In this Article
Table of Contents | ||
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Install a Snaplex on Linux
This article describes the procedures for installing an on-premise Snaplex in a Linux environment. An on-premise Snaplex is also known as a Groundplex. This document uses the term Groundplex to distinguish this type of Snaplex (on-premise) from other types, such as a Clouplex or an eXtremeplex. However, in command syntax and references to the UI, the generic term Snaplex is used.
Groundplex installation covers the following tasks:
For prerequisites, see Requirements for On-premises Snaplex.
Note | ||
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| ||
The Linux installer comes bundled with the JRE necessary for this Snaplex. We recommend you use the patch version of Java 11 that is bundled with the installer for your Linux environment. To update your Snaplex to the Java 11, see Upgrading Your Groundplex to Java 11. |
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- Click the Snaplex tab, then click to display the Snaplex popup.
OR
...
For CentOS (or Redhat) 6.3 or newer, run the following command
$ sudo rpm -i <filename>.rpm
For Ubuntu 14.04 or newer, run the following command:
$ sudo dpkg -i <filename>.deb
.
Where <filename> is the name of the current installer file.
After the software is installed, place the downloaded configuration file in the /opt/snaplogic/etc
directory and make sure the file name ends with .slpropz
. Change the slpropz file so that snapuser owns it by running the following commands:
Code Block |
---|
$ sudo chown snapuser:snapuser /opt/snaplogic/etc/myplex.slpropz
$ sudo chmod 600 /opt/snaplogic/etc/myplex.slpropz |
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A FeedMaster is a type of node that you use when running tasks based on Ultra Pipelines. You can designate a Groundplex as a FeedMaster by setting the Snaplex node types on the Node Properties panel in the Update Snaplex dialog. For complete instructions, see Deploying a FeedMaster Node.
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To generate and import a self-signed certificate on all the JCC nodes in the Snaplex:
...
Import the file by using the following command in the JCC node:
Paste code macro |
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/opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/bin/keytool -import -file <path_to_pem_file_from_step_1> -alias <alias_name_optional> -keystore /opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/lib/security/cacerts -vEnter keystore password: changeit |
Note |
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This example is an excerpt from 1.8.0_45; the directory path might vary based on the Java installation directory. |
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Run the following command to list certificates from the CAcerts file:
Paste code macro |
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/opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/bin/keytool -list --keystore /opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/lib/security/cacerts -v+ |
Note |
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The steps to import the certificate to the JCC node can vary based on the certificate format and the OS. |
Info | ||
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| ||
While configuring accounts for various Snap Packs, you might encounter the following error message:
If this error occurs, update the CAcert trust store in the SnapLogic JCC nodes to enable a successful SSL handshake to the target endpoint. Find the trust store at |
Automatically Start and Stop a Groundplex on Linux
You can use either the systemd
or init.d
utility to start and stop the Snaplex. Procedures for both are included below. The procedures vary depending on which Linux distribution is installed on the Snaplex host.
Starting and Stopping the Groundplex by Using the Linux Systems Call
Use this procedure for Red Hat-like Linux distributions such as Red Hat, Fedora CoreOS, CentOS, and SuSE.
To add the Groundplex as a Service:
...
Create the startup service file:
Code Block |
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touch /etc/systemd/system/snaplogic.service |
Change the permissions on the file:
Code Block |
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chmod 664 /etc/systemd/system/snaplogic.service |
...
Open the file with a text editor. For example, the using a vim editor:
Code Block |
---|
vim /etc/systemd/system/snaplogic.service |
Add the following text to the file:
Paste code macro |
---|
[Unit]
Description=SnapLogic JVM
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=forking
ExecStart=/opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh start
ExecReload=/opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh restart
ExecStop=/opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh stop
[Install]
WantedBy=default.target |
...
Enable the service by running the following command:
Code Block |
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systemctl enable snaplogic.service |
...
Start the service:
Code Block |
---|
systemctl start snaplogic.service |
To stop the Snaplex as a service, run the following command:
Code Block |
---|
systemctl disable snaplogic.service |
Starting and Stopping the Groundplex by Using the init.d Utility
Use this procedure for Red Hat-like Linux distributions such as Red Hat, Fedora CoreOS, CentOS, and SuSE.
To add the Groundplex as a service:
...
Change directories:
Code Block |
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cd /etc/init.d/ |
Create a softlink to the jcc.sh
file:
Code Block |
---|
ln -s /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh snaplex |
Add the softlink to chkconfig
management:
Code Block |
---|
chkconfig --add snaplex |
...
We recommend that you reboot the machine to verify if the Snaplex service is restarting automatically on machine reboot. Under some conditions, the symlink resolution might fail when the machine is starting up. In this case, you can change the Snaplex startup script to be a file instead of a symlink. Run the following commands a root user:
Code Block |
---|
rm /etc/init.d/snaplex
cp /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh /etc/init.d/snaplex
echo "export SL_ROOT=/opt/snaplogic" >> /etc/sysconfig/jcc |
To delete the Snaplex as a service, remove the service from the chkconfig
management:
Code Block |
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chkconfig --del snaplex |
Debian-like Distribution (Debian and Ubuntu)
To add the Snaplex as a Service:
...
Change directories:
Code Block |
---|
cd /etc/init.d/ |
Create a soft-link to the jcc.sh
file:
Code Block |
---|
ln -s /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh snaplex |
Install the service using update-rc.d
. For example:
Code Block |
---|
sudo update-rc.d snaplex defaults 98 02 |
Note | ||
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| ||
We recommend that you reboot the machine to verify whether the Snaplex service is restarting automatically on machine reboot. Under some conditions, the symlink resolution might fail when the machine is starting up. In this case, you can change the Snaplex startup script to be a file instead of a symlink. Run the following commands a root user:
On a Debian system, the |
To stop the Snaplex as a Service, remove the service from update-rc.d
management:
Code Block |
---|
update-rc.d -f snaplex remove |
Configuring Java 11 on Linux
To update your JCC nodes to OpenJDK Java 11:
...
Changing the installation folder
If you want to use the/myopt/myroot
instead of the /opt/snaplogic
as the installation folder and myuser instead of snapuser, do the following steps:
- Run the following commands after installing the RPM/DEB package:
$ sudo mv /opt/snaplogic /myopt/myroot
$ sudo chown -R myuser /myopt/myroot
- Add the following properties in the
/etc/sysconfig/jcc
file. If this file does not exist, create it.export SL_USER=myuser
export SL_ROOT=/myopt/myroot
- Restart the service with the following command:
$ sudo /myopt/myroot/bin/jcc.sh restart
- To make a service using init.d, make the
/etc/init.d/snaplex
file a symlink to the/myopt/myroot/bin/jcc.sh
file.
Groundplex on Azure
When running a Linux Groundplex on Azure, the default TCP keepalive settings on Azure might cause connectivity issues between the Groundplex and the SnapLogic control plane. The workaround is to disable the keep alive settings in the JCC configuration.
Add the following properties in the global.properties file:
Code Block |
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jcc.jvm_options = -Dhttp.keepAlive=False -Dcom.ning.http.client.AsyncHttpClientConfig.allowPoolingConnection=false -Dcom.ning.http.client.AsyncHttpClientConfig.allowSslConnectionPool=false |
...
Note |
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If you are unable to create an SLDB file using international language characters (such as æ, Æ, Ø) in the file name, update the |
System Limits
Some Linux installations have system ulimit settings that are set to low values. This low setting can cause errors when running higher Pipeline loads on the Grounplex JCC node, such as, java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: unable to create new native thread
. To fix this issue, you need to increase the system limits for the Snapuser user. You can add the following in the /etc/security/limits.conf
folder to increase the file and process limits.
Note |
---|
The JCC process needs to be restarted after the limits are updated. |
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In this article
Table of Contents | ||
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|
Install a Snaplex on Linux
This article describes the procedures for installing an on-premise Snaplex in a Linux environment. An on-premise Snaplex is also known as a Groundplex. This document uses the term Groundplex to distinguish this type of Snaplex (on-premise) from a Cloudplex, which SnapLogic manages. However, in command syntax and references to the UI, the generic term Snaplex is used.
Groundplex installation covers the following tasks:
For prerequisites, see Groundplex Deployment Planning.
Note |
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Linux-based Groundplex Installation Tips
|
Setting up a Groundplex
Log into SnapLogic Manager as an Org admin.
Navigate to the project where you want to create your Groundplex, and perform one of the following steps:
Click the Snaplex tab, then click to display the Snaplex dialog.
OR
Click to display the Assets drop-down list, then select Snaplex; the Snaplex dialog appears.
Enter the required information on the Create Snaplex form. Once completed, the Downloads tab on the Snaplex popup appears. The Downloads tab has links to the installer and configuration files.
Download the RPM or DEB-based installer and configuration files onto a Linux machine, where <filename> is the name of the current installer file and
fontconfig
andzip
are the required dependencies:For CentOS (or Redhat) 6.3 or newer, run the following commands:
$ sudo yum install fontconfig zip
$ sudo rpm -i <filename>.rpm
For Ubuntu 14.04 or newer, run the following command:
$ sudo apt-get install fontconfig zip
$ sudo dpkg -i <filename>.deb
After the software is installed, place the downloaded configuration file in the
/opt/snaplogic/etc
directory and make sure the file name ends with.slpropz
. Change the .slpropz
file so that snapuser owns it by running the following commands:Code Block $ sudo chown snapuser:snapuser /opt/snaplogic/etc/myplex.slpropz $ sudo chmod 600 /opt/snaplogic/etc/myplex.slpropz
To start the Snaplex service, run:
$ sudo /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh start
To verify that the Snaplex has started, visit https://elastic.snaplogic.com/sl/dashboard.html#Health. The newly installed Snaplex node should appear in the list of nodes for the Snaplex.
Note |
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Disable noexec SettingSome Snaps, such as the SQL Bulk Load Snaps, require write and execute permissions to the |
Info |
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FeedMaster InstallationUltra Pipelines require that you set up a FeedMaster along with the JCC (Java Component Container) nodes in your Groundplex. For details, see Deploying a FeedMaster Node. |
Importing a Certificate to SnapLogic JCC nodes
Importing a certificate is not a requirement. However, we recommend that you import a certificate on your Groundplex nodes for any communication over TLS 1.2.
The following scenarios are two examples of where an SSL certificate is required:
Example 1 - New Groundplex installation with an SSL proxy. Groundplex nodes must communicate with an SSL proxy, so import the proxy self-signed certificate into the Truststore once at the time of installation.
Example 2 - Running a Pipeline where Snaps establish an SSL-encrypted JDBC connection to an endpoint where a Truststore requires the root CA’s certificate. You need to import the root CA’s certificate into the Java Truststore every time the Trustore does not include an endpoint’s CA certificate.
To generate and import a self-signed certificate on all the JCC nodes in the Snaplex:
Obtain the certificate (.pem) file by using SSH.
Import the file by using the following command in the JCC node:
Code Block /opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/bin/keytool -import -file <path_to_pem_file_from_step_1> -alias <alias_name_optional> -keystore /opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/lib/security/cacerts -vEnter keystore password: changeit
Note This example is an excerpt from 1.8.0_45; the directory path might vary based on the Java installation directory.
Restart the JCC node process to confirm the import.
Run the following command to list certificates from the CAcerts file:
Code Block /opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/bin/keytool -list --keystore /opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jre1.8.0_45/lib/security/cacerts -v+
Note |
---|
The steps to import the certificate to the JCC node can vary based on the certificate format and the OS. |
Info |
---|
Invalid Self-signed certificateWhile configuring accounts for various Snap Packs, you might encounter the following error message:
If this error occurs, update the CAcert trust store in the SnapLogic JCC nodes to enable a successful TLS (SSL) handshake to the target endpoint. Find the trust store at |
Automatically Start and Stop a Groundplex on Linux
You can use either the systemd
or init.d
utility to start and stop the Snaplex. Procedures for both are included below. The procedures vary depending on which Linux distribution is installed on the Snaplex host.
Starting and Stopping the Groundplex by Using the Linux Systems Call
Use this procedure for Red Hat-like Linux distributions such as Red Hat, Fedora CoreOS, CentOS, and SuSE.
To add the Snaplex as a Service:
Log in to the host as a root or sudo user.
Create the startup service file:
Code Block touch /etc/systemd/system/snaplogic.service
Change the permissions on the file:
Code Block chmod 664 /etc/systemd/system/snaplogic.service
This change provides read and write permissions for the owner and group, and read permission for others.
Open the file with a text editor. For example, using a vim editor:
Code Block vim /etc/systemd/system/snaplogic.service
Add the following text to the file:
Paste code macro [Unit] Description=SnapLogic JVM After=network.target [Service] Type=forking ExecStart=/opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh start ExecReload=/opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh restart ExecStop=/opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh stop [Install] WantedBy=default.target
Save and exit the file.
Enable the service by running the following command:
Code Block systemctl enable snaplogic.service
The service will start automatically when the host reboots.
Start the service:
Code Block systemctl start snaplogic.service
To stop the Snaplex as a service, run the following command:
Code Block systemctl disable snaplogic.service
Starting and Stopping the Groundplex by Using the init.d Utility
Use this procedure for Red Hat-like Linux distributions such as Red Hat, Fedora CoreOS, CentOS, and SuSE.
To add the Snaplex as a service:
Login to the Linux machine as root.
Change directories:
Code Block cd /etc/init.d/
Create a softlink to the
jcc.sh
file:Code Block ln -s /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh snaplex
Add the softlink to
chkconfig
management:Code Block chkconfig --add snaplex
Note | ||
---|---|---|
We recommend that you reboot the machine to verify if the Snaplex service is restarting automatically on machine reboot. Under some conditions, the symlink resolution might fail when the machine is starting up. In this case, you can change the Snaplex startup script to be a file instead of a symlink. Run the following commands a root user:
|
To delete the Snaplex as a service, remove the service from the chkconfig
management:
Code Block |
---|
chkconfig --del snaplex |
Debian-like Distribution (Debian and Ubuntu)
To add the Snaplex as a Service:
Log in to the Linux machine as root.
Change directories:
Code Block cd /etc/init.d/
Create a soft-link to the
jcc.sh
file:Code Block ln -s /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh snaplex
Install the service using
update-rc.d
. For example:Code Block sudo update-rc.d snaplex defaults 98 02
Note title Troubleshooting if the machine reboot fails We recommend that you reboot the machine to verify whether the Snaplex service is restarting automatically on machine reboot. Under some conditions, the symlink resolution might fail when the machine is starting up. In this case, you can change the Snaplex startup script to be a file instead of a symlink. Run the following commands a root user:
Code Block rm /etc/init.d/snaplex cp /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh /etc/init.d/snaplex echo "export SL_ROOT=/opt/snaplogic" >> /etc/sysconfig/jcc
On a Debian system, the
/etc/sysconfig
directory would need to be created if not already present.To stop the Snaplex as a Service, remove the service from
update-rc.d
management:Code Block update-rc.d -f snaplex remove
Manage disk volumes for Groundplex nodes
To address issues that cause disk full errors and to ensure smoother operations of the systems that affect the stability of the Groundplex, you need to have separate mounts on Groundplex nodes. Follow the steps suggested below to create two separate disk volumes on the JCC nodes.
Note |
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The commands and the steps specified are validated on *nix (RHEL based systems). |
The JCC nodes are equipped with two separate disk volumes to ensure that the operating system and pipeline execution workspace remain segregated.
The JCC is installed in
/(root)
volume, and the workspace is separated in the bind mounts.The second disk volume is mounted on
/workspace,
and bind mount directories are created.Code Block sudo su mkdir /workspace
Create subdirectories in
/workspace
and/opt/snaplogic/run
directories using the commands specified below:
Code Block |
---|
mount /dev/nvme2n1 /dev/workspace #(replace nvme2n1 with the device name)
mkdir -p /workspace/{fs,broker,tmp}
mkdir -p /opt/snaplogic/run/{fs, broker}
chown -R snapuser:snapuser /workspace && chmod -R 0755 /workspace |
Create the bind mounts using the commands specified below:
Code Block |
---|
mount --bind /workspace/fs /opt/snaplogic/run/fs
mount --bind /workspace/broker /opt/snaplogic/run/broker
mount --bind /workspace/tmp /tmp |
Workspace | Bind Mount | Ownership | Permissions |
---|---|---|---|
/workspace/fs | /opt/snaplogic/run/fs | snapuser:snapuser | 0775 |
/workspace/broker | /opt/snaplogic/run/broker | snapuser:snapuser | 0775 |
/workspace/tmp | /tmp | snapuser:snapuser | 0775 |
...
Info |
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To ensure that the changes remain in effect after system reboots, it is necessary to create entries in |
For Example:
Code Block |
---|
/dev/nvme1n1 /workspace xfs noatime 0 0
/workspace/fs /opt/snaplogic/run/fs none bind 0 0
/workspace/broker /opt/snaplogic/run/broker none bind 0 0
/workspace/tmp /tmp none bind 0 0 |
Configure Java 11 on Linux
The JRE is bundled with the Snaplex installer. While a Snaplex auto upgrade updates the SnapLogic binaries in the installed Snaplex, the JRE version is not automatically updated. You must manage the JRE versions of your Snaplex.
Info |
---|
We recommend installing the latest JRE 11 version available at https://adoptium.net/temurin/releases/?version=11. |
To update your JCC nodes to OpenJDK Java 11:
Stop the existing JCC node by running the following command:
$ sudo /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh stop
Download the new Snaplex installer and install the Groundplex, running the RPM, DEB, or Docker installers as appropriate.
For RPM systems, run the following command:
$ rpm -U snaplogic-snaplex.rpm
For DEB systems, run the following command:
$ dpkg -i snaplogic-snaplex.deb
For Docker, stop the existing container and start a new container using the latest image.
Add the following entry to the
/etc/sysconfig/jcc
directory. You must create this directory and file if neither are present.export SL_JAVA_HOME=/opt/snaplogic/pkgs/jdk-11.0.12+7-jre/
Start the JCC node by running the following command:
$ sudo /opt/snaplogic/bin/jcc.sh start
.
Older Versions of JRE and TLS
JRE versions prior to 11.0.8 have issues connecting to TLS 1.3 endpoints. We recommend using a newer JRE version.
Note |
---|
If you are running with 11.0.10 onwards, endpoint connections to TLS 1.0 and 1.1 are disabled by default. We recommend that you update the endpoint to support TLS 1.2 or later, for security. |
Renabling Support for Older Versions
If updating the TLS endpoint is not possible, then the Snaplex JRE can be updated to re-enable support for older TLS versions by doing these steps:
Open the jre/conf/security/java.security file in the JRE installation /opt/snaplogic/pkgs folder.
Change the jdk.tls.disabledAlgorithms configuration property by removing TLSv1, TLSv1.1.
Restart the Snaplex to re-enable support for TLS 1.0 and 1.1.
Changing the Installation Folder
If you want to use the/myopt/myroot
instead of the /opt/snaplogic
as the installation folder and myuser instead of snapuser, perform the following steps:
Run the following commands after installing the RPM/DEB package:
$ sudo mv /opt/snaplogic /myopt/myroot
$ sudo chown -R myuser /myopt/myroot
Add the following properties in the
/etc/sysconfig/jcc
file. If this file does not exist, create it.export SL_USER=myuser
export SL_ROOT=/myopt/myroot
Restart the service with the following command:
$ sudo /myopt/myroot/bin/jcc.sh restart
To make a service using init.d, make the
/etc/init.d/snaplex
file a symlink to the/myopt/myroot/bin/jcc.sh
file.
Uninstalling the SnapLogic RPM from your environment
To uninstall the SnapLogic Linux-based package from your environment:
Remove all content from the /etc/snaplogic and /opt/snaplogic folders by running the following commands:
$ rpm -qa | grep snaplogic
$ sudo rpm -e snaplogic-sidekick-4.main_9292-1.x86_64
$ sudo rm -rf /opt/snaplogic
$ sudo rm -rf /etc/snaplogic
Verify that the packages were deleted from the /etc/snaplogic and /opt/snaplogic folders.
Note |
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Enhanced Encryption KeysWhen using Enhanced Account Encryption, the private key for the Org is stored in the /etc/snaplogic directory. We recommend that you also maintain a copy of the private key elsewhere. If the private keys are not available, then Accounts created in SnapLogic cannot be used. |
System Limits
Some Linux installations have system ulimit settings that are set to lower values. This low setting can cause errors when running higher pipeline loads on the Groundplex JCC node, such as, java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: unable to create new native thread
.
To fix this issue, you need to increase the system limits for the Snapuser user. You can add the following in the /etc/security/limits.conf
folder to increase the file and process limits.
Note |
---|
The JCC process needs to be restarted after the limits are updated. |
Code Block |
---|
snapuser soft nproc 8192
snapuser hard nproc 65536
snapuser soft nofile 8192
snapuser hard nofile 65536 |
Info |
---|
Setting limits for Docker ContainersFor Docker deployments, you may not be able to set these limits because of permissions issues with the |
...
Related content
Video: Installing a Groundplex through a Debian-based Linux Distribution