Kevin,
What did you think of Cloudera Desktop? Where you able to get it
running with a vanilla hadoop install?
-John
On Nov 12, 2009, at 9:40 AM, Kevin Sweeney wrote:
We're about in the same boat as you. We use Nagios and have Cacti
for other
things so I'll probably use it for hadoop as well. Ganglia seems
interesting
but not too simple to setup. We also tried Cloudera Desktop which
gives you
a nice interface to see what's happening but it requires using
Cloudera's
hadoop and seems more focused on real-time status as opposed to
background
monitoring.
I'd be interested to hear more of what other people have been
successful
with. Anyone?
-Kevin
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 6:22 AM, John Martyniak <
j...@beforedawnsolutions.com> wrote:
I do already use Nagios, and have been monitoring the availability
etc, of
the network.
But I was hoping to get more insight into the load/workings of the
hadoop
network and Ganglia seemed like a good start.
Do you use either Ganglia or Cacti, or something else?
-John
On Nov 12, 2009, at 12:51 AM, Kevin Sweeney wrote:
Nagios is always a good start. This webcast has some good
information on
this subject:
http://www.cloudera
.com/blog/2009/11/09/hadoop-world-monitoring-best-practices-from-
ed-capriolo/
<
http://www.cloudera.com/blog/2009/11/09/hadoop-world-monitoring-best-practices-from-ed-capriolo/
On Wed, Nov 11, 2009 at 10:46 PM, John Martyniak <
j...@beforedawnsolutions.com> wrote:
Is there a good solution for Hadoop node monitoring? I know that
Cacti
and
Ganglia are probably the two big ones, but are they the best ones
to use?
Easiest to setup? Most thorough reporting, etc.
I started to play with Ganglia, and the install is crazy, I am
installing
it on CentOS and having all sorts of troubles. So any idea there
would
be
very helpful.
Thank you,
-John