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I am trying to set up sqoop to run sql queries from databases and store the tables in HDFS.

I've installed sqoop version 1.99.3 and download the directory contents to "~/sqoop/sqoop-1.99.3-bin-hadoop200/" on my local machine. Then, following the instructions I found here, I executed the command.

./sqoop.sh server start

Many of the other steps in the documentation require using the command "sqoop", but my bash prompt doesn't recognize that command:

~/sqoop/sqoop-1.99.3-bin-hadoop200/bin 15:30:22]$ sqoop -bash: sqoop: command not found

Does anyone have guidance?

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2 Answers 2

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It sounds to me like the installation location of the sqoop binary isn't in your $PATH. You might consider referencing the question here

I know this isn't going to be the top answer, but it's my first answer. Someone will hopefully be along eventually who knows the actual product.

Another thing to try is to locate the binary for sqoop, navigate into that directory, and use "./sqoop youroptionshere -foo -bar" instead of just "sqoop youroptionshere -foo -bar". That might be better than adding tons of directories to your $PATH

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  • I added these lines to my bash_profile: export SQOOP_HOME="########/sqoop/sqoop-1.99.3-bin-hadoop200" export PATH="$PATH:SQOOP_HOME/bin" but still no luck
    – TM_MM
    Nov 13, 2014 at 21:32
  • You may need to remember to restart your bash session or log back in. I forget what causes $PATH changes in bash config files to change. Have you tried yet running the sqoop binary directly from it's installation location? EDIT: Also, is the binary's executable flag set?
    – user80311
    Nov 13, 2014 at 21:35
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There are currently 2 versions of Sqoop that are very different from each other: Sqoop 1 and Sqoop 2.

You are using Sqoop 1.99.3 it seems, which is an early release of Sqoop2. Check out the 5 minute demo to get a sense of what's going on.

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