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Oracle Database 12c Release 2 (12.2) Installation On Oracle Linux 6 (OL6) and 7 (OL7)

原创 yBmZlQzJ 2022-06-06
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Oracle Database 12c Release 2 (12.2) Installation On Oracle Linux 6 (OL6) and 7 (OL7)

This article describes the installation of Oracle Database 12c Release 2 (12.2) 64-bit on Oracle Linux 6 (OL6) and 7 (OL7) 64-bit. The article is based on a server installation with a minimum of 2G swap and secure Linux set to permissive. An example of this type of Linux installation can be seen here (OL6 or OL7).

Related articles.

Download Software

Download the Oracle software from OTN or MOS depending on your support status.

Unpack Files

Unzip the file.

unzip linuxx64_12201_database.zip

You should now have a single directory called "database" containing installation files.

Hosts File

The "/etc/hosts" file must contain a fully qualified name for the server.

<IP-address> <fully-qualified-machine-name> <machine-name>

For example.

127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost4 localhost4.localdomain4

192.168.56.107 ol7-122.localdomain ol7-122

Set the correct hostname in the "/etc/hostname" file.

ol7-122.localdomain

Oracle Installation Prerequisites

Perform either the Automatic Setup or the Manual Setup to complete the basic prerequisites. The Additional Setup is required for all installations.

Automatic Setup

If you plan to use the "oracle-database-server-12cR2-preinstall" package to perform all your prerequisite setup, issue the following command.

# yum install oracle-database-server-12cR2-preinstall -y

It is probably worth doing a full update as well, but this is not strictly speaking necessary.

# yum update -y

 It's worth running the all the YUM commands listed in the manual setup section. Depending on the OS package groups you have selected, some additional packages might also be needed.

Manual Setup

If you have not used the "oracle-database-server-12cR2-preinstall" package to perform all prerequisites, you will need to manually perform the following setup tasks.

Add the following lines to the "/etc/sysctl.conf" file, or in a file called "/etc/sysctl.d/98-oracle.conf".

fs.file-max = 6815744

kernel.sem = 250 32000 100 128

kernel.shmmni = 4096

kernel.shmall = 1073741824

kernel.shmmax = 4398046511104

kernel.panic_on_oops = 1

net.core.rmem_default = 262144

net.core.rmem_max = 4194304

net.core.wmem_default = 262144

net.core.wmem_max = 1048576

net.ipv4.conf.all.rp_filter = 2

net.ipv4.conf.default.rp_filter = 2

fs.aio-max-nr = 1048576

net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range = 9000 65500

Run one of the following commands to change the current kernel parameters, depending on which file you edited.

/sbin/sysctl -p

# Or

/sbin/sysctl -p /etc/sysctl.d/98-oracle.conf

Add the following lines to a file called "/etc/security/limits.d/oracle-database-server-12cR2-preinstall.conf" file.

oracle soft nofile 1024

oracle hard nofile 65536

oracle soft nproc 16384

oracle hard nproc 16384

oracle soft stack 10240

oracle hard stack 32768

oracle hard memlock 134217728

oracle soft memlock 134217728

 Someone in the comments suggested you might need to add the previous lines into the "/etc/security/limits.conf" file also for CentOS7. This is definitely not needed for OL7, but worth considering if the installer gives prerequisite failures for these settings.

The following packages are listed as required, including the 32-bit version of some of the packages. Many of the packages should be installed already.

# OL6 and OL7 (RHEL6 and RHEL7)

yum install binutils -y

yum install compat-libcap1 -y

yum install compat-libstdc++-33 -y

yum install compat-libstdc++-33.i686 -y

yum install glibc -y

yum install glibc.i686 -y

yum install glibc-devel -y

yum install glibc-devel.i686 -y

yum install ksh -y

yum install libaio -y

yum install libaio.i686 -y

yum install libaio-devel -y

yum install libaio-devel.i686 -y

yum install libX11 -y

yum install libX11.i686 -y

yum install libXau -y

yum install libXau.i686 -y

yum install libXi -y

yum install libXi.i686 -y

yum install libXtst -y

yum install libXtst.i686 -y

yum install libgcc -y

yum install libgcc.i686 -y

yum install libstdc++ -y

yum install libstdc++.i686 -y

yum install libstdc++-devel -y

yum install libstdc++-devel.i686 -y

yum install libxcb -y

yum install libxcb.i686 -y

yum install make -y

yum install nfs-utils -y

yum install net-tools -y

yum install smartmontools -y

yum install sysstat -y

yum install unixODBC -y

yum install unixODBC-devel -y

# Required for 12.1, not listed for 12.2

yum install gcc -y

yum install gcc-c++ -y

yum install libXext -y

yum install libXext.i686 -y

yum install zlib-devel -y

yum install zlib-devel.i686 -y

# OL6 only (RHEL6 only)

yum install e2fsprogs -y

yum install e2fsprogs-libs -y

yum install libs -y

yum install libxcb.i686 -y

yum install libxcb -y

Create the new groups and users.

groupadd -g 54321 oinstall

groupadd -g 54322 dba

groupadd -g 54323 oper

#groupadd -g 54324 backupdba

#groupadd -g 54325 dgdba

#groupadd -g 54326 kmdba

#groupadd -g 54327 asmdba

#groupadd -g 54328 asmoper

#groupadd -g 54329 asmadmin

#groupadd -g 54330 racdba

useradd -u 54321 -g oinstall -G dba,oper oracle

Uncomment the extra groups you require.

Additional Setup

The following steps must be performed, whether you did the manual or automatic setup.

Set the password for the "oracle" user.

passwd oracle

Set secure Linux to permissive by editing the "/etc/selinux/config" file, making sure the SELINUX flag is set as follows.

SELINUX=permissive

Once the change is complete, restart the server or run the following command.

# setenforce Permissive

If you have the Linux firewall enabled, you will need to disable or configure it, as shown here or here. To disable it, do the following.

# systemctl stop firewalld

# systemctl disable firewalld

If you are not using Oracle Linux and UEK, you will need to manually disable transparent huge pages.

Create the directories in which the Oracle software will be installed.

mkdir -p /u01/app/oracle/product/12.2.0.1/db_1

chown -R oracle:oinstall /u01

chmod -R 775 /u01

Putting mount points directly under root without mounting separate disks to them is typically a bad idea. It's done here for simplicity, but for a real installation "/" storage should be reserved for the OS.

Unless you are working from the console, or using SSH tunnelling, login as root and issue the following command.

xhost +<machine-name>

 The scripts are created using the cat command, with all the "$" characters escaped. If you want to manually create these files, rather than using the cat command, remember to remove the "\" characters before the "$" characters.

Create a "scripts" directory.

mkdir /home/oracle/scripts

Create an environment file called "setEnv.sh".

cat > /home/oracle/scripts/setEnv.sh <<EOF

# Oracle Settings

export TMP=/tmp

export TMPDIR=\$TMP

export ORACLE_HOSTNAME=ol7-122.localdomain

export ORACLE_UNQNAME=cdb1

export ORACLE_BASE=/u01/app/oracle

export ORACLE_HOME=\$ORACLE_BASE/product/12.2.0.1/db_1

export ORACLE_SID=cdb1

export PATH=/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:\$PATH

export PATH=\$ORACLE_HOME/bin:\$PATH

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=\$ORACLE_HOME/lib:/lib:/usr/lib

export CLASSPATH=\$ORACLE_HOME/jlib:\$ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/jlib

EOF

Add a reference to the "setEnv.sh" file at the end of the "/home/oracle/.bash_profile" file.

echo ". /home/oracle/scripts/setEnv.sh" >> /home/oracle/.bash_profile

Create a "start_all.sh" and "stop_all.sh" script that can be called from a startup/shutdown service. Make sure the ownership and permissions are correct.

cat > /home/oracle/scripts/start_all.sh <<EOF

#!/bin/bash

. /home/oracle/scripts/setEnv.sh

export ORAENV_ASK=NO

. oraenv

export ORAENV_ASK=YES

dbstart \$ORACLE_HOME

EOF

cat > /home/oracle/scripts/stop_all.sh <<EOF

#!/bin/bash

. /home/oracle/scripts/setEnv.sh

export ORAENV_ASK=NO

. oraenv

export ORAENV_ASK=YES

dbshut \$ORACLE_HOME

EOF

chown -R oracle.oinstall /home/oracle/scripts

chmod u+x /home/oracle/scripts/*.sh

Once the installation is complete and you've edited the "/etc/oratab", you should be able to start/stop the database with the following scripts run from the "oracle" user.

~/scripts/start_all.sh

~/scripts/stop_all.sh

You can see how to create a Linux service to automatically start/stop the database here (OL6OL7).

Installation

Log into the oracle user. If you are using X emulation then set the DISPLAY environmental variable.

DISPLAY=<machine-name>:0.0; export DISPLAY

Start the Oracle Universal Installer (OUI) by issuing the following command in the database directory.

./runInstaller

Proceed with the installation of your choice.

You can see the type of installation I performed by clicking on the links below to see screen shots of each stage.

  1. Configure Security Updates
  2. Select Install Option
  3. Select System Class
  4. Select Database Installation Option
  5. Select Install Type
  6. Typical Install Configuration
  7. Create Inventory
  8. Perform Prerequisite Checks
  9. Summary
  10. Install Product
  11. Execute Configuration Scripts
  12. Database Configuration Assistant
  13. Finish
  14. Database Express 12c Login
  15. Database Express 12c Dashboard

The "Database Configuration Assistant Complete" screen displays the Database Express 12c URL, which will be something like "https://ol7-122.localdomain:5500/em".

Post Installation

Edit the "/etc/oratab" file setting the restart flag for each instance to 'Y'.

cdb1:/u01/app/oracle/product/12.2.0.1/db_1:Y

For more information see:

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