BUILDING.txt 26 KB

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  1. Build instructions for Hadoop
  2. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  3. Requirements:
  4. * Unix System
  5. * JDK 1.8
  6. * Maven 3.3 or later
  7. * Boost 1.72 (if compiling native code)
  8. * Protocol Buffers 3.7.1 (if compiling native code)
  9. * CMake 3.19 or newer (if compiling native code)
  10. * Zlib devel (if compiling native code)
  11. * Cyrus SASL devel (if compiling native code)
  12. * One of the compilers that support thread_local storage: GCC 9.3.0 or later, Visual Studio,
  13. Clang (community version), Clang (version for iOS 9 and later) (if compiling native code)
  14. * openssl devel (if compiling native hadoop-pipes and to get the best HDFS encryption performance)
  15. * Linux FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) version 2.6 or above (if compiling fuse_dfs)
  16. * Doxygen ( if compiling libhdfspp and generating the documents )
  17. * Internet connection for first build (to fetch all Maven and Hadoop dependencies)
  18. * python (for releasedocs)
  19. * bats (for shell code testing)
  20. * Node.js / bower / Ember-cli (for YARN UI v2 building)
  21. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  22. The easiest way to get an environment with all the appropriate tools is by means
  23. of the provided Docker config.
  24. This requires a recent version of docker (1.4.1 and higher are known to work).
  25. On Linux / Mac:
  26. Install Docker and run this command:
  27. $ ./start-build-env.sh
  28. The prompt which is then presented is located at a mounted version of the source tree
  29. and all required tools for testing and building have been installed and configured.
  30. Note that from within this docker environment you ONLY have access to the Hadoop source
  31. tree from where you started. So if you need to run
  32. dev-support/bin/test-patch /path/to/my.patch
  33. then the patch must be placed inside the hadoop source tree.
  34. Known issues:
  35. - On Mac with Boot2Docker the performance on the mounted directory is currently extremely slow.
  36. This is a known problem related to boot2docker on the Mac.
  37. See:
  38. https://github.com/boot2docker/boot2docker/issues/593
  39. This issue has been resolved as a duplicate, and they point to a new feature for utilizing NFS mounts
  40. as the proposed solution:
  41. https://github.com/boot2docker/boot2docker/issues/64
  42. An alternative solution to this problem is to install Linux native inside a virtual machine
  43. and run your IDE and Docker etc inside that VM.
  44. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  45. Installing required packages for clean install of Ubuntu 18.04 LTS Desktop.
  46. (For Ubuntu 20.04, gcc/g++ and cmake bundled with Ubuntu can be used.
  47. Refer to dev-support/docker/Dockerfile):
  48. * Open JDK 1.8
  49. $ sudo apt-get update
  50. $ sudo apt-get -y install openjdk-8-jdk
  51. * Maven
  52. $ sudo apt-get -y install maven
  53. * Native libraries
  54. $ sudo apt-get -y install build-essential autoconf automake libtool cmake zlib1g-dev pkg-config libssl-dev libsasl2-dev
  55. * GCC 9.3.0
  56. $ sudo apt-get -y install software-properties-common
  57. $ sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test
  58. $ sudo apt-get update
  59. $ sudo apt-get -y install g++-9 gcc-9
  60. $ sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/gcc gcc /usr/bin/gcc-9 60 --slave /usr/bin/g++ g++ /usr/bin/g++-9
  61. * CMake 3.19
  62. $ curl -L https://cmake.org/files/v3.19/cmake-3.19.0.tar.gz > cmake-3.19.0.tar.gz
  63. $ tar -zxvf cmake-3.19.0.tar.gz && cd cmake-3.19.0
  64. $ ./bootstrap
  65. $ make -j$(nproc)
  66. $ sudo make install
  67. * Protocol Buffers 3.7.1 (required to build native code)
  68. $ curl -L -s -S https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/releases/download/v3.7.1/protobuf-java-3.7.1.tar.gz -o protobuf-3.7.1.tar.gz
  69. $ mkdir protobuf-3.7-src
  70. $ tar xzf protobuf-3.7.1.tar.gz --strip-components 1 -C protobuf-3.7-src && cd protobuf-3.7-src
  71. $ ./configure
  72. $ make -j$(nproc)
  73. $ sudo make install
  74. * Boost
  75. $ curl -L https://sourceforge.net/projects/boost/files/boost/1.72.0/boost_1_72_0.tar.bz2/download > boost_1_72_0.tar.bz2
  76. $ tar --bzip2 -xf boost_1_72_0.tar.bz2 && cd boost_1_72_0
  77. $ ./bootstrap.sh --prefix=/usr/
  78. $ ./b2 --without-python
  79. $ sudo ./b2 --without-python install
  80. Optional packages:
  81. * Snappy compression (only used for hadoop-mapreduce-client-nativetask)
  82. $ sudo apt-get install libsnappy-dev
  83. * Intel ISA-L library for erasure coding
  84. Please refer to https://01.org/intel%C2%AE-storage-acceleration-library-open-source-version
  85. (OR https://github.com/01org/isa-l)
  86. * Bzip2
  87. $ sudo apt-get install bzip2 libbz2-dev
  88. * Linux FUSE
  89. $ sudo apt-get install fuse libfuse-dev
  90. * ZStandard compression
  91. $ sudo apt-get install libzstd1-dev
  92. * PMDK library for storage class memory(SCM) as HDFS cache backend
  93. Please refer to http://pmem.io/ and https://github.com/pmem/pmdk
  94. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  95. Maven main modules:
  96. hadoop (Main Hadoop project)
  97. - hadoop-project (Parent POM for all Hadoop Maven modules. )
  98. (All plugins & dependencies versions are defined here.)
  99. - hadoop-project-dist (Parent POM for modules that generate distributions.)
  100. - hadoop-annotations (Generates the Hadoop doclet used to generate the Javadocs)
  101. - hadoop-assemblies (Maven assemblies used by the different modules)
  102. - hadoop-maven-plugins (Maven plugins used in project)
  103. - hadoop-build-tools (Build tools like checkstyle, etc.)
  104. - hadoop-common-project (Hadoop Common)
  105. - hadoop-hdfs-project (Hadoop HDFS)
  106. - hadoop-yarn-project (Hadoop YARN)
  107. - hadoop-mapreduce-project (Hadoop MapReduce)
  108. - hadoop-tools (Hadoop tools like Streaming, Distcp, etc.)
  109. - hadoop-dist (Hadoop distribution assembler)
  110. - hadoop-client-modules (Hadoop client modules)
  111. - hadoop-minicluster (Hadoop minicluster artifacts)
  112. - hadoop-cloud-storage-project (Generates artifacts to access cloud storage like aws, azure, etc.)
  113. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  114. Where to run Maven from?
  115. It can be run from any module. The only catch is that if not run from trunk
  116. all modules that are not part of the build run must be installed in the local
  117. Maven cache or available in a Maven repository.
  118. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  119. Maven build goals:
  120. * Clean : mvn clean [-Preleasedocs]
  121. * Compile : mvn compile [-Pnative]
  122. * Run tests : mvn test [-Pnative] [-Pshelltest]
  123. * Create JAR : mvn package
  124. * Run spotbugs : mvn compile spotbugs:spotbugs
  125. * Run checkstyle : mvn compile checkstyle:checkstyle
  126. * Install JAR in M2 cache : mvn install
  127. * Deploy JAR to Maven repo : mvn deploy
  128. * Run clover : mvn test -Pclover
  129. * Run Rat : mvn apache-rat:check
  130. * Build javadocs : mvn javadoc:javadoc
  131. * Build distribution : mvn package [-Pdist][-Pdocs][-Psrc][-Pnative][-Dtar][-Preleasedocs][-Pyarn-ui]
  132. * Change Hadoop version : mvn versions:set -DnewVersion=NEWVERSION
  133. Build options:
  134. * Use -Pnative to compile/bundle native code
  135. * Use -Pdocs to generate & bundle the documentation in the distribution (using -Pdist)
  136. * Use -Psrc to create a project source TAR.GZ
  137. * Use -Dtar to create a TAR with the distribution (using -Pdist)
  138. * Use -Preleasedocs to include the changelog and release docs (requires Internet connectivity)
  139. * Use -Pyarn-ui to build YARN UI v2. (Requires Internet connectivity)
  140. * Use -DskipShade to disable client jar shading to speed up build times (in
  141. development environments only, not to build release artifacts)
  142. YARN Application Timeline Service V2 build options:
  143. YARN Timeline Service v.2 chooses Apache HBase as the primary backing storage. The supported
  144. versions of Apache HBase are 1.2.6 (default) and 2.0.0-beta1.
  145. * HBase 1.2.6 is used by default to build Hadoop. The official releases are ready to use if you
  146. plan on running Timeline Service v2 with HBase 1.2.6.
  147. * Use -Dhbase.profile=2.0 to build Hadoop with HBase 2.0.0-beta1. Provide this option if you plan
  148. on running Timeline Service v2 with HBase 2.0.
  149. Snappy build options:
  150. Snappy is a compression library that can be utilized by the native code.
  151. It is currently an optional component, meaning that Hadoop can be built with
  152. or without this dependency. Snappy library as optional dependency is only
  153. used for hadoop-mapreduce-client-nativetask.
  154. * Use -Drequire.snappy to fail the build if libsnappy.so is not found.
  155. If this option is not specified and the snappy library is missing,
  156. we silently build a version of libhadoop.so that cannot make use of snappy.
  157. This option is recommended if you plan on making use of snappy and want
  158. to get more repeatable builds.
  159. * Use -Dsnappy.prefix to specify a nonstandard location for the libsnappy
  160. header files and library files. You do not need this option if you have
  161. installed snappy using a package manager.
  162. * Use -Dsnappy.lib to specify a nonstandard location for the libsnappy library
  163. files. Similarly to snappy.prefix, you do not need this option if you have
  164. installed snappy using a package manager.
  165. * Use -Dbundle.snappy to copy the contents of the snappy.lib directory into
  166. the final tar file. This option requires that -Dsnappy.lib is also given,
  167. and it ignores the -Dsnappy.prefix option. If -Dsnappy.lib isn't given, the
  168. bundling and building will fail.
  169. ZStandard build options:
  170. ZStandard is a compression library that can be utilized by the native code.
  171. It is currently an optional component, meaning that Hadoop can be built with
  172. or without this dependency.
  173. * Use -Drequire.zstd to fail the build if libzstd.so is not found.
  174. If this option is not specified and the zstd library is missing.
  175. * Use -Dzstd.prefix to specify a nonstandard location for the libzstd
  176. header files and library files. You do not need this option if you have
  177. installed zstandard using a package manager.
  178. * Use -Dzstd.lib to specify a nonstandard location for the libzstd library
  179. files. Similarly to zstd.prefix, you do not need this option if you have
  180. installed using a package manager.
  181. * Use -Dbundle.zstd to copy the contents of the zstd.lib directory into
  182. the final tar file. This option requires that -Dzstd.lib is also given,
  183. and it ignores the -Dzstd.prefix option. If -Dzstd.lib isn't given, the
  184. bundling and building will fail.
  185. OpenSSL build options:
  186. OpenSSL includes a crypto library that can be utilized by the native code.
  187. It is currently an optional component, meaning that Hadoop can be built with
  188. or without this dependency.
  189. * Use -Drequire.openssl to fail the build if libcrypto.so is not found.
  190. If this option is not specified and the openssl library is missing,
  191. we silently build a version of libhadoop.so that cannot make use of
  192. openssl. This option is recommended if you plan on making use of openssl
  193. and want to get more repeatable builds.
  194. * Use -Dopenssl.prefix to specify a nonstandard location for the libcrypto
  195. header files and library files. You do not need this option if you have
  196. installed openssl using a package manager.
  197. * Use -Dopenssl.lib to specify a nonstandard location for the libcrypto library
  198. files. Similarly to openssl.prefix, you do not need this option if you have
  199. installed openssl using a package manager.
  200. * Use -Dbundle.openssl to copy the contents of the openssl.lib directory into
  201. the final tar file. This option requires that -Dopenssl.lib is also given,
  202. and it ignores the -Dopenssl.prefix option. If -Dopenssl.lib isn't given, the
  203. bundling and building will fail.
  204. Tests options:
  205. * Use -DskipTests to skip tests when running the following Maven goals:
  206. 'package', 'install', 'deploy' or 'verify'
  207. * -Dtest=<TESTCLASSNAME>,<TESTCLASSNAME#METHODNAME>,....
  208. * -Dtest.exclude=<TESTCLASSNAME>
  209. * -Dtest.exclude.pattern=**/<TESTCLASSNAME1>.java,**/<TESTCLASSNAME2>.java
  210. * To run all native unit tests, use: mvn test -Pnative -Dtest=allNative
  211. * To run a specific native unit test, use: mvn test -Pnative -Dtest=<test>
  212. For example, to run test_bulk_crc32, you would use:
  213. mvn test -Pnative -Dtest=test_bulk_crc32
  214. Intel ISA-L build options:
  215. Intel ISA-L is an erasure coding library that can be utilized by the native code.
  216. It is currently an optional component, meaning that Hadoop can be built with
  217. or without this dependency. Note the library is used via dynamic module. Please
  218. reference the official site for the library details.
  219. https://01.org/intel%C2%AE-storage-acceleration-library-open-source-version
  220. (OR https://github.com/01org/isa-l)
  221. * Use -Drequire.isal to fail the build if libisal.so is not found.
  222. If this option is not specified and the isal library is missing,
  223. we silently build a version of libhadoop.so that cannot make use of ISA-L and
  224. the native raw erasure coders.
  225. This option is recommended if you plan on making use of native raw erasure
  226. coders and want to get more repeatable builds.
  227. * Use -Disal.prefix to specify a nonstandard location for the libisal
  228. library files. You do not need this option if you have installed ISA-L to the
  229. system library path.
  230. * Use -Disal.lib to specify a nonstandard location for the libisal library
  231. files.
  232. * Use -Dbundle.isal to copy the contents of the isal.lib directory into
  233. the final tar file. This option requires that -Disal.lib is also given,
  234. and it ignores the -Disal.prefix option. If -Disal.lib isn't given, the
  235. bundling and building will fail.
  236. Special plugins: OWASP's dependency-check:
  237. OWASP's dependency-check plugin will scan the third party dependencies
  238. of this project for known CVEs (security vulnerabilities against them).
  239. It will produce a report in target/dependency-check-report.html. To
  240. invoke, run 'mvn dependency-check:aggregate'. Note that this plugin
  241. requires maven 3.1.1 or greater.
  242. PMDK library build options:
  243. The Persistent Memory Development Kit (PMDK), formerly known as NVML, is a growing
  244. collection of libraries which have been developed for various use cases, tuned,
  245. validated to production quality, and thoroughly documented. These libraries are built
  246. on the Direct Access (DAX) feature available in both Linux and Windows, which allows
  247. applications directly load/store access to persistent memory by memory-mapping files
  248. on a persistent memory aware file system.
  249. It is currently an optional component, meaning that Hadoop can be built without
  250. this dependency. Please Note the library is used via dynamic module. For getting
  251. more details please refer to the official sites:
  252. http://pmem.io/ and https://github.com/pmem/pmdk.
  253. * -Drequire.pmdk is used to build the project with PMDK libraries forcibly. With this
  254. option provided, the build will fail if libpmem library is not found. If this option
  255. is not given, the build will generate a version of Hadoop with libhadoop.so.
  256. And storage class memory(SCM) backed HDFS cache is still supported without PMDK involved.
  257. Because PMDK can bring better caching write/read performance, it is recommended to build
  258. the project with this option if user plans to use SCM backed HDFS cache.
  259. * -Dpmdk.lib is used to specify a nonstandard location for PMDK libraries if they are not
  260. under /usr/lib or /usr/lib64.
  261. * -Dbundle.pmdk is used to copy the specified libpmem libraries into the distribution tar
  262. package. This option requires that -Dpmdk.lib is specified. With -Dbundle.pmdk provided,
  263. the build will fail if -Dpmdk.lib is not specified.
  264. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  265. Building components separately
  266. If you are building a submodule directory, all the hadoop dependencies this
  267. submodule has will be resolved as all other 3rd party dependencies. This is,
  268. from the Maven cache or from a Maven repository (if not available in the cache
  269. or the SNAPSHOT 'timed out').
  270. An alternative is to run 'mvn install -DskipTests' from Hadoop source top
  271. level once; and then work from the submodule. Keep in mind that SNAPSHOTs
  272. time out after a while, using the Maven '-nsu' will stop Maven from trying
  273. to update SNAPSHOTs from external repos.
  274. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  275. Importing projects to eclipse
  276. At first, install artifacts including hadoop-maven-plugins at the top of the source tree.
  277. $ mvn clean install -DskipTests -DskipShade
  278. Then, import to eclipse by specifying the root directory of the project via
  279. [File] > [Import] > [Maven] > [Existing Maven Projects].
  280. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  281. Building distributions:
  282. Create binary distribution without native code and without Javadocs:
  283. $ mvn package -Pdist -DskipTests -Dtar -Dmaven.javadoc.skip=true
  284. Create binary distribution with native code:
  285. $ mvn package -Pdist,native -DskipTests -Dtar
  286. Create source distribution:
  287. $ mvn package -Psrc -DskipTests
  288. Create source and binary distributions with native code:
  289. $ mvn package -Pdist,native,src -DskipTests -Dtar
  290. Create a local staging version of the website (in /tmp/hadoop-site)
  291. $ mvn site site:stage -Preleasedocs,docs -DstagingDirectory=/tmp/hadoop-site
  292. Note that the site needs to be built in a second pass after other artifacts.
  293. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  294. Installing Hadoop
  295. Look for these HTML files after you build the document by the above commands.
  296. * Single Node Setup:
  297. hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-common/SingleCluster.html
  298. * Cluster Setup:
  299. hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-common/ClusterSetup.html
  300. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  301. Handling out of memory errors in builds
  302. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  303. If the build process fails with an out of memory error, you should be able to fix
  304. it by increasing the memory used by maven which can be done via the environment
  305. variable MAVEN_OPTS.
  306. Here is an example setting to allocate between 256 MB and 1.5 GB of heap space to
  307. Maven
  308. export MAVEN_OPTS="-Xms256m -Xmx1536m"
  309. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  310. Building on macOS (without Docker)
  311. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  312. Installing required dependencies for clean install of macOS 10.14:
  313. * Install Xcode Command Line Tools
  314. $ xcode-select --install
  315. * Install Homebrew
  316. $ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
  317. * Install OpenJDK 8
  318. $ brew tap AdoptOpenJDK/openjdk
  319. $ brew cask install adoptopenjdk8
  320. * Install maven and tools
  321. $ brew install maven autoconf automake cmake wget
  322. * Install native libraries, only openssl is required to compile native code,
  323. you may optionally install zlib, lz4, etc.
  324. $ brew install openssl
  325. * Protocol Buffers 3.7.1 (required to compile native code)
  326. $ wget https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/releases/download/v3.7.1/protobuf-java-3.7.1.tar.gz
  327. $ mkdir -p protobuf-3.7 && tar zxvf protobuf-java-3.7.1.tar.gz --strip-components 1 -C protobuf-3.7
  328. $ cd protobuf-3.7
  329. $ ./configure
  330. $ make
  331. $ make check
  332. $ make install
  333. $ protoc --version
  334. Note that building Hadoop 3.1.1/3.1.2/3.2.0 native code from source is broken
  335. on macOS. For 3.1.1/3.1.2, you need to manually backport YARN-8622. For 3.2.0,
  336. you need to backport both YARN-8622 and YARN-9487 in order to build native code.
  337. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  338. Building command example:
  339. * Create binary distribution with native code but without documentation:
  340. $ mvn package -Pdist,native -DskipTests -Dmaven.javadoc.skip \
  341. -Dopenssl.prefix=/usr/local/opt/openssl
  342. Note that the command above manually specified the openssl library and include
  343. path. This is necessary at least for Homebrewed OpenSSL.
  344. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  345. Building on CentOS 8
  346. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  347. * Install development tools such as GCC, autotools, OpenJDK and Maven.
  348. $ sudo dnf group install --with-optional 'Development Tools'
  349. $ sudo dnf install java-1.8.0-openjdk-devel maven
  350. * Install python2 for building documentation.
  351. $ sudo dnf install python2
  352. * Install Protocol Buffers v3.7.1.
  353. $ git clone https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf
  354. $ cd protobuf
  355. $ git checkout v3.7.1
  356. $ autoreconf -i
  357. $ ./configure --prefix=/usr/local
  358. $ make
  359. $ sudo make install
  360. $ cd ..
  361. * Install libraries provided by CentOS 8.
  362. $ sudo dnf install libtirpc-devel zlib-devel lz4-devel bzip2-devel openssl-devel cyrus-sasl-devel libpmem-devel
  363. * Install GCC 9.3.0
  364. $ sudo dnf -y install gcc-toolset-9-gcc gcc-toolset-9-gcc-c++
  365. $ source /opt/rh/gcc-toolset-9/enable
  366. * Install CMake 3.19
  367. $ curl -L https://cmake.org/files/v3.19/cmake-3.19.0.tar.gz > cmake-3.19.0.tar.gz
  368. $ tar -zxvf cmake-3.19.0.tar.gz && cd cmake-3.19.0
  369. $ ./bootstrap
  370. $ make -j$(nproc)
  371. $ sudo make install
  372. * Install boost.
  373. $ curl -L -o boost_1_72_0.tar.bz2 https://sourceforge.net/projects/boost/files/boost/1.72.0/boost_1_72_0.tar.bz2/download
  374. $ tar xjf boost_1_72_0.tar.bz2
  375. $ cd boost_1_72_0
  376. $ ./bootstrap.sh --prefix=/usr/local
  377. $ ./b2
  378. $ sudo ./b2 install
  379. * Install optional dependencies (snappy-devel).
  380. $ sudo dnf --enablerepo=PowerTools install snappy-devel
  381. * Install optional dependencies (libzstd-devel).
  382. $ sudo dnf install https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-8.noarch.rpm
  383. $ sudo dnf --enablerepo=epel install libzstd-devel
  384. * Install optional dependencies (isa-l).
  385. $ sudo dnf --enablerepo=PowerTools install nasm
  386. $ git clone https://github.com/intel/isa-l
  387. $ cd isa-l/
  388. $ ./autogen.sh
  389. $ ./configure
  390. $ make
  391. $ sudo make install
  392. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  393. Building on Windows
  394. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  395. Requirements:
  396. * Windows System
  397. * JDK 1.8
  398. * Maven 3.0 or later
  399. * Boost 1.72
  400. * Protocol Buffers 3.7.1
  401. * CMake 3.19 or newer
  402. * Visual Studio 2010 Professional or Higher
  403. * Windows SDK 8.1 (if building CPU rate control for the container executor)
  404. * zlib headers (if building native code bindings for zlib)
  405. * Internet connection for first build (to fetch all Maven and Hadoop dependencies)
  406. * Unix command-line tools from GnuWin32: sh, mkdir, rm, cp, tar, gzip. These
  407. tools must be present on your PATH.
  408. * Python ( for generation of docs using 'mvn site')
  409. Unix command-line tools are also included with the Windows Git package which
  410. can be downloaded from http://git-scm.com/downloads
  411. If using Visual Studio, it must be Professional level or higher.
  412. Do not use Visual Studio Express. It does not support compiling for 64-bit,
  413. which is problematic if running a 64-bit system.
  414. The Windows SDK 8.1 is available to download at:
  415. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/bg162891.aspx
  416. Cygwin is not required.
  417. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  418. Building:
  419. Keep the source code tree in a short path to avoid running into problems related
  420. to Windows maximum path length limitation (for example, C:\hdc).
  421. There is one support command file located in dev-support called win-paths-eg.cmd.
  422. It should be copied somewhere convenient and modified to fit your needs.
  423. win-paths-eg.cmd sets up the environment for use. You will need to modify this
  424. file. It will put all of the required components in the command path,
  425. configure the bit-ness of the build, and set several optional components.
  426. Several tests require that the user must have the Create Symbolic Links
  427. privilege.
  428. All Maven goals are the same as described above with the exception that
  429. native code is built by enabling the 'native-win' Maven profile. -Pnative-win
  430. is enabled by default when building on Windows since the native components
  431. are required (not optional) on Windows.
  432. If native code bindings for zlib are required, then the zlib headers must be
  433. deployed on the build machine. Set the ZLIB_HOME environment variable to the
  434. directory containing the headers.
  435. set ZLIB_HOME=C:\zlib-1.2.7
  436. At runtime, zlib1.dll must be accessible on the PATH. Hadoop has been tested
  437. with zlib 1.2.7, built using Visual Studio 2010 out of contrib\vstudio\vc10 in
  438. the zlib 1.2.7 source tree.
  439. http://www.zlib.net/
  440. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  441. Building distributions:
  442. * Build distribution with native code : mvn package [-Pdist][-Pdocs][-Psrc][-Dtar][-Dmaven.javadoc.skip=true]
  443. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  444. Running compatibility checks with checkcompatibility.py
  445. Invoke `./dev-support/bin/checkcompatibility.py` to run Java API Compliance Checker
  446. to compare the public Java APIs of two git objects. This can be used by release
  447. managers to compare the compatibility of a previous and current release.
  448. As an example, this invocation will check the compatibility of interfaces annotated as Public or LimitedPrivate:
  449. ./dev-support/bin/checkcompatibility.py --annotation org.apache.hadoop.classification.InterfaceAudience.Public --annotation org.apache.hadoop.classification.InterfaceAudience.LimitedPrivate --include "hadoop.*" branch-2.7.2 trunk
  450. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  451. Changing the Hadoop version declared returned by VersionInfo
  452. If for compatibility reasons the version of Hadoop has to be declared as a 2.x release in the information returned by
  453. org.apache.hadoop.util.VersionInfo, set the property declared.hadoop.version to the desired version.
  454. For example: mvn package -Pdist -Ddeclared.hadoop.version=2.11
  455. If unset, the project version declared in the POM file is used.