the status offirewalld
with the command:# systemctl status firewalld
If
firewalld
is deactivated, the command output is:* firewalld.service - firewalld - dynamic firewall daemon
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/firewalld.service; disabled; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: inactive (dead)
If necessary, run these commands as root to deactivate
firewalld
:# systemctl stop firewalld.service
# systemctl deactivate firewalld.service
If you decide to enable iptables
with Greenplum Database for security purposes, see Enabling iptables (Optional) for important considerations and example configurations.
See the documentation for the firewall or your operating system for additional information.
Recommended OS Parameters Settings
Greenplum requires that certain Linux operating system (OS) parameters be set on all hosts in your Greenplum Database system (masters and segments).
In general, the following categories of system parameters need to be altered:
- Shared Memory - A Greenplum Database instance will not work unless the shared memory segment for your kernel is properly sized. Most default OS installations have the shared memory values set too low for Greenplum Database. On Linux systems, you must also deactivate the OOM (out of memory) killer. For information about Greenplum Database shared memory requirements, see the Greenplum Database server configuration parameter shared_buffers in the Greenplum Database Reference Guide.
- Network - On high-volume Greenplum Database systems, certain network-related tuning parameters must be set to optimize network connections made by the Greenplum interconnect.
- User Limits - User limits control the resources available to processes started by a user’s shell. Greenplum Database requires a higher limit on the allowed number of file descriptors that a single process can have open. The default settings may cause some Greenplum Database queries to fail because they will run out of file descriptors needed to process the query.
More specifically, you need to edit the following Linux configuration settings:
- The hosts File
- The sysctl.conf File
- System Resources Limits
- Core Dump
- XFS Mount Options
- Disk I/O Settings
- Read ahead values
- Disk I/O scheduler disk access
- Networking
- Transparent Huge Pages (THP)
- IPC Object Removal
- SSH Connection Threshold
The hosts File
Edit the /etc/hosts
file and make sure that it includes the host names and all interface address names for every machine participating in your Greenplum Database system.
The sysctl.conf File
The sysctl.conf
parameters listed in this topic are for performance, optimization, and consistency in a wide variety of environments. Change these settings according to your specific situation and setup.
Set the parameters in the /etc/sysctl.conf
file and reload with sysctl -p
:
# kernel.shmall = _PHYS_PAGES / 2 # See Shared Memory Pages
kernel.shmall = 197951838
# kernel.shmmax = kernel.shmall * PAGE_SIZE
kernel.shmmax = 810810728448
kernel.shmmni = 4096
vm.overcommit_memory = 2 # See Segment Host Memory
vm.overcommit_ratio = 95 # See Segment Host Memory
net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range = 10000 65535 # See Port Settings
kernel.sem = 250 2048000 200 8192
kernel.sysrq = 1
kernel.core_uses_pid = 1
kernel.msgmnb = 65536
kernel.msgmax = 65536
kernel.msgmni = 2048
net.ipv4.tcp_syncookies = 1
net.ipv4.conf.default.accept_source_route = 0
net.ipv4.tcp_max_syn_backlog = 4096
net.ipv4.conf.all.arp_filter = 1
net.ipv4.ipfrag_high_thresh = 41943040
net.ipv4.ipfrag_low_thresh = 31457280
net.ipv4.ipfrag_time = 60
net.core.netdev_max_backlog = 10000
net.core.rmem_max = 2097152
net.core.wmem_max = 2097152
vm.swappiness = 10
vm.zone_reclaim_mode = 0
vm.dirty_expire_centisecs = 500
vm.dirty_writeback_centisecs = 100
vm.dirty_background_ratio = 0 # See System Memory
vm.dirty_ratio = 0
vm.dirty_background_bytes = 1610612736
vm.dirty_bytes = 4294967296
Shared Memory Pages
Greenplum Database uses shared memory to communicate between postgres
processes that are part of the same postgres
instance. kernel.shmall
sets the total amount of shared memory, in pages, that can be used system wide. kernel.shmmax
sets the maximum size of a single shared memory segment in bytes.
Set kernel.shmall
and kernel.shmmax
values based on your system’s physical memory and page size. In general, the value for both parameters should be one half of the system physical memory.
Use the operating system variables _PHYS_PAGES
and PAGE_SIZE
to set the parameters.
kernel.shmall = ( _PHYS_PAGES / 2)
kernel.shmmax = ( _PHYS_PAGES / 2) * PAGE_SIZE
To calculate the values for kernel.shmall
and kernel.shmmax
, run the following commands using the getconf
command, which returns the value of an operating system variable.
$ echo $(expr $(getconf _PHYS_PAGES) / 2)
$ echo $(expr $(getconf _PHYS_PAGES) / 2 \* $(getconf PAGE_SIZE))
As best practice, we recommend you set the following values in the /etc/sysctl.conf
file using calculated values. For example, a host system has 1583 GB of memory installed and returns these values: _PHYS_PAGES = 395903676 and PAGE_SIZE = 4096. These would be the kernel.shmall
and kernel.shmmax
values:
kernel.shmall = 197951838
kernel.shmmax = 810810728448
If the Greenplum Database master has a different shared memory configuration than the segment hosts, the _PHYS_PAGES and PAGE_SIZE values might differ, and the kernel.shmall
and kernel.shmmax
values on the master host will differ from those on the segment hosts.
Segment Host Memory
The vm.overcommit_memory
Linux kernel parameter is used by the OS to determine how much memory can be allocated to processes. For Greenplum Database, this parameter should always be set to 2.
vm.overcommit_ratio
is the percent of RAM that is used for application processes and the remainder is reserved for the operating system. The default is 50 on Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
For vm.overcommit_ratio
tuning and calculation recommendations with resource group-based resource management or resource queue-based resource management, refer to Options for Configuring Segment Host Memory in the Geenplum Database Administrator Guide.
Port Settings
To avoid port conflicts between Greenplum Database and other applications during Greenplum initialization, make a note of the port range specified by the operating system parameter net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range
. When initializing Greenplum using the gpinitsystem
cluster configuration file, do not specify Greenplum Database ports in that range. For example, if net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range = 10000 65535
, set the Greenplum Database base port numbers to these values.
PORT_BASE = 6000
MIRROR_PORT_BASE = 7000
For information about the gpinitsystem
cluster configuration file, see Initializing a Greenplum Database System.
For Azure deployments with Greenplum Database avoid using port 65330; add the following line to sysctl.conf:
net.ipv4.ip_local_reserved_ports=65330
For additional requirements and recommendations for cloud deployments, see Greenplum Database Cloud Technical Recommendations.
IP Fragmentation Settings
When the Greenplum Database interconnect uses UDP (the default), the network interface card controls IP packet fragmentation and reassemblies.
If the UDP message size is larger than the size of the maximum transmission unit (MTU) of a network, the IP layer fragments the message. (Refer to Networking later in this topic for more information about MTU sizes for Greenplum Database.) The receiver must store the fragments in a buffer before it can reorganize and reassemble the message.
The following sysctl.conf
operating system parameters control the reassembly process:
OS Parameter | Description |
---|---|
net.ipv4.ipfrag_high_thresh | The maximum amount of memory used to reassemble IP fragments before the kernel starts to remove fragments to free up resources. The default value is 4194304 bytes (4MB). |
net.ipv4.ipfrag_low_thresh | The minimum amount of memory used to reassemble IP fragments. The default value is 3145728 bytes (3MB). (Deprecated after kernel version 4.17.) |
net.ipv4.ipfrag_time | The maximum amount of time (in seconds) to keep an IP fragment in memory. The default value is 30. |
The recommended settings for these parameters for Greenplum Database follow:
net.ipv4.ipfrag_high_thresh = 41943040
net.ipv4.ipfrag_low_thresh = 31457280
net.ipv4.ipfrag_time = 60
System Memory
For host systems with more than 64GB of memory, these settings are recommended:
vm.dirty_background_ratio = 0
vm.dirty_ratio = 0
vm.dirty_background_bytes = 1610612736 # 1.5GB
vm.dirty_bytes = 4294967296 # 4GB
For host systems with 64GB of memory or less, remove vm.dirty_background_bytes
and vm.dirty_bytes
and set the two ratio
parameters to these values:
vm.dirty_background_ratio = 3
vm.dirty_ratio = 10
Increase vm.min_free_kbytes
to ensure PF_MEMALLOC
requests from network and storage drivers are easily satisfied. This is especially critical on systems with large amounts of system memory. The default value is often far too low on these systems. Use this awk command to set vm.min_free_kbytes
to a recommended 3% of system physical memory:
awk 'BEGIN {OFMT = "%.0f";} /MemTotal/ {print "vm.min_free_kbytes =", $2 * .03;}'
/proc/meminfo >> /etc/sysctl.conf
Do not set vm.min_free_kbytes
to higher than 5% of system memory as doing so might cause out of memory conditions.
System Resources Limits
Set the following parameters in the /etc/security/limits.conf
file:
* soft nofile 524288
* hard nofile 524288
* soft nproc 131072
* hard nproc 131072
For Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and CentOS systems, parameter values in the /etc/security/limits.d/90-nproc.conf
file (RHEL/CentOS 6) or /etc/security/limits.d/20-nproc.conf
file (RHEL/CentOS 7) override the values in the limits.conf
file. Ensure that any parameters in the override file are set to the required value. The Linux module pam_limits
sets user limits by reading the values from the limits.conf
file and then from the override file. For information about PAM and user limits, see the documentation on PAM and pam_limits
.
Run the ulimit -u
command on each segment host to display the maximum number of processes that are available to each user. Validate that the return value is 131072.
Core Dump
Enable core file generation to a known location by adding the following line to /etc/sysctl.conf
:
kernel.core_pattern=/var/core/core.%h.%t
Add the following line to /etc/security/limits.conf
:
* soft core unlimited
To apply the changes to the live kernel, run the following command:
# sysctl -p
XFS Mount Options
XFS is the preferred data storage file system on Linux platforms. Use the mount
command with the following recommended XFS mount options for RHEL 7 and CentOS systems:
rw,nodev,noatime,nobarrier,inode64
The nobarrier
option is not supported on RHEL 8 or Ubuntu systems. Use only the options:
rw,nodev,noatime,inode64
See the mount
manual page (man mount
opens the man page) for more information about using this command.
The XFS options can also be set in the /etc/fstab
file. This example entry from an fstab
file specifies the XFS options.
/dev/data /data xfs nodev,noatime,inode64 0 0
Note
You must have root permission to edit the
/etc/fstab
file.
Disk I/O Settings
Read-ahead value
Each disk device file should have a read-ahead (
blockdev
) value of 16384. To verify the read-ahead value of a disk device:# sudo /sbin/blockdev --getra <devname>
For example:
# sudo /sbin/blockdev --getra /dev/sdb
To set blockdev (read-ahead) on a device:
# sudo /sbin/blockdev --setra <bytes> <devname>
For example:
# sudo /sbin/blockdev --setra 16384 /dev/sdb
See the manual page (man) for the
blockdev
command for more information about using that command (man blockdev
opens the man page).Note
The
blockdev --setra
command is not persistent. You must ensure the read-ahead value is set whenever the system restarts. How to set the value will vary based on your system.One method to set the
blockdev
value at system startup is by adding the/sbin/blockdev --setra
command in therc.local
file. For example, add this line to therc.local
file to set the read-ahead value for the disksdb
./sbin/blockdev --setra 16384 /dev/sdb
On systems that use systemd, you must also set the execute permissions on the
rc.local
file to enable it to run at startup. For example, on a RHEL/CentOS 7 system, this command sets execute permissions on the file.# chmod +x /etc/rc.d/rc.local
Restart the system to have the setting take effect.
Disk I/O scheduler
The Linux disk scheduler orders the I/O requests submitted to a storage device, controlling the way the kernel commits reads and writes to disk.
A typical Linux disk I/O scheduler supports multiple access policies. The optimal policy selection depends on the underlying storage infrastructure. The recommended scheduler policy settings for Greenplum Database systems for specific OSs and storage device types follow:
Storage Device Type OS Recommended Scheduler Policy Non-Volatile Memory Express (NVMe) RHEL 7
RHEL 8
Ubuntunone
Solid-State Drives (SSD) RHEL 7 noop
RHEL 8
Ubuntunone
Other RHEL 7 deadline
RHEL 8
Ubuntumq-deadline
To specify a scheduler until the next system reboot, run the following:
# echo schedulername > /sys/block/<devname>/queue/scheduler
For example:
# echo deadline > /sys/block/sbd/queue/scheduler
Note
Using the
echo
command to set the disk I/O scheduler policy is not persistent; you must ensure that you run the command whenever the system reboots. How to run the command will vary based on your system.To specify the I/O scheduler at boot time on systems that use
grub2
such as RHEL 7.x or CentOS 7.x, use the system utilitygrubby
. This command adds the parameter when run asroot
:# grubby --update-kernel=ALL --args="elevator=deadline"
After adding the parameter, reboot the system.
This
grubby
command displays kernel parameter settings:# grubby --info=ALL
Refer to your operating system documentation for more information about the
grubby
utility. If you used thegrubby
command to configure the disk scheduler on a RHEL or CentOS 7.x system and it does not update the kernels, see the Note at the end of the section.For additional information about configuring the disk scheduler, refer to the RedHat Enterprise Linux documentation for RHEL 7 or RHEL 8. The Ubuntu wiki IOSchedulers topic describes the I/O schedulers available on Ubuntu systems.
Networking
The maximum transmission unit (MTU) of a network specifies the size (in bytes) of the largest data packet/frame accepted by a network-connected device. A jumbo frame is a frame that contains more than the standard MTU of 1500 bytes.
Greenplum Database utilizes 3 distinct MTU settings:
- The Greenplum Database gp_max_packet_size server configuration parameter. The default max packet size is 8192. This default assumes a jumbo frame MTU.
- The operating system MTU setting.
- The rack switch MTU setting.
These settings are connected, in that they should always be either the same, or close to the same, value, or otherwise in the order of Greenplum < OS < switch for MTU size.
9000 is a common supported setting for switches, and is the recommended OS and rack switch MTU setting for your Greenplum Database hosts.
Transparent Huge Pages (THP)
Deactivate Transparent Huge Pages (THP) as it degrades Greenplum Database performance. RHEL 6.0 or higher enables THP by default. One way to deactivate THP on RHEL 6.x is by adding the parameter transparent_hugepage=never
to the kernel command in the file /boot/grub/grub.conf
, the GRUB boot loader configuration file. This is an example kernel command from a grub.conf
file. The command is on multiple lines for readability:
kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-274.3.1.el5 ro root=LABEL=/
elevator=deadline crashkernel=128M@16M quiet console=tty1
console=ttyS1,115200 panic=30 transparent_hugepage=never
initrd /initrd-2.6.18-274.3.1.el5.img
On systems that use grub2
such as RHEL 7.x or CentOS 7.x, use the system utility grubby
. This command adds the parameter when run as root.
# grubby --update-kernel=ALL --args="transparent_hugepage=never"
After adding the parameter, reboot the system.
For Ubuntu systems, install the hugepages
package and run this command as root:
# hugeadm --thp-never
This cat command checks the state of THP. The output indicates that THP is deactivated.
$ cat /sys/kernel/mm/*transparent_hugepage/enabled
always [never]
For more information about Transparent Huge Pages or the grubby
utility, see your operating system documentation. If the grubby
command does not update the kernels, see the Note at the end of the section.
IPC Object Removal
Deactivate IPC object removal for RHEL 7.2 or CentOS 7.2, or Ubuntu. The default systemd
setting RemoveIPC=yes
removes IPC connections when non-system user accounts log out. This causes the Greenplum Database utility gpinitsystem
to fail with semaphore errors. Perform one of the following to avoid this issue.
When you add the
gpadmin
operating system user account to the master node in Creating the Greenplum Administrative User, create the user as a system account.Deactivate
RemoveIPC
. Set this parameter in/etc/systemd/logind.conf
on the Greenplum Database host systems.RemoveIPC=no
The setting takes effect after restarting the
systemd-login
service or rebooting the system. To restart the service, run this command as the root user.service systemd-logind restart
SSH Connection Threshold
Certain Greenplum Database management utilities including gpexpand
, gpinitsystem
, and gpaddmirrors
, use secure shell (SSH) connections between systems to perform their tasks. In large Greenplum Database deployments, cloud deployments, or deployments with a large number of segments per host, these utilities may exceed the host’s maximum threshold for unauthenticated connections. When this occurs, you receive errors such as: ssh_exchange_identification: Connection closed by remote host
.
To increase this connection threshold for your Greenplum Database system, update the SSH MaxStartups
and MaxSessions
configuration parameters in one of the /etc/ssh/sshd_config
or /etc/sshd_config
SSH daemon configuration files.
Note
You must have root permission to edit these two files.
If you specify MaxStartups
and MaxSessions
using a single integer value, you identify the maximum number of concurrent unauthenticated connections (MaxStartups
) and maximum number of open shell, login, or subsystem sessions permitted per network connection (MaxSessions
). For example:
MaxStartups 200
MaxSessions 200
If you specify MaxStartups
using the “start:rate:full” syntax, you enable random early connection drop by the SSH daemon. start identifies the maximum number of unauthenticated SSH connection attempts allowed. Once start number of unauthenticated connection attempts is reached, the SSH daemon refuses rate percent of subsequent connection attempts. full identifies the maximum number of unauthenticated connection attempts after which all attempts are refused. For example:
Max Startups 10:30:200
MaxSessions 200
Restart the SSH daemon after you update MaxStartups
and MaxSessions
. For example, on a CentOS 6 system, run the following command as the root
user:
# service sshd restart
For detailed information about SSH configuration options, refer to the SSH documentation for your Linux distribution.
Note
If the
grubby
command does not update the kernels of a RHEL 7.x or CentOS 7.x system, you can manually update all kernels on the system. For example, to add the parametertransparent_hugepage=never
to all kernels on a system.
Add the parameter to the
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX
line in the file parameter in/etc/default/grub
.GRUB_TIMEOUT=5
GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR="$(sed 's, release .*$,,g' /etc/system-release)"
GRUB_DEFAULT=saved
GRUB_DISABLE_SUBMENU=true
GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT="console"
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="crashkernel=auto rd.lvm.lv=cl/root rd.lvm.lv=cl/swap rhgb quiet transparent_hugepage=never"
GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true"
Note
You must have root permission to edit the
/etc/default/grub
file.As root, run the
grub2-mkconfig
command to update the kernels.# grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
Reboot the system.
Synchronizing System Clocks
You should use NTP (Network Time Protocol) to synchronize the system clocks on all hosts that comprise your Greenplum Database system. See www.ntp.org for more information about NTP.
NTP on the segment hosts should be configured to use the master host as the primary time source, and the standby master as the secondary time source. On the master and standby master hosts, configure NTP to point to your preferred time server.
To configure NTP
On the master host, log in as root and edit the
/etc/ntp.conf
file. Set theserver
parameter to point to your data center’s NTP time server. For example (if10.6.220.20
was the IP address of your data center’s NTP server):server 10.6.220.20
On each segment host, log in as root and edit the
/etc/ntp.conf
file. Set the firstserver
parameter to point to the master host, and the second server parameter to point to the standby master host. For example:server mdw prefer
server smdw
On the standby master host, log in as root and edit the
/etc/ntp.conf
file. Set the firstserver
parameter to point to the primary master host, and the second server parameter to point to your data center’s NTP time server. For example:server mdw prefer
server 10.6.220.20
On the master host, use the NTP daemon synchronize the system clocks on all Greenplum hosts. For example, using gpssh:
# gpssh -f hostfile_gpssh_allhosts -v -e 'ntpd'
Creating the Greenplum Administrative User
Create a dedicated operating system user account on each node to run and administer Greenplum Database. This user account is named gpadmin
by convention.
Important
You cannot run the Greenplum Database server as
root
.
The gpadmin
user must have permission to access the services and directories required to install and run Greenplum Database.
The gpadmin
user on each Greenplum host must have an SSH key pair installed and be able to SSH from any host in the cluster to any other host in the cluster without entering a password or passphrase (called “passwordless SSH”). If you enable passwordless SSH from the master host to every other host in the cluster (“1-n passwordless SSH”), you can use the Greenplum Database gpssh-exkeys
command-line utility later to enable passwordless SSH from every host to every other host (“n-n passwordless SSH”).
You can optionally give the gpadmin
user sudo privilege, so that you can easily administer all hosts in the Greenplum Database cluster as gpadmin
using the sudo
, ssh/scp
, and gpssh/gpscp
commands.
The following steps show how to set up the gpadmin
user on a host, set a password, create an SSH key pair, and (optionally) enable sudo capability. These steps must be performed as root on every Greenplum Database cluster host. (For a large Greenplum Database cluster you will want to automate these steps using your system provisioning tools.)
Note
See Example Ansible Playbook for an example that shows how to automate the tasks of creating the
gpadmin
user and installing the Greenplum Database software on all hosts in the cluster.
Create the
gpadmin
group and user.Note
If you are installing Greenplum Database on RHEL 7.2 or CentOS 7.2 and want to deactivate IPC object removal by creating the
gpadmin
user as a system account, provide both the-r
option (create the user as a system account) and the-m
option (create a home directory) to theuseradd
command. On Ubuntu systems, you must use the-m
option with theuseradd
command to create a home directory for a user.This example creates the
gpadmin
group, creates thegpadmin
user as a system account with a home directory and as a member of thegpadmin
group, and creates a password for the user.# groupadd gpadmin
# useradd gpadmin -r -m -g gpadmin
# passwd gpadmin
New password: <changeme>
Retype new password: <changeme>
Note
You must have root permission to create the
gpadmin
group and user.Note
Make sure the
gpadmin
user has the same user id (uid) and group id (gid) numbers on each host to prevent problems with scripts or services that use them for identity or permissions. For example, backing up Greenplum databases to some networked filesy stems or storage appliances could fail if thegpadmin
user has different uid or gid numbers on different segment hosts. When you create thegpadmin
group and user, you can use thegroupadd -g
option to specify a gid number and theuseradd -u
option to specify the uid number. Use the commandid gpadmin
to see the uid and gid for thegpadmin
user on the current host.Switch to the
gpadmin
user and generate an SSH key pair for thegpadmin
user.$ su gpadmin
$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/gpadmin/.ssh/id_rsa):
Created directory '/home/gpadmin/.ssh'.
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
At the passphrase prompts, press Enter so that SSH connections will not require entry of a passphrase.
Grant sudo access to the
gpadmin
user.On Red Hat or CentOS, run
visudo
and uncomment the%wheel
group entry.%wheel ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
Make sure you uncomment the line that has the
NOPASSWD
keyword.Add the
gpadmin
user to thewheel
group with this command.# usermod -aG wheel gpadmin