This deployment guide shows you how to deploy a SAP HANA system on Google Cloud by using Terraform and a configuration file to define your installation. The guide helps you configure Compute Engine virtual machines (VMs) and persistent disks, as well as the Linux operating system, to achieve the best performance for your SAP HANA system. The Terraform configuration file incorporates best practices from both Compute Engine and SAP.
Use this guide to deploy either a single-host scale-up or a multi-host scale-out SAP HANA system that does not include standby hosts.
If you need to include SAP HANA automatic host failover, use the Terraform: SAP HANA scale-out system with host auto-failover deployment guide instead.
If you need to deploy SAP HANA in a Linux high-availability cluster, use one of the following guides:
- Terraform: SAP HANA high-availability cluster configuration guide
- The HA cluster configuration guide for SAP HANA on RHEL
- The HA cluster configuration guide for SAP HANA on SLES
Prerequisites
Before you begin, make sure that you meet the following prerequisites:
- You have read the SAP HANA planning guide.
- You have a Google Cloud account and project.
- If you require your SAP workload to run in compliance with data residency, access control, support personnel, or regulatory requirements, then you must create the required Assured Workloads folder. For more information, see Compliance and sovereign controls for SAP on Google Cloud.
- Virtual Private Cloud networking is set up with firewall rules or other methods to control access to your VMs.
You have access to the SAP HANA installation media.
If OS login is enabled in your project metadata and you are deploying scale-out nodes, you need to disable OS login temporarily until your deployment is complete. For deployment purposes, this procedure configures SSH keys in instance metadata. When OS login is enabled, metadata-based SSH key configurations are disabled, and this deployment fails. After deployment is complete, you can enable OS login again.
For more information, see:
Setting up your Google account
A Google account is required to work with Google Cloud.
- Sign up for a Google account if you don't already have one.
- (Optional) If you require your SAP workload to run in compliance with data residency, access control, support personnel, or regulatory requirements, then you must create the required Assured Workloads folder. For more information, see Compliance and sovereign controls for SAP on Google Cloud.
- Log in to the Google Cloud console, and create a new project.
- Enable your billing account.
- Configure SSH keys so that you are able to use them to SSH into your Compute Engine VM instances. Use the Google Cloud CLI to create a new SSH key.
- Use the gcloud CLI or Google Cloud console to add the SSH keys to your project metadata. This allows you to access any Compute Engine VM instance created within this project, except for instances that explicitly disable project-wide SSH keys.
Creating a network
For security purposes, create a new network. You can control who has access by adding firewall rules or by using another access control method.
If your project has a default VPC network, don't use it. Instead, create your own VPC network so that the only firewall rules in effect are those that you create explicitly.
During deployment, VM instances typically require access to the internet to download Google Cloud's Agent for SAP. If you are using one of the SAP-certified Linux images that are available from Google Cloud, the VM instance also requires access to the internet in order to register the license and to access OS vendor repositories. A configuration with a NAT gateway and with VM network tags supports this access, even if the target VMs do not have external IPs.
To create a VPC network for your project, complete the following steps:
-
Create a custom mode network. For more information, see Creating a custom mode network.
-
Create a subnetwork, and specify the region and IP range. For more information, see Adding subnets.
Setting up a NAT gateway
If you need to create one or more VMs without public IP addresses, you need to use network address translation (NAT) to enable the VMs to access the internet. Use Cloud NAT, a Google Cloud distributed, software-defined managed service that lets VMs send outbound packets to the internet and receive any corresponding established inbound response packets. Alternatively, you can set up a separate VM as a NAT gateway.
To create a Cloud NAT instance for your project, see Using Cloud NAT.
After you configure Cloud NAT for your project, your VM instances can securely access the internet without a public IP address.
Adding firewall rules
By default, an implied firewall rule blocks incoming connections from outside your Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) network. To allow incoming connections, set up a firewall rule for your VM. After an incoming connection is established with a VM, traffic is permitted in both directions over that connection.
You can also create a firewall rule to allow external access to specified ports,
or to restrict access between VMs on the same network. If the default
VPC network type is used, some additional default rules also
apply, such as the default-allow-internal
rule, which allows connectivity
between VMs on the same network on all ports.
Depending on the IT policy that is applicable to your environment, you might need to isolate or otherwise restrict connectivity to your database host, which you can do by creating firewall rules.
Depending on your scenario, you can create firewall rules to allow access for:
- The default SAP ports that are listed in TCP/IP of All SAP Products.
- Connections from your computer or your corporate network environment to your Compute Engine VM instance. If you are unsure of what IP address to use, talk to your company's network administrator.
- Communication between VMs in the SAP HANA subnetwork, including communication between nodes in an SAP HANA scale-out system or communication between the database server and application servers in a 3-tier architecture. You can enable communication between VMs by creating a firewall rule to allow traffic that originates from within the subnetwork.
- SSH connections to your VM instance, including SSH-in-browser.
- Connection to your VM by using a third-party tool in Linux. Create a rule to allow access for the tool through your firewall.
To create the firewall rules for your project, see Creating firewall rules.
Creating a Cloud Storage bucket for the SAP HANA installation files
Before you use Terraform to install SAP HANA on your Compute Engine VM, you must upload the installation files that contain the SAP HANA binaries to a Cloud Storage bucket.
Terraform expects the SAP HANA installation files in the file formats provided by SAP. Depending on your version of SAP HANA, the file format might be ZIP, EXE, or RAR.To download the SAP HANA installation files, you must create a Cloud Storage bucket, and then upload the files to that bucket as follows:
Download the base installation files for the required SAP HANA version:
- Go to the SAP Support Portal.
- Click Software Downloads.
- Under the Installations & Upgrades tab, click By Alphabetical Index (A-Z) > H > SAP HANA Platform Edition > SAP HANA Platform Edition 2.0.
- Click Installation.
For the required service pack, select the Linux x86_64 distribution, and then click Download Basket.
If your SAP Support Portal account does not allow access to the software and you believe that you are entitled to the software, then contact the SAP Global Support Customer Interaction Center.
Download the files required for upgrading the SAP HANA database to the required version. These files are of the SAR format, and the file names start with
IMDB_SERVER
,IMDB_CLIENT
, andIMDB_AFL
.Go to the SAP Support Portal.
Click Software Downloads.
Navigate to the Support Packages & Patches tab.
Click By Alphabetical Index (A-Z) > H > SAP HANA Platform Edition > SAP HANA Platform Edition 2.0.
Click the required component. For example, SAP HANA Database 2.0, SAP HANA Client 2.0, or SAP HANA AFL 2.0.
Select the required file, and then click Download Basket.
In your Google Cloud project, create a Cloud Storage bucket. For instructions, see Create buckets.
The bucket name must be unique across Google Cloud. During bucket creation, choose Standard for your storage class.
Configure bucket permissions. By default, as owner of the bucket, you have read-write access to the bucket. To give access to other principals, see Using IAM permissions.
Upload the downloaded SAP HANA binaries to the Cloud Storage bucket, or a folder in the bucket. For instructions, see Uploading objects from a filesystem.
Ensure that your bucket or folder contains only one installation file for each file type. For example:
510056441.ZIP IMDB_SERVER20_059_11-80002031.SAR IMDB_CLIENT20_005_111-80002082.SAR IMDB_AFL20_059_11-80002031.SAR
Note the name of the bucket and folder to which you uploaded the SAP binaries. You need to use them later when you install SAP HANA.
Creating a VM with SAP HANA installed
The following instructions use Terraform to install SAP HANA on one or more VM instances with all of the persistent disks that SAP HANA requires. You define the values for the installation in a Terraform configuration file.
The following instructions use Cloud Shell, but are generally applicable to the Google Cloud CLI.
Confirm that your current quotas for resources such as persistent disks and CPUs are sufficient for the SAP HANA system you are about to install. If your quotas are insufficient, deployment fails. For the SAP HANA quota requirements, see Pricing and quota considerations for SAP HANA.
Open the Cloud Shell or, if you installed the Google Cloud CLI on your local workstation, open a terminal.
Download the
sap_hana.tf
configuration file to your working directory by running the following command in the Cloud Shell or your terminal:wget https://storage.googleapis.com/cloudsapdeploy/terraform/latest/terraform/sap_hana/terraform/sap_hana.tf
Open the
sap_hana.tf
file in Cloud Shell code editor or, if you are using your terminal, the text editor of your choice.To open the Cloud Shell code editor, click the pencil icon in the upper right corner of the Cloud Shell terminal window.
In the
sap_hana.tf
file, update the following argument values by replacing the brackets and their contents with the values for your installation.Some of the argument values that you specify for the SAP HANA system, such as values for
sap_hana_sid
,sap_hana_sidadm_password
, orsap_hana_system_password
, are subject to rules that are defined by SAP. For more information, see the Parameter Reference in the SAP HANA Server Installation and Update Guide.To specify passwords in the configuration file, you must either use secrets or, specify passwords in plain text. For more information, see Password management.
If you want to create a VM instance without installing SAP HANA, delete all of the lines that begin with
sap_hana_
.Argument Data type Description source
String Specifies the location and version of the Terraform module to use during deployment.
The
sap_hana.tf
configuration file includes two instances of thesource
argument: one that is active and one that is included as a comment. Thesource
argument that is active by default specifieslatest
as the module version. The second instance of thesource
argument, which by default is deactivated by a leading#
character, specifies a timestamp that identifies a module version.If you need all of your deployments to use the same module version, then remove the leading
#
character from thesource
argument that specifies the version timestamp and add it to thesource
argument that specifieslatest
.project_id
String Specify the ID of your Google Cloud project in which you are deploying this system. For example, my-project-x
.instance_name
String Specify a name for the host VM instance. The name can contain lowercase letters, numbers, and hyphens. The VM instances for the worker and standby hosts use the same name with a w
and the host number appended to the name.machine_type
String Specify the type of Compute Engine virtual machine (VM) on which you need to run your SAP system. If you need a custom VM type, then specify a predefined VM type with a number of vCPUs that is closest to the number you need while still being larger. After deployment is complete, modify the number of vCPUs and the amount of memory. For example,
n1-highmem-32
.zone
String Specify the zone in which you are deploying your SAP system. The zone must be in the same region that you selected for your subnet.
For example, if your subnet is deployed in the
us-central1
region, then you can specify a zone such asus-central1-a
.subnetwork
String Specify the name of the subnetwork that you created in a previous step. If you are deploying to a shared VPC, then specify this value as SHARED_VPC_PROJECT_ID/SUBNETWORK
. For example,myproject/network1
.linux_image
String Specify the name of the Linux operating system image on which you want to deploy your SAP system. For example, rhel-9-2-sap-ha
orsles-15-sp5-sap
. For the list of available operating system images, see the Images page in the Google Cloud console.linux_image_project
String Specify the Google Cloud project that contains the image that you have specified for the argument linux_image
. This project might be your own project or a Google Cloud image project. For a Compute Engine image, specify eitherrhel-sap-cloud
orsuse-sap-cloud
. To find the image project for your operating system, see Operating system details.sap_hana_deployment_bucket
String To automatically install SAP HANA on the deployed VMs, specify the path of the Cloud Storage bucket that contains the SAP HANA installation files. Do not include gs://
in the path; include only the bucket name and the names of any folders. For example,my-bucket-name/my-folder
.The Cloud Storage bucket must exist in the Google Cloud project that you specify for the
project_id
argument.sap_hana_sid
String To automatically install SAP HANA on the deployed VMs, specify the SAP HANA system ID. The ID must consist of three alpha-numeric characters and begin with a letter. All letters must be in uppercase. For example, ED1
.sap_hana_sidadm_uid
Integer Optional. Specify a value to override the default value of the SID_LCadm user ID. The default value is 900
. You can change this to a different value for consistency within your SAP landscape.sap_hana_instance_number
Integer Optional. Specify the instance number, 0 to 99, of the SAP HANA system. The default is 0
.sap_hana_sidadm_password
String To automatically install SAP HANA on the deployed VMs, specify a temporary SIDadm
password for the installation scripts to use during deployment. The password must contain at least 8 characters and include at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, and a number.Instead of specifying password as plain text, we recommend that you use a secret. For more information, see Password management.
sap_hana_sidadm_password_secret
String Optional. If you are using Secret Manager to store the SIDadm
password, then specify the Name of the secret that corresponds to this password.In Secret Manager, make sure that the Secret value, which is the password, contains at least 8 characters and includes at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, and a number.
For more information, see Password management.
sap_hana_system_password
String To automatically install SAP HANA on the deployed VMs, specify a temporary database superuser password for the installation scripts to use during deployment. The password must contain at least 8 characters and include at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, and a number. Instead of specifying password as plain text, we recommend that you use a secret. For more information, see Password management.
sap_hana_system_password_secret
String Optional. If you are using Secret Manager to store the database superuser password, then specify the Name of the secret that corresponds to this password. In Secret Manager, make sure that the Secret value, which is the password, contains at least 8 characters and includes at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, and a number.
For more information, see Password management.
sap_hana_scaleout_nodes
Integer Specify the number of worker hosts that you need in your scale-out system. To deploy a scale-out system, you need at least one worker host. Terraform creates the worker hosts in addition to the primary SAP HANA instance. For example, if you specify
3
, then four SAP HANA instances are deployed in your scale-out system.sap_hana_shared_nfs
String Optional. For a multi-host scale-out deployment that uses an NFS solution to share the /hana/shared
volume with the worker hosts, specify the NFS mount point for that volume. For example,10.151.91.122:/hana_shared_nfs
.For more information, see File sharing solutions for multi-host scale-out deployments.
This argument is available insap_hana
module version202302060649
or later.sap_hana_backup_nfs
String Optional. For a multi-host scale-out deployment that uses an NFS solution to share the /hanabackup
volume with the worker hosts, specify the NFS mount point for that volume. For example,10.216.41.122:/hana_backup_nfs
.For more information, see File sharing solutions for multi-host scale-out deployments.
This argument is available insap_hana
module version202302060649
or later.sap_hana_shared_nfs_resource
Map/Object Optional. To deploy a Filestore instance that shares the /hana/shared/
volume with the hosts in your multi-host scale-out SAP HANA system, specify the name of the file share that you set in the definition of yourgoogle_filestore_instance
resource. To view an example, see the sample configuration in this guide.For more information, see File sharing solutions for multi-host scale-out deployments.
This argument is available insap_hana
module version202302060649
or later.sap_hana_backup_nfs_resource
Map/Object Optional. To deploy a Filestore instance that shares the /hanabackup
volume with the hosts in your multi-host scale-out SAP HANA system, specify the name of the file share that you set in the definition of yourgoogle_filestore_instance
resource. To view an example, see the sample configuration in this guide.For more information, see File sharing solutions for multi-host scale-out deployments.
This argument is available insap_hana
module version202302060649
or later.sap_hana_backup_size
Integer Optional. Specify size of the /hanabackup
volume in GB. If you don't specify this argument or set it to0
, then the installation script provisions Compute Engine instance with a HANA backup volume of two times the total memory.sap_hana_backup_size
is ignored when you specify a value forsap_hana_backup_nfs
orsap_hana_backup_nfs_resource
.sap_hana_sapsys_gid
Integer Optional. Overrides the default group ID for sapsys
. The default value is79
.network_tags
String Optional. Specify one or more comma-separated network tags that you want to associate with your VM instances for firewall or routing purposes. If you specify
public_ip = false
and do not specify a network tag, then make sure to provide another means of access to the internet.nic_type
String Optional. Specify the network interface to use with the VM instance. You can specify the value GVNIC
orVIRTIO_NET
. To use a Google Virtual NIC (gVNIC), you need to specify an OS image that supports gVNIC as the value for thelinux_image
argument. For the OS image list, see Operating system details.If you do not specify a value for this argument, then the network interface is automatically selected based on the machine type that you specify for the
This argument is available inmachine_type
argument.sap_hana
module version202302060649
or later.disk_type
String Optional. Specify the default type of Persistent Disk or Hyperdisk volume that you want to deploy for the SAP data and log volumes in your deployment. For information about the default disk deployment performed by the Terraform configurations provided by Google Cloud, see Disk deployment by Terraform. The following are valid values for this argument:
pd-ssd
,pd-balanced
,hyperdisk-extreme
,hyperdisk-balanced
, andpd-extreme
. In SAP HANA scale-up deployments, a separate Balanced Persistent Disk is also deployed for the/hana/shared
directory.You can override this default disk type and the associated default disk size and default IOPS using some advanced arguments. For more information, navigate to your working directory, then run the
terraform init
command, and then see the/.terraform/modules/sap_hana/variables.tf
file. Before you use these arguments in production, make sure to test them in a non-production environment.use_single_shared_data_log_disk
Boolean Optional. The default value is false
, which directs Terraform to deploy a separate persistent disk or Hyperdisk for each of the following SAP volumes:/hana/data
,/hana/log
,/hana/shared
, and/usr/sap
. To mount these SAP volumes on the same persistent disk or Hyperdisk, specifytrue
.enable_data_striping
Boolean Optional. This argument lets you deploy the /hana/data
volume on two disks. The default value isfalse
, which directs Terraform to deploy a single disk for hosting your/hana/data
volume.This argument is available in
sap_hana
module version1.3.674800406
or later.include_backup_disk
Boolean Optional. This argument is applicable to SAP HANA scale-up deployments. The default value is true
, which directs Terraform to deploy a separate disk to host the/hanabackup
directory.The disk type is determined by the
backup_disk_type
argument. The size of this disk is determined by thesap_hana_backup_size
argument.If you set the value for
include_backup_disk
asfalse
, then no disk is deployed for the/hanabackup
directory.backup_disk_type
String Optional. For scale-up deployments, specify the type of Persistent Disk or Hyperdisk that you want to deploy for the /hanabackup
volume. For information about the default disk deployment performed by the Terraform configurations provided by Google Cloud, see Disk deployment by Terraform.The following are the valid values for this argument:
pd-ssd
,pd-balanced
,pd-standard
,hyperdisk-extreme
,hyperdisk-balanced
, andpd-extreme
.This argument is available in
sap_hana
module version202307061058
or later.enable_fast_restart
Boolean Optional. This argument determines whether or not the SAP HANA Fast Restart option is enabled for your deployment. The default value is true
. Google Cloud strongly recommends enabling the SAP HANA Fast Restart option.This argument is available in
sap_hana
module version202309280828
or later.public_ip
Boolean Optional. Determines whether or not a public IP address is added to your VM instance. The default value is true
.service_account
String Optional. Specify the email address of a user-managed service account to be used by the host VMs and by the programs that run on the host VMs. For example, [email protected]
.If you specify this argument without a value, or omit it, then the installation script uses the Compute Engine default service account. For more information, see Identity and access management for SAP programs on Google Cloud.
sap_deployment_debug
Boolean Optional. Only when Cloud Customer Care asks you to enable debugging for your deployment, specify true
, which makes the deployment generate verbose deployment logs. The default value isfalse
.reservation_name
String Optional. To use a specific Compute Engine VM reservation for this deployment, specify the name of the reservation. By default, the installation script selects any available Compute Engine reservation based on the following conditions. For a reservation to be usable, regardless of whether you specify a name or the installation script selects it automatically, the reservation must be set with the following:
-
The
specificReservationRequired
option is set totrue
or, in the Google Cloud console, the Select specific reservation option is selected. -
Some Compute Engine machine types support CPU platforms that are not
covered by the SAP certification of the machine type. If the target
reservation is for any of the following machine types, then the reservation
must specify the minimum CPU platforms as indicated:
n1-highmem-32
: Intel Broadwelln1-highmem-64
: Intel Broadwelln1-highmem-96
: Intel Skylakem1-megamem-96
: Intel Skylake
The minimum CPU platforms for all of the other machine types that are
certified by SAP for use on Google Cloud conform to the SAP minimum CPU
requirement.
vm_static_ip
String Optional. Specify a valid static IP address for the VM instance. If you don't specify one, then an IP address is automatically generated for your VM instance. This argument is available in
sap_hana
module version202306120959
or later.worker_static_ips
List(String) Optional. Specify an array of valid static IP addresses for the worker instances in your scale-out system. If you don't specify a value for this argument, then an IP address is automatically generated for each worker VM instance. For example, [ "1.0.0.1", "2.3.3.4" ]
.The static IP addresses are assigned in the order of instance creation. For example, if you choose to deploy 3 worker instances but specify only 2 IP addresses for the argument
worker_static_ips
, then these IP addresses are assigned to the first two VM instances that the Terraform configuration deploys. For the third worker VM instance, the IP address is automatically generated.This argument is available in
sap_hana
module version202306120959
or later.can_ip_forward
Boolean Specify whether sending and receiving of packets with non-matching source or destination IPs is allowed, which enables a VM to act like a router. The default value is
true
.If you only intend to use Google's internal load balancers to manage virtual IPs for the deployed VMs, then set the value to
false
. An internal load balancer is automatically deployed as part of high availability templates.The following example shows a completed configuration file that directs Terraform to deploy an
n2-highmem-32
virtual machine with a scale-out SAP HANA system that includes a master SAP HANA instance with three worker hosts, and Filestore Basic instances that share the/hana/shared
and/hanabackup
volumes with the worker hosts. The hosts run the operating system SLES for SAP 15 SP2.# resource "google_filestore_instance" "hana_shared_nfs" { name = "fs-basic-shared" tier = "PREMIUM" project = "example-project-123456" location = "us-central1-f" file_shares { name = "hana_shared_nfs" capacity_gb = 2600 } networks { network = "example-network" modes = ["MODE_IPV4"] } } resource "google_filestore_instance" "hana_backup_nfs" { name = "fs-basic-backup" tier = "PREMIUM" project = "example-project-123456" location = "us-central1-f" file_shares { name = "hana_backup_nfs" capacity_gb = 2600 } networks { network = "example-network" modes = ["MODE_IPV4"] } } #... module "sap_hana" { source = "https://storage.googleapis.com/cloudsapdeploy/terraform/latest/terraform/sap_hana/sap_hana_module.zip" # # By default, this source file uses the latest release of the terraform module # for SAP on Google Cloud. To fix your deployments to a specific release # of the module, comment out the source property above and uncomment the source property below. # # source = "https://storage.googleapis.com/cloudsapdeploy/terraform/YYYYMMDDHHMM/terraform/sap_hana/sap_hana_module.zip" # ... project_id = "example-project-123456" zone = "us-central1-f" machine_type = "n2-highmem-32" subnetwork = "example-subnet-us-central1" linux_image = "sles-15-sp2-sap" linux_image_project = "suse-sap-cloud" instance_name = "hana-scaleout" sap_hana_shared_nfs_resource = resource.google_filestore_instance.hana_shared_nfs sap_hana_backup_nfs_resource = resource.google_filestore_instance.hana_backup_nfs # sap_hana_shared_nfs = "10.151.91.122:/hana_shared_nfs" # sap_hana_backup_nfs = "10.216.41.122:/hana_backup_nfs" sap_hana_deployment_bucket = "mybucketname" sap_hana_sid = "AB2" sap_hana_instance_number = 12 sap_hana_sidadm_password = "TempPa55word" sap_hana_system_password = "TempPa55word" sap_hana_scaleout_nodes = 3 sap_hana_sidadm_uid = 11 vm_static_ip = "10.0.0.1" worker_static_ips = ["10.0.0.2", "10.0.0.3", "10.0.0.4"] enable_fast_restart = true # ... }
-
The
To initialize your current working directory and download the Terraform provider plugin and module files for Google Cloud:
terraform init
The
terraform init
command prepares your working directory for other Terraform commands.To force a refresh of the provider plugin and configuration files in your working directory, specify the
--upgrade
flag. If the--upgrade
flag is omitted and you don't make any changes in your working directory, then Terraform uses the locally cached copies, even iflatest
is specified in thesource
URL.terraform init --upgrade
Optionally, to create the Terraform execution plan:
terraform plan
The
terraform plan
command shows the changes required by your current configuration. If you skip theterraform plan
command, then theterraform apply
command computes the plan before applying it.To apply the execution plan:
terraform apply
When you are prompted to approve the actions, enter
yes
.The
terraform apply
command sets up the Google Cloud infrastructure and then invokes another script that configures the operating system and installs SAP HANA.While Terraform has control, status messages are written to the Cloud Shell. After the scripts are invoked, status messages are written to Logging and are viewable in the Google Cloud console, as described in Check the logs.
Time to completion can vary, but the entire process usually takes less than 30 minutes.
Verifying deployment
To verify deployment, you check the deployment logs in Cloud Logging and check the disks and services on the VMs of primary and worker hosts.
Check the logs
In the Google Cloud console, open Cloud Logging to monitor installation progress and check for errors.
Filter the logs:
Logs Explorer
In the Logs Explorer page, go to the Query pane.
From the Resource drop-down menu, select Global, and then click Add.
If you don't see the Global option, then in the query editor, enter the following query:
resource.type="global" "Deployment"
Click Run query.
Legacy Logs Viewer
- In the Legacy Logs Viewer page, from the basic selector menu, select Global as your logging resource.
Analyze the filtered logs:
- If
"--- Finished"
is displayed, then the deployment processing is complete and you can proceed to the next step. If you see a quota error:
On the IAM & Admin Quotas page, increase any of your quotas that do not meet the SAP HANA requirements that are listed in the SAP HANA planning guide.
Open Cloud Shell.
Go to your working directory and delete the deployment to clean up the VMs and persistent disks from the failed installation:
terraform destroy
When you are prompted to approve the action, enter
yes
.Rerun your deployment.
- If
Check the configuration of the VM and SAP HANA system
After the SAP HANA system deploys without errors, connect to each VM by using SSH. From the Compute Engine VM instances page, you can click the SSH button for each VM instance, or you can use your preferred SSH method.
Change to the root user.
sudo su -
At the command prompt, enter
df -h
, and then make sure that you see an output similar to the following, with the volumes and sizes that you expect.The following is an example output from the master node of a sample scale-out system that has three worker nodes. Note that there are no volumes for
/hana/shared
and/hanabackup
because these volumes are hosted on Filestore instances.example-vm:~ # df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on devtmpfs 126G 8.0K 126G 1% /dev tmpfs 189G 0 189G 0% /dev/shm tmpfs 126G 18M 126G 1% /run tmpfs 126G 0 126G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup /dev/sda3 30G 6.5G 24G 22% / /dev/sda2 20M 2.9M 18M 15% /boot/efi 10.65.188.162:/hana_shared_nfs 2.5T 41G 2.4T 2% /hana/shared /dev/mapper/vg_hana_usrsap-usrsap 32G 265M 32G 1% /usr/sap /dev/mapper/vg_hana_data-data 308G 10G 298G 4% /hana/data /dev/mapper/vg_hana_log-log 128G 7.8G 121G 7% /hana/log 10.160.217.66:/hana_backup_nfs 2.5T 0 2.4T 0% /hanabackup tmpfs 26G 0 26G 0% /run/user/472 tmpfs 26G 0 26G 0% /run/user/900 tmpfs 26G 0 26G 0% /run/user/1000
Switch to the SAP admin user:
su - SID_LCadm
Replace
SID_LC
with the SID value that you specified in the configuration file. Use lowercase for any letters.Ensure that SAP HANA services, such as
hdbnameserver
,hdbindexserver
, and others, are running on the instance:HDB info
If you are using RHEL for SAP 9.0 or later, then make sure that the packages
chkconfig
andcompat-openssl11
are installed on your VM instance.For more information from SAP, see SAP Note 3108316 - Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.x: Installation and Configuration .
Clean up and retry deployment
If any of the deployment verification steps in the preceding sections show that the installation wasn't successful, then you must undo your deployment and retry it by completing the following steps:
Resolve any errors to ensure that your deployment doesn't fail again for the same reason. For information about checking the logs, or resolving quota related errors, see Check the logs.
Open Cloud Shell or, if you installed the Google Cloud CLI on your local workstation, then open a terminal.
Go to the directory that contains the Terraform configuration file that you used for this deployment.
Delete all resources that are part of your deployment by running the following command:
terraform destroy
When you are prompted to approve the action, enter
yes
.Retry your deployment as instructed earlier in this guide.
Validate your installation of Google Cloud's Agent for SAP
After you have deployed a VM and installed your SAP system, validate that Google Cloud's Agent for SAP is functioning properly.
Verify that Google Cloud's Agent for SAP is running
To verify that the agent is running, follow these steps:
Establish an SSH connection with your Compute Engine instance.
Run the following command:
systemctl status google-cloud-sap-agent
If the agent is functioning properly, then the output contains
active (running)
. For example:google-cloud-sap-agent.service - Google Cloud Agent for SAP Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/google-cloud-sap-agent.service; enabled; vendor preset: disabled) Active: active (running) since Fri 2022-12-02 07:21:42 UTC; 4 days ago Main PID: 1337673 (google-cloud-sa) Tasks: 9 (limit: 100427) Memory: 22.4 M (max: 1.0G limit: 1.0G) CGroup: /system.slice/google-cloud-sap-agent.service └─1337673 /usr/bin/google-cloud-sap-agent
If the agent isn't running, then restart the agent.
Verify that SAP Host Agent is receiving metrics
To verify that the infrastructure metrics are collected by Google Cloud's Agent for SAP and sent correctly to the SAP Host Agent, follow these steps:
- In your SAP system, enter transaction
ST06
. In the overview pane, check the availability and content of the following fields for the correct end-to-end setup of the SAP and Google monitoring infrastructure:
- Cloud Provider:
Google Cloud Platform
- Enhanced Monitoring Access:
TRUE
- Enhanced Monitoring Details:
ACTIVE
- Cloud Provider:
Installing SAP HANA Studio on a Compute Engine Windows VM
You can connect from a SAP HANA instance outside of Google Cloud or from an instance on Google Cloud. To do so, you might need to enable network access to the target VMs from within SAP HANA Studio.
To install SAP HANA Studio on a Windows VM on Google Cloud, use the following procedure.
Use the Cloud Shell to invoke the following commands.
export NETWORK_NAME="[YOUR_NETWORK_NAME]" export REGION="[YOUR_REGION]" export ZONE="[YOUR_ZONE]" export SUBNET="[YOUR_SUBNETWORK_NAME]" export SOURCE_IP_RANGE="[YOUR_WORKSTATION_IP]"
gcloud compute instances create saphanastudio --zone=$ZONE \ --machine-type=n1-standard-2 --subnet=$SUBNET --tags=hanastudio \ --image-family=windows-2016 --image-project=windows-cloud \ --boot-disk-size=100 --boot-disk-type=pd-standard \ --boot-disk-device-name=saphanastudio
gcloud compute firewall-rules create ${NETWORK_NAME}-allow-rdp \ --network=$NETWORK_NAME --allow=tcp:3389 --source-ranges=$SOURCE_IP_RANGE \ --target-tags=hanastudio
The above commands set variables for the current Cloud Shell session, create a Windows server in the subnetwork that you created earlier, and create a firewall rule that allows access from your local workstation to the instance through the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP).
Install SAP HANA Studio on this server.
- Upload the SAP HANA Studio installation files and the SAPCAR extraction tool to a Cloud Storage bucket in your Google Cloud project.
- Connect to the new Windows VM by using RDP or your preferred method.
- In Windows, with administrator permissions, open the Google Cloud CLI Shell or other command-line interface.
Copy the SAP HANA Studio installation files and the SAPCAR extraction tool from the storage bucket to the VM by entering the
gcloud storage cp
command in the command interface. For example:gcloud storage cp gs://[SOURCE_BUCKET]/IMC_STUDIO2_232_0-80000323.SAR C:\[TARGET_DIRECTORY] & gcloud storage cp gs://[SOURCE_BUCKET]/SAPCAR_1014-80000938.EXE C:\[TARGET_DIRECTORY]
Change the directory to your target directory.
cd C:\[TARGET_DIRECTORY]
Run the SAPCAR program to extract the SAP HANA Studio installation file.
SAPCAR_1014-80000938.EXE -xvf IMC_STUDIO2_232_0-80000323.SAR
Run the extracted
hdbinst
program to install SAP HANA Studio.
Set up monitoring for SAP HANA
Optionally, you can monitor your SAP HANA instances using Google Cloud's Agent for SAP. From version 2.0, you can configure the agent to collect the SAP HANA monitoring metrics and send them to Cloud Monitoring. Cloud Monitoring lets you create dashboards to visualize these metrics, set up alerts based on metric thresholds, and more.
For more information about the collection of SAP HANA monitoring metrics using Google Cloud's Agent for SAP, see SAP HANA monitoring metrics collection.
Connecting to SAP HANA
Note that because these instructions don't use an external IP for SAP HANA, you can only connect to the SAP HANA instances through the bastion instance using SSH or through the Windows server through SAP HANA Studio.
To connect to SAP HANA through the bastion instance, connect to the bastion host, and then to the SAP HANA instance(s) by using an SSH client of your choice.
To connect to the SAP HANA database through SAP HANA Studio, use a remote desktop client to connect to the Windows Server instance. After connection, manually install SAP HANA Studio and access your SAP HANA database.
Performing post-deployment tasks
Before using your SAP HANA instance, we recommend that you perform the following post-deployment steps. For more information, see SAP HANA Installation and Update Guide.
Change the temporary passwords for the SAP HANA system administrator and database superuser. For example:
sudo passwd SIDadm
Install your permanent SAP HANA license. If you do not, SAP HANA might go into database lockdown after the temporary license expires.
For more information from SAP about managing your SAP HANA licenses, see License Keys for the SAP HANA Database.
Update the SAP HANA software with the latest patches.
If your SAP HANA system is deployed on a VirtIO network interface, then we recommend that you ensure the value of the TCP parameter
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_limit_output_bytes
is set to1048576
. This modification helps improve the overall network throughput on the VirtIO network interface without affecting the network latency.Install any additional components such as Application Function Libraries (AFL) or Smart Data Access (SDA).
Configure and backup your new SAP HANA database. For more information, see the SAP HANA operations guide.
Evaluate your SAP HANA workload
To automate continuous validation checks for your SAP HANA workloads running on Google Cloud, you can use Workload Manager.
Workload Manager allows you to automatically scan and evaluate your SAP HANA workloads against best practices from SAP, Google Cloud, and OS vendors. This helps improve the quality, performance, and reliability of your workloads.
For information about the best practices that Workload Manager supports for evaluating SAP HANA workloads running on Google Cloud, see Workload Manager best practices for SAP. For information about creating and running an evaluation using Workload Manager, see Create and run an evaluation.
What's next
- If you need to use NetApp Cloud Volumes Service for Google Cloud instead of persistent disks for your SAP HANA directories, see the NetApp Cloud Volumes Service deployment information in the SAP HANA planning guide.
- For more information about VM administration of and monitoring, see the SAP HANA Operations Guide.