Files
impala/bin/bootstrap_system.sh
Riza Suminto b581e45286 IMPALA-14606: (addendum) Install Python 3 for RHEL8
The first IMPALA-14606 commit miss to setup Python 3 in fresh RHEL8
machine. This was not caught before because I test using downstream
jenkins and it reuse RHEL8 machine that previously setup with Python 2.

This patch fix the issue by skipping pip install argparse that broke the
script and run setup_python3 instead for RHEL8 machine.

Testing:
- Run full bootstrap_system.sh and buildall.sh in fresh RHEL8 machine.

Change-Id: I6df0a534175404fe96d32eeb1e7bf0aa9ca204cd
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/23772
Reviewed-by: Michael Smith <michael.smith@cloudera.com>
Reviewed-by: Laszlo Gaal <laszlo.gaal@cloudera.com>
Tested-by: Riza Suminto <riza.suminto@cloudera.com>
2025-12-10 17:22:32 +00:00

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#!/bin/bash
# Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
# or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
# distributed with this work for additional information
# regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
# to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
# "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
# with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
# software distributed under the License is distributed on an
# "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
# KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
# specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
# This script bootstraps a system for Impala development from almost nothing; it is known
# to work on Ubuntu 16.04. It clobbers some local environment and system
# configurations, so it is best to run this in a fresh install. It also sets up the
# ~/.bashrc for the calling user and impala-config-local.sh with some environment
# variables to make Impala compile and run after this script is complete.
# When IMPALA_HOME is set, the script will bootstrap Impala development in the
# location specified.
#
# The intended user is a person who wants to start contributing code to Impala. This
# script serves as an executable reference point for how to get started.
#
# To run this in a Docker container:
#
# 1. Run with --privileged
# 2. Give the container a non-root sudoer wih NOPASSWD:
# apt-get update
# apt-get install sudo
# adduser --disabled-password --gecos '' impdev
# echo 'impdev ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL' >> /etc/sudoers
# 3. Run this script as that user: su - impdev -c /bootstrap_development.sh
#
# This script has some specializations for CentOS/Redhat 6/7 and Ubuntu.
# Of note, inside of Docker, Redhat 7 doesn't allow you to start daemons
# with systemctl, so sshd and postgresql are started manually in those cases.
set -eu -o pipefail
: ${IMPALA_HOME:=$(cd "$(dirname $0)"/..; pwd)}
export IMPALA_HOME
if [[ -t 1 ]] # if on an interactive terminal
then
echo "This script will clobber some system settings. Are you sure you want to"
echo -n "continue? "
while true
do
read -p "[yes/no] " ANSWER
ANSWER=$(echo "$ANSWER" | tr /a-z/ /A-Z/)
if [[ $ANSWER = YES ]]
then
break
elif [[ $ANSWER = NO ]]
then
echo "OK, Bye!"
exit 1
fi
done
fi
set -x
# Determine whether we're running on redhat or ubuntu
REDHAT=
REDHAT7=
REDHAT8=
REDHAT9=
UBUNTU=
UBUNTU16=
UBUNTU18=
UBUNTU20=
UBUNTU22=
UBUNTU24=
IN_DOCKER=
if [[ -f /etc/redhat-release ]]; then
REDHAT=true
echo "Identified redhat system."
if grep 'release 9\.' /etc/redhat-release; then
REDHAT9=true
echo "Identified redhat9 system."
fi
if grep 'release 8\.' /etc/redhat-release; then
REDHAT8=true
echo "Identified redhat8 system."
fi
if grep 'release 7\.' /etc/redhat-release; then
REDHAT7=true
echo "Identified redhat7 system."
fi
# TODO: restrict redhat versions
else
source /etc/lsb-release
if [[ $DISTRIB_ID = Ubuntu ]]
then
UBUNTU=true
echo "Identified Ubuntu system."
# Kerberos setup would pop up dialog boxes without this
export DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
if [[ $DISTRIB_RELEASE = 16.04 ]]
then
UBUNTU16=true
echo "Identified Ubuntu 16.04 system."
elif [[ $DISTRIB_RELEASE = 18.04 ]]
then
UBUNTU18=true
echo "Identified Ubuntu 18.04 system."
elif [[ $DISTRIB_RELEASE = 20.04 ]]
then
UBUNTU20=true
echo "Identified Ubuntu 20.04 system."
elif [[ $DISTRIB_RELEASE = 22.04 ]]
then
UBUNTU22=true
echo "Identified Ubuntu 22.04 system."
elif [[ $DISTRIB_RELEASE = 24.04 ]]
then
UBUNTU24=true
echo "Identified Ubuntu 24.04 system."
else
echo "This script supports Ubuntu versions 16.04, 18.04, 20.04, 22.04, or 24.04" >&2
exit 1
fi
else
echo "This script only supports Ubuntu or RedHat" >&2
exit 1
fi
fi
if grep docker /proc/1/cgroup; then
IN_DOCKER=true
echo "Identified we are running inside of Docker."
fi
# Helper function to execute following command only on Ubuntu
function ubuntu {
if [[ "$UBUNTU" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only on Ubuntu 16.04
function ubuntu16 {
if [[ "$UBUNTU16" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only on Ubuntu 18.04
function ubuntu18 {
if [[ "$UBUNTU18" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
function ubuntu20 {
if [[ "$UBUNTU20" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
function ubuntu22 {
if [[ "$UBUNTU22" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
function ubuntu24 {
if [[ "$UBUNTU24" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only on RedHat
function redhat {
if [[ "$REDHAT" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only on RedHat7
function redhat7 {
if [[ "$REDHAT7" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only on RedHat8
function redhat8 {
if [[ "$REDHAT8" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only on RedHat8
function redhat9 {
if [[ "$REDHAT9" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only in docker
function indocker {
if [[ "$IN_DOCKER" == true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# Helper function to execute following command only outside of docker
function notindocker {
if [[ "$IN_DOCKER" != true ]]; then
"$@"
fi
}
# X permission on home directory is needed for some uses of postgresql (IMPALA-13693)
chmod o+X ~
# Note that yum has its own retries; see yum.conf(5).
REAL_APT_GET=$(ubuntu which apt-get)
function apt-get {
for ITER in $(seq 1 30); do
echo "ATTEMPT: ${ITER}"
if sudo -E "${REAL_APT_GET}" "$@"
then
return 0
fi
sleep "${ITER}"
done
echo "NO MORE RETRIES"
return 1
}
echo ">>> Installing build tools"
if [[ "$UBUNTU" == true ]]; then
while sudo fuser /var/lib/dpkg/lock-frontend; do
sleep 1
done
fi
# Set UBUNTU_JAVA_VERSION, UBUNTU_PACKAGE_ARCH, REDHAT_JAVA_VERSION
source "$IMPALA_HOME/bin/impala-config-java.sh"
ubuntu apt-get update
ubuntu apt-get --yes install ccache curl file gawk g++ gcc apt-utils git libffi-dev \
libkrb5-dev krb5-admin-server krb5-kdc krb5-user libsasl2-dev \
libsasl2-modules libsasl2-modules-gssapi-mit libssl-dev make ninja-build \
python3-dev python3-setuptools python3-venv postgresql \
ssh wget vim-common psmisc lsof net-tools language-pack-en libxml2-dev \
libxslt-dev openjdk-${UBUNTU_JAVA_VERSION}-jdk \
openjdk-${UBUNTU_JAVA_VERSION}-source openjdk-${UBUNTU_JAVA_VERSION}-dbg
# Regular python packages don't exist on Ubuntu 22. Everything is Python 3.
ubuntu16 apt-get --yes install python python-dev python-setuptools
ubuntu18 apt-get --yes install python python-dev python-setuptools
ubuntu20 apt-get --yes install python python-dev python-setuptools
# Ubuntu 20's Python 2.7.18-1~20.04.5 version has a bug in its tarfile support.
# If we detect the affected tarfile.py, download a patched version and overwrite it.
if [[ $UBUNTU20 == true ]]; then
if [[ -f /usr/lib/python2.7/tarfile.py ]]; then
TARFILE_PY_HASH=$(sha1sum /usr/lib/python2.7/tarfile.py | cut -d' ' -f1)
if [[ "${TARFILE_PY_HASH}" == "6e1a6d9ea2a535cbb17fe266ed9ac76eb5e27b89" ]]; then
TMP_DIR=$(mktemp -d)
pushd $TMP_DIR
wget -nv https://launchpadlibrarian.net/759546541/tarfile.py
sudo cp tarfile.py /usr/lib/python2.7/tarfile.py
popd
rm -rf $TMP_DIR
fi
fi
fi
# Required by Kudu in the minicluster. Older Kudu versions depend on libtinfo5,
# versions that can be compiled for Ubuntu 24.04 depend on libtinfo6.
ubuntu20 apt-get --yes install libtinfo5 libtinfo6
ubuntu22 apt-get --yes install libtinfo5 libtinfo6
ubuntu24 apt-get --yes install libtinfo6
ARCH_NAME=$(uname -p)
if [[ $ARCH_NAME == 'aarch64' ]]; then
ubuntu apt-get --yes install unzip pkg-config flex maven python3-pip build-essential \
texinfo bison autoconf automake libtool libz-dev libncurses-dev \
libncurses5-dev libreadline-dev
fi
ubuntu sudo update-java-alternatives -l || true
# Configure the default Java version to be the version we selected.
ubuntu sudo update-java-alternatives -v -s \
java-1.${UBUNTU_JAVA_VERSION}.0-openjdk-${UBUNTU_PACKAGE_ARCH}
redhat sudo yum install -y file gawk gcc gcc-c++ git krb5-devel krb5-server \
krb5-workstation libevent-devel libffi-devel make openssl-devel cyrus-sasl \
cyrus-sasl-gssapi cyrus-sasl-devel cyrus-sasl-plain \
postgresql postgresql-server rpm-build \
wget vim-common nscd cmake zlib-devel \
procps psmisc lsof openssh-server python3-devel python3-setuptools \
net-tools langpacks-en glibc-langpack-en libxml2-devel libxslt-devel \
java-${REDHAT_JAVA_VERSION}-openjdk-src java-${REDHAT_JAVA_VERSION}-openjdk-devel
redhat sudo alternatives --set java java-${REDHAT_JAVA_VERSION}-openjdk.${ARCH_NAME}
redhat sudo alternatives --set javac java-${REDHAT_JAVA_VERSION}-openjdk.${ARCH_NAME}
redhat sudo alternatives --set java_sdk_openjdk java-${REDHAT_JAVA_VERSION}-openjdk.${ARCH_NAME}
redhat sudo alternatives --set jre_openjdk java-${REDHAT_JAVA_VERSION}-openjdk.${ARCH_NAME}
# update-java-alternatives may not take effect if there is a Java in PATH
which java
java -version
which javac
javac -version
# fuse-devel doesn't exist for Redhat 9
redhat7 sudo yum install -y fuse-devel curl
redhat8 sudo yum install -y fuse-devel curl
# Redhat9 can have curl-minimal preinstalled, which can conflict with curl.
# Adding --allowerasing allows curl to replace curl-minimal.
redhat9 sudo yum install -y --allowerasing curl
# RedHat / CentOS 8 exposes only specific versions of Python.
# Set up unversioned default Python 2.x for older CentOS versions
redhat7 sudo yum install -y python-devel python-setuptools python-argparse
# Install Python 2.x explicitly for CentOS 8
function setup_python2() {
if command -v python && [[ $(python --version 2>&1 | cut -d ' ' -f 2) =~ 2\. ]]; then
echo "We have Python 2.x";
else
if ! command -v python2; then
# Python2 needs to be installed
sudo dnf install -y python2
fi
# Here Python2 is installed, but is not the default Python.
# 1. Link pip's version to Python's version
sudo alternatives --add-slave python /usr/bin/python2 /usr/bin/pip pip /usr/bin/pip2
sudo alternatives --add-slave python /usr/libexec/no-python /usr/bin/pip pip \
/usr/libexec/no-python
# 2. Set Python2 (with pip2) to be the system default.
sudo alternatives --set python /usr/bin/python2
fi
# Here the Python2 runtime is already installed, add the dev package
sudo dnf -y install python2-devel
}
# IMPALA-14606: Stop building using Python 2 and always run with
# IMPALA_USE_PYTHON3_TESTS=true.
# redhat8 setup_python2
# redhat8 pip install --user argparse
# Point Python to Python 3 for Redhat 9 and Ubuntu 22, or newer
function setup_python3() {
# If python is already set, then use it. Otherwise, try to point python to python3.
if ! command -v python > /dev/null; then
if command -v python3 ; then
# Newer OSes (e.g. Redhat 9 and equivalents) make it harder to get Python 2, and we
# need to start using Python 3 by default.
# For these new OSes (Ubuntu 22+, Redhat 9), there is no alternative entry for
# python, so we need to create one from scratch.
if command -v alternatives > /dev/null; then
if sudo alternatives --list | grep python > /dev/null ; then
sudo alternatives --set python /usr/bin/python3
else
# The alternative doesn't exist, create it
sudo alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3 20
fi
elif command -v update-alternatives > /dev/null; then
# This is what Ubuntu 20/22+ does. There is no official python alternative,
# so we need to create one.
sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3 20
else
echo "ERROR: trying to set python to point to python3"
echo "ERROR: alternatives/update-alternatives don't exist, so giving up..."
exit 1
fi
fi
fi
}
redhat8 setup_python3
redhat9 setup_python3
ubuntu22 setup_python3
ubuntu24 setup_python3
# CentOS repos don't contain ccache, so install from EPEL
redhat sudo yum install -y epel-release
redhat sudo yum install -y ccache
# Clean up yum caches
redhat sudo yum clean all
# Download Maven since the packaged version is pretty old.
: ${IMPALA_TOOLCHAIN_HOST:=native-toolchain.s3.amazonaws.com}
MVN_VERSION="3.9.8"
if [ ! -d "/usr/local/apache-maven-${MVN_VERSION}" ]; then
sudo wget -nv \
"https://${IMPALA_TOOLCHAIN_HOST}/maven/apache-maven-${MVN_VERSION}-bin.tar.gz"
sha512sum -c - <<< "7d171def9b85846bf757a2cec94b7529371068a0670df14682447224e57983528e97a6d1b850327e4ca02b139abaab7fcb93c4315119e6f0ffb3f0cbc0d0b9a2 apache-maven-${MVN_VERSION}-bin.tar.gz"
sudo tar -C /usr/local -xzf "apache-maven-${MVN_VERSION}-bin.tar.gz"
# Ensure that Impala's preferred version is installed locally,
# even if a previous version exists there.
sudo ln -s -f "/usr/local/apache-maven-${MVN_VERSION}/bin/mvn" "/usr/local/bin"
# reset permissions on redhat8
# TODO: figure out why this is necessary for redhat8
MAVEN_DIRECTORY="/usr/local/apache-maven-${MVN_VERSION}"
redhat8 indocker sudo chmod 0755 ${MAVEN_DIRECTORY}
redhat8 indocker sudo chmod 0755 ${MAVEN_DIRECTORY}/{bin,boot}
redhat9 indocker sudo chmod 0755 ${MAVEN_DIRECTORY}
redhat9 indocker sudo chmod 0755 ${MAVEN_DIRECTORY}/{bin,boot}
fi
if ! { service --status-all | grep -E '^ \[ \+ \] ssh$'; }
then
ubuntu sudo service ssh start
redhat notindocker sudo service sshd start
redhat indocker sudo /usr/bin/ssh-keygen -A
redhat indocker sudo /usr/sbin/sshd
# The CentOS 8.1 image includes /var/run/nologin by mistake; this file prevents
# SSH logins. See https://github.com/CentOS/sig-cloud-instance-images/issues/60
redhat8 indocker sudo rm -f /var/run/nologin
fi
# TODO: config ccache to give it plenty of space
# TODO: check that there is enough space on disk to do a build and data load
# TODO: make this work with non-bash shells
echo ">>> Configuring system"
function setup_postgresql() {
echo ">>> Configuring postgresql. This can fail if postgres is already initialized"
# initdb can fail if it was run before on this host - ignore this error
redhat notindocker sudo service postgresql initdb || true
redhat notindocker sudo service postgresql stop
redhat indocker sudo -u postgres PGDATA=/var/lib/pgsql/data pg_ctl init
ubuntu sudo service postgresql stop
# These configurations expose connectiong to PostgreSQL via md5-hashed
# passwords over TCP to localhost, and the local socket is trusted
# widely.
ubuntu sudo sed -ri 's/local +all +all +peer/local all all trust/g' \
/etc/postgresql/*/main/pg_hba.conf
# Accept remote connections from the hosts in the same subnet.
ubuntu sudo sed -ri "s/#listen_addresses = 'localhost'/listen_addresses = '0.0.0.0'/g" \
/etc/postgresql/*/main/postgresql.conf
ubuntu sudo sed -ri 's/host +all +all +127.0.0.1\/32/host all all samenet/g' \
/etc/postgresql/*/main/pg_hba.conf
redhat sudo sed -ri 's/local +all +all +(ident|peer)/local all all trust/g' \
/var/lib/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf
# Accept md5 passwords from localhost
redhat sudo sed -i -e 's,\(host.*\)ident,\1md5,' /var/lib/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf
# Accept remote connections from the hosts in the same subnet.
redhat sudo sed -ri "s/#listen_addresses = 'localhost'/listen_addresses = '0.0.0.0'/g" \
/var/lib/pgsql/data/postgresql.conf
redhat sudo sed -ri 's/host +all +all +127.0.0.1\/32/host all all samenet/g' \
/var/lib/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf
ubuntu sudo service postgresql start
redhat notindocker sudo service postgresql start
# Important to redirect pg_ctl to a logfile, lest it keep the stdout
# file descriptor open, preventing the shell from exiting.
redhat indocker sudo -u postgres PGDATA=/var/lib/pgsql/data bash -c \
"pg_ctl start -w --timeout=120 >> /var/lib/pgsql/pg.log 2>&1"
# Set up postgres for HMS
if ! [[ 1 = $(sudo -u postgres psql -At -c "SELECT count(*) FROM pg_roles WHERE rolname = 'hiveuser';") ]]
then
sudo -u postgres psql -c "CREATE ROLE hiveuser LOGIN PASSWORD 'password';"
fi
sudo -u postgres psql -c "ALTER ROLE hiveuser WITH CREATEDB;"
# On Ubuntu 18.04 aarch64 version, the sql 'select * from pg_roles' blocked,
# because output of 'select *' is too long to display in 1 line.
# So here just change it to 'select count(*)' as a work around.
if [[ $ARCH_NAME == 'aarch64' ]]; then
sudo -u postgres psql -c "SELECT count(*) FROM pg_roles WHERE rolname = 'hiveuser';"
else
sudo -u postgres psql -c "SELECT * FROM pg_roles WHERE rolname = 'hiveuser';"
fi
echo ">>> Configuring postgresql finished."
}
# Setup ssh to ssh to localhost
mkdir -p ~/.ssh
chmod go-rwx ~/.ssh
if ! [[ -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa ]]
then
ssh-keygen -t rsa -N '' -q -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa
fi
{ echo "" | cat - ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys; } && chmod 0600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
echo -e "\nNoHostAuthenticationForLocalhost yes" >> ~/.ssh/config && chmod 0600 ~/.ssh/config
ssh localhost whoami
# Workarounds for HDFS networking issues: On the minicluster, tests that rely
# on WebHDFS may fail with "Connection refused" errors because the namenode
# will return a "Location:" redirect to the hostname, but the datanode is only
# listening on localhost. See also HDFS-13797. To reproduce this, the following
# snippet may be useful:
#
# $impala-python3
# >>> import logging
# >>> logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
# >>> logging.getLogger("requests.packages.urllib3").setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
# >>> from pywebhdfs.webhdfs import PyWebHdfsClient
# >>> PyWebHdfsClient(host='localhost',port='5070', user_name='hdfs').read_file(
# "/test-warehouse/tpch.region/region.tbl")
# INFO:...:Starting new HTTP connection (1): localhost
# DEBUG:...:"GET /webhdfs/v1//t....tbl?op=OPEN&user.name=hdfs HTTP/1.1" 307 0
# INFO:...:Starting new HTTP connection (1): HOSTNAME.DOMAIN
# Traceback (most recent call last):
# ...
# ...ConnectionError: ('Connection aborted.', error(111, 'Connection refused'))
# Prefer the FQDN first for rpc-mgr-kerberized-test as newer krb5 requires FQDN.
add_if_not_there() {
grep -q "$2" $1 || echo "$2" | sudo tee -a $1
}
add_if_not_there "/etc/hosts" "127.0.0.1 $(hostname) $(hostname -s)"
# Add hostnames with multiple labels to allow matching wildcard TLS certificates.
# Create names that map to v4/v6/dual localhost to help ipv6 testing.
add_if_not_there "/etc/hosts" "127.0.0.1 ip4.impala.test ip46.impala.test"
add_if_not_there "/etc/hosts" "::1 ip6.impala.test ip46.impala.test"
#
# In Docker, one can change /etc/hosts as above but not with sed -i. The error message is
# "sed: cannot rename /etc/sedc3gPj8: Device or resource busy". The following lines are
# basically sed -i but with cp instead of mv for -i part.
NEW_HOSTS=$(mktemp)
sed 's/127.0.1.1/127.0.0.1/g' /etc/hosts > "${NEW_HOSTS}"
diff -u /etc/hosts "${NEW_HOSTS}" || true
sudo cp "${NEW_HOSTS}" /etc/hosts
rm "${NEW_HOSTS}"
sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/hadoop-hdfs
sudo chown $(whoami) /var/lib/hadoop-hdfs/
# TODO: restrict this to only the users it is needed for
echo -e "\n* - nofile 1048576" | sudo tee -a /etc/security/limits.conf
# Increase memlock for HDFS caching. On RedHat systems this defaults to 64 (KB). Ubuntu
# uses systemd, which sets its own default. With Ubuntu 18.04 that default is 16 KB,
# 20.04+ defaults to 64 MB. Set all to 64 MB for the current user; Impala test systems
# require 10s of GBs of memory, so this setting should not be a problem.
USER=${USER-$(id -un)}
echo -e "${USER} - memlock 65536" | sudo tee /etc/security/limits.d/10-memlock.conf
# Default on CentOS limits a user to 1024 or 4096 processes (threads) , which isn't
# enough for minicluster with all of its friends.
redhat7 sudo sed -i 's,\*\s*soft\s*nproc\s*[0-9]*$,* soft nproc unlimited,' \
/etc/security/limits.d/*-nproc.conf
redhat8 echo -e "* soft nproc unlimited" | sudo tee -a /etc/security/limits.conf
redhat9 echo -e "* soft nproc unlimited" | sudo tee -a /etc/security/limits.conf
echo ">>> Checking out Impala"
# If there is no Impala git repo, get one now
if ! [[ -d "$IMPALA_HOME" ]]
then
time -p git clone https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/impala.git "$IMPALA_HOME"
fi
cd "$IMPALA_HOME"
SET_IMPALA_HOME="export IMPALA_HOME=$(pwd)"
echo -e "\n$SET_IMPALA_HOME" >> ~/.bashrc
eval "$SET_IMPALA_HOME"
# Try to prepopulate the m2 directory to save time
if [[ "${PREPOPULATE_M2_REPOSITORY:-true}" == true ]] ; then
echo ">>> Populating m2 directory..."
if ! bin/jenkins/populate_m2_directory.py ; then
echo "Failed to prepopulate the m2 directory. Continuing..."
fi
else
echo ">>> Skip populating m2 directory"
fi
setup_postgresql
# Be careful about adding code after postgres initialization, it may fail (IMPALA-13802).