Oracle® Developer Suite Installation Guide
10g (9.0.4) for Windows, Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX Part No. B10579-02 |
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This chapter describes the Oracle Developer Suite and Oracle Developer Suite Documentation Library hardware and software requirements. The topics include:
Table 2-1 contains the basic hardware requirements for Oracle Developer Suite.
Table 2-1 Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements
Hardware Item | Requirements |
---|---|
CPU | One of the following:
|
Memory | 128 MB Foot 1 |
Disk Space Foot 2 | J2EE Development
Business Intelligence (Windows only)
Rapid Application Development (Windows only)
Complete
|
Total Pagefile Size, TMP, or Swap SpaceFoot 4 |
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Video | The computer must be capable of displaying a minimum of 256 colors. |
Table 2-2 contains the memory requirements for each Oracle Developer Suite component.
Table 2-2 Memory Requirements for Oracle Developer Suite Components
Component | Memory |
---|---|
Oracle9i JDeveloper (including Oracle Business Intelligence Beans, and UIX and Bali subcomponents) |
|
Oracle Reports Developer
|
|
Oracle Discoverer Administrator
|
|
Oracle Discoverer Desktop
|
128 MB |
Oracle Forms Developer
|
|
Oracle Software Configuration Manager
|
256 MB |
Oracle Designer
|
256 MB |
Oracle Developer Suite is available for the Microsoft Windows NT/2000/XP Professional, Sun Solaris, HP PA-RISC HP-UX (64-bit), and Linux x86 operating environments. Table 2-3 lists the operating environments and the Oracle Developer Suite components that are installed with each environment.
Note: In this document, the term "Linux" refers to Linux x86 operating environments. |
Table 2-3 Operating Environments and Oracle Developer Suite Components
Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX Notes:
Oracle9i Developer Suite Release 2 (9.0.2) for Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX included the full Windows distribution pack. The Windows distribution pack for Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) may not be in the initial Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX release pack. You will receive it when it becomes available; meanwhile, you will be able to download it from Oracle Technology Network (http://otn.oracle.com
).
The following Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX desktops have been certified for JDeveloper:
Solaris/CDE
HP-UX/CDE
HP-UX/VUE
Linux/GNOME
Linux/KDE2
This section lists the operating environment requirements for Windows, Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX.
Table 2-4 contains the Windows operating environment software requirements for Oracle Developer Suite.
Table 2-4 Oracle Developer Suite Windows Software Requirements
Software Item | Requirement |
---|---|
Windows Operating Environment |
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Note: Newer versions of Windows allow you to use a system drive other than C. This guide refers to the system drive as the "system default drive." You are not limited to using C as the system default drive.Most examples in this guide use C as the system default drive. |
For Solaris running on Sun SPARC workstations, Oracle Developer Suite requires either Solaris 8 (2.8) or Solaris 9 (2.9). Table 2-5 contains the Solaris patchset requirements for Oracle Developer Suite. You can download the patches from
http://sunsolve.sun.com/pub-cgi/show.pl?target=patches/J2SE
.
Note: Oracle9i JDeveloper running on Solaris requires the CDE windows manager. |
Table 2-5 Solaris Operating Environment Patchset Requirements
Software Item | Requirement |
---|---|
Solaris 8 (2.8) |
|
Solaris 9 (2.9) |
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Table 2-6 contains the Solaris 8 (2.8) and Solaris 9 (2.9) package requirements for Oracle Developer Suite. To verify that an operating system package is installed on your computer, run the pkginfo
command with the name of the package. Do this for each package listed. The syntax for pkginfo
is:
pkginfo
package_name
For example:
prompt>
pkginfo SUNWarc
If your computer is missing a package, contact your system administrator.
Table 2-6 Solaris Operating Environment Package Requirements
Software Item | Requirement |
---|---|
Solaris 8 (2.8) |
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Solaris 9 (2.9) |
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For the HP PA-RISC HP-UX (64-bit) operating environment, Oracle Developer Suite requires either version 11.00 or version 11.11. Table 2-7 contains the HP-UX operating environment software requirements for Oracle Developer Suite. You can download the HP-UX operating environment patches from http://itresourcecenter.hp.com
.
Table 2-7 HP-UX Operating Environment Software Requirements
Software Item | Requirement |
---|---|
HP-UX Operating Environment |
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HP-UX 11.00 Patches |
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HP-UX 11.00 Software and Packages |
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HP-UX 11.11 Patches |
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HP-UX 11.11 Software and Packages |
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Table 2-8 contains the Linux x86 operating environment software requirements for Oracle Developer Suite. For more information on Red Hat Linux patches, see http://www.redhat.com
. For more information on United Linux patches, see http://www.unitedlinux.com
.
Table 2-8 Linux x86 Operating Environment Software Requirements
Software Item | Requirement |
---|---|
Linux x86 Operating Environment |
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Red Hat Linux Operating System Patches | Kernel Errata 25 (2.4.9-e.25 )
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Red Hat Linux Operating System Software and Packages |
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United Linux Operating System Patches | For the most current information, refer to the Oracle Developer Suite 10g Release Notes Addendum, which is available at Oracle Technology Network (http://otn.oracle.com ).
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United Linux Operating System Software and Packages |
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You can view a complete list of certified software for Oracle Developer Suite on OracleMetaLink, at
The Oracle Developer Suite Documentation Library contains online documentation in HTML and Adobe PDF formats. See Appendix C, "Installing the Documentation Library" for instructions on installing and viewing the contents of the Documentation Library.
Table 2-9 contains the tools and disk space requirements for the Oracle Developer Suite Documentation Library.
Table 2-9 Online Documentation Requirements
This section provides information about the coexistence of Oracle products in one Oracle home, and guidelines for installing multiple Oracle products on one computer.
Your Oracle home is the top-level directory in which you install Oracle software.
Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) cannot share the same Oracle home with its previous versions (Oracle9iDS Release 2 (9.0.2) or Oracle Internet Developer Suite Release 1.0.2.x).
Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) cannot share the same Oracle home with any Oracle databases, including Oracle9i Database Release 2.
Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) cannot share the same Oracle home with a Oracle Application Server Forms and Reports Services 10g standalone server instance.
Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) can coexist in the same Oracle home with any installation of Oracle Application Server 10g (9.0.4), with the exception of Oracle Application Server Infrastructure.
Note: This does not apply to any other version of Oracle Application Server. |
For Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX only: If there are existing Oracle homes set on the computer where you are installing Oracle Developer Suite, refer to Section 2.8.5.1.1, "Preventing Conflicts With Other Oracle Homes".
In this guide, directory paths may contain the placeholder text oracle_home
, which represents the path to your actual Oracle home directory.
Note: If you install Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) and Oracle Application Server 10g (9.0.4) to the same Oracle home, do not try to start Oracle Application Server Containers for J2EE (OC4J) on port 8888 fromoracle_home \j2ee\home . If you do, the OC4J instance will fail.
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The following guidelines apply to installing multiple instances of Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) on the same computer. The guidelines also apply to installing Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4) on a computer that has existing installations of Oracle9iDS or Oracle Internet Developer Suite:
Make sure you reboot the computer after you install Oracle Developer Suite the first time.
Make sure you have sufficient disk space to handle all of your installations. See Table 2-1 to determine the disk space requirements.
Install subsequent instances into a different Oracle home from the previous one.
Reboot the computer after the last installation is completed (Windows only).
Note: Oracle Developer Suite can not share an Oracle home with an Oracle database. |
When you install Oracle Developer Suite, and you have either already installed an Oracle database on the same computer, or plan to install an Oracle database on the same computer:
Make sure you have sufficient disk space to handle both installations. See the specific Oracle database installation guide and Table 2-1 in this guide to determine the total disk space requirements.
Windows only: If you have not installed the Oracle database, install it first, and then reboot the computer after the database installation is completed.
Install Oracle Developer Suite into a different Oracle home from the Oracle database.
Windows only: Reboot the computer after you have installed Oracle Developer Suite.
The installer writes files to the following directories:
Table 2-10 Directories Used by the Installer
Directory | Description |
---|---|
Oracle home directory | This directory contains Oracle Developer Suite files. You specify this directory when you install Oracle Developer Suite. For more information, see Section 2.6.1, "Oracle Home Considerations". |
Inventory directory | The installer uses this directory to keep track of Oracle products that are installed on the computer. In subsequent installations, the installer uses the same inventory directory. For more information, see Section 2.9.3, "The Installer Inventory Directory". |
Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX only: /var/opt/oracle or
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This directory contains information about locations of Oracle homes on your Linux, Solaris, or HP-UX computer. For more information, see Section 2.9.3, "The Installer Inventory Directory". Note: On a Windows computer, this information is stored in the Windows Registry. |
Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX only:
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The installer writes files needed only during installation to a temporary directory. By default, the temporary directory is /tmp . To specify a different directory, set the TMP environment variable.
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Windows only:
temp directory |
The installer writes files needed only during installation to a temporary directory. The installer uses the directory specified in the %TEMP% system environment variable.
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Before installing Oracle Developer Suite, review the Oracle Developer Suite release notes. The release notes are available in the Oracle Developer Suite Documentation Library. To view the release notes, see Section C.3.1, "Viewing the Release Notes from Disk". The latest release notes and release notes addendum are also available on Oracle Technology Network at
The preinstallation tasks for Oracle Developer Suite are divided into the following parts:
Download the HP Java 2 SDK 1.4.1 (version 1.4.1.05 or higher) for PA-RISC (for HP-UX 11.00 or HP-UX 11.11, depending on your operating system version) from http://www.hp.com/products1/unix/java/java2/sdkrte14/index.html
.
Install the SDK.
If you have Windows NT, 2000, or XP Professional, ensure that you are logged on to your computer as a member of the Administrators group.
On Linux, Solaris, or HP-UX, ensure that you are not logged in as the root
user; otherwise, you will not be able to run the installer. See Section 2.8.6, "Creating Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX Accounts and Groups" for more information.
Ensure that your PATH,CLASSPATH,LD_LIBRARY_PATH
(Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX only), and SHLIB_PATH
(HP-UX only) environment variable values do not exceed 1,024 characters. Variable values greater than 1,204 characters will generate errors such as "Word too long" during installation.
Stop all Oracle services or Oracle processes, and close all other open applications.
The installer user interface language is based on settings in the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) locale, which is based on the operating environment locale. To run the installer with a particular locale, set your operating environment's locale before you start the installer.
The installer supports the locale languages listed in Table 2-11:
Table 2-11 Languages Displayable by the Installer
Language | ISO-639 Language Code |
---|---|
English | en |
French | fr |
German | de |
Italian | it |
Japanese | ja |
Korean | ko |
Brazilian Portuguese | pt_BR |
Simplified Chinese | zh_CN |
Traditional Chinese | zh_TW |
If your locale is not listed in this table, the installer appears in English.
If you use assistive technologies such as screen readers to work with Java-based applications and applets, run access_setup.bat
before starting your screen reader.
The file access_setup.bat
is located on your CD-ROM Disk 1, or on your DVD:
Media | Location of File |
---|---|
CD-ROM | \install\win32
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DVD | \developer_suite\install\win32
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If you use assistive technologies such as screen readers to work with Java-based applications and applets, the Windows-based computer where you are installing Oracle Developer Suite must have Sun's Java Access Bridge installed in all the Java virtual machine locations on the computer.
The installer installs files for JDK/JRE 1.4.1 and JDK/JRE 1.1.8 on your computer, but it will install Java Access Bridge 1.0.3 files in the JDK/JRE 1.4.1 location only.
If you use assistive technologies, you should perform one of the following steps:
If you don't have JDK/JRE 1.1.8 installed on your computer:
Proceed with your installation. After you have finished installing Oracle Developer Suite, ensure that you have Java Access Bridge 1.0.3 installed in all your JDK/JRE locations. This will ensure that all your applications that require assistive technologies work correctly.
If you do have JDK/JRE 1.1.8 on your computer:
You must install the production version of Java Access Bridge 1.0.2 in the JDK/JRE 1.1.8 location on your computer before you install Oracle Developer Suite.
To download and install Java Access Bridge 1.0.2:
Download the zip file for Java Access Bridge 1.0.2 from
http://java.sun.com/products/accessbridge/
.
Refer to the Java Access Bridge documentation available from the web site for installation instructions and other information.
After downloading the file, extract the contents to a folder; for example, accessbridge_home
.
Install Java Access Bridge by running install.exe
from the accessbridge_home
\installer
folder, where
accessbridge_home
is the folder you created in the previous step.
Confirm that you want to install the Java Access Bridge into each of the Java virtual machines displayed in the dialog.
Note: Do not install Java Access Bridge 1.0.2 into a Java virtual machine with a version higher than 1.1.18. |
Click OK when you see the Installation Completed message.
The tasks in this section are required on Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX platforms only.
To prevent a conflict between the software in an existing Oracle home and the Oracle Developer Suite installation, you must remove all references to the existing Oracle home in your environment. Follow these steps to remove these references.
Unset your existing Oracle home variable by using the following command.
C shell | Bourne/Korn shell |
---|---|
prompt> unsetenv ORACLE_HOME
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prompt> ORACLE_HOME=; export ORACLE_HOME
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In your PATH
, CLASSPATH,LD_LIBRARY_PATH
, and SHLIB_PATH
(HP-UX only) environment variables, remove any references to the environment variable ORACLE_HOME
.
Setting the DISPLAY
environment variable allows you to run the installer remotely and view the installer UI from your local computer.
On the remote computer, set DISPLAY
to the system name or IP address of your local computer.
Note: A PC X emulator can be used to run the install if it supports a PseudoColor color model or PseudoColor visual. Set the PC X emulator to use a PseudoColor visual, and then start the installer. Refer to the X emulator documentation for instructions on how to change the color model or visual settings. |
If you get an Xlib error similar to "Failed to connect to server", "Connection refused by server", or "Can't open display" when starting the installer, then run the following commands on your local computer:
Shell Types | On the remote computer | On your local computer |
---|---|---|
C shell | prompt> setenv DISPLAY hostname :0.0
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prompt> xhost + server_name
|
Bourne or Korn shell | prompt> DISPLAY= hostname :0.0 ; export DISPLAY
|
prompt> xhost + server_name
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During installation, the installer uses a temporary directory for swap space. You must ensure that this directory meets the hardware requirements listed in Table 2-1 before you start your installation. The installation may fail if you do not have sufficient space. The installer checks for the TMP
environment variable to locate the temporary directory. If this environment variable does not exist, then the installer uses the /tmp
directory.
The following are instructions for setting the TMP
environment variable.
C shell | Bourne/Korn shell |
---|---|
prompt> setenv TMP full_path
|
prompt> TMP= full_path ; export TMP
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TNS_ADMIN
points to the directory where network configuration files are stored.
If TNS_ADMIN
is set to an existing directory on your computer, you will have conflicts between that directory and the directory where the Oracle Developer Suite network configuration files are created. You will also have conflicts if the configuration files are in a common directory outside of the Oracle home for your other Oracle products. For example, your computer may use /var/opt/oracle/tnsnames.ora
for database aliases.
To prevent conflicts between the network configuration files for different Oracle products, copy the existing configuration files from either the existing TNS_ADMIN
directory or the common directory to the other product's oracle_home
/network/admin
and unset TNS_ADMIN
using the following command:
C shell | Bourne/Korn shell |
---|---|
prompt> unsetenv TNS_ADMIN
|
prompt> TNS_ADMIN=;export TNS_ADMIN
|
The tasks in this section are required on Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX platforms only.
Create a group that has read and write access to the oraInventory
directory. The installer uses the oraInventory
directory to keep track of the Oracle products installed on a computer. You can allow a user to install Oracle products to the computer by giving it write access to oraInventory
. To do this, make all the users members of the same group. This guide refers to the group as the devsuitegrp
group.
Use a an operating environment utility to create the group. For example:
On Solaris, use the admintool
or groupadd
utility.
On HP-UX, use the SAM
utility.
On Linux x86, use /usr/sbin/groupadd
and/usr/sbin/useradd
.
These utilities are described in your operating environment documentation.
The devsuitegrp
group will own the installer's oraInventory
directory. Any user account that runs an Oracle installation must be a member of the devsuitegrp
group.
If this is the first time you are installing Oracle software on this computer, Oracle recommends that you start by creating a new user. Use this user specifically for installing and administering Oracle software.
Create the user with the properties listed in Table 2-12.
Table 2-12 Oracle Account Properties
Variable | Property |
---|---|
name | Choose any name This guide uses the name oracle .
|
Group Identifier | The devsuitegrp group.
|
Home directory | Choose a home directory consistent with other user home directories. The home directory of the oracle account does not have to be the same as the Oracle home directory.
|
Login Shell | The default shell can be either the C, Bourne, or Korn shell. |
Note: Use this user only for installing and maintaining Oracle software. Never use it for purposes unrelated to the installer. Do not useroot for the Oracle user.
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Components that are not listed here have no component-specific preinstallation tasks.
There are no specific preinstallation requirements. However, to effectively use Software Configuration Manager, Oracle recommends that you review the Oracle SCM Repository Installation Guide, which is available from the Start menu of the Oracle SCM client.
The installer guides you through the installation screens. Depending on your operating environment and the installation options you select, you will need the information listed in Table 2-13.
Table 2-13 Information Needed During Installation
Item | Installation Type | Example |
---|---|---|
Oracle home name and path for Oracle Developer Suite Foot 1 | All (Windows, Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX) | Name: DevSuiteHome
Path: or
|
Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX group name | All (Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX only) | devsuitegrp
|
Outgoing mail server name | Business Intelligence, Rapid Application Development, Complete (all platforms). Used only by Oracle Application Server Reports Services. | mysmtp01.mycorp.com
|
Java SDK directory | All (HP-UX only) | /opt/java/java.1.4.1
|
Review Appendix A, "Upgrade Notes" if you are migrating or upgrading from:
Oracle9iDS Release 2 (9.0.2)
Oracle Internet Developer Suite release 1, version 1.0.2.x (the former version of Oracle9i Developer Suite)
A 9.0.3 or earlier version of any Oracle Developer Suite component (for instance, Oracle JDeveloper, Oracle Repository, and so forth)
This section introduces Oracle Universal Installer and provides you information that you should know before you start the installation.
Oracle Developer Suite uses Oracle Universal Installer to install components and to configure environment variables. The installer guides you through each step of the installation process.
Oracle Universal Installer automates the tasks of:
Providing installation options for products, based on the target computer's operating environment
Detecting pre-set environment variables and configuration settings
Setting environment variables and configuration during installation
Deinstalling products
The installer does an automatic prerequisite check on your computer before starting the installation. The following tables list the prerequisite checks that the installer performs.
Table 2-14 lists the automatic prerequisite checks for Windows:
Table 2-14 Installer Prerequisite Checks for Windows
Prerequisite Checks | See Also |
---|---|
Verify the computer can display a minimum of 256 colors | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify the minimum CPU speed | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify the operating system requirements |
|
Table 2-15 lists the automatic prerequisite checks for Solaris on Sun SPARC computers:
Table 2-15 Installer Prerequisite Checks for Solaris
Prerequisite Checks | See Also |
---|---|
Verify the computer can display a minimum of 256 colors | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify that the minimum swap space is available | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify the minimum CPU speed | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify Operating System requirements |
|
Table 2-16 lists the automatic prerequisite checks for Linux x86:
Table 2-16 Installer Prerequisite Checks for Linux
Prerequisite Checks | See Also |
---|---|
Verify that the minimum swap space is available | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify the minimum CPU speed | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify Operating System requirements |
|
Table 2-17 lists the automatic prerequisite checks for HP-UX:
Table 2-17 Installer Prerequisite Checks for HP-UX
Prerequisite Checks | See Also |
---|---|
Verify that the minimum swap space is available | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify the minimum CPU speed | Table 2-1, "Oracle Developer Suite Hardware Requirements"
|
Verify Operating System requirements |
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The installer creates the inventory directory the first time it runs on your computer. The inventory directory keeps a record of the products that the installer has installed, as well as other installation information. If you have previously installed Oracle products on your computer, then you may already have an inventory directory.
Please review the following information about the inventory directory:
Do not delete or alter the inventory directory or its contents. Doing so can prevent the installer from locating products that you have installed on your computer.
For Windows, the installer automatically creates the inventory directory as system_default_drive
:\Program Files\Oracle\Inventory
when you install the first Oracle product on your computer. The value of system_default_drive
is normally "C:", and is set in the Windows Registry.
For Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX, the default directory location is listed in the file /var/opt/oracle/oraInst.loc
(/etc/oraInst.loc
on Linux). The first time you install an Oracle product on your computer, the installer prompts you for an existing directory to use as the inventory directory. The installer then creates oraInst.loc
and lists your inventory directory in it.
If you specify a Linux, Solaris, or HP-UX group name during installation, you are granting any user that belongs to that group the permission to write to the oraInventory
directory. Later on, if another user attempts to run the installer, then they must have user-level permission to write to the oraInventory
directory, or they must belong to the group you specified. If they do not have permission, then the installation fails.
The installer writes a log of its actions to a file in the directory system_default_drive
:\Program Files\Oracle\Inventory\logs
(Windows) or inventory_location
/logs
(Linux, Solaris, and HP-UX). The log file name has the form
installActions
year
-
date
_
time
.log
.
Follow these instructions to start the installer:
Stop all Oracle services such as an Oracle database.
CD-ROM:Insert the Oracle Developer Suite CD-ROM labeled "Disk 1" into your computer's CD-ROM drive.
DVD: Insert the Oracle Developer Suite DVD labeled "Oracle Developer Suite and Documentation" into your computer's DVD drive.
CD-ROM: If you are not using the autorun feature, locate the program setup.exe
in the root directory of the CD-ROM. Start the installer by running this program.
DVD: If your are not using the autorun feature, locate the program setup.exe
in the directory \developer_suite
under the root directory of the DVD. Start the installer by running this program.
If you are using the autorun feature, the installer will start automatically. Click Install Oracle Developer Suite to start your installation.
For users of Windows assistive technologies: To disable the autorun feature, hold down the Shift key after inserting the CD-ROM or DVD. Alternatively, if the autorun window appears, press ALT-F4 to close the window. Then do one of the following:
CD-ROM: To install Oracle Developer Suite, locate the program setup.exe
in the root directory of the CD-ROM. Start the installer by running this program.
DVD: To install Oracle Developer Suite, locate the program setup.exe
in the directory \developer_suite
under the root directory of the DVD. Start the installer by running this program.
To browse the CD-ROM or DVD contents, use Windows Explorer.
To learn about Oracle Developer Suite, point your browser to the file \doc\welcome\index.htm
on the CD-ROM, or \developer_suite\doc\welcome\index.htm
on the DVD.
Proceed to Section 3.1, "Installing Oracle Developer Suite" to continue.
Oracle Developer Suite requires several files to be present in your Windows system directory. During the Oracle Developer Suite installation, files already present on your computer are examined to ensure that they meet the requirements for Oracle Developer Suite. If a file is not present or is present but outdated, the installer installs the required file.
If an outdated file is in use by another process at the time of installation, then the installer will stop and display an error dialog. This is because Windows needs to restart for the updated file to take effect. The installer cannot automatically shut down and then start up again after a system restart.
Oracle Developer Suite includes a supplementary installation for the required Windows system files. This installation will automatically reboot the computer if necessary when it is finished.
If you encounter the Windows System Files error during the Oracle Developer Suite installation, click OK to close the error dialog, then use the following instructions to start the Windows System Files installation. You cannot proceed with the Oracle Developer Suite installation if you do not run the Windows System Files installation.
To start the Windows System Files installation:
Click Exit to quit the installer.
Change to the root directory on the CD-ROM, or to the directory \developer_suite
under the root directory of the DVD.
Run wsf.exe
.
The Windows System Files installer is controlled by script that attempts to find an existing Oracle home. If the installer does not find one, it displays a File Locations dialog. Choose your Oracle home from the dialog.
Windows restarts automatically, if it is required; otherwise, the Windows System Files installation ends without displaying the Installation Finished dialog.
After Windows restarts, or when the Windows System Files installation finishes, restart the Oracle Developer Suite installation.
Note: You need access to theroot account.
|
For operating environments that do not support automatic mounting, you must manually mount the installation CD-ROM or DVD. You must have root
privileges to mount or unmount a CD-ROM or DVD. Be sure to unmount a CD-ROM or DVD before removing it from the drive.
Note: The Oracle Developer Suite installation CD-ROM is in RockRidge format. The Oracle Developer Suite and Documentation DVD is in DVD-ROM format. |
To mount the installation CD-ROM or DVD:
Stop all Oracle processes such as the Oracle database.
Read the section for your operating environment to get detailed mounting instructions:
If your computer is set up for auto mounting, then the CD-ROM or DVD is mounted automatically to the directory specified in your auto mount configuration when you insert the disk into the drive.
If your computer is not set up for auto mounting, then you must mount the CD-ROM or DVD manually.
Follow these steps to mount the CD-ROM or DVD manually:
Insert the Oracle Developer Suite Disk 1 CD-ROM or the Oracle Developer Suite and Documentation DVD into the drive.
Log in as the root
user.
Ensure that you have a mount point directory for the CD-ROM or DVD. For example, you can create the directory /cdrom
:
#
mkdir
/cdrom
Mount the CD-ROM or DVD drive to the mount point directory. For example, if your mount point directory is /cdrom
, enter the following command:
#
mount
-r -F hsfs
device_name
/cdrom
Log out as the root
user.
Proceed to Section 2.9.4.2.4, "Running the Installer".
If your computer is set up for auto mounting, then the CD-ROM or DVD is mounted automatically to the directory specified in your auto mount configuration when you insert the disk into the drive.
If your computer is not set up for auto mounting, then you must mount the CD-ROM or DVD manually.
Note: Before executing any of the following steps, consult the man pages forpfs_fstab , pfs_mount , pfs_mountd , and pfsd .
|
Follow these steps to mount the CD-ROM or DVD manually:
Log in as the root
user.
Use the following command to determine the CD-ROM or DVD device_file:
#
ioscan -fun -C disk
If there is not already an entry in the /etc/pfs_fstab
file for your CD-ROM or DVD device_file
, you must add one. As the root user, use a text editor to add a line to the /etc/pfs_fstab
file following this format:
device_file mount_point filesystem_type options frequency pass
Example:
/dev/dsk/c5t2d0 /SD_CDROM pfs-rrip ro 0 0
Note: This example assumes the existence of an empty/mnt/cdrom directory. If one does not exist, create it.
|
Enter the following commands:
#
nohup /usr/sbin/pfs_mountd &
#
nohup /usr/sbin/pfsd &
Insert the Oracle Developer Suite Disk 1 CD-ROM or Oracle Developer Suite and Documentation DVD into your drive and mount the CD-ROM by entering the following command:
#
/usr/sbin/pfs_mount /SD_CDROM
Log out as the root
user.
Proceed to Section 2.9.4.2.4, "Running the Installer".
If your computer is set up for CD-ROM or DVD auto mounting, then the CD-ROM or DVD is mounted automatically to the directory specified in your auto mount configuration when you insert the disk into the drive.
If your computer is not set up for auto mounting, then you must mount the CD-ROM or DVD manually.
Follow these steps to mount the CD-ROM or DVD manually:
Insert the Oracle Developer Suite Disk 1 CD-ROM or the Oracle Developer Suite and Documentation DVD into your drive.
Log in as the root
user.
Ensure that you have a mount point directory for the CD-ROM or DVD. For example, you can create the directory /mnt/cdrom
:
#
mkdir /mnt/cdrom
Ensure that the following line for /dev/cdrom
is in /etc/fstab
:
/dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom iso9660 noauto,owner,kudzu,ro 0 0
Note: The file /etc/fstab must contain this line exactly as it appears in the text. Replace any other form of the line with the line in the text. |
Mount the CD-ROM or DVD drive to the mount point directory by entering the following command:
#
/bin/mount /mnt/cdrom
This command mounts the CD-ROM or DVD to the mount point directory /mnt/cdrom
.
Log out as the root
user.
Proceed to Section 2.9.4.2.4, "Running the Installer".
After you mount the installation CD-ROM or DVD, you can start the installer.
To start the installer from the CD-ROM or DVD:
Note: Be sure you are not logged in as theroot user when you start the installer. If you are, you will receive an error message and the installer will stop.
|
Log in with the user that you created for installing Oracle products (see Section 2.8.6.2, "User for Oracle Software").
Change to a directory other than the mount point directory or its subdirectories. For example, if your mount point directory is /mnt/cdrom
, change to a directory other than /mnt/cdrom
or its subdirectories.
CD-ROM: Start the installer by entering:
prompt>
mount_point_directory
/runInstaller
DVD: Start the installer by entering:
prompt>
mount_point_directory
/developer_suite/runInstaller
This starts the installer. Proceed to Section 3.1, "Installing Oracle Developer Suite" for further instructions.