Yes, it works, but need not be doing this explicitly when the jars are in /var/lib/sqoop. On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 2:02 PM, John Zhao wrote: > Simply add —libjars will solve this. > I did this to Teradata and it works. > > John Zhao > > On Apr 13, 2015, at 10:57 AM, Abraham Elmahrek wrote: > > Hmmm have you tried combining the two jars together and supplying that to > /var/lib/sqoop? > > On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 5:46 AM, Chalcy wrote: > >> Hello All, >> >> This is nothing to do with DB2. Sqoop needs this jar to be specified >> explicitly like -libjars *db2jcc_license_*.jar* although I have this is >> /var/lib/sqoop. >> >> I am not sure if this has been corrected in the latest releases. Using >> sqoop1.4.4 cdh5.1.3+59. >> >> Thanks, >> Chalcy >> >> On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 1:42 PM, Chalcy wrote: >> >>> I found this below and hence asking the db2 team about the same. >>> >>> Thanks, Brett >>> >>> The message comes from the JDBC driver and has nothing to do with the >>> licensing for DbVisualizer. >>> >>> What you need to do is open the Tools->Driver Manager >>> in >>> DbVisualizer and add the requested *db2jcc_license_*.jar* file to the *User >>> Specified Driver File Paths* for the DB2 driver. >>> >>> The *db2jcc_license_*.jar* file is usually included with the *DB2 >>> Connect* software. >>> >>> On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 1:40 PM, Brett Medalen >>> wrote: >>> >>>> The last error looks like the issue: >>>> >>>> Connection to the data server failed. The IBM Data Server for JDBC and >>>> SQLJ license was invalid. >>>> >>>> Have you tried that JDBC driver outside of Sqoop? >>>> >>>> > On Apr 9, 2015, at 1:39 PM, Chalcy wrote: >>>> > >>>> > Connection to the data server failed. The IBM Data Server for JDBC >>>> and SQLJ license was invalid >>>> >>> >>> >> > >