Could someone please let me know where to get RPM for Centos for Zookeeper.
Thanks Harish On Tue, May 8, 2018 at 1:57 PM, Washko, Daniel <[email protected]> wrote: > Steve, how was zookeeper installed? That should be the method with which > you remove it. > > If you are not sure how it was installed, you can do: > > rpm -qa |grep zookeeper > > To determine whether it was installed via an RPM package. If that does not > unearth a matching RPM then it was probably installed some other way. More > than likely it could have binary in an archive extracted to, maybe, > /opt/zookeeper. > > If you look at the running zookeeper process it should give you an idea of > where zookeeper is installed and where the data directory is: > > ps -ef |grep zookeeper > > How zookeeper is starting is dependent on which version of Centos you are > running. Centos 6 uses upstart and service command. More than likely you > will find the zookeeper init script in /etc/init.d. If this is Centos 7 > then it's systemd. As root you can run systemctl by itself to get a list of > service scripts. Hit the "/" key and type in zookeeper. It will take you to > any service script with zookeeper in the name. This will help you determine > how to stop zookeeper. > > If neither systemd is showing a zookeeper service nor you see a service > script in /etc/init.d (or if service zookeeper stop doesn't work), then it > would appear that zookeeper was started in some other way, maybe manually > without a service or systemd script. > > You'll want to figure this out because if you have to manually remove > zookeeper, instead of using a package manager like RPM, you'll want to > disable any startup scripts from running and throwing errors once Zookeeper > is removed. > > On 5/8/18, 10:32 AM, "Steph van Schalkwyk" <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Find where it is installed - typically /opt/zookeeper. > Also do a which zookeeper to see if it is linked to /usr/bin or some > such > place. > Make sure zookeeper is stopped. > Far as I recall, Centos has Upstart, so sudo stop zookeeper and sudo > disable zookeeper. Or sudo systemctl stop zookeeper and sudo systemctl > disable zookeeper. > Then cat the /opt/zookeeper/conf/zoo.cfg to see where the data > directories > and logs are. Delete the data and log directories. > Then delete /opt/zookeeper. > Steph > > > > On Tue, May 8, 2018 at 9:07 AM, Steve Pruitt <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > I need to remove ZooKeeper from a Centos machine. I tried yum > remove to > > no avail using instructions I found online. > > > > Thanks. > > > > -S > > > > > > >
