Hands-On Presto Tutorial: Presto 101
This tutorial will guide you on installing and configuring Presto locally.
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Join For FreeIn this blog we'll show you how to get started with Presto, the open source SQL query engine for the data lake. By the end you'll be able to run Presto locally on your machine.
Presto Installation
Presto can be installed manually or using docker images on:
- Single Node: Both co-ordinator and workers run on the same machine.
- Or even multiple machines depending on the workload requirements.
Manual Installing Presto
Download the Presto server tarball, presto-server-0.253.1.tar.gz
and unpack it. The tarball will contain a single top-level directory, presto-server-0.253.1
which we will call the installation directory.
Run the commands below to install the official tarballs for presto-server and presto-cli from prestodb.io
[root@prestodb_c01 ~]# curl -O https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/facebook/presto/presto-server/0.235.1/presto-server-0.235.1.tar.gz |
Data Directory
Presto needs a data directory for storing logs, etc. We recommend creating a data directory outside of the installation directory, which allows it to be easily preserved when upgrading Presto.
[root@prestodb_c01 ~]# mkdir -p /var/presto/data |
Configuration Settings
Create an etc directory inside the installation directory. This will hold the following configuration:
- Node Properties: environmental configuration specific to each node
- JVM Config: command-line options for the Java Virtual Machine
- Config Properties: configuration for the Presto server
- Catalog Properties: configuration for Connectors (data sources)
[root@prestodb_c01 ~]# mkdir etc |
Node Properties
The node properties file, etc/node.properties
contains configuration specific to each node. A node is a single installed instance of Presto on a machine. This file is typically created by the deployment system when Presto is first installed. The following is a minimal etc/node.properties
:
[root@prestodb_c01 ~]# cat etc/node.propertiesnode.environment=productionnode.id=ffffffff-ffff-ffff-ffff-ffffffffffffnode.data-dir=/var/presto/data |
The above properties are described below:
node.environment
: The name of the environment. All Presto nodes in a cluster must have the same environment name.node.id
: The unique identifier for this installation of Presto. This must be unique for every node. This identifier should remain consistent across reboots or upgrades of Presto. If running multiple installations of Presto on a single machine (i.e. multiple nodes on the same machine), each installation must have a unique identifier.node.data-dir
: The location (filesystem path) of the data directory. Presto will store logs and other data here.
JVM configuration
The JVM config file, etc/jvm.config
, contains a list of command-line options used for launching the Java Virtual Machine. The format of the file is a list of options, one per line. These options are not interpreted by the shell, so options containing spaces or other special characters should not be quoted.
The following provides a good starting point for creating etc/jvm.config
:
[root@prestodb_c01 ~]# cat etc/jvm.config -server -Xmx16G -XX:+UseG1GC -XX:G1HeapRegionSize=32M -XX:+UseGCOverheadLimit -XX:+ExplicitGCInvokesConcurrent -XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError -XX:+ExitOnOutOfMemoryError |
Because an OutOfMemoryError
will typically leave the JVM in an inconsistent state, we write a heap dump (for debugging) and forcibly terminate the process when this occurs.
Config Properties
The config properties file, etc/config.properties
, contains the configuration for the Presto server. Every Presto server can function as both a coordinator and a worker, but dedicating a single machine to only perform coordination work provides the best performance on larger clusters.
In order to set up a single machine for testing that will function as both a coordinator and worker, then set the below parameters to true in etc/config.properties
[root@singlenode01 ~]# cat etc/config.properties coordinator=true node-scheduler.include-coordinator=true http-server.http.port=8080 query.max-memory=50GB query.max-memory-per-node=1GB query.max-total-memory-per-node=2GB discovery-server.enabled=true discovery.uri=http://example.net:8080 |
coordinator
: Allow this Presto instance to function as a coordinator (accept queries from clients and manage query execution).node-scheduler.include-coordinator
: Allow scheduling work on the coordinator.http-server.http.port
: Specifies the port for the HTTP server. Presto uses HTTP for all communication, internal and external.query.max-memory
: The maximum amount of distributed memory that a query may use.query.max-memory-per-node
: The maximum amount of user memory that a query may use on any one machine.query.max-total-memory-per-node
: The maximum amount of user and system memory that a query may use on any one machine, where system memory is the memory used during execution by readers, writers, and network buffers, etc.discovery-server.enabled
: Presto uses the Discovery service to find all the nodes in the cluster. Every Presto instance will register itself with the Discovery service on startup. In order to simplify deployment and avoid running an additional service, the Presto coordinator can run an embedded version of the Discovery service. It shares the HTTP server with Presto and thus uses the same port.discovery.uri
: The URI to the Discovery server. Because we have enabled the embedded version of Discovery in the Presto coordinator, this should be the URI of the Presto coordinator. Replace example.net:8080 to match the host and port of the Presto coordinator. This URI must not end in a slash.
You may also wish to set the following properties:
jmx.rmiregistry.port
: Specifies the port for the JMX RMI registry. JMX clients should connect to this port.jmx.rmiserver.port
: Specifies the port for the JMX RMI server. Presto exports many metrics that are useful for monitoring via JMX.
Log Levels
The optional log levels file, etc/log.properties
allows setting the minimum log level for named logger hierarchies. Every logger has a name, which is typically the fully qualified name of the class that uses the logger.
[root@coordinator01 ~]# cat etc/log.properties |
There are four levels: DEBUG
, INFO
, WARN
and ERROR
.
Catalog Properties
Presto accesses data via connectors, which are mounted in catalogs. The connector provides all of the schemas and tables inside of the catalog.
Catalogs are registered by creating a catalog properties file in the etc/catalog
directory. For example, create etc/catalog/jmx.properties
with the following contents to mount the jmx connector as the jmx catalog
[root@coordinator01 ~]# mkdir etc/catalog |
Running Presto
The installation directory contains the launcher script in bin/launcher
. Presto can be started as a daemon by running the following:
[root@hsrhvm01 presto-server-0.235.1]# bin/launcher start Started as 23378 |
After launching, you can find the log files in var/log
:
launcher.log
: This log is created by the launcher and is connected to the stdout and stderr streams of the server. It will contain a few log messages that occur while the server logging is being initialized and any errors or diagnostics produced by the JVM.server.log
: This is the main log file used by Presto. It will typically contain the relevant information if the server fails during initialization. It is automatically rotated and compressed.http-request.log
: This is the HTTP request log which contains every HTTP request received by the server. It is automatically rotated and compressed.
Published at DZone with permission of Praburam Upendran. See the original article here.
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