To deploy a new instance of DataHub, perform the following steps.
-
Install docker, jq and docker-compose (if using Linux). Make sure to allocate enough hardware resources for Docker engine. Tested & confirmed config: 2 CPUs, 8GB RAM, 2GB Swap area, and 10GB disk space.
-
Launch the Docker Engine from command line or the desktop app.
-
Install the DataHub CLI
a. Ensure you have Python 3.6+ installed & configured. (Check using
python3 --version
)b. Run the following commands in your terminal
python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip wheel setuptools python3 -m pip uninstall datahub acryl-datahub || true # sanity check - ok if it fails python3 -m pip install --upgrade acryl-datahub datahub version
:::note
If you see "command not found", try running cli commands with the prefix 'python3 -m' instead like python3 -m datahub version
Note that DataHub CLI does not support Python 2.x.
:::
-
To deploy DataHub, run the following CLI command from your terminal
datahub docker quickstart
Upon completion of this step, you should be able to navigate to the DataHub UI at http://localhost:9002 in your browser. You can sign in using
datahub
as both the username and password. -
To ingest the sample metadata, run the following CLI command from your terminal
datahub docker ingest-sample-data
That's it! To start pushing your company's metadata into DataHub, take a look at the Metadata Ingestion Framework.
To cleanse DataHub of all of it's state (e.g. before ingesting your own), you can use the CLI nuke
command.
datahub docker nuke
If you have been testing DataHub locally, a new version of DataHub got released and you want to try the new version then you can use below commands.
datahub docker nuke --keep-data
datahub docker quickstart
This will keep the data that you have ingested so far in DataHub and start a new quickstart with the latest version of DataHub.
If running the datahub cli produces "command not found" errors inside your terminal, your system may be defaulting to an
older version of Python. Try prefixing your datahub
commands with python3 -m
:
python3 -m datahub docker quickstart
Another possibility is that your system PATH does not include pip's $HOME/.local/bin
directory. On linux, you can add this to your ~/.bashrc
:
if [ -d "$HOME/.local/bin" ] ; then
PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH"
fi
There can be misc issues with Docker, like conflicting containers and dangling volumes, that can often be resolved by pruning your Docker state with the following command. Note that this command removes all unused containers, networks, images (both dangling and unreferenced), and optionally, volumes.
docker system prune