CentOS 7 CE CPU Installation With Yum

This is an end-to-end recipe for installing MapD Community Edition on a CentOS 7 machine running without GPUs using a tarball. This install has all of the functionality of MapD, except for backend rendering (Pointmap, Scatterplot, and other charts might not be available).

Here is a quick video overview of the installation process.

The installation phases are:

Note: The order of these instructions is significant. Please install each component in the order presented to prevent aggravated hair loss.

Assumptions

These instructions assume the following:
  • You are installing on a “clean” CentOS/RHEL 7 host machine with only the operating system installed.
  • Your MapD host only runs the daemons and services required to support MapD.
  • Your MapD host is connected to the Internet.

Preparation

Prepare your host machine by updating your system, creating the MapD user, and enabling a firewall.

Update and Reboot

Update the entire system and reboot to activate the latest kernel.

sudo yum update
sudo reboot

Create the MapD User

Create the mapd group and mapd user, who will be the owner of the MapD database. You can create both the group and user with the useradd command and the -U switch.

sudo useradd -U mapd

Firewall

To use Immerse, you must prepare your host machine to accept HTTP connections. You can configure your firewall for external access.

sudo firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=9092/tcp --permanent
sudo firewall-cmd --reload

For more information, see https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Firewalld?rd=FirewallD.

Installation

Use curl to download the MapD repository file to the yum repository directory.

curl https://releases.mapd.com/ce/mapd-ce-cpu.repo | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/mapd.repo

Use yum to install MapD .

sudo yum install mapd

Configuration

These are the steps to prepare your MapD environment.

Set Environment Variables

For convenience, you can update .bashrc with the required environment variables.

  1. Go to your home directory.

  2. Use ctrl-h to show hidden files.

  3. Edit the .bashrc file. Add the following variable export commands under “User specific aliases and functions.”

    # User specific aliases and functions
    export MAPD_USER=mapd
    export MAPD_GROUP=mapd
    export MAPD_STORAGE=/var/lib/mapd
    export MAPD_PATH=/opt/mapd
    
  4. Save the .bashrc file.

  5. Open a new terminal window to use your changes.

The $MAPD_STORAGE directory must be dedicated to MapD: do not set it to a directory shared by other packages.

MapD Configuration File (mapd.conf)

You can also create a configuration file with optional settings. See Configuration.

Initialization

This step initializes the database and prepares systemd commands for MapD.

  1. Run the systemd installer. This script requires sudo access. You might be prompted for a password. Accept the values provided (based on your environment variables) or make changes as needed. The script creates a data directory in $MAPD_STORAGE with the directories mapd_catalogs, mapd_data, and mapd_export. mapd_import and mapd_log directories are created when you insert data the first time. The mapd_log directory is the one of most interest to a MapD administrator.

    cd $MAPD_PATH/systemd
    sudo ./install_mapd_systemd.sh
    

Activation

Start and use MapD Core and Immerse.

  1. Start MapD Core

    cd $MAPD_PATH
    sudo systemctl start mapd_server
    sudo systemctl start mapd_web_server
    
  2. Enable MapD Core to start when the system reboots.

    sudo systemctl enable mapd_server
    sudo systemctl enable mapd_web_server
    

Checkpoint

To verify that all systems are go, load some sample data, perform a mapdql query, and generate a Table chart using Immerse.

MapD ships with two sample datasets of airline flight information collected in 2008. To install the sample data, run the following command.

cd $MAPD_PATH
sudo ./insert_sample_data

When prompted, choose whether to insert dataset 1 (7 million rows) or dataset 2 (10 thousand rows). The examples below use the smaller 10 thousand row dataset.

Enter dataset number to download, or 'q' to quit:
#     Dataset           Rows    Table Name          File Name
1)    Flights (2008)    7M      flights_2008_7M     flights_2008_7M.tar.gz
2)    Flights (2008)    10k     flights_2008_10k    flights_2008_10k.tar.gz

Connect to MapD Core by entering the following command (default password is HyperInteractive):

$MAPD_PATH/bin/mapdql
password: ••••••••••••••••

Enter a SQL query such as the following:

mapdql> SELECT origin_city AS "Origin", dest_city AS "Destination", AVG(airtime) AS
"Average Airtime" FROM flights_2008_10k WHERE distance < 175 GROUP BY origin_city,
dest_city;

The results should be similar to the results below.

Origin|Destination|Average Airtime
Austin|Houston|33.055556
Norfolk|Baltimore|36.071429
Ft. Myers|Orlando|28.666667
Orlando|Ft. Myers|32.583333
Houston|Austin|29.611111
Baltimore|Norfolk|31.714286

Connect to Immerse using a web browser connected to your host machine on port 9092. For example, http://mapd.mycompany.com:9092.

Create a new dashboard and a Table chart.

  1. Click New Dashboard.
  2. Select the flights_2008_10K table as the datasource.
  3. Click Connect to Table.
  4. Click Add Chart.
  5. Click Table.
  6. Click Add Measure.
  7. Choose arrdelay.
  8. Click Add Measure.
  9. Choose depdelay.

The resulting chart shows, unsurprisingly, that there is a correlation between departure delay and arrival delay.

getting-started/images/firstTable.png