Hi Adaryl,

Ambari expects FQDNs to be set on the hosts.
On your hosts, you want to make sure that "hostname -f" returns the FQDN (with 
the domain name, like c6401.ambari.apache.org).

Your /etc/hosts should look something like below (note that for each host, 
there's the FQDN followed by the short name):
127.0.0.1   localhost localhost.localdomain localhost4 localhost4.localdomain4
::1         localhost localhost.localdomain localhost6 localhost6.localdomain6
192.168.64.101 c6401.ambari.apache.org c6401
192.168.64.102 c6402.ambari.apache.org c6402
192.168.64.103 c6403.ambari.apache.org c6403

For your future reference, you may want to ask Ambari-specific questions via 
[email protected].

I hope this helps!
Yusaku


From: MBA <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Reply-To: "[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Thursday, February 12, 2015 9:24 PM
To: "[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: installation with Ambari

I'm trying to set up a Hadoop cluster but Ambari is giving me issues. At the 
screen where it ask me to confirm host, I get:
1. Warning that I'm not inputting a fully qualified domain name.
2. The host that the Ambari instance is actually sitting on is not even 
registering.

When run hostname -fqdn I get just the name of my machine. I put that into the 
screen asking for FQDNs and I just get a warning that it's not a FQDN. What 
exactly is Ambari expecting?
B.

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