Fedora, CentOS, or Red Hat

This section describes the steps needed to set up a single-node Citus cluster on your own Linux machine from RPM packages.

1. Install PostgreSQL 10 and the Citus extension

# Add Citus repository for package manager
curl https://install.citusdata.com/community/rpm.sh | sudo bash

# install Citus extension
sudo yum install -y citus73_10

2. Initialize the Cluster

Citus has two kinds of components, the coordinator and the workers. The coordinator coordinates queries and maintains metadata on where in the cluster each row of data is. The workers hold your data and respond to queries.

Let’s create directories for those nodes to store their data. For convenience in using PostgreSQL Unix domain socket connections we’ll use the postgres user.

# this user has access to sockets in /var/run/postgresql
sudo su - postgres

# include path to postgres binaries
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/pgsql-10/bin

cd ~
mkdir -p citus/coordinator citus/worker1 citus/worker2

# create three normal postgres instances
initdb -D citus/coordinator
initdb -D citus/worker1
initdb -D citus/worker2

Citus is a Postgres extension, to tell Postgres to use this extension you’ll need to add it to a configuration variable called shared_preload_libraries:

echo "shared_preload_libraries = 'citus'" >> citus/coordinator/postgresql.conf
echo "shared_preload_libraries = 'citus'" >> citus/worker1/postgresql.conf
echo "shared_preload_libraries = 'citus'" >> citus/worker2/postgresql.conf

3. Start the coordinator and workers

We will start the PostgreSQL instances on ports 9700 (for the coordinator) and 9701, 9702 (for the workers). We assume those ports are available on your machine. Feel free to use different ports if they are in use.

Let’s start the databases:

pg_ctl -D citus/coordinator -o "-p 9700" -l coordinator_logfile start
pg_ctl -D citus/worker1 -o "-p 9701" -l worker1_logfile start
pg_ctl -D citus/worker2 -o "-p 9702" -l worker2_logfile start

Above you added Citus to shared_preload_libraries. That lets it hook into some deep parts of Postgres, swapping out the query planner and executor. Here, we load the user-facing side of Citus (such as the functions you’ll soon call):

psql -p 9700 -c "CREATE EXTENSION citus;"
psql -p 9701 -c "CREATE EXTENSION citus;"
psql -p 9702 -c "CREATE EXTENSION citus;"

Finally, the coordinator needs to know where it can find the workers. To tell it you can run:

psql -p 9700 -c "SELECT * from master_add_node('localhost', 9701);"
psql -p 9700 -c "SELECT * from master_add_node('localhost', 9702);"

4. Verify that installation has succeeded

To verify that the installation has succeeded we check that the coordinator node has picked up the desired worker configuration. First start the psql shell on the coordinator node:

psql -p 9700 -c "select * from master_get_active_worker_nodes();"

You should see a row for each worker node including the node name and port.

At this step, you have completed the installation process and are ready to use your Citus cluster. To help you get started, we have a tutorial which has instructions on setting up a Citus cluster with sample data in minutes.

Note

Please note that Citus reports anonymous information about your cluster to the Citus Data company servers. To learn more about what information is collected and how to opt out of it, see Checks For Updates and Cluster Statistics.