I did some more digging on this. It does appear that snappy is not being properly built while the rest of the other native libraries are. I am not completely sure on why this is. Whether its because of installing through fluo-uno or with this version of hadoop (3.2.0). I did get past this by adding the libsnappy.so.1 file manually.
On Tue, May 28, 2019 at 5:36 PM Jeffrey Manno <[email protected]> wrote: > I have ran into this issue before. I believe it has something to do with > the second part Christopher mentioned. > I know installing snappy into the OS only causes more headaches. I can > take a deeper look into it tomorrow. > > On Tue, May 28, 2019 at 5:31 PM Christopher <[email protected]> wrote: > >> You might need to install snappy into your OS. >> On Fedora: 'sudo dnf install snappy' >> On RHEL/CentOS: 'sudo yum install snappy' >> >> It's also possible that the version of Hadoop you're using doesn't >> have its native libraries built, but it's hard to know more without >> seeing more of the error message (like an associated stack trace or >> logger class name). If it is Hadoop not having it's native libraries >> built, I'm not sure how to rebuild Hadoop from source. >> >> On Tue, May 28, 2019 at 3:48 PM Jeffrey Zeiberg <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > >> > I am seeing this in my error logs on my Uno instance when I run the >> > "./bin/cingest ingest" in accumulo-testing. Anyone else seeing this? >> > >> >
