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bash: pig: command not found



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I am trying to find out what version of pig I am using. I thought I already installed it



# yum install hadoop* mahout* oozie* hbase* hive* hue* pig* zookeeper*


When I try to enter a pig script, the terminal returns the following.



# pig totalmiles.pig
bash: pig: command not found...









share|improve this question







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  • I don't know yum nor pig, but is there a way you can (1) list all installed packages starting with pig, then (2) list the files installed by these packages, and see if the executable is actually called pig?

    – Sparhawk
    yesterday











  • It would be helpful to know which distribution you are using, e.g., Fedora, CentOS, etc. (I'm assuming its one of those given that it uses yum). Also, any output from that command would be helpful to determine if it actually installed correctly.

    – Lucas Ramage
    yesterday


















0















I am trying to find out what version of pig I am using. I thought I already installed it



# yum install hadoop* mahout* oozie* hbase* hive* hue* pig* zookeeper*


When I try to enter a pig script, the terminal returns the following.



# pig totalmiles.pig
bash: pig: command not found...









share|improve this question







New contributor




ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • I don't know yum nor pig, but is there a way you can (1) list all installed packages starting with pig, then (2) list the files installed by these packages, and see if the executable is actually called pig?

    – Sparhawk
    yesterday











  • It would be helpful to know which distribution you are using, e.g., Fedora, CentOS, etc. (I'm assuming its one of those given that it uses yum). Also, any output from that command would be helpful to determine if it actually installed correctly.

    – Lucas Ramage
    yesterday














0












0








0








I am trying to find out what version of pig I am using. I thought I already installed it



# yum install hadoop* mahout* oozie* hbase* hive* hue* pig* zookeeper*


When I try to enter a pig script, the terminal returns the following.



# pig totalmiles.pig
bash: pig: command not found...









share|improve this question







New contributor




ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am trying to find out what version of pig I am using. I thought I already installed it



# yum install hadoop* mahout* oozie* hbase* hive* hue* pig* zookeeper*


When I try to enter a pig script, the terminal returns the following.



# pig totalmiles.pig
bash: pig: command not found...






hadoop






share|improve this question







New contributor




ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









ubliatubliat

12




12




New contributor




ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






ubliat is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • I don't know yum nor pig, but is there a way you can (1) list all installed packages starting with pig, then (2) list the files installed by these packages, and see if the executable is actually called pig?

    – Sparhawk
    yesterday











  • It would be helpful to know which distribution you are using, e.g., Fedora, CentOS, etc. (I'm assuming its one of those given that it uses yum). Also, any output from that command would be helpful to determine if it actually installed correctly.

    – Lucas Ramage
    yesterday



















  • I don't know yum nor pig, but is there a way you can (1) list all installed packages starting with pig, then (2) list the files installed by these packages, and see if the executable is actually called pig?

    – Sparhawk
    yesterday











  • It would be helpful to know which distribution you are using, e.g., Fedora, CentOS, etc. (I'm assuming its one of those given that it uses yum). Also, any output from that command would be helpful to determine if it actually installed correctly.

    – Lucas Ramage
    yesterday

















I don't know yum nor pig, but is there a way you can (1) list all installed packages starting with pig, then (2) list the files installed by these packages, and see if the executable is actually called pig?

– Sparhawk
yesterday





I don't know yum nor pig, but is there a way you can (1) list all installed packages starting with pig, then (2) list the files installed by these packages, and see if the executable is actually called pig?

– Sparhawk
yesterday













It would be helpful to know which distribution you are using, e.g., Fedora, CentOS, etc. (I'm assuming its one of those given that it uses yum). Also, any output from that command would be helpful to determine if it actually installed correctly.

– Lucas Ramage
yesterday





It would be helpful to know which distribution you are using, e.g., Fedora, CentOS, etc. (I'm assuming its one of those given that it uses yum). Also, any output from that command would be helpful to determine if it actually installed correctly.

– Lucas Ramage
yesterday










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














You can check and see what you actually installed with yum install pig* by running yum list pig* as odds are that you didn't install pig but only for instance pigz (a parallel implementation of gzip, that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores when compressing data).



If yum list pig* does show that pig is installed, then it is possible (though unlikely) that the binary is not in your default $PATH. Check for instance with rpm -ql pig where the package installed its contents and the pig executable.






share|improve this answer
























  • Ok, I checked the following: # yum list pig* Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * epel: mirrors.mit.edu * extras: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * updates: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu Installed Packages pig-udf-datafu.noarch 1.3.0-1.el7 @bigtop piglit.x86_64 1.0.20170515-4.GITa969d23f.el7 @epel pigz.x86_64 2.3.4-1.el7 @epel # rpm -ql pig package pig is not installed

    – ubliat
    36 mins ago












Your Answer








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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









0














You can check and see what you actually installed with yum install pig* by running yum list pig* as odds are that you didn't install pig but only for instance pigz (a parallel implementation of gzip, that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores when compressing data).



If yum list pig* does show that pig is installed, then it is possible (though unlikely) that the binary is not in your default $PATH. Check for instance with rpm -ql pig where the package installed its contents and the pig executable.






share|improve this answer
























  • Ok, I checked the following: # yum list pig* Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * epel: mirrors.mit.edu * extras: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * updates: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu Installed Packages pig-udf-datafu.noarch 1.3.0-1.el7 @bigtop piglit.x86_64 1.0.20170515-4.GITa969d23f.el7 @epel pigz.x86_64 2.3.4-1.el7 @epel # rpm -ql pig package pig is not installed

    – ubliat
    36 mins ago
















0














You can check and see what you actually installed with yum install pig* by running yum list pig* as odds are that you didn't install pig but only for instance pigz (a parallel implementation of gzip, that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores when compressing data).



If yum list pig* does show that pig is installed, then it is possible (though unlikely) that the binary is not in your default $PATH. Check for instance with rpm -ql pig where the package installed its contents and the pig executable.






share|improve this answer
























  • Ok, I checked the following: # yum list pig* Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * epel: mirrors.mit.edu * extras: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * updates: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu Installed Packages pig-udf-datafu.noarch 1.3.0-1.el7 @bigtop piglit.x86_64 1.0.20170515-4.GITa969d23f.el7 @epel pigz.x86_64 2.3.4-1.el7 @epel # rpm -ql pig package pig is not installed

    – ubliat
    36 mins ago














0












0








0







You can check and see what you actually installed with yum install pig* by running yum list pig* as odds are that you didn't install pig but only for instance pigz (a parallel implementation of gzip, that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores when compressing data).



If yum list pig* does show that pig is installed, then it is possible (though unlikely) that the binary is not in your default $PATH. Check for instance with rpm -ql pig where the package installed its contents and the pig executable.






share|improve this answer













You can check and see what you actually installed with yum install pig* by running yum list pig* as odds are that you didn't install pig but only for instance pigz (a parallel implementation of gzip, that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores when compressing data).



If yum list pig* does show that pig is installed, then it is possible (though unlikely) that the binary is not in your default $PATH. Check for instance with rpm -ql pig where the package installed its contents and the pig executable.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 19 hours ago









HBruijnHBruijn

5,6261527




5,6261527













  • Ok, I checked the following: # yum list pig* Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * epel: mirrors.mit.edu * extras: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * updates: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu Installed Packages pig-udf-datafu.noarch 1.3.0-1.el7 @bigtop piglit.x86_64 1.0.20170515-4.GITa969d23f.el7 @epel pigz.x86_64 2.3.4-1.el7 @epel # rpm -ql pig package pig is not installed

    – ubliat
    36 mins ago



















  • Ok, I checked the following: # yum list pig* Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * epel: mirrors.mit.edu * extras: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * updates: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu Installed Packages pig-udf-datafu.noarch 1.3.0-1.el7 @bigtop piglit.x86_64 1.0.20170515-4.GITa969d23f.el7 @epel pigz.x86_64 2.3.4-1.el7 @epel # rpm -ql pig package pig is not installed

    – ubliat
    36 mins ago

















Ok, I checked the following: # yum list pig* Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * epel: mirrors.mit.edu * extras: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * updates: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu Installed Packages pig-udf-datafu.noarch 1.3.0-1.el7 @bigtop piglit.x86_64 1.0.20170515-4.GITa969d23f.el7 @epel pigz.x86_64 2.3.4-1.el7 @epel # rpm -ql pig package pig is not installed

– ubliat
36 mins ago





Ok, I checked the following: # yum list pig* Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * epel: mirrors.mit.edu * extras: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu * updates: mirror.es.its.nyu.edu Installed Packages pig-udf-datafu.noarch 1.3.0-1.el7 @bigtop piglit.x86_64 1.0.20170515-4.GITa969d23f.el7 @epel pigz.x86_64 2.3.4-1.el7 @epel # rpm -ql pig package pig is not installed

– ubliat
36 mins ago










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