In this Document
APPLIES TO:
Oracle Database - Standard Edition - Version 11.2.0.4 to
11.2.0.4 [Release 11.2]
Oracle Database - Enterprise Edition - Version 11.2.0.4 to 11.2.0.4 [Release 11.2] Linux x86-64
This note explains the requirements that need to be met
for a successful installation of Oracle 11gR2 RDBMS release 11.2.0.4 on Red
Hat Enterprise Linux 7.0 (or higher 7.x version), 64-bit (x86-64).
These guidelines apply to cluster (RAC) or standalone / single instances.
It is NOT the purpose of this NOTE to repeat every "how-to" step that is presented in the 11gR2 Installation Guide manual. For example this NOTE does not include how to create the Linux OS account named "oracle", nor does it cover how to set environment variables. Both are adequately covered in Chapter 2 "Oracle Database Pre-installation Requirements" of the 11gR2 Installation Guide manual. You can download Oracle 11.2.0.4 software from My Oracle Support (patch 13390677)
This procedure is meant for those
planning/installing Oracle 11gR2 RDBMS release 11.2.0.4.0 (or higher 11.2.0.x
version) on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.0 (or higher 7.x version) on the
64-bit (x86-64) platform. Since it is the expressed goal to keep Oracle Linux
(OL) functionally IDENTICAL to RHEL, this NOTE is also completely applicable
to 64-bit (x86-64) OL 7.0 (or higher 7.x version).
This procedure is not meant for those planning/installing Grid Infrastructure (GI) or any other Oracle products.
Requirements for installing Oracle 11gR2 RDBMS
release 11.2.0.4 64-bit on RHEL7 or OL7 64-bit (x86_64)
I. Hardware:
=========== 1. Minimum Hardware Requirements a.) At least 1.0 GB (1024MB) of physical RAM b.) Swap disk space proportional to the system's physical memory as follows:
NOTE: The above recommendations (from
the 11.2 Database installation guide)
are MINIMUM recommendations for installations. Further RAM and swap space may
be required to tune/improve RDBMS performance.
c.) 1.0 GB (1024MB) of disk space (and less than 2TB of disk space) in the /tmp directory. d.) approximately 4.4 GB of local disk space for the database software. e.) approximately 1.7 GB of disk space for a preconfigured database that uses file system storage (optional). 2. Refer Note:236826.1 for details on certified filesystems for Oracle Database.
II. Software:
============ 1. As is specified in section 1.3.2 of the Oracle Database Installation Guide for 11gR2 on Linux (part number E24321-02), Oracle recommends that you install the Linux operating system with the default software packages (RPMs) and do not customize the RPMs during installation. For additional information on "default-RPMs", please see Note 376183.1, "Defining a "default RPMs" installation of the RHEL OS" or Note 401167.1, "Defining a "default RPMs" installation of the Oracle Enterprise Linux (OEL) OS".
2.Linux Kernel Requirements
Oracle Linux 7.0
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server 7.0
NOTE:
3.
Required OS Components (per Release Notes, and Install Guide)
a.) The exact version number details of this list are based upon 64-bit (x86_64) RHEL 7.0. When a higher "update" level is used, the RPM release numbers (such as 4.4.4-13) may be slightly different. Since updates of RHEL 7 are certified, this is fine so long as you are still using 64-bit Linux (x86_64) RHEL 7 RPMs. b.) Some of the Install Guide requirements will already be present from the "default-RPMs" foundation of Linux that you started with:
compat-libstdc++-33-3.2.3
binutils-2.23.52.0.1-12.el7.x86_64 compat-libcap1-1.10-3.el7.x86_64 gcc-4.8.2-3.el7.x86_64 gcc-c++-4.8.2-3.el7.x86_64 glibc-2.17-36.el7.x86_64 glibc-devel-2.17-36.el7.x86_64 ksh libaio-0.3.109-9.el7.x86_64 libaio-devel-0.3.109-9.el7.x86_64 libgcc-4.8.2-3.el7.x86_64 libstdc++-4.8.2-3.el7.x86_64 libstdc++-devel-4.8.2-3.el7.x86_64 libXi-1.7.2-1.el7.x86_64 libXtst-1.2.2-1.el7.x86_64 make-3.82-19.el7.x86_64 sysstat-10.1.5-1.el7.x86_64
4. Additional Required OS Components (per the runInstaller
OUI)
a.) intentionally blank
5. Additional Required OS Components (per this NOTE)
a.) Please do not rush, skip, or minimize this critical step. This list is based upon a "default-RPMs" installation of 64-bit (x86_64) RHEL 6. Additional RPMs (beyond anything known to Oracle) may be needed if a "less-than-default-RPMs" installation of 64-bit (x86_64) RHEL Server 6 is performed. For more information, please refer to Note 376183.1, "Defining a "default RPMs" installation of the RHEL OS" or Note 401167.1, "Defining a "default RPMs" installation of the Oracle Enterprise Linux (OEL) OS". b.) Several RPMs will be required as prerequisites to those listed in section II.3.c:
cpp-4.8.2-16.el7.x86_64
glibc-headers-2.17-55.el7.x86_64 mpfr-3.1.1-4.el7.x86_64
6. Oracle Global Customer Support has noticed a
recent trend with install problems that originates from installing too many
RPMs. For example:
a.) installing your own JDK version (prior to execute the Oracle Software runInstaller) is not needed on Linux, and is not recommended on Linux. A pre-existing JDK often interferes with the correct JDK that the Linux Oracle Software runInstaller will place and use. b.) installing more than the required version of the gcc / g++ RPMs often leads to accidentally using (aka enabling or activating) the incorrect one. If you have multiple RDBMS versions installed on the same Linux machine, then you will likely have to manage multiple versions of gcc /g++ . For more information, please see Note 444084.1, "Multiple gcc / g++ Versions in Linux" 7. All of the RPMs in section II. are on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 64-bit (x86_64) distribution media.
III. Environment:
================ 1. Modify your kernel settings in /etc/sysctl.conf (RedHat) as follows. If the current value for any parameter is higher than the value listed in this table, do not change the value of that parameter. Range values (such as net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range) must match exactly.
kernel.shmall = physical RAM size
/ pagesize For most systems, this will be the value 2097152. See Note 301830.1 for
more information.
kernel.shmmax = 1/2 of physical RAM. This would be the value 2147483648 for a system with 4GB of physical RAM. See Note:567506.1 for more information. kernel.shmmni = 4096 kernel.sem = 250 32000 100 128 fs.file-max = 512 x processes (for example 6815744 for 13312 processes) fs.aio-max-nr = 1048576 net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range = 9000 65500 net.core.rmem_default = 262144 net.core.rmem_max = 4194304 net.core.wmem_default = 262144 net.core.wmem_max = 1048576
2. To activate these new settings into the
running kernel space, run the "sysctl -p" command as root.
3. Set Shell Limits for the oracle User. Assuming that the "oracle" Unix user will perform the installation, do the following: a.) Add the following settings to /etc/security/limits.conf
oracle soft nproc 2047
oracle hard nproc 16384 oracle soft nofile 1024 oracle hard nofile 65536 oracle soft stack 10240
b.) Verify the latest
version of PAM is loaded, then add or edit the following line in the
/etc/pam.d/login file, if it does not already exist:
session required pam_limits.so
c.) Verify the current
ulimits, and raise if needed. This can be done many ways...adding the
following lines to /etc/profile is the recommended method:
if [ $USER = "oracle" ];
then
if [ $SHELL = "/bin/ksh" ]; then ulimit -u 16384 ulimit -n 65536 else ulimit -u 16384 -n 65536 fi fi
4. The gcc-4.4.4 and gcc-c++-4.4.4 RPM items above will
ensure that the correct gcc / g++ versions are installed. It is also required
that you ensure that these correct gcc / g++ versions are active, and in-use.
Ensure that the commands "gcc --version" and "g++
--version" each return "4.8.2".
5. The hostname command should return the fully qualified
hostname as shown below:
% hostname
hostname.domainname
6. If any Java packages are installed on the system, unset
the Java environment variables, for example JAVA_HOME.
7. The oracle account that is used to install Oracle
11.2.0.4 should not have the Oracle install related variables set by default.
For example setting ORACLE_HOME, PATH, LD_LIBRARY_PATH to include Oracle
binaries in .profile, .login file and /etc/profile.d should be completely
avoided.
a.) Setting $ORACLE_BASE (not $ORACLE_HOME) is recommended, since it eases a few prompts in the OUI runInstaller tool. b.) Following the successful install, it is recommended to set $ORACLE_HOME, and to set $PATH to include $ORACLE_HOME/bin at the beginning of the $PATH string.
8. By default, RHEL 7 x86_64 Linux is installed with
SELinux as "enforcing". This is fine for the 11gR2 installation
process. However, to subsequently run "sqlplus", switch SELinux to
the "Permissive" mode. See NOTE 454196.1,
"./sqlplus: error on libnnz11.so: cannot restore segment prot after
reloc" for more details.
UPDATE: Internal testing suggests that
there is no problem running "sqlplus" with SELinux in
"enforcing" mode on RHEL7/OL7. The problem only affects RHEL5/OL5.
9. Log in as Oracle user and start the installation as
follows:
$ ./runInstaller -ignorePrereq
a.) It is best
practice not to use any form of "su" to start the runInstaller, in
order to avoid potential display-related problems.
b.) When performing the 11.2.0.4 installation, make sure to use the "runInstaller" version that comes with 11.2.0.4 software. c.) When performing any subsequent 11.2.0.x patchset, make sure to use the "runInstaller" version that comes with the patchset.
Known Issue :
01) The installer needs to be launched with
"-ignorePrereq" option due to unpublished bug 19947777.
This issue occurs since Oracle Linux 7 was not released when Oracle database
11.2.0.4 was made available and hence was not certified. However, Oracle
11.2.0.4 is now certified on OL7. Refer Note 1962046.1 for
details.
02) Compilation fails for target 'relink_exe' fails with
"undefined reference to symbol ‘B_DestroyKeyObject’" error and is
reported in unpublished bug 19692824. The solution is to
install patch 19692824 as
documented in Note 1965691.1.
ADDITIONAL NOTES
---------------- 1. Supported distributions of the 32-bit (x86) Linux OS can run on on AMD64/EM64T and Intel Processor Chips that adhere to the x86_64 architecture a.) Oracle 32-bit Database Server running on AMD64/EM64T with 32-bit OS is supported, but is NOT covered by this NOTE. b.) Oracle 32-bit Database Server running on AMD64/EM64T with 64-bit OS is not certified and is not supported. c.) Oracle 32-bit Database Client running on AMD64/EM64T with 64-bit OS is expected to be supported, but is NOT covered by this NOTE. 2. Asynchronous I/O on ext2 and ext3 file systems is supported if your scsi/fc driver supports that functionality.
Note : Asynchronous I/O on Ext4
file system is supported with Oracle 10g onwards on OEL5.6 and later.
Reference : Oracle Linux, Filesystem & I/O Type Supportability (Note 279069.1)
3. No extra patch is required for the DIRECTIO support for
x86_64.
4. No LD_ASSUME_KERNEL value should be used with the 11gR2 product. 5. The following rpm command can be used to distinguish between a 32-bit or 64-bit package.
# rpm -qa --queryformat
"%{NAME}-%{VERSION}-%{RELEASE} (%{ARCH})\n" | grep glibc-devel
glibc-devel-2.12-1.7(x86_64) glibc-devel-2.12-1.7(i686)
NOTE:401167.1 - Defining a "default
RPMs" installation of the Oracle Linux (OL) OS
NOTE:567506.1 - Maximum SHMMAX values for Linux x86 and x86-64 NOTE:1962046.1 - Missing pdksh-5.2.14 package during Oracle database 11.2.0.4 install on Oracle Linux 7 NOTE:376183.1 - Defining a "default RPMs" installation of the RHEL OS NOTE:236826.1 - Supported and Recommended File Systems on Linux NOTE:851598.1 - Master Note of Linux OS Requirements for Database Server NOTE:605251.1 - Where To Locate The Oracle RDBMS Installation Guides, Upgrade Guides and Release Notes NOTE:1304727.1 - Certification Information for Oracle Database on Linux x86-64 |
Friday, 3 March 2017
Requirements for Installing Oracle 11.2.0.4 RDBMS on OL7 or RHEL7 64-bit (x86-64) (Doc ID 1962100.1)
Labels:
Oracle 11g
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