As far as I know this is not a sqoop connector. It is a standalone
MapReduce program. Please, correct me if I'm wrong.

Best regards,
Dima

On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 2:53 PM, Boglarka Egyed <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Dima,
>
> Actually, you can download and install manually Teradata connector from
> the official Teradata website. The connector for Hadoop downloads can be
> found here:
> http://downloads.teradata.com/download/connectivity/teradata-connector-for-hadoop-command-line-edition
>
> Kind regards,
> Bogi
>
> On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 2:43 PM, Attila Szabo <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hi Dima,
>>
>> It's is possible however it might not be that straightforward ( e.g. in
>> case of CDH the Terradata connector is distributed with the help of
>> Cloudera manager and not manually).
>>
>> Could you please provide some more information about your use case ( how
>> many nodes do you have in your cluster, how many mappers you'd like to use,
>> etc. ). Would you please also tell why would you like to avoid the use of
>> vendor distributions?
>>
>> Thanks
>> Attila
>> On Jul 7, 2016 2:37 PM, "Dima Fadeyev" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hello, everyone,
>>
>> Is there a Teradata connector for Sqoop available? I'm seeing that every
>> Hadoop vendor has one. However there are no mentions of Teradata connector
>> for Apache Sqoop. If there is no such thing, is it possible to use a
>> connector provided by any of the vendors (Cloudera, Hortonworks, IBM) with
>> Apache Sqoop?
>>
>> By Apache Sqoop I mean Sqoop downloaded from Apache website, not Sqoop
>> that comes as part of CDH, HDP, etc...
>>
>> Thanks and best regards
>>
>>
>

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