
OpenJDK 11 is supported as of Cloudera Manager and CDH 6.3. If you do not delete these files, Cloudera Manager and other components mayĬontinue to use the old version of the JDK.

On the Home > Status tab, click to the right of the cluster name and select Restart.Select Clusters > Cloudera Management Service.Log in to the Cloudera Manager Admin Console.Restart the Cloudera Management Service.RHEL 7, SLES 12, Debian 8, Ubuntu 16.04 and higher sudo systemctl restart cloudera-scm-server RHEL 5 or 6, SLES 11, Debian 6 or 7, Ubuntu 12.04 or 14.04 sudo service cloudera-scm-server restart (See Recommended Keystore andĮxport JAVA_HOME="/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle-cloudera" You must also ensure that the Java Truststores are retained during the upgrade. JDK 1.8.0_162 enables unlimited strength encryption by default.
UNABLE TO LOCATE PACKAGE OPENJDK 8 JDK INSTALL
(In a Cloudera Manager deployment, you automatically install the policy files for unmanaged deployments, install them manually.) If you are upgrading from a lower major version of the JDK to JDK 1.8 or from JDK 1.6 to JDK 1.7, and you are usingĪES-256 bit encryption, you must install new encryption policy files.Supported JDKs Cloudera Enterprise Version
