diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml
index 8310e0e715..e4cccf2965 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml
@@ -1,2196 +1,2191 @@
Linux Binary CompatibilityRestructured and parts updated by &a.jim;, 22 March
2000. Originally contributed by &a.handy; and
&a.rich;SynopsisThe following chapter will cover FreeBSD's Linux binary
compatibility features, how to install it, and how it works.At this point, you may be asking yourself why exactly, does
FreeBSD need to be able to run Linux binaries? The answer to that
question is quite simple. Many companies and developers develop
only for Linux, since it is the latest hot thing in
the computing world. That leaves the rest of us FreeBSD users
bugging these same companies and developers to put out native
FreeBSD versions of their applications. The problem is, that most
of these companies do not really realize how many people would use
their product if there were FreeBSD versions too, and most continue
to only develop for Linux. So what is a FreeBSD user to do? This
is where the Linux binary compatibility of FreeBSD comes into
play.In a nutshell, the compatibility allows FreeBSD users to run
about 90% of all Linux applications without modification. This
includes applications such as Star Office, the Linux version of
Netscape, Adobe Acrobat, RealPlayer 5 and 7, VMWare, Oracle,
WordPerfect, Doom, Quake, and more. It is also reported that in
some situations, Linux binaries perform better on FreeBSD than they
do under Linux.There are, however, some Linux-specific operating system
features that are not supported under FreeBSD. Linux binaries will
not work on FreeBSD if they overly use the Linux
/proc filesystem (which is different from
FreeBSD's /proc filesystem), or i386-specific
calls, such as enabling virtual 8086 mode.For information on installing the Linux binary compatibility
mode, see the next section.InstallationWith the advent of 3.0-RELEASE, it is no longer necessary to
specify options LINUX or
options COMPAT_LINUX in your kernel
configuration.The Linux binary compatibility is now done via a KLD object
(Kernel LoaDable object), so it can be installed
on-the-fly without having to reboot. You will,
however, need to have the following in
/etc/rc.conf:linux_enable=YESThis, in turn, triggers the following action in
/etc/rc.i386:# Start the Linux binary compatibility if requested.
#
case ${linux_enable} in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
;;
esacIf you wish to verify that the KLD is loaded,
kldstat will do that:&prompt.user; kldstat
Id Refs Address Size Name
1 2 0xc0100000 16bdb8 kernel
7 1 0xc24db000 d000 linux.koIf for some reason you do not want to or cannot load the KLD,
then you may statically link the binary compatibility in the kernel
by adding options LINUX to your kernel
configuration file. Then install your new kernel as described in
the kernel configuration section
of this handbook.Installing Linux Runtime LibrariesThis can be done one of two ways, either by using the linux_base port, or by installing them
manually.Installing using the linux_base portThis is by far the easiest method to use when installing the
runtime libraries. It is just like installing any other port
from the ports collection.
Simply do the following:&prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base
&prompt.root; make install distcleanYou should now have working Linux binary compatibility.
Some programs may complain about incorrect minor versions of the
system libraries. In general, however, this does not seem to be
a problem.Installing libraries manuallyIf you do not have the ports collection
installed, you can install the libraries by hand instead. You
will need the Linux shared libraries that the program depends on
and the runtime linker. Also, you will need to create a
shadow root directory,
/compat/linux, for Linux libraries on your
FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by Linux programs
run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if a Linux
program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so,
FreeBSD will first try to open
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does
not exist, it will then try /lib/libc.so.
Shared libraries should be installed in the shadow tree
/compat/linux/lib rather than the paths
that the Linux ld.so reports.Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries
that Linux binaries depend on only the first few times that you
install a Linux program on your FreeBSD system. After a while,
you will have a sufficient set of Linux shared libraries on your
system to be able to run newly imported Linux binaries without
any extra work.How to install additional shared librariesWhat if you install the linux_base port
and your application still complains about missing shared
libraries? How do you know which shared libraries Linux
binaries need, and where to get them? Basically, there are 2
possibilities (when following these instructions you will need
to be root on your FreeBSD system).If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared
libraries the application needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD
system. Look at the following example:Let us assume you used FTP to get the Linux binary of
Doom, and put it on a Linux system you have access to. You
then can check which shared libraries it needs by running
ldd linuxdoom, like so:&prompt.user; ldd linuxdoom
libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29You would need to get all the files from the last column,
and put them under /compat/linux, with
the names in the first column as symbolic links pointing to
them. This means you eventually have these files on your
FreeBSD system:/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29 /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
Note that if you already have a Linux shared library
with a matching major revision number to the first column
of the ldd output, you will not need to
copy the file named in the last column to your system, the
one you already have should work. It is advisable to copy
the shared library anyway if it is a newer version,
though. You can remove the old one, as long as you make
the symbolic link point to the new one. So, if you have
these libraries on your system:/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27and you find a new binary that claims to require a
later version according to the output of
ldd:libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29If it is only one or two versions out of date in the
in the trailing digit then do not worry about copying
/lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because the
program should work fine with the slightly older version.
However, if you like, you can decide to replace the
libc.so anyway, and that should leave
you with:/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
The symbolic link mechanism is
only needed for Linux binaries. The
FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of looking for matching
major revision numbers itself and you do not need to worry
about it.
Installing Linux ELF binariesELF binaries sometimes require an extra step of
branding. If you attempt to run an unbranded ELF
binary, you will get an error message like the following;&prompt.user; ./my-linux-elf-binary
ELF binary type not known
AbortTo help the FreeBSD kernel distinguish between a FreeBSD ELF
binary from a Linux binary, use the &man.brandelf.1;
utility.&prompt.user; brandelf -t Linux my-linux-elf-binaryThe GNU toolchain now places the appropriate branding
information into ELF binaries automatically, so you this step
should become increasingly more rare in the future.Configuring the host name resolverIf DNS does not work or you get this message:resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword resolv+:
"hosts" is an invalid keywordYou will need to configure a
/compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
containing:order hosts, bind
multi onThe order here specifies that /etc/hosts
is searched first and DNS is searched second. When
/compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
installed, linux applications find FreeBSD's
/etc/host.conf and complain about the
incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
bind if you have not configured a name server
using the /etc/resolv.conf file.Installing MathematicaUpdated for Mathematica version 4.x by &a.murray
and merged with work by Bojan Bistrovic
bojanb@physics.odu.edu.This document describes the process of installing the Linux
version of Mathematica 4.X onto a FreeBSD system.The Linux version of Mathematica runs perfectly under FreeBSD
however the binaries shipped by Wolfram need to be branded so that
FreeBSD knows to use the Linux ABI to execute them.The Linux version of Mathematica or Mathematica for Students can
be ordered directly from Wolfram at http://www.wolfram.com/.Branding the Linux binariesThe Linux binaries are located in the Unix
directory of the Mathematica CDROM distributed by Wolfram. You
need to copy this directory tree to your local hard drive so that
you can brand the Linux binaries with &man.brandelf.1; before
running the installer:&prompt.root; mount /cdrom
&prompt.root; cp -rp /cdrom/Unix/ /localdir/
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Kernel/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/FrontEnd/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Installation/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Graphics/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Converters/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/LicenseManager/Binaries/Linux/mathlm
&prompt.root; cd /localdir/Installers/Linux/
&prompt.root; ./MathInstallerAlternatively, you can simply set the default ELF brand
to Linux for all unbranded binaries with the command:&prompt.root; sysctl -w kern.fallback_elf_brand=3This will make FreeBSD assume that unbranded ELF binaries
use the Linux ABI and so you should be able to run the
installer straight from the CDROM.Obtaining your Mathematica PasswordBefore you can run Mathematica you will have to obtain a
password from Wolfram that corresponds to your machine
ID.Once you have installed the Linux compatibility runtime
libraries and unpacked Mathematica you can obtain the
machine ID by running the program
mathinfo in the Install directory. This
machine ID is based solely on the MAC address of your first
ethernet card.&prompt.root; cd /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Installation/Binaries/Linux
&prompt.root; mathinfo
disco.example.com 7115-70839-20412When you register with Wolfram, either by email, phone or fax,
you will give them the machine ID and they will
respond with a corresponding password consisting of groups of
numbers. You can then enter this information when you attempt to
run Mathematica for the first time exactly as you would for any
other Mathematica platform.Running the Mathematica front end over a networkMathematica uses some special fonts to display characters not
present in any of the standard font sets (integrals, sums, greek
letters, etc.). The X protocol requires these fonts to be install
locally. This means you will have to copy
these fonts from the CDROM or from a host with Mathematica
installed to your local machine. These fonts are normally stored
in /cdrom/Unix/Files/SystemFiles/Fonts on the
CDROM, or
/usr/local/mathematica/SystemFiles/Fonts on
your hard drive. The actual fonts are in the subdirectories
Type1 and X. There are
several ways to use them, as described below.The first way is to copy them into one of the existing font
directories in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts.
This will require editing the fonts.dir file,
adding the font names to it, and changing the number of fonts on
the first line. Alternatively, you should also just be able to
run mkfontdir in the directory you have copied
them to.The second way to do this is to copy the directories to
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts:&prompt.root; cd /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts
&prompt.root; mkdir X
&prompt.root; mkdir MathType1
&prompt.root; cd /cdrom/Unix/Files/SystemFiles/Fonts
&prompt.root; cp X/* /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/X
&prompt.root; cp Type1/* /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/MathType1
&prompt.root; cd /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/X
&prompt.root; mkfontdir
&prompt.root; cd ../MathType1
&prompt.root; mkfontdirNow add the new font directories to your font path:&prompt.root; xset fp+ /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/X
&prompt.root; xset fp+ /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/MathType1
&prompt.root; xset fp rehashIf you are using the XFree86 server, you can have these font
directories loaded automatically by adding them to your
XF86Config file.If you do not already have a directory
called /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Type1, you
can change the name of the MathType1
directory in the example above to
Type1.Installing OracleContributed by Marcel Moolenaar
marcel@cup.hp.comPrefaceThis document describes the process of installing Oracle 8.0.5 and
Oracle 8.0.5.1 Enterprise Edition for Linux onto a FreeBSD
machineInstalling the Linux environmentMake sure you have both linux_base and
linux_devtools from the ports collection
installed. These ports are added to the collection after the release
of FreeBSD 3.2. If you are using FreeBSD 3.2 or an older version for
that matter, update your ports collection. You may want to consider
updating your FreeBSD version too. If you run into difficulties with
linux_base-6.1 or
linux_devtools-6.1 you may have to use version
5.2 of these packages.If you want to run the intelligent agent, you'll
also need to install the Red Hat TCL package:
tcl-8.0.3-20.i386.rpm. The general command
for installing packages with the official RPM port is :&prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm packageInstallation of the package should not generate any errors.Creating the Oracle environmentBefore you can install Oracle, you need to set up a proper
environment. This document only describes what to do
specially to run Oracle for Linux on FreeBSD, not
what has been described in the Oracle installation guide.Kernel TuningAs described in the Oracle installation guide, you need to set
the maximum size of shared memory. Don't use
SHMMAX under FreeBSD. SHMMAX
is merely calculated out of SHMMAXPGS and
PGSIZE. Therefore define
SHMMAXPGS. All other options can be used as
described in the guide. For example:options SHMMAXPGS=10000
options SHMMNI=100
options SHMSEG=10
options SEMMNS=200
options SEMMNI=70
options SEMMSL=61Set these options to suit your intended use of Oracle.Also, make sure you have the following options in your kernel
config-file:options SYSVSHM #SysV shared memory
options SYSVSEM #SysV semaphores
options SYSVMSG #SysV interprocess communicationOracle accountCreate an Oracle account just as you would create any other
account. The Oracle account is special only that you need to give
it a Linux shell. Add /compat/linux/bin/bash to
/etc/shells and set the shell for the Oracle
account to /compat/linux/bin/bash.EnvironmentBesides the normal Oracle variables, such as
ORACLE_HOME and ORACLE_SID you must
set the following environment variables:VariableValueLD_LIBRARY_PATH$ORACLE_HOME/libCLASSPATH$ORACLE_HOME/jdbc/lib/classes111.zipPATH/compat/linux/bin
/compat/linux/sbin
/compat/linux/usr/bin
/compat/linux/usr/sbin
/bin
/sbin
/usr/bin
/usr/sbin
/usr/local/bin
$ORACLE_HOME/binIt is advised to set all the environment variables in
.profile. A complete example is:ORACLE_BASE=/oracle; export ORACLE_BASE
ORACLE_HOME=/oracle; export ORACLE_HOME
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
ORACLE_SID=ORCL; export ORACLE_SID
ORACLE_TERM=386x; export ORACLE_TERM
CLASSPATH=$ORACLE_HOME/jdbc/lib/classes111.zip
export CLASSPATH
PATH=/compat/linux/bin:/compat/linux/sbin:/compat/linux/usr/bin:/compat/linux/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:$ORACLE_HOME/bin
export PATHInstalling OracleDue to a slight inconsistency in the Linux emulator, you need to
create a directory named .oracle in
/var/tmp before you start the installer. Either
make it world writable or let it be owner by the oracle user. You
should be able to install Oracle without any problems. If you have
problems, check your Oracle distribution and/or configuration first!
After you have installed Oracle, apply the patches described in the
next two subsections.A frequent problem is that the TCP protocol adapter is not
installed right. As a consequence, you cannot start any TCP listeners.
The following actions help solve this problem:&prompt.root; cd $ORACLE_HOME/network/lib
&prompt.root; make -f ins_network.mk ntcontab.o
&prompt.root; cd $ORACLE_HOME/lib
&prompt.root; ar r libnetwork.a ntcontab.o
&prompt.root; cd $ORACLE_HOME/network/lib
&prompt.root; make -f ins_network.mk installDon't forget to run root.sh again!Patching root.shWhen installing Oracle, some actions, which need to be performed
as root, are recorded in a shell script called
root.sh. root.sh is
written in the orainst directory. Apply the
following patch to root.sh, to have it use to proper location of
chown or alternatively run the script under a Linux native
shell.*** orainst/root.sh.orig Tue Oct 6 21:57:33 1998
--- orainst/root.sh Mon Dec 28 15:58:53 1998
***************
*** 31,37 ****
# This is the default value for CHOWN
# It will redefined later in this script for those ports
# which have it conditionally defined in ss_install.h
! CHOWN=/bin/chown
#
# Define variables to be used in this script
--- 31,37 ----
# This is the default value for CHOWN
# It will redefined later in this script for those ports
# which have it conditionally defined in ss_install.h
! CHOWN=/usr/sbin/chown
#
# Define variables to be used in this scriptWhen you don't install Oracle from CD, you can patch the source
for root.sh. It is called
rthd.sh and is located in the
orainst directory in the source tree.Patching genclntshThe script genclntsh is used to create a single shared client
library. It is used when building the demos. Apply the following
patch to comment out the definition of PATH:*** bin/genclntsh.orig Wed Sep 30 07:37:19 1998
--- bin/genclntsh Tue Dec 22 15:36:49 1998
***************
*** 32,38 ****
#
# Explicit path to ensure that we're using the correct commands
#PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/ccs/bin export PATH
! PATH=/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin export PATH
#
# each product MUST provide a $PRODUCT/admin/shrept.lst
--- 32,38 ----
#
# Explicit path to ensure that we're using the correct commands
#PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/ccs/bin export PATH
! #PATH=/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin export PATH
#
# each product MUST provide a $PRODUCT/admin/shrept.lstRunning OracleWhen you have followed the instructions, you should be able to run
Oracle as if it was run on Linux itself.Installing SAP R/3 (4.6B - IDES)Contributed by Holger Kippholger.kipp@alogis.comConverted to SGML by &a.logo;PrefaceThis document describes a possible way of installing a SAP
- R/3 4.6B IDES-System with Oracle 8.0.5 for Linux onto a FreeBSD
- 4.3 machine, including the installation of FreeBSD 4.3 stable and
- Oracle 8.0.5.
+ R/3 4.6B IDES-System with Oracle 8.0.5 for Linux onto a
+ FreeBSD 4.3 machine, including the installation of FreeBSD 4.3
+ stable and Oracle 8.0.5.
Even though this document tries to describe all important
- steps in a greater detail, it is not intended as a replacement for
- the Oracle and SAP R/3 installation guides.
+ steps in a greater detail, it is not intended as a replacement
+ for the Oracle and SAP R/3 installation guides.
Please see the documentation that comes with the SAP R/3
- Linux edition for SAP- and Oracle-specific questions, as well as
- resources from Oracle and SAP OSS.
+ Linux edition for SAP- and Oracle-specific questions, as well
+ as resources from Oracle and SAP OSS.
SoftwareThe following CD-ROMs have been used for
- SAP-installation:
+ SAP-installation:
NameNumberDescriptionKERNEL51009113SAP Kernel Oracle /
Installation / AIX, Linux, SolarisRDBMS51007558Oracle / RDBMS 8.0.5.X /
LinuxEXPORT151010208IDES / DB-Export / Disc
1 of 6EXPORT251010209IDES / DB-Export / Disc
2 of 6EXPORT351010210IDES / DB-Export /
Disc3 of 6EXPORT451010211IDES / DB-Export /
Disc4 of 6EXPORT551010212IDES / DB-Export /
Disc5 of 6EXPORT651010213IDES / DB-Export /
Disc6 of 6
- Additionally, I used the Oracle 8 Server (Pre-production
- version 8.0.5 for Linux, Kernel Version 2.0.33) CD which is not
- really necessary, and of course FreeBSD 4.3 stable (it was only a
- few days past 4.3 RELEASE).
+ Additionally, I used the Oracle 8
+ Server (Pre-production version 8.0.5 for Linux,
+ Kernel Version 2.0.33) CD which is not really necessary, and
+ of course FreeBSD 4.3 stable (it was only a few days past 4.3
+ RELEASE).SAP-Notes
- The following notes should be read before installing SAP R/3
- or proved to be useful during installation:
+ The following notes should be read before installing
+ SAP R/3 or proved to be useful
+ during installation:NumberTitle0171356SAP Software auf Linux: grundlegenden
Anmerkungen0201147INST: 4.6C R/3 Inst. on UNIX -
Oracle0373203Update / Migration Oracle 8.0.5 -->
8.0.6/8.1.6 LINUX0072984Release of Digital UNIX 4.0B for
Oracle0130581R3SETUP step DIPGNTAB terminates0144978Your system has not been installed
correctly0162266Questions and tips for R3SETUP on Windows
NT / W2KHardware-Requirements
- The following equipment is sufficient for a SAP R/3 System
- (4.6B):
+ The following equipment is sufficient for a
+ SAP R/3 System (4.6B):Component4.6B4.6CProcessor2 x 800MHz Pentium III2 x 800MHz Pentium IIIMemory1GB ECC2GB ECCHard Disc Space50-60GB (IDES)50-60GB (IDES)For use in production, Xeon-Processors with large cache,
- high-speed disc access (SCSI, RAID hardware controller), USV and
- ECC-RAM is recommended. The large amount of Hard disc space is
- due to the preconfigured IDES System, which creates 27 GB of
- database files during installation. Usually after installation it
- is then necessary to extend some tablespaces.
+ high-speed disc access (SCSI, RAID hardware controller), USV
+ and ECC-RAM is recommended. The large amount of Hard disc
+ space is due to the preconfigured IDES System, which creates
+ 27 GB of database files during installation. Usually after
+ installation it is then necessary to extend some
+ tablespaces.
I used a dual processor board with 2 800MHz Pentium III
- processors, Adaptec 29160 Ultra160 SCSI adapter (for accessing a
- 40/80 GB DLT tape drive and CD-ROM), Mylex AcelleRAID (2 channels,
- firmware 6.00-1-00 with 32MB RAM). To the Mylex Raid-controller
- are attached two 17GB hard discs (mirrored) and four 36GB hard
- discs (RAID level 5).
+ processors, Adaptec 29160 Ultra160 SCSI adapter (for accessing
+ a 40/80 GB DLT tape drive and CD-ROM), Mylex AcelleRAID (2
+ channels, firmware 6.00-1-00 with 32MB RAM). To the Mylex
+ Raid-controller are attached two 17GB hard discs (mirrored)
+ and four 36GB hard discs (RAID level 5).
Installation of FreeBSD 4.3 stableFirst I installed FreeBSD 4.3 stable. I did the
- default-installation via ftp.
+ default-installation via ftp.
Installation via FTPGet the diskimages
kern.flp and mfsroot.flp and put them on floppy disks (I got
mine from ftp7.de.freebsd.org. Please choose the appropriate
mirror).
-
- &prompt.root; dd if=kern.flp of=/dev/fd0
- &prompt.root; dd if=mfsroot.flp of=/dev/fd0
+ &prompt.root; dd if=kern.flp of=/dev/fd0
+&prompt.root; dd if=mfsroot.flp of=/dev/fd0Don't forget to use different disks for the two images
- :-), then boot from the floppy with the kern.flp-image on it and
- follow instructions. I used the following disk layout:
+ :-), then boot from the floppy with the kern.flp-image on it
+ and follow instructions. I used the following disk
+ layout:
FilesystemSize (1k-blocks)Size (GB)Mounted on/dev/da0s1a1.016.3031//dev/da0s1b6<swap>/dev/da0s1e2.032.6232/var/dev/da0s1f8.205.3398/usr/dev/da1s1e45.734.36145/compat/linux/oracle/dev/da1s1f2.032.6232/compat/linux/sapmnt/dev/da1s1g2.032.6232/compat/linux/usr/sapI had to configure and initialise the two logical drives
- with the Mylex software beforehand. It is located on the board
- itself and can be started during the boot phase of the
- pc.
- Please note that this disk layout differs
- slightly from the SAP recommendations, as SAP suggests mounting
- the oracle-subdirectories (and some others) separately - I
- decided to just create them as real subdirectories for
- simplicity.
+ with the Mylex software beforehand. It is located on the
+ board itself and can be started during the boot phase of the
+ pc.
+
+ Please note that this disk layout differs slightly from
+ the SAP recommendations, as SAP suggests mounting the
+ oracle-subdirectories (and some others) separately - I
+ decided to just create them as real subdirectories for
+ simplicity.
-
Get the latest stable-sourcesFor FreeBSD 4.3 stable onwards, it is quite easy to get
- the latest stable sources. With the older versions of FreeBSD, I
- had my own script located in /etc/cvsup. Setting up cvsup for
- FreeBSD 4.3 is quite easy. As user root do
- the following:
+ the latest stable sources. With the older versions of
+ FreeBSD, I had my own script located in /etc/cvsup. Setting
+ up cvsup for FreeBSD 4.3 is quite easy. As user
+ root do the following:
-
- &prompt.root; cp /etc/defaults/make.conf /etc/make.conf
- &prompt.root; vi /etc/make.conf
+ &prompt.root; cp /etc/defaults/make.conf /etc/make.conf
+&prompt.root; vi /etc/make.confThe file /etc/make.conf requires the
following entries to be active:SUP_UPDATE= yes
SUP= /usr/local/bin/cvsup
SUPFLAGS= -g -L 2
SUPHOST= cvsup8.FreeBSD.org
SUPFILE= /usr/share/examples/cvsup/stable-supfile
PORTSSUPFILE= /usr/share/examples/cvsup/ports-supfile
DOCSUPFILE= /usr/share/examples/cvsup/doc-supfileChange the SUPHOST-value
- appropriately. The supfiles in
- /usr/share/examples/cvsup should be
- fine. If you don't want to load all the docfiles, leave the
- corresponding DOCSUPFILE-entry inactive.
- Starting cvsup to get the latest stable-sources is then very
- easy:
+ appropriately. The supfiles in
+ /usr/share/examples/cvsup should be
+ fine. If you don't want to load all the docfiles, leave the
+ corresponding DOCSUPFILE-entry
+ inactive. Starting cvsup to get the latest stable-sources
+ is then very easy:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
- &prompt.root; make update
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
+&prompt.root; make updateMake world and a new kernelThe first thing to do is to install the sources.
As user root, do the following:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
- &prompt.root; make world
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
+&prompt.root; make worldIf this goes through, one can then continue creating and
- configuring the new kernel. Usually this is where to customize
- the kernel configuration file. As the computer is named
- troubadix, the natural name for the config file also is
- troubadix:
+ configuring the new kernel. Usually this is where to
+ customize the kernel configuration file. As the computer is
+ named troubadix, the natural name for the config file also
+ is troubadix:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
- &prompt.root; cp GENERIC TROUBADIX
- &prompt.root; vi TROUBADIX
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
+&prompt.root; cp GENERIC TROUBADIX
+&prompt.root; vi TROUBADIX
- At this stage one can define the drivers to use and not to
- use, etc. See the appropriate documentation or have a look at
- file LINT for some additional
- explanations.
+ At this stage one can define the drivers to use and not
+ to use, etc. See the appropriate documentation or have a
+ look at file LINT for some additional
+ explanations.One can then also include the parameters as described
- below Creating the new kernel then requires:
+ below Creating the new kernel then requires:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
- &prompt.root; config TROUBADIX
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/compile/TROUBADIX
- &prompt.root; make depend
- &prompt.root; make
- &prompt.root; make install
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
+&prompt.root; config TROUBADIX
+&prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/compile/TROUBADIX
+&prompt.root; make depend
+&prompt.root; make
+&prompt.root; make install
- After make install finished
- successfully, one should reboot the computer to have the new
- kernel available.
+ After make install finished
+ successfully, one should reboot the computer to have the new
+ kernel available.Installing the Linux environmentI had some trouble downloading the required RPM-files (for
- 4.3 stable, 2nd May 2001), so you might try one of the following
- locations (if all the others fail and the following aren't out of
- date):
+ 4.3 stable, 2nd May 2001), so you might try one of the
+ following locations (if all the others fail and the following
+ aren't out of date):
ftp7.de.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/rpmftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/6.1/en/os/i386/RedHat/RPMSInstalling Linux base-system
First the linux base-system needs to be installed (as root):
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base
- &prompt.root; make package
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base
+&prompt.root; make packageInstalling Linux developmentNext, the linux development is needed:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/devel/linux_devtools
- &prompt.root; make package
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/devel/linux_devtools
+&prompt.root; make packageInstalling necessary RPMsTo start the R3SETUP-Program, pam support is needed. As
- this also requires some other packages, I ended up installing
- several packages. After that, pam still complained about a
- missing package, so I forced the installation and it worked. I
- wonder if the other packages are really needed or if it would
- have been sufficient to install the pam-package.
+ this also requires some other packages, I ended up
+ installing several packages. After that, pam still
+ complained about a missing package, so I forced the
+ installation and it worked. I wonder if the other packages
+ are really needed or if it would have been sufficient to
+ install the pam-package.
Anyway, here is the list of packages I installed:cracklib-2.7-5.i386.rpmcracklib-dicts-2.7-5.i386.rpmpwdb-0.60-1.i386.rpmpam-0.68-7.i386.rpmI installed these packages with the following
- command:
+ command:
-
- &prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm <package_name>
+ &prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm <package_name>except for the pam package, which I forced with
-
- &prompt.root rpm -i --ignoreos --nodeps --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm pam-0.68-7.i386.rpm
+ &prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --nodeps --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm pam-0.68-7.i386.rpm
- For Oracle to run the intelligent agent, I also hat to
- install the following RedHat TCL package (as is steted in the
- FreeBSD Handbook): tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm (otherwise the
- relinking during Oracle install won't work). There are some
- other issues regarding relinking of Oracle, but that is a
- Oracle-Linux issue, not FreeBSD specific as far as I understand
- it.
+ For Oracle to run the
+ intelligent agent, I also had to install the following
+ RedHat TCL package (as is stated in the FreeBSD Handbook):
+ tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm (otherwise the
+ relinking during Oracle install
+ won't work). There are some other issues regarding
+ relinking of Oracle, but that is
+ a Oracle-Linux issue, not FreeBSD specific as far as I
+ understand it.Creating the SAP/R3 environmentCreating the necessary filesystems and mountpointsFor a simple installation, it is sufficient to create the
- following filesystems:
+ following filesystems:
mountpointsize in GB/compat/linux/oracle45 GB/compat/linux/sapmnt2 GB/compat/linux/usr/sap2 GBI also created some links, so FreeBSD will also find the
- correct path:
+ correct path:
-
- &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/oracle /oracle
- &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/sapmnt /sapmnt
- &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/usr/sap /usr/sap
+ &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/oracle /oracle
+&prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/sapmnt /sapmnt
+&prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/usr/sap /usr/sapCreating users and directoriesSAP R/3 needs two users and three groups. The usernames
- depend on the SAP system id (SID) which consists of three
- letters. Some of these SIDs are reserved by SAP (for example
- SAP and NIX. For a
- complete list please see the SAP documentation). For the IDES
- installation I used IDS. We have therefore
- the following groups (group ids might differ, these are just the
- values I used with my installation):
+ depend on the SAP system id (SID) which consists of three
+ letters. Some of these SIDs are reserved by SAP (for example
+ SAP and NIX. For
+ a complete list please see the SAP documentation). For the
+ IDES installation I used IDS. We have
+ therefore the following groups (group ids might differ,
+ these are just the values I used with my installation):group idgroup namedescription100dbaData Base Administrator101sapsysSAP System102operData Base OperatorFor a default Oracle-Installation, only group
- dba is used. As
- oper-group, one also uses group
- dba (see Oracle- and SAP-documentation for further
- information).
+ dba is used. As
+ oper-group, one also uses group
+ dba (see Oracle- and
+ SAP-documentation for further information).
We also need the following users:user idusernamegeneric namegroupadditional groupsdescription1000idsadm<sid>admsapsysoperSAP Administrator1002oraidsora<sid>dbaoperDB Administrator
- Adding the users with adduser requires the following
- (please note shell and home directory) entries for
- SAP-Administrator:
+ Adding the users with adduser
+ requires the following (please note shell and home
+ directory) entries for SAP-Administrator:Name: idsadm <sid>adm
Password: ******
Fullname: SAP IDES Administrator
Uid: 1000
Gid: 101 (sapsys)
Class:
Groups: sapsys dba
HOME: /home/idsadm /home/<sid>adm
Shell: /bin/shand for Database-Administrator:Name: oraids ora<sid>
Password: ******
Fullname: Oracle IDES Administrator
Uid: 1002
Gid: 100 (dba)
Class:
Groups: dba
HOME: /oracle/IDS /oracle/<sid>
Shell: /bin/sh
- This should also include group oper
- in case you are using both groups dba and
- oper.
+ This should also include group
+ oper in case you are using both
+ groups dba and
+ oper.Creating directoriesThese directories are usually created as separate
- filesystems. This depends entirely on your requirements. I
- choose to create them as simple directories, as they are all
- located on the same RAID 5 anyway:
+ filesystems. This depends entirely on your requirements. I
+ choose to create them as simple directories, as they are all
+ located on the same RAID 5 anyway:
First we'll set owners and right of some directories (as
- user root):
+ user root):
-
- &prompt.root; chmod 775 /oracle
- &prompt.root; chmod 777 /sapmnt
- &prompt.root; chown root:dba /oracle
- &prompt.root; chown idsadm:sapsys /compat/linux/usr/sap
- &prompt.root; chmow 775 /compat/linux/usr/sap
+ &prompt.root; chmod 775 /oracle
+&prompt.root; chmod 777 /sapmnt
+&prompt.root; chown root:dba /oracle
+&prompt.root; chown idsadm:sapsys /compat/linux/usr/sap
+&prompt.root; chmow 775 /compat/linux/usr/sapSecond we'll create directories as user ora<sid>. These
will all be subdirectories of /oracle/IDS:
-
- &prompt.root; su - oraids
- &prompt.root; mkdir mirrlogA mirrlogB origlogA origlogB
- &prompt.root; mkdir sapdata1 sapdata2 sapdata3 sapdata4 sapdata5 sapdata6
- &prompt.root; mkdir saparch sapreorg
- &prompt.root; exit
+ &prompt.root; su - oraids
+&prompt.root; mkdir mirrlogA mirrlogB origlogA origlogB
+&prompt.root; mkdir sapdata1 sapdata2 sapdata3 sapdata4 sapdata5 sapdata6
+&prompt.root; mkdir saparch sapreorg
+&prompt.root; exitIn the third step we create directories as user idsadm
(<sid>adm):
-
- &prompt.root; su - idsadm
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/sap
- &prompt.root; mkdir IDS
- &prompt.root; mkdir trans
- &prompt.root; exit
+ &prompt.root; su - idsadm
+&prompt.root; cd /usr/sap
+&prompt.root; mkdir IDS
+&prompt.root; mkdir trans
+&prompt.root; exitEntries in /etc/servicesSAP R/3 requires some entries in file
- /etc/services , which will not be set
- correctly during installation under FreeBSD. Please add the
- following entries (you need at least those entries corresponding
- to the instance number - in this case, 00.
- It'll do no harm adding all entries from 00
- to 99 for dp,
- gw, sp and
- ms);
+ /etc/services , which will not be set
+ correctly during installation under FreeBSD. Please add the
+ following entries (you need at least those entries
+ corresponding to the instance number - in this case,
+ 00. It'll do no harm adding all
+ entries from 00 to
+ 99 for dp,
+ gw, sp and
+ ms);
sapdp00 3200/tcp # SAP Dispatcher. 3200 + Instance-Number
sapgw00 3300/tcp # SAP Gateway. 3300 + Instance-Number
sapsp00 3400/tcp # 3400 + Instance-Number
sapms00 3500/tcp # 3500 + Instance-Number
sapmsIDS 3600/tcp # SAP Message Server. 3600 + Instance-NumberNecessary locales
- SAP requires at least two locales that aren't part of the
- default RedHat installation. SAP offers the required RPMs as
- download from their ftp-server (which is only accessible if you
- are a customer with OSS-access). See note 0171356 for a list of
- RPMs you need.
+ SAP requires at least two locales that aren't part of
+ the default RedHat installation. SAP offers the required
+ RPMs as download from their ftp-server (which is only
+ accessible if you are a customer with OSS-access). See note
+ 0171356 for a list of RPMs you need.
- It is also possible to just create appropriate links (for
- example from de_DE and
- en_US ), but I wouldn't recommend this for
- a production system (so far it worked with the IDES system
- without any problems, though). The following locales are
- needed:
+ It is also possible to just create appropriate links
+ (for example from de_DE and
+ en_US ), but I wouldn't recommend this
+ for a production system (so far it worked with the IDES
+ system without any problems, though). The following locales
+ are needed:de_DE.ISO-8859-1
en_US.ISO-8859-1If they are not present, there will be some problems
- during the installation. If these are then subsequently ignored
- (eg by setting the status of the offending steps to OK in file
- CENTRDB.R3S), it will be impossible to log onto the SAP-system
- without some additional effort.
-
+ during the installation. If these are then subsequently
+ ignored (eg by setting the status of the offending steps to
+ OK in file CENTRDB.R3S), it will be impossible to log onto
+ the SAP-system without some additional effort.Kernel TuningSAP R/3 Systems need a lot of resources. I therefore
added the following parameters to my kernel config-file:
# Set these for memory pigs (SAP and Oracle):
options MAXDSIZ="(1024*1024*1024)"
options DFLDSIZ="(1024*1024*1024)" # System V options needed.
options SYSVSHM #SYSV-style shared memory
options SHMMAXPGS=262144 #max amount of shared mem. pages
options SHMMNI=256 #max number of shared memory ident if.
options SHMSEG=100 #max shared mem.segs per process
options SYSVMSG #SYSV-style message queues
options MSGSEG=32767 #max num. of mes.segments in system
options MSGSSZ=32 #size of msg-seg. MUST be power of 2
options MSGMNB=65535 #max char. per message queue
options MSGTQL=2046 #max amount of msgs in system
options SYSVSEM #SYSV-style semaphores
options SEMMNU=256 #number of semaphore UNDO structures
options SEMMNS=1024 #number of semaphores in system
options SEMMNI=520 #number of semaphore indentifiers
options SEMUME=100 #number of UNDO keys
-
- The minimum values are specified in the documentation that
+ The minimum values are specified in the documentation that
comes from SAP. As there is no description for Linux, see the
HP-UX-section (32-bit) for further information.
Installing SAP R/3Preparing SAP CD-ROMsThere are lots of CD-ROMs to mount and unmount during
- installation. Assuming you have enough CD-ROM-drives, you can
- just mount them all. I decided to copy the CD-ROM contents to
- corresponding directories:
+ installation. Assuming you have enough CD-ROM-drives, you
+ can just mount them all. I decided to copy the CD-ROM
+ contents to corresponding directories:
/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/<cd-name>where <cd-name> was one of KERNEL, RDBMS, EXPORT1,
EXPORT2, EXPORT3, EXPORT4, EXPORT5 and EXPORT6. All the
filenames should be in capital letters, otherwise use the -g
option for mounting. So use the following commands:
-
- &prompt.root; mount_cd9660 -g /dev/cd0a /mnt
- &prompt.root; cp -R /mnt/* /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/<cd-name>
- &prompt.root; umount /mnt
+ &prompt.root; mount_cd9660 -g /dev/cd0a /mnt
+&prompt.root; cp -R /mnt/* /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/<cd-name>
+&prompt.root; umount /mntRunning the install-scriptFirst we need to prepare an install-directory:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg
- &prompt.root; mkdir install
- &prompt.root; cd install
+ &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg
+&prompt.root; mkdir install
+&prompt.root; cd installThen the install-script is started, which will copy nearly
- all the relevant files into the install-directory:
+ all the relevant files into the install-directory:
/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/KERNEL/UNIX/INSTTOOL.SHAs this is an IDES-Installation with a fully customized
- SAP R/3 Demo-System, we have six instead of just three
- EXPORT-CDs. At this point the installation template CENTRDB.R3S
- is for installing a standard central instance (R/3 and
- Database), not an IDES central instance, so copy the
- corresponding CENTRDB.R3S from the EXPORT1 directory, otherwise
- R3SETUP will only ask for three EXPORT-CDs.
+ SAP R/3 Demo-System, we have six instead of just three
+ EXPORT-CDs. At this point the installation template
+ CENTRDB.R3S is for installing a standard central instance
+ (R/3 and Database), not an IDES central instance, so copy
+ the corresponding CENTRDB.R3S from the EXPORT1 directory,
+ otherwise R3SETUP will only ask for three EXPORT-CDs.
Start R3SETUPMake sure LD_LIBRARY_PATH is set correctly:
-
- &prompt.root; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/oracle/IDS/lib:/sapmnt/IDS/exe:/oracle/805_32/lib
+ &prompt.root; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/oracle/IDS/lib:/sapmnt/IDS/exe:/oracle/805_32/libStart R3SETUP as user root from installation
directory:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/install
- &prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3S
+ &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/install
+&prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3SThe script then asks some questions (defaults in brackets,
followed by actual input):QuestionDefaultInputEnter SAP System ID[C11]IDS<ret>Enter SAP Instance Number
[00]<ret>Enter SAPMOUNT Directory[/sapmnt]<ret>Enter name of SAP central host[troubadix.domain.de]<ret>Enter name of SAP db host[troubadix]<ret>Select character set[1] (WE8DEC)<ret>Enter Oracle server version (1) Oracle 8.0.5, (2) Oracle 8.0.6, (3) Oracle 8.1.5, (4) Oracle 8.1.61<ret>Extract Oracle Client archive[1] (Yes, extract)<ret>Enter path to KERNEL CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/KERNELEnter path to RDBMS CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/RDBMSEnter path to EXPORT1 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT1Directory to copy EXPORT1 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD4_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT2 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT2Directory to copy EXPORT2 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD5_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT3 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT3Directory to copy EXPORT3 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD6_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT4 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT4Directory to copy EXPORT4 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD7_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT5 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT5Directory to copy EXPORT5 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD8_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT6 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT6Directory to copy EXPORT6 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD9_DIR]<ret>Enter amount of RAM for SAP + DB850<ret> (in Megabytes)Service Entry Message Server[3600]<ret>Enter Group-ID of sapsys[101]<ret>Enter Group-ID of oper[102]<ret>Enter Group-ID of dba[100]<ret>Enter User-ID of <sid>adm[1000]<ret>Enter User-ID of ora<sid>[1002]<ret>Number of parallel procs[2]<ret>If I had not copied the CDs to the different locations,
- then the SAP-Installer can't find the CD needed (identified by
- the LABEL.ASC-File on CD) and would then ask you to insert /
- mount the CD and confirm or enter the mountpath.
+ then the SAP-Installer can't find the CD needed (identified
+ by the LABEL.ASC-File on CD) and would
+ then ask you to insert / mount the CD and confirm or enter
+ the mountpath.
- The CENTRDB.R3S might not be error-free. In my case, it
- requested EXPORT4 again (but indicated the correct key (6_LOCATI
- ON, then 7_LOCATION etc.), so one can just continue with
- entering the correct values. Don't get irritated.
+ The CENTRDB.R3S might not be
+ error-free. In my case, it requested EXPORT4 again (but
+ indicated the correct key (6_LOCATI ON, then 7_LOCATION
+ etc.), so one can just continue with entering the correct
+ values. Don't get irritated.Apart from some problems mentioned below, everything
- should go straight throught up to the point where the Oracle
- database software needs to be installed.
+ should go straight throught up to the point where the Oracle
+ database software needs to be installed.
Installing Oracle 8.0.5Please see the corresponding SAP-Notes and Oracle Readmes
- regarding Linux and Oracle DB for possible problems. Most if not
- all problems stem from incompatible libraries
+ regarding Linux and Oracle DB for possible problems. Most if
+ not all problems stem from incompatible libraries
- For more information on installing Oracle, refer to
- the Installing Oracle chapter
+ For more information on installing Oracle, refer to the Installing Oracle
+ chapter.Installing the Oracle 8.0.5 with orainst
- If Oracle 8.0.5 is to be used, some additional libraries
- are needed for successfully relinking, as Oracle 8.0.5 was
- linked with an old glibc (RedHat 6.0), but RedHat 6.1 already
- uses a new glibc. So you have to install the following
- additional packages to ensure that linking will work:
+ If Oracle 8.0.5 is to be
+ used, some additional libraries are needed for successfully
+ relinking, as Oracle 8.0.5 was linked with an old glibc
+ (RedHat 6.0), but RedHat 6.1 already uses a new glibc. So
+ you have to install the following additional packages to
+ ensure that linking will work:compat-libs-5.2-2.i386.rpmcompat-glibc-5.2-2.0.7.2.i386.rpmcompat-egcs-5.2-1.0.3a.1.i386.rpmcompat-egcs-c++-5.2-1.0.3a.1.i386.rpmcompat-binutils-5.2-2.9.1.0.23.1.i386.rpmSee the corresponding SAP-Notes or Oracle Readmes for
- further information. If this is no option (at the time of
- installation I didn't have enough time to check this), one could
- use the original binaries, or use the relinked binaries from an
- original RedHat System.
+ further information. If this is no option (at the time of
+ installation I didn't have enough time to check this), one
+ could use the original binaries, or use the relinked
+ binaries from an original RedHat System.
For compiling the intelligent agent, the RedHat TCL
- package must be installed. If you can't get
- tcl-8.0.3-20.i386.rpm, a newer one like
- tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm for RedHat 6.1 should
- also do.
+ package must be installed. If you can't get
+ tcl-8.0.3-20.i386.rpm, a newer one like
+ tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm for RedHat 6.1
+ should also do.
Apart from relinking, the installation is
- straightforward:
+ straightforward:
-
- &prompt.root; su - oraids
- &prompt.root; export TERM=xterm
- &prompt.root; export ORACLE_TERM=xterm
- &prompt.root; export ORACLE_HOME=/oracle/IDS
- &prompt.root; cd /ORACLE_HOME/orainst_sap
- &prompt.root; ./orainst
+ &prompt.root; su - oraids
+&prompt.root; export TERM=xterm
+&prompt.root; export ORACLE_TERM=xterm
+&prompt.root; export ORACLE_HOME=/oracle/IDS
+&prompt.root; cd /ORACLE_HOME/orainst_sap
+&prompt.root; ./orainstConfirm all Screens with Enter until the software is
- installed, except that one has to deselect the Oracle
- On-Line Text Viewer , as this is not currently
- available for Linux. Oracle then wants to relink with
- i386-glibc20-linux-gcc instead of the
- available gcc, egcs or
- i386-redhat-linux-gcc .
-
- Due to time constrains I decided to use the binaries from
- an Oracle 8.0.5 PreProduction release, after the first attempt
- at getting the version from the RDBMS-CD working, failed, and
- finding / accessing the correct RPMs was a nightmare at that
- time.
+ installed, except that one has to deselect the
+ Oracle On-Line Text Viewer , as this is
+ not currently available for Linux. Oracle then wants to
+ relink with i386-glibc20-linux-gcc
+ instead of the available gcc,
+ egcs or i386-redhat-linux-gcc
+ .
+
+ Due to time constrains I decided to use the binaries
+ from an Oracle 8.0.5 PreProduction release, after the first
+ attempt at getting the version from the RDBMS-CD working,
+ failed, and finding / accessing the correct RPMs was a
+ nightmare at that time.Installing the Oracle 8.0.5 Pre-Production release for
- Linux (Kernel 2.0.33)
+ Linux (Kernel 2.0.33)
This installation is quite easy. Mount the CD, start the
- installer. It will then ask for the location of the Oracle home
- directory, and copy all binaries there. I did not delete the
- remains of my previous RDBMS-installation tries, though.
+ installer. It will then ask for the location of the Oracle
+ home directory, and copy all binaries there. I did not
+ delete the remains of my previous RDBMS-installation tries,
+ though.
Afterwards, Oracle Database could be started with no
- problems.
+ problems.
Continue with SAP R/3 installationFirst check the environment settings of users idsamd
- (<sid>adm) and oraids (ora<sid>). They should now both have the
- files .profile , .login
- and .cshrc which are all using
- hostname. In case the system's hostname is
- the fully qualified name, you need to change
- hostname to hostname -s
- within all three files.
+ (<sid>adm) and oraids (ora<sid>). They should now
+ both have the files .profile ,
+ .login and .cshrc
+ which are all using hostname. In case the
+ system's hostname is the fully qualified name, you need to
+ change hostname to hostname
+ -s within all three files.
Database loadAfterwards, R3SETUP can either be restarted or continued
- (depending on whether exit was chosen or not). R3SETUP then
- creates the tablespaces and loads the data from EXPORT1 to
- EXPORT6 (remember, it is an IDES system, otherwise it would only
- be EXPORT1 to EXPORT3) with R3load into the database.
+ (depending on whether exit was chosen or not). R3SETUP then
+ creates the tablespaces and loads the data from EXPORT1 to
+ EXPORT6 (remember, it is an IDES system, otherwise it would
+ only be EXPORT1 to EXPORT3) with R3load into the
+ database.
When the database load is finished (might take a few
- hours), some passwords are requested. For test installations,
- one can use the well known default passwords (use different ones
- if security is an issue!):
+ hours), some passwords are requested. For test
+ installations, one can use the well known default passwords
+ (use different ones if security is an issue!):
QuestionInputEnter Password for sapr3sap<ret>Confirum Password for sapr3sap<ret>Enter Password for syschange_on_install<ret>Confirm Password for syschange_on_install<ret>Enter Password for systemmanager<ret>Confirm Password for systemmanager<ret>At this point I had a few problems with dipgntab.ListenerStart the Oracle-Listener as user oraids (ora<sid>) as
follows:umask 0; lsnrctl startOtherwise you might get ORA-12546 as the sockets won't
have the correct permissions. See SAP note 072984.Post-installation stepsRequest SAP R/3 license keyThis is needed, as the temporary license is only valid for
four weeks. Don't forget to enter the correct Operating System:
(X) Other: FreeBSD 4.3 Stable. First get
- the hardware key. Logon as user idsadm and
- call saplicense:
+ the hardware key. Log on as user idsadm and
+ call saplicense:
&prompt.root; /sapmnt/IDS/exe/saplicense -get
- Calling saplicense without options
+ Calling saplicense without options
gives a list of options. Upon receiving the license key, it can
be installed using&prompt.root; /sapmnt/IDS/exe/saplicense -installYou are then required to enter the following
values:SAP SYSTEM ID = <SID, 3 chars>
CUSTOMER KEY = <hardware key, 11 chars>
INSTALLATION NO = <installation, 10 digits>
EXPIRATION DATE = <yyyymmdd, usually "99991231">
LICENSE KEY = <license key, 24 chars>Creating UsersCreate a user within client 000 (for some tasks required
to be done within client 000, but with a user different from
- users sap* and
- ddic). As a username, I usually choose
- wartung (or service in
- English). Profiles required are sap_new
- and sap_all. For additional safety the
- passwords of default users within all clients should be changed
- (this includes users sap* and
- ddic).
+ users sap* and
+ ddic). As a username, I usually choose
+ wartung (or
+ service in English). Profiles
+ required are sap_new and
+ sap_all. For additional safety the
+ passwords of default users within all clients should be
+ changed (this includes users sap* and
+ ddic).
Configure Transport System, Profile, Operation Modes, etc.Within client 000, user different from ddic and sap*, do
- at least the following:
+ at least the following:
TaskTransactionConfigure Transport System, eg as Stand-Alone
Transport Domain EntitySTMSCreate / Edit Profile for SystemRZ10Maintain Operation Modes and InstancesRZ04These and all the other post-installation steps are
- thoroughly described in SAP installation guides.
+ thoroughly described in SAP installation guides.
Edit init<sid>.sap (initIDS.sap)
- The file /oracle/IDS/dbs/initIDS.sap contains the SAP
- backup profile. Here the size of the tape to be used, type of
- compression and so on need to be defined. To get this running
- with sapdba /
- brbackup, I changed the following
- values:
+ The file
+ /oracle/IDS/dbs/initIDS.sap contains
+ the SAP backup profile. Here the size of the tape to be
+ used, type of compression and so on need to be defined. To
+ get this running with sapdba /
+ brbackup, I changed the following
+ values:compress = hardware
archive_function = copy_delete_save
cpio_flags = "-ov --format=newc --block-size=128 --quiet"
cpio_in_flags = "-iuv --block-size=128 --quiet"
tape_size = 38000M
tape_address = /dev/nsa0
tape_address_rew = /dev/sa0Explanations:compress The tape I use is a HP DLT1
which does hardware compression.archive_function This defines the
default behaviour for saving Oracle archive logs: New logfiles
are saved to tape, already saved logfiles are saved again and
are then deleted. This prevents lots of trouble if one needs to
recover the database, and one of the archive-tapes has gone
bad.cpio_flags Default is to use -B which
sets blocksize to 5120 Bytes. For DLT-Tapes, HP recommends at
least 32K blocksize, so I used --block-size=128 for
64K. --format=newc is needed I have inode numbers greater than
65535. The last option --quiet is needed as otherwise brbackup
complains as soon as cpio outputs the numbers of blocks
saved.cpio_in_flags Flags needed for
loading data back from tape. Format is reckognized
automagically.tape_size This usually gives the raw
storage capability of the tape. For security reason (we use
hardware compression), thevalue is slightly lower than the
actual value.tape_address The non-rewindable
device to be used with cpio.tape_address_rew The rewindable device to be
used with cpio.Problems during installationOSUSERSIDADM_IND_ORA during R3SETUP
- If R3SETUP complains at this stage, edit file CENTRDB.R3S.
- Locate [OSUSERSIDADM_IND_ORA] and edit the following
- values:
+ If R3SETUP complains at this stage, edit file
+ CENTRDB.R3S. Locate [OSUSERSIDADM_IND_ORA] and edit the
+ following values:HOME=/home/idsadm (was empty)
STATUS=OK (had status ERROR)
Then you can restart R3SETUP with:&prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3SOSUSERDBSID_IND_ORA during R3SETUPPossibly R3SETUP also complains at this stage. Just edit
- CENTRDB.R3S. Locate [OSUSERDBSID_IND_ORA] and edit the
- following value in that section:
+ CENTRDB.R3S. Locate [OSUSERDBSID_IND_ORA] and edit the
+ following value in that section:
STATUS=OKThen just restart R3SETUP again:&prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3Soraview.vrf FILE NOT FOUND during Oracle installationYou haven't deselected Oracle On-Line Text Viewer
before starting the installation. This is marked for installation even
though this option is currently not available for Linux. Deselect this
product inside the Oracle installation menu and restart installation.TEXTENV_INVALID during R3SETUP, RFC or SAPGUI startIf this error is encountered, the correct locale is
- missing. SAP note 0171356 lists the necessary RPMs that need be
- installed (eg saplocales-1.0-3,
- saposcheck-1.0-1 for RedHat 6.1). In case
- you ignored all the related errors and set the corresponding
- status from ERROR to OK (in CENTRDB.R3S) every time R3SETUP
- complained and just restarted R3SETUP, the SAP-System will not
- be properly configured and you will then not be able to connect
- to the system with a sapgui, even though the system can be
- started. Trying to connect with the old Linux sapgui gave the
- following messages:
+ missing. SAP note 0171356 lists the necessary RPMs that
+ need be installed (eg saplocales-1.0-3,
+ saposcheck-1.0-1 for RedHat 6.1). In
+ case you ignored all the related errors and set the
+ corresponding status from ERROR to OK (in CENTRDB.R3S) every
+ time R3SETUP complained and just restarted R3SETUP, the
+ SAP-System will not be properly configured and you will then
+ not be able to connect to the system with a sapgui, even
+ though the system can be started. Trying to connect with the
+ old Linux sapgui gave the following messages:
Sat May 5 14:23:14 2001
*** ERROR => no valid userarea given [trgmsgo. 0401]
Sat May 5 14:23:22 2001
*** ERROR => ERROR NR 24 occured [trgmsgi. 0410]
*** ERROR => Error when generating text environment. [trgmsgi. 0435]
*** ERROR => function failed [trgmsgi. 0447]
*** ERROR => no socket operation allowed [trxio.c 3363]
-Speicherzugriffsfehler
-
+Speicherzugriffsfehler
- This behaviour is due to SAP R/3 being unable to correctly
- assign a locale and also not being properly configured itself
- (missing entries in some database tables). To be able to connect
- to SAP, add the following entries to file DEFAULT.PFL (see note
- 0043288):
+ This behaviour is due to SAP R/3 being unable to
+ correctly assign a locale and also not being properly
+ configured itself (missing entries in some database
+ tables). To be able to connect to SAP, add the following
+ entries to file DEFAULT.PFL (see note 0043288):abap/set_etct_env_at_new_mode =0
install/collate/active =0
rscp/TCP0B =TCP0B
- Restart the SAP system. Now one can connect to the system,
- even though country-specific language settings might not work as
- expected. After correcting country-settings (and providing the
- correct locales), these entries can be removed from DEFAULT.PFL
- and the SAP system can be restarted.
+ Restart the SAP system. Now one can connect to the
+ system, even though country-specific language settings might
+ not work as expected. After correcting country-settings
+ (and providing the correct locales), these entries can be
+ removed from DEFAULT.PFL and the SAP system can be
+ restarted.ORA-12546. Start Listener with correct permissionsStart the Oracle Listener as user
- oraids with the following commands:
+ oraids with the following commands:
&prompt.root; umask 0; lsnrctl startOtherwise one might get ORA-12546 as the sockets won't
- have the correct permissions. See SAP note 0072984.
+ have the correct permissions. See SAP note 0072984.
[DIPGNTAB_IND_IND] during R3SETUPIn general, see SAP note 0130581 (R3SETUP step DIPGNTAB
- terminates). During this specific installation, for some
- reasons the installation process was not using the proper SAP
- system name "IDS", but the empty string "" instead. This lead to
- some minor problems with accessing directories, as the paths are
- generated dynamically using <sid> (in this case IDS). So
- instead of accessing:
+ terminates). During this specific installation, for some
+ reasons the installation process was not using the proper
+ SAP system name "IDS", but the empty string "" instead. This
+ lead to some minor problems with accessing directories, as
+ the paths are generated dynamically using <sid> (in
+ this case IDS). So instead of accessing:
/usr/sap/IDS/SYS/...
-/usr/sap/IDS/DVMGS00
-
+/usr/sap/IDS/DVMGS00
the following path were used:/usr/sap//SYS/...
-/usr/sap/D00i
-
+/usr/sap/D00i
To continue with the installation, I created a link and an
- additional directory:
-
-
- &prompt.root; pwd
- /compat/linux/usr/sap
- &prompt.root; ls -l
- total 4
- drwxr-xr-x 3 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:20 D00
- drwxr-x--x 5 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:35 IDS
- lrwxr-xr-x 1 root sapsys 7 May 5 11:35 SYS -> IDS/SYS
- drwxrwxr-x 2 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 13:00 tmp
- drwxrwxr-x 11 idsadm sapsys 512 May 4 14:20 trans
+ additional directory:
+
+ &prompt.root; pwd
+/compat/linux/usr/sap
+&prompt.root; ls -l
+total 4
+drwxr-xr-x 3 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:20 D00
+drwxr-x--x 5 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:35 IDS
+lrwxr-xr-x 1 root sapsys 7 May 5 11:35 SYS -> IDS/SYS
+drwxrwxr-x 2 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 13:00 tmp
+drwxrwxr-x 11 idsadm sapsys 512 May 4 14:20 trans I also found SAP notes (0029227 and 0008401) describing
this behaviour.[RFCRSWBOINI_IND_IND] during R3SETUPSet STATUS of the offending step from ERROR to OK (file
- CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After installation, you have
- to execute the report RSWBOINS from transaction SE38. See SAP
- note 0162266 for additional information about phase RFCRSWBOINI
- and RFCRADDBDIF.
+ CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After
+ installation, you have to execute the report RSWBOINS from
+ transaction SE38. See SAP note 0162266 for additional
+ information about phase RFCRSWBOINI and RFCRADDBDIF.[RFCRADDBDIF_IND_IND] during R3SETUPSet STATUS of the offending step from ERROR to OK (file
- CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After installation, you have
- to execute the report RADDBDIF from transaction SE38. See SAP
- note 0162266 for further information.
+ CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After
+ installation, you have to execute the report RADDBDIF from
+ transaction SE38. See SAP note 0162266 for further
+ information.
Advanced TopicsIf you are curious as to how the Linux binary compatibility
works, this is the section you want to read. Most of what follows
is based heavily on an email written to &a.chat; by Terry Lambert
tlambert@primenet.com (Message ID:
<199906020108.SAA07001@usr09.primenet.com>).How Does It Work?FreeBSD has an abstraction called an execution class
loader. This is a wedge into the &man.execve.2; system
call.What happens is that FreeBSD has a list of loaders, instead of
a single loader with a fallback to the #!
loader for running any shell interpreters or shell scripts.Historically, the only loader on the UNIX platform examined
the magic number (generally the first 4 or 8 bytes of the file) to
see if it was a binary known to the system, and if so, invoked the
binary loader.If it was not the binary type for the system, the
&man.execve.2; call returned a failure, and the shell attempted to
start executing it as shell commands.The assumption was a default of whatever the current
shell is.Later, a hack was made for &man.sh.1; to examine the first two
characters, and if they were :\n, then it
invoked the &man.csh.1; shell instead (we believe SCO first made
this hack).What FreeBSD does now is go through a list of loaders, with a
generic #! loader that knows about interpreters
as the characters which follow to the next whitespace next to
last, followed by a fallback to
/bin/sh.For the Linux ABI support, FreeBSD sees the magic number as an
ELF binary (it makes no distinction between FreeBSD, Solaris,
Linux, or any other OS which has an ELF image type, at this
point).The ELF loader looks for a specialized
brand, which is a comment section in the ELF
image, and which is not present on SVR4/Solaris ELF
binaries.For Linux binaries to function, they must be
branded as type Linux;
from &man.brandelf.1;:&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux fileWhen this is done, the ELF loader will see the
Linux brand on the file.When the ELF loader sees the Linux brand,
the loader replaces a pointer in the proc
structure. All system calls are indexed through this pointer (in
a traditional UNIX system, this would be the
sysent[] structure array, containing the system
calls). In addition, the process flagged for special handling of
the trap vector for the signal trampoline code, and sever other
(minor) fix-ups that are handled by the Linux kernel
module.The Linux system call vector contains, among other things, a
list of sysent[] entries whose addresses reside
in the kernel module.When a system call is called by the Linux binary, the trap
code dereferences the system call function pointer off the
proc structure, and gets the Linux, not the
FreeBSD, system call entry points.In addition, the Linux mode dynamically
reroots lookups; this is, in effect, what the
union option to FS mounts
(not the unionfs!) does. First, an attempt
is made to lookup the file in the
/compat/linux/original-path
directory, then only if that fails, the
lookup is done in the
/original-path
directory. This makes sure that binaries that require other
binaries can run (e.g., the Linux toolchain can all run under
Linux ABI support). It also means that the Linux binaries can
load and exec FreeBSD binaries, if there are no corresponding
Linux binaries present, and that you could place a &man.uname.1;
command in the /compat/linux directory tree
to ensure that the Linux binaries could not tell they were not
running on Linux.In effect, there is a Linux kernel in the FreeBSD kernel; the
various underlying functions that implement all of the services
provided by the kernel are identical to both the FreeBSD system
call table entries, and the Linux system call table entries: file
system operations, virtual memory operations, signal delivery,
System V IPC, etc… The only difference is that FreeBSD
binaries get the FreeBSD glue functions, and
Linux binaries get the Linux glue functions
(most older OS's only had their own glue
functions: addresses of functions in a static global
sysent[] structure array, instead of addresses
of functions dereferenced off a dynamically initialized pointer in
the proc structure of the process making the
call).Which one is the native FreeBSD ABI? It does not matter.
Basically the only difference is that (currently; this could
easily be changed in a future release, and probably will be after
this) the FreeBSD glue functions are
statically linked into the kernel, and the Linux glue functions
can be statically linked, or they can be accessed via a kernel
module.Yeah, but is this really emulation? No. It is an ABI
implementation, not an emulation. There is no emulator (or
simulator, to cut off the next question) involved.So why is it sometimes called Linux emulation?
To make it hard to sell FreeBSD! 8-). Really, it
is because the historical implementation was done at a time when
there was really no word other than that to describe what was
going on; saying that FreeBSD ran Linux binaries was not true, if
you did not compile the code in or load a module, and there needed
to be a word to describe what was being loaded—hence
the Linux emulator.
diff --git a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml
index 8310e0e715..e4cccf2965 100644
--- a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml
+++ b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml
@@ -1,2196 +1,2191 @@
Linux Binary CompatibilityRestructured and parts updated by &a.jim;, 22 March
2000. Originally contributed by &a.handy; and
&a.rich;SynopsisThe following chapter will cover FreeBSD's Linux binary
compatibility features, how to install it, and how it works.At this point, you may be asking yourself why exactly, does
FreeBSD need to be able to run Linux binaries? The answer to that
question is quite simple. Many companies and developers develop
only for Linux, since it is the latest hot thing in
the computing world. That leaves the rest of us FreeBSD users
bugging these same companies and developers to put out native
FreeBSD versions of their applications. The problem is, that most
of these companies do not really realize how many people would use
their product if there were FreeBSD versions too, and most continue
to only develop for Linux. So what is a FreeBSD user to do? This
is where the Linux binary compatibility of FreeBSD comes into
play.In a nutshell, the compatibility allows FreeBSD users to run
about 90% of all Linux applications without modification. This
includes applications such as Star Office, the Linux version of
Netscape, Adobe Acrobat, RealPlayer 5 and 7, VMWare, Oracle,
WordPerfect, Doom, Quake, and more. It is also reported that in
some situations, Linux binaries perform better on FreeBSD than they
do under Linux.There are, however, some Linux-specific operating system
features that are not supported under FreeBSD. Linux binaries will
not work on FreeBSD if they overly use the Linux
/proc filesystem (which is different from
FreeBSD's /proc filesystem), or i386-specific
calls, such as enabling virtual 8086 mode.For information on installing the Linux binary compatibility
mode, see the next section.InstallationWith the advent of 3.0-RELEASE, it is no longer necessary to
specify options LINUX or
options COMPAT_LINUX in your kernel
configuration.The Linux binary compatibility is now done via a KLD object
(Kernel LoaDable object), so it can be installed
on-the-fly without having to reboot. You will,
however, need to have the following in
/etc/rc.conf:linux_enable=YESThis, in turn, triggers the following action in
/etc/rc.i386:# Start the Linux binary compatibility if requested.
#
case ${linux_enable} in
[Yy][Ee][Ss])
echo -n ' linux'; linux > /dev/null 2>&1
;;
esacIf you wish to verify that the KLD is loaded,
kldstat will do that:&prompt.user; kldstat
Id Refs Address Size Name
1 2 0xc0100000 16bdb8 kernel
7 1 0xc24db000 d000 linux.koIf for some reason you do not want to or cannot load the KLD,
then you may statically link the binary compatibility in the kernel
by adding options LINUX to your kernel
configuration file. Then install your new kernel as described in
the kernel configuration section
of this handbook.Installing Linux Runtime LibrariesThis can be done one of two ways, either by using the linux_base port, or by installing them
manually.Installing using the linux_base portThis is by far the easiest method to use when installing the
runtime libraries. It is just like installing any other port
from the ports collection.
Simply do the following:&prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base
&prompt.root; make install distcleanYou should now have working Linux binary compatibility.
Some programs may complain about incorrect minor versions of the
system libraries. In general, however, this does not seem to be
a problem.Installing libraries manuallyIf you do not have the ports collection
installed, you can install the libraries by hand instead. You
will need the Linux shared libraries that the program depends on
and the runtime linker. Also, you will need to create a
shadow root directory,
/compat/linux, for Linux libraries on your
FreeBSD system. Any shared libraries opened by Linux programs
run under FreeBSD will look in this tree first. So, if a Linux
program loads, for example, /lib/libc.so,
FreeBSD will first try to open
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so, and if that does
not exist, it will then try /lib/libc.so.
Shared libraries should be installed in the shadow tree
/compat/linux/lib rather than the paths
that the Linux ld.so reports.Generally, you will need to look for the shared libraries
that Linux binaries depend on only the first few times that you
install a Linux program on your FreeBSD system. After a while,
you will have a sufficient set of Linux shared libraries on your
system to be able to run newly imported Linux binaries without
any extra work.How to install additional shared librariesWhat if you install the linux_base port
and your application still complains about missing shared
libraries? How do you know which shared libraries Linux
binaries need, and where to get them? Basically, there are 2
possibilities (when following these instructions you will need
to be root on your FreeBSD system).If you have access to a Linux system, see what shared
libraries the application needs, and copy them to your FreeBSD
system. Look at the following example:Let us assume you used FTP to get the Linux binary of
Doom, and put it on a Linux system you have access to. You
then can check which shared libraries it needs by running
ldd linuxdoom, like so:&prompt.user; ldd linuxdoom
libXt.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
libX11.so.3 (DLL Jump 3.1) => /usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) => /lib/libc.so.4.6.29You would need to get all the files from the last column,
and put them under /compat/linux, with
the names in the first column as symbolic links pointing to
them. This means you eventually have these files on your
FreeBSD system:/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libXt.so.3 -> libXt.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/usr/X11/lib/libX11.so.3 -> libX11.so.3.1.0
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29 /compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
Note that if you already have a Linux shared library
with a matching major revision number to the first column
of the ldd output, you will not need to
copy the file named in the last column to your system, the
one you already have should work. It is advisable to copy
the shared library anyway if it is a newer version,
though. You can remove the old one, as long as you make
the symbolic link point to the new one. So, if you have
these libraries on your system:/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.27
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.27and you find a new binary that claims to require a
later version according to the output of
ldd:libc.so.4 (DLL Jump 4.5pl26) -> libc.so.4.6.29If it is only one or two versions out of date in the
in the trailing digit then do not worry about copying
/lib/libc.so.4.6.29 too, because the
program should work fine with the slightly older version.
However, if you like, you can decide to replace the
libc.so anyway, and that should leave
you with:/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4.6.29
/compat/linux/lib/libc.so.4 -> libc.so.4.6.29
The symbolic link mechanism is
only needed for Linux binaries. The
FreeBSD runtime linker takes care of looking for matching
major revision numbers itself and you do not need to worry
about it.
Installing Linux ELF binariesELF binaries sometimes require an extra step of
branding. If you attempt to run an unbranded ELF
binary, you will get an error message like the following;&prompt.user; ./my-linux-elf-binary
ELF binary type not known
AbortTo help the FreeBSD kernel distinguish between a FreeBSD ELF
binary from a Linux binary, use the &man.brandelf.1;
utility.&prompt.user; brandelf -t Linux my-linux-elf-binaryThe GNU toolchain now places the appropriate branding
information into ELF binaries automatically, so you this step
should become increasingly more rare in the future.Configuring the host name resolverIf DNS does not work or you get this message:resolv+: "bind" is an invalid keyword resolv+:
"hosts" is an invalid keywordYou will need to configure a
/compat/linux/etc/host.conf file
containing:order hosts, bind
multi onThe order here specifies that /etc/hosts
is searched first and DNS is searched second. When
/compat/linux/etc/host.conf is not
installed, linux applications find FreeBSD's
/etc/host.conf and complain about the
incompatible FreeBSD syntax. You should remove
bind if you have not configured a name server
using the /etc/resolv.conf file.Installing MathematicaUpdated for Mathematica version 4.x by &a.murray
and merged with work by Bojan Bistrovic
bojanb@physics.odu.edu.This document describes the process of installing the Linux
version of Mathematica 4.X onto a FreeBSD system.The Linux version of Mathematica runs perfectly under FreeBSD
however the binaries shipped by Wolfram need to be branded so that
FreeBSD knows to use the Linux ABI to execute them.The Linux version of Mathematica or Mathematica for Students can
be ordered directly from Wolfram at http://www.wolfram.com/.Branding the Linux binariesThe Linux binaries are located in the Unix
directory of the Mathematica CDROM distributed by Wolfram. You
need to copy this directory tree to your local hard drive so that
you can brand the Linux binaries with &man.brandelf.1; before
running the installer:&prompt.root; mount /cdrom
&prompt.root; cp -rp /cdrom/Unix/ /localdir/
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Kernel/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/FrontEnd/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Installation/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Graphics/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Converters/Binaries/Linux/*
&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/LicenseManager/Binaries/Linux/mathlm
&prompt.root; cd /localdir/Installers/Linux/
&prompt.root; ./MathInstallerAlternatively, you can simply set the default ELF brand
to Linux for all unbranded binaries with the command:&prompt.root; sysctl -w kern.fallback_elf_brand=3This will make FreeBSD assume that unbranded ELF binaries
use the Linux ABI and so you should be able to run the
installer straight from the CDROM.Obtaining your Mathematica PasswordBefore you can run Mathematica you will have to obtain a
password from Wolfram that corresponds to your machine
ID.Once you have installed the Linux compatibility runtime
libraries and unpacked Mathematica you can obtain the
machine ID by running the program
mathinfo in the Install directory. This
machine ID is based solely on the MAC address of your first
ethernet card.&prompt.root; cd /localdir/Files/SystemFiles/Installation/Binaries/Linux
&prompt.root; mathinfo
disco.example.com 7115-70839-20412When you register with Wolfram, either by email, phone or fax,
you will give them the machine ID and they will
respond with a corresponding password consisting of groups of
numbers. You can then enter this information when you attempt to
run Mathematica for the first time exactly as you would for any
other Mathematica platform.Running the Mathematica front end over a networkMathematica uses some special fonts to display characters not
present in any of the standard font sets (integrals, sums, greek
letters, etc.). The X protocol requires these fonts to be install
locally. This means you will have to copy
these fonts from the CDROM or from a host with Mathematica
installed to your local machine. These fonts are normally stored
in /cdrom/Unix/Files/SystemFiles/Fonts on the
CDROM, or
/usr/local/mathematica/SystemFiles/Fonts on
your hard drive. The actual fonts are in the subdirectories
Type1 and X. There are
several ways to use them, as described below.The first way is to copy them into one of the existing font
directories in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts.
This will require editing the fonts.dir file,
adding the font names to it, and changing the number of fonts on
the first line. Alternatively, you should also just be able to
run mkfontdir in the directory you have copied
them to.The second way to do this is to copy the directories to
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts:&prompt.root; cd /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts
&prompt.root; mkdir X
&prompt.root; mkdir MathType1
&prompt.root; cd /cdrom/Unix/Files/SystemFiles/Fonts
&prompt.root; cp X/* /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/X
&prompt.root; cp Type1/* /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/MathType1
&prompt.root; cd /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/X
&prompt.root; mkfontdir
&prompt.root; cd ../MathType1
&prompt.root; mkfontdirNow add the new font directories to your font path:&prompt.root; xset fp+ /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/X
&prompt.root; xset fp+ /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/MathType1
&prompt.root; xset fp rehashIf you are using the XFree86 server, you can have these font
directories loaded automatically by adding them to your
XF86Config file.If you do not already have a directory
called /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Type1, you
can change the name of the MathType1
directory in the example above to
Type1.Installing OracleContributed by Marcel Moolenaar
marcel@cup.hp.comPrefaceThis document describes the process of installing Oracle 8.0.5 and
Oracle 8.0.5.1 Enterprise Edition for Linux onto a FreeBSD
machineInstalling the Linux environmentMake sure you have both linux_base and
linux_devtools from the ports collection
installed. These ports are added to the collection after the release
of FreeBSD 3.2. If you are using FreeBSD 3.2 or an older version for
that matter, update your ports collection. You may want to consider
updating your FreeBSD version too. If you run into difficulties with
linux_base-6.1 or
linux_devtools-6.1 you may have to use version
5.2 of these packages.If you want to run the intelligent agent, you'll
also need to install the Red Hat TCL package:
tcl-8.0.3-20.i386.rpm. The general command
for installing packages with the official RPM port is :&prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm packageInstallation of the package should not generate any errors.Creating the Oracle environmentBefore you can install Oracle, you need to set up a proper
environment. This document only describes what to do
specially to run Oracle for Linux on FreeBSD, not
what has been described in the Oracle installation guide.Kernel TuningAs described in the Oracle installation guide, you need to set
the maximum size of shared memory. Don't use
SHMMAX under FreeBSD. SHMMAX
is merely calculated out of SHMMAXPGS and
PGSIZE. Therefore define
SHMMAXPGS. All other options can be used as
described in the guide. For example:options SHMMAXPGS=10000
options SHMMNI=100
options SHMSEG=10
options SEMMNS=200
options SEMMNI=70
options SEMMSL=61Set these options to suit your intended use of Oracle.Also, make sure you have the following options in your kernel
config-file:options SYSVSHM #SysV shared memory
options SYSVSEM #SysV semaphores
options SYSVMSG #SysV interprocess communicationOracle accountCreate an Oracle account just as you would create any other
account. The Oracle account is special only that you need to give
it a Linux shell. Add /compat/linux/bin/bash to
/etc/shells and set the shell for the Oracle
account to /compat/linux/bin/bash.EnvironmentBesides the normal Oracle variables, such as
ORACLE_HOME and ORACLE_SID you must
set the following environment variables:VariableValueLD_LIBRARY_PATH$ORACLE_HOME/libCLASSPATH$ORACLE_HOME/jdbc/lib/classes111.zipPATH/compat/linux/bin
/compat/linux/sbin
/compat/linux/usr/bin
/compat/linux/usr/sbin
/bin
/sbin
/usr/bin
/usr/sbin
/usr/local/bin
$ORACLE_HOME/binIt is advised to set all the environment variables in
.profile. A complete example is:ORACLE_BASE=/oracle; export ORACLE_BASE
ORACLE_HOME=/oracle; export ORACLE_HOME
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
ORACLE_SID=ORCL; export ORACLE_SID
ORACLE_TERM=386x; export ORACLE_TERM
CLASSPATH=$ORACLE_HOME/jdbc/lib/classes111.zip
export CLASSPATH
PATH=/compat/linux/bin:/compat/linux/sbin:/compat/linux/usr/bin:/compat/linux/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:$ORACLE_HOME/bin
export PATHInstalling OracleDue to a slight inconsistency in the Linux emulator, you need to
create a directory named .oracle in
/var/tmp before you start the installer. Either
make it world writable or let it be owner by the oracle user. You
should be able to install Oracle without any problems. If you have
problems, check your Oracle distribution and/or configuration first!
After you have installed Oracle, apply the patches described in the
next two subsections.A frequent problem is that the TCP protocol adapter is not
installed right. As a consequence, you cannot start any TCP listeners.
The following actions help solve this problem:&prompt.root; cd $ORACLE_HOME/network/lib
&prompt.root; make -f ins_network.mk ntcontab.o
&prompt.root; cd $ORACLE_HOME/lib
&prompt.root; ar r libnetwork.a ntcontab.o
&prompt.root; cd $ORACLE_HOME/network/lib
&prompt.root; make -f ins_network.mk installDon't forget to run root.sh again!Patching root.shWhen installing Oracle, some actions, which need to be performed
as root, are recorded in a shell script called
root.sh. root.sh is
written in the orainst directory. Apply the
following patch to root.sh, to have it use to proper location of
chown or alternatively run the script under a Linux native
shell.*** orainst/root.sh.orig Tue Oct 6 21:57:33 1998
--- orainst/root.sh Mon Dec 28 15:58:53 1998
***************
*** 31,37 ****
# This is the default value for CHOWN
# It will redefined later in this script for those ports
# which have it conditionally defined in ss_install.h
! CHOWN=/bin/chown
#
# Define variables to be used in this script
--- 31,37 ----
# This is the default value for CHOWN
# It will redefined later in this script for those ports
# which have it conditionally defined in ss_install.h
! CHOWN=/usr/sbin/chown
#
# Define variables to be used in this scriptWhen you don't install Oracle from CD, you can patch the source
for root.sh. It is called
rthd.sh and is located in the
orainst directory in the source tree.Patching genclntshThe script genclntsh is used to create a single shared client
library. It is used when building the demos. Apply the following
patch to comment out the definition of PATH:*** bin/genclntsh.orig Wed Sep 30 07:37:19 1998
--- bin/genclntsh Tue Dec 22 15:36:49 1998
***************
*** 32,38 ****
#
# Explicit path to ensure that we're using the correct commands
#PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/ccs/bin export PATH
! PATH=/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin export PATH
#
# each product MUST provide a $PRODUCT/admin/shrept.lst
--- 32,38 ----
#
# Explicit path to ensure that we're using the correct commands
#PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/ccs/bin export PATH
! #PATH=/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin export PATH
#
# each product MUST provide a $PRODUCT/admin/shrept.lstRunning OracleWhen you have followed the instructions, you should be able to run
Oracle as if it was run on Linux itself.Installing SAP R/3 (4.6B - IDES)Contributed by Holger Kippholger.kipp@alogis.comConverted to SGML by &a.logo;PrefaceThis document describes a possible way of installing a SAP
- R/3 4.6B IDES-System with Oracle 8.0.5 for Linux onto a FreeBSD
- 4.3 machine, including the installation of FreeBSD 4.3 stable and
- Oracle 8.0.5.
+ R/3 4.6B IDES-System with Oracle 8.0.5 for Linux onto a
+ FreeBSD 4.3 machine, including the installation of FreeBSD 4.3
+ stable and Oracle 8.0.5.
Even though this document tries to describe all important
- steps in a greater detail, it is not intended as a replacement for
- the Oracle and SAP R/3 installation guides.
+ steps in a greater detail, it is not intended as a replacement
+ for the Oracle and SAP R/3 installation guides.
Please see the documentation that comes with the SAP R/3
- Linux edition for SAP- and Oracle-specific questions, as well as
- resources from Oracle and SAP OSS.
+ Linux edition for SAP- and Oracle-specific questions, as well
+ as resources from Oracle and SAP OSS.
SoftwareThe following CD-ROMs have been used for
- SAP-installation:
+ SAP-installation:
NameNumberDescriptionKERNEL51009113SAP Kernel Oracle /
Installation / AIX, Linux, SolarisRDBMS51007558Oracle / RDBMS 8.0.5.X /
LinuxEXPORT151010208IDES / DB-Export / Disc
1 of 6EXPORT251010209IDES / DB-Export / Disc
2 of 6EXPORT351010210IDES / DB-Export /
Disc3 of 6EXPORT451010211IDES / DB-Export /
Disc4 of 6EXPORT551010212IDES / DB-Export /
Disc5 of 6EXPORT651010213IDES / DB-Export /
Disc6 of 6
- Additionally, I used the Oracle 8 Server (Pre-production
- version 8.0.5 for Linux, Kernel Version 2.0.33) CD which is not
- really necessary, and of course FreeBSD 4.3 stable (it was only a
- few days past 4.3 RELEASE).
+ Additionally, I used the Oracle 8
+ Server (Pre-production version 8.0.5 for Linux,
+ Kernel Version 2.0.33) CD which is not really necessary, and
+ of course FreeBSD 4.3 stable (it was only a few days past 4.3
+ RELEASE).SAP-Notes
- The following notes should be read before installing SAP R/3
- or proved to be useful during installation:
+ The following notes should be read before installing
+ SAP R/3 or proved to be useful
+ during installation:NumberTitle0171356SAP Software auf Linux: grundlegenden
Anmerkungen0201147INST: 4.6C R/3 Inst. on UNIX -
Oracle0373203Update / Migration Oracle 8.0.5 -->
8.0.6/8.1.6 LINUX0072984Release of Digital UNIX 4.0B for
Oracle0130581R3SETUP step DIPGNTAB terminates0144978Your system has not been installed
correctly0162266Questions and tips for R3SETUP on Windows
NT / W2KHardware-Requirements
- The following equipment is sufficient for a SAP R/3 System
- (4.6B):
+ The following equipment is sufficient for a
+ SAP R/3 System (4.6B):Component4.6B4.6CProcessor2 x 800MHz Pentium III2 x 800MHz Pentium IIIMemory1GB ECC2GB ECCHard Disc Space50-60GB (IDES)50-60GB (IDES)For use in production, Xeon-Processors with large cache,
- high-speed disc access (SCSI, RAID hardware controller), USV and
- ECC-RAM is recommended. The large amount of Hard disc space is
- due to the preconfigured IDES System, which creates 27 GB of
- database files during installation. Usually after installation it
- is then necessary to extend some tablespaces.
+ high-speed disc access (SCSI, RAID hardware controller), USV
+ and ECC-RAM is recommended. The large amount of Hard disc
+ space is due to the preconfigured IDES System, which creates
+ 27 GB of database files during installation. Usually after
+ installation it is then necessary to extend some
+ tablespaces.
I used a dual processor board with 2 800MHz Pentium III
- processors, Adaptec 29160 Ultra160 SCSI adapter (for accessing a
- 40/80 GB DLT tape drive and CD-ROM), Mylex AcelleRAID (2 channels,
- firmware 6.00-1-00 with 32MB RAM). To the Mylex Raid-controller
- are attached two 17GB hard discs (mirrored) and four 36GB hard
- discs (RAID level 5).
+ processors, Adaptec 29160 Ultra160 SCSI adapter (for accessing
+ a 40/80 GB DLT tape drive and CD-ROM), Mylex AcelleRAID (2
+ channels, firmware 6.00-1-00 with 32MB RAM). To the Mylex
+ Raid-controller are attached two 17GB hard discs (mirrored)
+ and four 36GB hard discs (RAID level 5).
Installation of FreeBSD 4.3 stableFirst I installed FreeBSD 4.3 stable. I did the
- default-installation via ftp.
+ default-installation via ftp.
Installation via FTPGet the diskimages
kern.flp and mfsroot.flp and put them on floppy disks (I got
mine from ftp7.de.freebsd.org. Please choose the appropriate
mirror).
-
- &prompt.root; dd if=kern.flp of=/dev/fd0
- &prompt.root; dd if=mfsroot.flp of=/dev/fd0
+ &prompt.root; dd if=kern.flp of=/dev/fd0
+&prompt.root; dd if=mfsroot.flp of=/dev/fd0Don't forget to use different disks for the two images
- :-), then boot from the floppy with the kern.flp-image on it and
- follow instructions. I used the following disk layout:
+ :-), then boot from the floppy with the kern.flp-image on it
+ and follow instructions. I used the following disk
+ layout:
FilesystemSize (1k-blocks)Size (GB)Mounted on/dev/da0s1a1.016.3031//dev/da0s1b6<swap>/dev/da0s1e2.032.6232/var/dev/da0s1f8.205.3398/usr/dev/da1s1e45.734.36145/compat/linux/oracle/dev/da1s1f2.032.6232/compat/linux/sapmnt/dev/da1s1g2.032.6232/compat/linux/usr/sapI had to configure and initialise the two logical drives
- with the Mylex software beforehand. It is located on the board
- itself and can be started during the boot phase of the
- pc.
- Please note that this disk layout differs
- slightly from the SAP recommendations, as SAP suggests mounting
- the oracle-subdirectories (and some others) separately - I
- decided to just create them as real subdirectories for
- simplicity.
+ with the Mylex software beforehand. It is located on the
+ board itself and can be started during the boot phase of the
+ pc.
+
+ Please note that this disk layout differs slightly from
+ the SAP recommendations, as SAP suggests mounting the
+ oracle-subdirectories (and some others) separately - I
+ decided to just create them as real subdirectories for
+ simplicity.
-
Get the latest stable-sourcesFor FreeBSD 4.3 stable onwards, it is quite easy to get
- the latest stable sources. With the older versions of FreeBSD, I
- had my own script located in /etc/cvsup. Setting up cvsup for
- FreeBSD 4.3 is quite easy. As user root do
- the following:
+ the latest stable sources. With the older versions of
+ FreeBSD, I had my own script located in /etc/cvsup. Setting
+ up cvsup for FreeBSD 4.3 is quite easy. As user
+ root do the following:
-
- &prompt.root; cp /etc/defaults/make.conf /etc/make.conf
- &prompt.root; vi /etc/make.conf
+ &prompt.root; cp /etc/defaults/make.conf /etc/make.conf
+&prompt.root; vi /etc/make.confThe file /etc/make.conf requires the
following entries to be active:SUP_UPDATE= yes
SUP= /usr/local/bin/cvsup
SUPFLAGS= -g -L 2
SUPHOST= cvsup8.FreeBSD.org
SUPFILE= /usr/share/examples/cvsup/stable-supfile
PORTSSUPFILE= /usr/share/examples/cvsup/ports-supfile
DOCSUPFILE= /usr/share/examples/cvsup/doc-supfileChange the SUPHOST-value
- appropriately. The supfiles in
- /usr/share/examples/cvsup should be
- fine. If you don't want to load all the docfiles, leave the
- corresponding DOCSUPFILE-entry inactive.
- Starting cvsup to get the latest stable-sources is then very
- easy:
+ appropriately. The supfiles in
+ /usr/share/examples/cvsup should be
+ fine. If you don't want to load all the docfiles, leave the
+ corresponding DOCSUPFILE-entry
+ inactive. Starting cvsup to get the latest stable-sources
+ is then very easy:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
- &prompt.root; make update
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
+&prompt.root; make updateMake world and a new kernelThe first thing to do is to install the sources.
As user root, do the following:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
- &prompt.root; make world
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src
+&prompt.root; make worldIf this goes through, one can then continue creating and
- configuring the new kernel. Usually this is where to customize
- the kernel configuration file. As the computer is named
- troubadix, the natural name for the config file also is
- troubadix:
+ configuring the new kernel. Usually this is where to
+ customize the kernel configuration file. As the computer is
+ named troubadix, the natural name for the config file also
+ is troubadix:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
- &prompt.root; cp GENERIC TROUBADIX
- &prompt.root; vi TROUBADIX
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
+&prompt.root; cp GENERIC TROUBADIX
+&prompt.root; vi TROUBADIX
- At this stage one can define the drivers to use and not to
- use, etc. See the appropriate documentation or have a look at
- file LINT for some additional
- explanations.
+ At this stage one can define the drivers to use and not
+ to use, etc. See the appropriate documentation or have a
+ look at file LINT for some additional
+ explanations.One can then also include the parameters as described
- below Creating the new kernel then requires:
+ below Creating the new kernel then requires:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
- &prompt.root; config TROUBADIX
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/compile/TROUBADIX
- &prompt.root; make depend
- &prompt.root; make
- &prompt.root; make install
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/i386/conf
+&prompt.root; config TROUBADIX
+&prompt.root; cd /usr/src/sys/compile/TROUBADIX
+&prompt.root; make depend
+&prompt.root; make
+&prompt.root; make install
- After make install finished
- successfully, one should reboot the computer to have the new
- kernel available.
+ After make install finished
+ successfully, one should reboot the computer to have the new
+ kernel available.Installing the Linux environmentI had some trouble downloading the required RPM-files (for
- 4.3 stable, 2nd May 2001), so you might try one of the following
- locations (if all the others fail and the following aren't out of
- date):
+ 4.3 stable, 2nd May 2001), so you might try one of the
+ following locations (if all the others fail and the following
+ aren't out of date):
ftp7.de.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/rpmftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/6.1/en/os/i386/RedHat/RPMSInstalling Linux base-system
First the linux base-system needs to be installed (as root):
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base
- &prompt.root; make package
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/emulators/linux_base
+&prompt.root; make packageInstalling Linux developmentNext, the linux development is needed:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/devel/linux_devtools
- &prompt.root; make package
+ &prompt.root; cd /usr/ports/devel/linux_devtools
+&prompt.root; make packageInstalling necessary RPMsTo start the R3SETUP-Program, pam support is needed. As
- this also requires some other packages, I ended up installing
- several packages. After that, pam still complained about a
- missing package, so I forced the installation and it worked. I
- wonder if the other packages are really needed or if it would
- have been sufficient to install the pam-package.
+ this also requires some other packages, I ended up
+ installing several packages. After that, pam still
+ complained about a missing package, so I forced the
+ installation and it worked. I wonder if the other packages
+ are really needed or if it would have been sufficient to
+ install the pam-package.
Anyway, here is the list of packages I installed:cracklib-2.7-5.i386.rpmcracklib-dicts-2.7-5.i386.rpmpwdb-0.60-1.i386.rpmpam-0.68-7.i386.rpmI installed these packages with the following
- command:
+ command:
-
- &prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm <package_name>
+ &prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm <package_name>except for the pam package, which I forced with
-
- &prompt.root rpm -i --ignoreos --nodeps --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm pam-0.68-7.i386.rpm
+ &prompt.root; rpm -i --ignoreos --nodeps --root /compat/linux --dbpath /var/lib/rpm pam-0.68-7.i386.rpm
- For Oracle to run the intelligent agent, I also hat to
- install the following RedHat TCL package (as is steted in the
- FreeBSD Handbook): tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm (otherwise the
- relinking during Oracle install won't work). There are some
- other issues regarding relinking of Oracle, but that is a
- Oracle-Linux issue, not FreeBSD specific as far as I understand
- it.
+ For Oracle to run the
+ intelligent agent, I also had to install the following
+ RedHat TCL package (as is stated in the FreeBSD Handbook):
+ tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm (otherwise the
+ relinking during Oracle install
+ won't work). There are some other issues regarding
+ relinking of Oracle, but that is
+ a Oracle-Linux issue, not FreeBSD specific as far as I
+ understand it.Creating the SAP/R3 environmentCreating the necessary filesystems and mountpointsFor a simple installation, it is sufficient to create the
- following filesystems:
+ following filesystems:
mountpointsize in GB/compat/linux/oracle45 GB/compat/linux/sapmnt2 GB/compat/linux/usr/sap2 GBI also created some links, so FreeBSD will also find the
- correct path:
+ correct path:
-
- &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/oracle /oracle
- &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/sapmnt /sapmnt
- &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/usr/sap /usr/sap
+ &prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/oracle /oracle
+&prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/sapmnt /sapmnt
+&prompt.root; ln -s /compat/linux/usr/sap /usr/sapCreating users and directoriesSAP R/3 needs two users and three groups. The usernames
- depend on the SAP system id (SID) which consists of three
- letters. Some of these SIDs are reserved by SAP (for example
- SAP and NIX. For a
- complete list please see the SAP documentation). For the IDES
- installation I used IDS. We have therefore
- the following groups (group ids might differ, these are just the
- values I used with my installation):
+ depend on the SAP system id (SID) which consists of three
+ letters. Some of these SIDs are reserved by SAP (for example
+ SAP and NIX. For
+ a complete list please see the SAP documentation). For the
+ IDES installation I used IDS. We have
+ therefore the following groups (group ids might differ,
+ these are just the values I used with my installation):group idgroup namedescription100dbaData Base Administrator101sapsysSAP System102operData Base OperatorFor a default Oracle-Installation, only group
- dba is used. As
- oper-group, one also uses group
- dba (see Oracle- and SAP-documentation for further
- information).
+ dba is used. As
+ oper-group, one also uses group
+ dba (see Oracle- and
+ SAP-documentation for further information).
We also need the following users:user idusernamegeneric namegroupadditional groupsdescription1000idsadm<sid>admsapsysoperSAP Administrator1002oraidsora<sid>dbaoperDB Administrator
- Adding the users with adduser requires the following
- (please note shell and home directory) entries for
- SAP-Administrator:
+ Adding the users with adduser
+ requires the following (please note shell and home
+ directory) entries for SAP-Administrator:Name: idsadm <sid>adm
Password: ******
Fullname: SAP IDES Administrator
Uid: 1000
Gid: 101 (sapsys)
Class:
Groups: sapsys dba
HOME: /home/idsadm /home/<sid>adm
Shell: /bin/shand for Database-Administrator:Name: oraids ora<sid>
Password: ******
Fullname: Oracle IDES Administrator
Uid: 1002
Gid: 100 (dba)
Class:
Groups: dba
HOME: /oracle/IDS /oracle/<sid>
Shell: /bin/sh
- This should also include group oper
- in case you are using both groups dba and
- oper.
+ This should also include group
+ oper in case you are using both
+ groups dba and
+ oper.Creating directoriesThese directories are usually created as separate
- filesystems. This depends entirely on your requirements. I
- choose to create them as simple directories, as they are all
- located on the same RAID 5 anyway:
+ filesystems. This depends entirely on your requirements. I
+ choose to create them as simple directories, as they are all
+ located on the same RAID 5 anyway:
First we'll set owners and right of some directories (as
- user root):
+ user root):
-
- &prompt.root; chmod 775 /oracle
- &prompt.root; chmod 777 /sapmnt
- &prompt.root; chown root:dba /oracle
- &prompt.root; chown idsadm:sapsys /compat/linux/usr/sap
- &prompt.root; chmow 775 /compat/linux/usr/sap
+ &prompt.root; chmod 775 /oracle
+&prompt.root; chmod 777 /sapmnt
+&prompt.root; chown root:dba /oracle
+&prompt.root; chown idsadm:sapsys /compat/linux/usr/sap
+&prompt.root; chmow 775 /compat/linux/usr/sapSecond we'll create directories as user ora<sid>. These
will all be subdirectories of /oracle/IDS:
-
- &prompt.root; su - oraids
- &prompt.root; mkdir mirrlogA mirrlogB origlogA origlogB
- &prompt.root; mkdir sapdata1 sapdata2 sapdata3 sapdata4 sapdata5 sapdata6
- &prompt.root; mkdir saparch sapreorg
- &prompt.root; exit
+ &prompt.root; su - oraids
+&prompt.root; mkdir mirrlogA mirrlogB origlogA origlogB
+&prompt.root; mkdir sapdata1 sapdata2 sapdata3 sapdata4 sapdata5 sapdata6
+&prompt.root; mkdir saparch sapreorg
+&prompt.root; exitIn the third step we create directories as user idsadm
(<sid>adm):
-
- &prompt.root; su - idsadm
- &prompt.root; cd /usr/sap
- &prompt.root; mkdir IDS
- &prompt.root; mkdir trans
- &prompt.root; exit
+ &prompt.root; su - idsadm
+&prompt.root; cd /usr/sap
+&prompt.root; mkdir IDS
+&prompt.root; mkdir trans
+&prompt.root; exitEntries in /etc/servicesSAP R/3 requires some entries in file
- /etc/services , which will not be set
- correctly during installation under FreeBSD. Please add the
- following entries (you need at least those entries corresponding
- to the instance number - in this case, 00.
- It'll do no harm adding all entries from 00
- to 99 for dp,
- gw, sp and
- ms);
+ /etc/services , which will not be set
+ correctly during installation under FreeBSD. Please add the
+ following entries (you need at least those entries
+ corresponding to the instance number - in this case,
+ 00. It'll do no harm adding all
+ entries from 00 to
+ 99 for dp,
+ gw, sp and
+ ms);
sapdp00 3200/tcp # SAP Dispatcher. 3200 + Instance-Number
sapgw00 3300/tcp # SAP Gateway. 3300 + Instance-Number
sapsp00 3400/tcp # 3400 + Instance-Number
sapms00 3500/tcp # 3500 + Instance-Number
sapmsIDS 3600/tcp # SAP Message Server. 3600 + Instance-NumberNecessary locales
- SAP requires at least two locales that aren't part of the
- default RedHat installation. SAP offers the required RPMs as
- download from their ftp-server (which is only accessible if you
- are a customer with OSS-access). See note 0171356 for a list of
- RPMs you need.
+ SAP requires at least two locales that aren't part of
+ the default RedHat installation. SAP offers the required
+ RPMs as download from their ftp-server (which is only
+ accessible if you are a customer with OSS-access). See note
+ 0171356 for a list of RPMs you need.
- It is also possible to just create appropriate links (for
- example from de_DE and
- en_US ), but I wouldn't recommend this for
- a production system (so far it worked with the IDES system
- without any problems, though). The following locales are
- needed:
+ It is also possible to just create appropriate links
+ (for example from de_DE and
+ en_US ), but I wouldn't recommend this
+ for a production system (so far it worked with the IDES
+ system without any problems, though). The following locales
+ are needed:de_DE.ISO-8859-1
en_US.ISO-8859-1If they are not present, there will be some problems
- during the installation. If these are then subsequently ignored
- (eg by setting the status of the offending steps to OK in file
- CENTRDB.R3S), it will be impossible to log onto the SAP-system
- without some additional effort.
-
+ during the installation. If these are then subsequently
+ ignored (eg by setting the status of the offending steps to
+ OK in file CENTRDB.R3S), it will be impossible to log onto
+ the SAP-system without some additional effort.Kernel TuningSAP R/3 Systems need a lot of resources. I therefore
added the following parameters to my kernel config-file:
# Set these for memory pigs (SAP and Oracle):
options MAXDSIZ="(1024*1024*1024)"
options DFLDSIZ="(1024*1024*1024)" # System V options needed.
options SYSVSHM #SYSV-style shared memory
options SHMMAXPGS=262144 #max amount of shared mem. pages
options SHMMNI=256 #max number of shared memory ident if.
options SHMSEG=100 #max shared mem.segs per process
options SYSVMSG #SYSV-style message queues
options MSGSEG=32767 #max num. of mes.segments in system
options MSGSSZ=32 #size of msg-seg. MUST be power of 2
options MSGMNB=65535 #max char. per message queue
options MSGTQL=2046 #max amount of msgs in system
options SYSVSEM #SYSV-style semaphores
options SEMMNU=256 #number of semaphore UNDO structures
options SEMMNS=1024 #number of semaphores in system
options SEMMNI=520 #number of semaphore indentifiers
options SEMUME=100 #number of UNDO keys
-
- The minimum values are specified in the documentation that
+ The minimum values are specified in the documentation that
comes from SAP. As there is no description for Linux, see the
HP-UX-section (32-bit) for further information.
Installing SAP R/3Preparing SAP CD-ROMsThere are lots of CD-ROMs to mount and unmount during
- installation. Assuming you have enough CD-ROM-drives, you can
- just mount them all. I decided to copy the CD-ROM contents to
- corresponding directories:
+ installation. Assuming you have enough CD-ROM-drives, you
+ can just mount them all. I decided to copy the CD-ROM
+ contents to corresponding directories:
/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/<cd-name>where <cd-name> was one of KERNEL, RDBMS, EXPORT1,
EXPORT2, EXPORT3, EXPORT4, EXPORT5 and EXPORT6. All the
filenames should be in capital letters, otherwise use the -g
option for mounting. So use the following commands:
-
- &prompt.root; mount_cd9660 -g /dev/cd0a /mnt
- &prompt.root; cp -R /mnt/* /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/<cd-name>
- &prompt.root; umount /mnt
+ &prompt.root; mount_cd9660 -g /dev/cd0a /mnt
+&prompt.root; cp -R /mnt/* /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/<cd-name>
+&prompt.root; umount /mntRunning the install-scriptFirst we need to prepare an install-directory:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg
- &prompt.root; mkdir install
- &prompt.root; cd install
+ &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg
+&prompt.root; mkdir install
+&prompt.root; cd installThen the install-script is started, which will copy nearly
- all the relevant files into the install-directory:
+ all the relevant files into the install-directory:
/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/KERNEL/UNIX/INSTTOOL.SHAs this is an IDES-Installation with a fully customized
- SAP R/3 Demo-System, we have six instead of just three
- EXPORT-CDs. At this point the installation template CENTRDB.R3S
- is for installing a standard central instance (R/3 and
- Database), not an IDES central instance, so copy the
- corresponding CENTRDB.R3S from the EXPORT1 directory, otherwise
- R3SETUP will only ask for three EXPORT-CDs.
+ SAP R/3 Demo-System, we have six instead of just three
+ EXPORT-CDs. At this point the installation template
+ CENTRDB.R3S is for installing a standard central instance
+ (R/3 and Database), not an IDES central instance, so copy
+ the corresponding CENTRDB.R3S from the EXPORT1 directory,
+ otherwise R3SETUP will only ask for three EXPORT-CDs.
Start R3SETUPMake sure LD_LIBRARY_PATH is set correctly:
-
- &prompt.root; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/oracle/IDS/lib:/sapmnt/IDS/exe:/oracle/805_32/lib
+ &prompt.root; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/oracle/IDS/lib:/sapmnt/IDS/exe:/oracle/805_32/libStart R3SETUP as user root from installation
directory:
-
- &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/install
- &prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3S
+ &prompt.root; cd /oracle/IDS/sapreorg/install
+&prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3SThe script then asks some questions (defaults in brackets,
followed by actual input):QuestionDefaultInputEnter SAP System ID[C11]IDS<ret>Enter SAP Instance Number
[00]<ret>Enter SAPMOUNT Directory[/sapmnt]<ret>Enter name of SAP central host[troubadix.domain.de]<ret>Enter name of SAP db host[troubadix]<ret>Select character set[1] (WE8DEC)<ret>Enter Oracle server version (1) Oracle 8.0.5, (2) Oracle 8.0.6, (3) Oracle 8.1.5, (4) Oracle 8.1.61<ret>Extract Oracle Client archive[1] (Yes, extract)<ret>Enter path to KERNEL CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/KERNELEnter path to RDBMS CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/RDBMSEnter path to EXPORT1 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT1Directory to copy EXPORT1 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD4_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT2 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT2Directory to copy EXPORT2 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD5_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT3 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT3Directory to copy EXPORT3 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD6_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT4 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT4Directory to copy EXPORT4 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD7_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT5 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT5Directory to copy EXPORT5 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD8_DIR]<ret>Enter path to EXPORT6 CD[/sapcd]/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/EXPORT6Directory to copy EXPORT6 CD[/oracle/IDS/sapreorg/CD9_DIR]<ret>Enter amount of RAM for SAP + DB850<ret> (in Megabytes)Service Entry Message Server[3600]<ret>Enter Group-ID of sapsys[101]<ret>Enter Group-ID of oper[102]<ret>Enter Group-ID of dba[100]<ret>Enter User-ID of <sid>adm[1000]<ret>Enter User-ID of ora<sid>[1002]<ret>Number of parallel procs[2]<ret>If I had not copied the CDs to the different locations,
- then the SAP-Installer can't find the CD needed (identified by
- the LABEL.ASC-File on CD) and would then ask you to insert /
- mount the CD and confirm or enter the mountpath.
+ then the SAP-Installer can't find the CD needed (identified
+ by the LABEL.ASC-File on CD) and would
+ then ask you to insert / mount the CD and confirm or enter
+ the mountpath.
- The CENTRDB.R3S might not be error-free. In my case, it
- requested EXPORT4 again (but indicated the correct key (6_LOCATI
- ON, then 7_LOCATION etc.), so one can just continue with
- entering the correct values. Don't get irritated.
+ The CENTRDB.R3S might not be
+ error-free. In my case, it requested EXPORT4 again (but
+ indicated the correct key (6_LOCATI ON, then 7_LOCATION
+ etc.), so one can just continue with entering the correct
+ values. Don't get irritated.Apart from some problems mentioned below, everything
- should go straight throught up to the point where the Oracle
- database software needs to be installed.
+ should go straight throught up to the point where the Oracle
+ database software needs to be installed.
Installing Oracle 8.0.5Please see the corresponding SAP-Notes and Oracle Readmes
- regarding Linux and Oracle DB for possible problems. Most if not
- all problems stem from incompatible libraries
+ regarding Linux and Oracle DB for possible problems. Most if
+ not all problems stem from incompatible libraries
- For more information on installing Oracle, refer to
- the Installing Oracle chapter
+ For more information on installing Oracle, refer to the Installing Oracle
+ chapter.Installing the Oracle 8.0.5 with orainst
- If Oracle 8.0.5 is to be used, some additional libraries
- are needed for successfully relinking, as Oracle 8.0.5 was
- linked with an old glibc (RedHat 6.0), but RedHat 6.1 already
- uses a new glibc. So you have to install the following
- additional packages to ensure that linking will work:
+ If Oracle 8.0.5 is to be
+ used, some additional libraries are needed for successfully
+ relinking, as Oracle 8.0.5 was linked with an old glibc
+ (RedHat 6.0), but RedHat 6.1 already uses a new glibc. So
+ you have to install the following additional packages to
+ ensure that linking will work:compat-libs-5.2-2.i386.rpmcompat-glibc-5.2-2.0.7.2.i386.rpmcompat-egcs-5.2-1.0.3a.1.i386.rpmcompat-egcs-c++-5.2-1.0.3a.1.i386.rpmcompat-binutils-5.2-2.9.1.0.23.1.i386.rpmSee the corresponding SAP-Notes or Oracle Readmes for
- further information. If this is no option (at the time of
- installation I didn't have enough time to check this), one could
- use the original binaries, or use the relinked binaries from an
- original RedHat System.
+ further information. If this is no option (at the time of
+ installation I didn't have enough time to check this), one
+ could use the original binaries, or use the relinked
+ binaries from an original RedHat System.
For compiling the intelligent agent, the RedHat TCL
- package must be installed. If you can't get
- tcl-8.0.3-20.i386.rpm, a newer one like
- tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm for RedHat 6.1 should
- also do.
+ package must be installed. If you can't get
+ tcl-8.0.3-20.i386.rpm, a newer one like
+ tcl-8.0.5-30.i386.rpm for RedHat 6.1
+ should also do.
Apart from relinking, the installation is
- straightforward:
+ straightforward:
-
- &prompt.root; su - oraids
- &prompt.root; export TERM=xterm
- &prompt.root; export ORACLE_TERM=xterm
- &prompt.root; export ORACLE_HOME=/oracle/IDS
- &prompt.root; cd /ORACLE_HOME/orainst_sap
- &prompt.root; ./orainst
+ &prompt.root; su - oraids
+&prompt.root; export TERM=xterm
+&prompt.root; export ORACLE_TERM=xterm
+&prompt.root; export ORACLE_HOME=/oracle/IDS
+&prompt.root; cd /ORACLE_HOME/orainst_sap
+&prompt.root; ./orainstConfirm all Screens with Enter until the software is
- installed, except that one has to deselect the Oracle
- On-Line Text Viewer , as this is not currently
- available for Linux. Oracle then wants to relink with
- i386-glibc20-linux-gcc instead of the
- available gcc, egcs or
- i386-redhat-linux-gcc .
-
- Due to time constrains I decided to use the binaries from
- an Oracle 8.0.5 PreProduction release, after the first attempt
- at getting the version from the RDBMS-CD working, failed, and
- finding / accessing the correct RPMs was a nightmare at that
- time.
+ installed, except that one has to deselect the
+ Oracle On-Line Text Viewer , as this is
+ not currently available for Linux. Oracle then wants to
+ relink with i386-glibc20-linux-gcc
+ instead of the available gcc,
+ egcs or i386-redhat-linux-gcc
+ .
+
+ Due to time constrains I decided to use the binaries
+ from an Oracle 8.0.5 PreProduction release, after the first
+ attempt at getting the version from the RDBMS-CD working,
+ failed, and finding / accessing the correct RPMs was a
+ nightmare at that time.Installing the Oracle 8.0.5 Pre-Production release for
- Linux (Kernel 2.0.33)
+ Linux (Kernel 2.0.33)
This installation is quite easy. Mount the CD, start the
- installer. It will then ask for the location of the Oracle home
- directory, and copy all binaries there. I did not delete the
- remains of my previous RDBMS-installation tries, though.
+ installer. It will then ask for the location of the Oracle
+ home directory, and copy all binaries there. I did not
+ delete the remains of my previous RDBMS-installation tries,
+ though.
Afterwards, Oracle Database could be started with no
- problems.
+ problems.
Continue with SAP R/3 installationFirst check the environment settings of users idsamd
- (<sid>adm) and oraids (ora<sid>). They should now both have the
- files .profile , .login
- and .cshrc which are all using
- hostname. In case the system's hostname is
- the fully qualified name, you need to change
- hostname to hostname -s
- within all three files.
+ (<sid>adm) and oraids (ora<sid>). They should now
+ both have the files .profile ,
+ .login and .cshrc
+ which are all using hostname. In case the
+ system's hostname is the fully qualified name, you need to
+ change hostname to hostname
+ -s within all three files.
Database loadAfterwards, R3SETUP can either be restarted or continued
- (depending on whether exit was chosen or not). R3SETUP then
- creates the tablespaces and loads the data from EXPORT1 to
- EXPORT6 (remember, it is an IDES system, otherwise it would only
- be EXPORT1 to EXPORT3) with R3load into the database.
+ (depending on whether exit was chosen or not). R3SETUP then
+ creates the tablespaces and loads the data from EXPORT1 to
+ EXPORT6 (remember, it is an IDES system, otherwise it would
+ only be EXPORT1 to EXPORT3) with R3load into the
+ database.
When the database load is finished (might take a few
- hours), some passwords are requested. For test installations,
- one can use the well known default passwords (use different ones
- if security is an issue!):
+ hours), some passwords are requested. For test
+ installations, one can use the well known default passwords
+ (use different ones if security is an issue!):
QuestionInputEnter Password for sapr3sap<ret>Confirum Password for sapr3sap<ret>Enter Password for syschange_on_install<ret>Confirm Password for syschange_on_install<ret>Enter Password for systemmanager<ret>Confirm Password for systemmanager<ret>At this point I had a few problems with dipgntab.ListenerStart the Oracle-Listener as user oraids (ora<sid>) as
follows:umask 0; lsnrctl startOtherwise you might get ORA-12546 as the sockets won't
have the correct permissions. See SAP note 072984.Post-installation stepsRequest SAP R/3 license keyThis is needed, as the temporary license is only valid for
four weeks. Don't forget to enter the correct Operating System:
(X) Other: FreeBSD 4.3 Stable. First get
- the hardware key. Logon as user idsadm and
- call saplicense:
+ the hardware key. Log on as user idsadm and
+ call saplicense:
&prompt.root; /sapmnt/IDS/exe/saplicense -get
- Calling saplicense without options
+ Calling saplicense without options
gives a list of options. Upon receiving the license key, it can
be installed using&prompt.root; /sapmnt/IDS/exe/saplicense -installYou are then required to enter the following
values:SAP SYSTEM ID = <SID, 3 chars>
CUSTOMER KEY = <hardware key, 11 chars>
INSTALLATION NO = <installation, 10 digits>
EXPIRATION DATE = <yyyymmdd, usually "99991231">
LICENSE KEY = <license key, 24 chars>Creating UsersCreate a user within client 000 (for some tasks required
to be done within client 000, but with a user different from
- users sap* and
- ddic). As a username, I usually choose
- wartung (or service in
- English). Profiles required are sap_new
- and sap_all. For additional safety the
- passwords of default users within all clients should be changed
- (this includes users sap* and
- ddic).
+ users sap* and
+ ddic). As a username, I usually choose
+ wartung (or
+ service in English). Profiles
+ required are sap_new and
+ sap_all. For additional safety the
+ passwords of default users within all clients should be
+ changed (this includes users sap* and
+ ddic).
Configure Transport System, Profile, Operation Modes, etc.Within client 000, user different from ddic and sap*, do
- at least the following:
+ at least the following:
TaskTransactionConfigure Transport System, eg as Stand-Alone
Transport Domain EntitySTMSCreate / Edit Profile for SystemRZ10Maintain Operation Modes and InstancesRZ04These and all the other post-installation steps are
- thoroughly described in SAP installation guides.
+ thoroughly described in SAP installation guides.
Edit init<sid>.sap (initIDS.sap)
- The file /oracle/IDS/dbs/initIDS.sap contains the SAP
- backup profile. Here the size of the tape to be used, type of
- compression and so on need to be defined. To get this running
- with sapdba /
- brbackup, I changed the following
- values:
+ The file
+ /oracle/IDS/dbs/initIDS.sap contains
+ the SAP backup profile. Here the size of the tape to be
+ used, type of compression and so on need to be defined. To
+ get this running with sapdba /
+ brbackup, I changed the following
+ values:compress = hardware
archive_function = copy_delete_save
cpio_flags = "-ov --format=newc --block-size=128 --quiet"
cpio_in_flags = "-iuv --block-size=128 --quiet"
tape_size = 38000M
tape_address = /dev/nsa0
tape_address_rew = /dev/sa0Explanations:compress The tape I use is a HP DLT1
which does hardware compression.archive_function This defines the
default behaviour for saving Oracle archive logs: New logfiles
are saved to tape, already saved logfiles are saved again and
are then deleted. This prevents lots of trouble if one needs to
recover the database, and one of the archive-tapes has gone
bad.cpio_flags Default is to use -B which
sets blocksize to 5120 Bytes. For DLT-Tapes, HP recommends at
least 32K blocksize, so I used --block-size=128 for
64K. --format=newc is needed I have inode numbers greater than
65535. The last option --quiet is needed as otherwise brbackup
complains as soon as cpio outputs the numbers of blocks
saved.cpio_in_flags Flags needed for
loading data back from tape. Format is reckognized
automagically.tape_size This usually gives the raw
storage capability of the tape. For security reason (we use
hardware compression), thevalue is slightly lower than the
actual value.tape_address The non-rewindable
device to be used with cpio.tape_address_rew The rewindable device to be
used with cpio.Problems during installationOSUSERSIDADM_IND_ORA during R3SETUP
- If R3SETUP complains at this stage, edit file CENTRDB.R3S.
- Locate [OSUSERSIDADM_IND_ORA] and edit the following
- values:
+ If R3SETUP complains at this stage, edit file
+ CENTRDB.R3S. Locate [OSUSERSIDADM_IND_ORA] and edit the
+ following values:HOME=/home/idsadm (was empty)
STATUS=OK (had status ERROR)
Then you can restart R3SETUP with:&prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3SOSUSERDBSID_IND_ORA during R3SETUPPossibly R3SETUP also complains at this stage. Just edit
- CENTRDB.R3S. Locate [OSUSERDBSID_IND_ORA] and edit the
- following value in that section:
+ CENTRDB.R3S. Locate [OSUSERDBSID_IND_ORA] and edit the
+ following value in that section:
STATUS=OKThen just restart R3SETUP again:&prompt.root; ./R3SETUP -f CENTRDB.R3Soraview.vrf FILE NOT FOUND during Oracle installationYou haven't deselected Oracle On-Line Text Viewer
before starting the installation. This is marked for installation even
though this option is currently not available for Linux. Deselect this
product inside the Oracle installation menu and restart installation.TEXTENV_INVALID during R3SETUP, RFC or SAPGUI startIf this error is encountered, the correct locale is
- missing. SAP note 0171356 lists the necessary RPMs that need be
- installed (eg saplocales-1.0-3,
- saposcheck-1.0-1 for RedHat 6.1). In case
- you ignored all the related errors and set the corresponding
- status from ERROR to OK (in CENTRDB.R3S) every time R3SETUP
- complained and just restarted R3SETUP, the SAP-System will not
- be properly configured and you will then not be able to connect
- to the system with a sapgui, even though the system can be
- started. Trying to connect with the old Linux sapgui gave the
- following messages:
+ missing. SAP note 0171356 lists the necessary RPMs that
+ need be installed (eg saplocales-1.0-3,
+ saposcheck-1.0-1 for RedHat 6.1). In
+ case you ignored all the related errors and set the
+ corresponding status from ERROR to OK (in CENTRDB.R3S) every
+ time R3SETUP complained and just restarted R3SETUP, the
+ SAP-System will not be properly configured and you will then
+ not be able to connect to the system with a sapgui, even
+ though the system can be started. Trying to connect with the
+ old Linux sapgui gave the following messages:
Sat May 5 14:23:14 2001
*** ERROR => no valid userarea given [trgmsgo. 0401]
Sat May 5 14:23:22 2001
*** ERROR => ERROR NR 24 occured [trgmsgi. 0410]
*** ERROR => Error when generating text environment. [trgmsgi. 0435]
*** ERROR => function failed [trgmsgi. 0447]
*** ERROR => no socket operation allowed [trxio.c 3363]
-Speicherzugriffsfehler
-
+Speicherzugriffsfehler
- This behaviour is due to SAP R/3 being unable to correctly
- assign a locale and also not being properly configured itself
- (missing entries in some database tables). To be able to connect
- to SAP, add the following entries to file DEFAULT.PFL (see note
- 0043288):
+ This behaviour is due to SAP R/3 being unable to
+ correctly assign a locale and also not being properly
+ configured itself (missing entries in some database
+ tables). To be able to connect to SAP, add the following
+ entries to file DEFAULT.PFL (see note 0043288):abap/set_etct_env_at_new_mode =0
install/collate/active =0
rscp/TCP0B =TCP0B
- Restart the SAP system. Now one can connect to the system,
- even though country-specific language settings might not work as
- expected. After correcting country-settings (and providing the
- correct locales), these entries can be removed from DEFAULT.PFL
- and the SAP system can be restarted.
+ Restart the SAP system. Now one can connect to the
+ system, even though country-specific language settings might
+ not work as expected. After correcting country-settings
+ (and providing the correct locales), these entries can be
+ removed from DEFAULT.PFL and the SAP system can be
+ restarted.ORA-12546. Start Listener with correct permissionsStart the Oracle Listener as user
- oraids with the following commands:
+ oraids with the following commands:
&prompt.root; umask 0; lsnrctl startOtherwise one might get ORA-12546 as the sockets won't
- have the correct permissions. See SAP note 0072984.
+ have the correct permissions. See SAP note 0072984.
[DIPGNTAB_IND_IND] during R3SETUPIn general, see SAP note 0130581 (R3SETUP step DIPGNTAB
- terminates). During this specific installation, for some
- reasons the installation process was not using the proper SAP
- system name "IDS", but the empty string "" instead. This lead to
- some minor problems with accessing directories, as the paths are
- generated dynamically using <sid> (in this case IDS). So
- instead of accessing:
+ terminates). During this specific installation, for some
+ reasons the installation process was not using the proper
+ SAP system name "IDS", but the empty string "" instead. This
+ lead to some minor problems with accessing directories, as
+ the paths are generated dynamically using <sid> (in
+ this case IDS). So instead of accessing:
/usr/sap/IDS/SYS/...
-/usr/sap/IDS/DVMGS00
-
+/usr/sap/IDS/DVMGS00
the following path were used:/usr/sap//SYS/...
-/usr/sap/D00i
-
+/usr/sap/D00i
To continue with the installation, I created a link and an
- additional directory:
-
-
- &prompt.root; pwd
- /compat/linux/usr/sap
- &prompt.root; ls -l
- total 4
- drwxr-xr-x 3 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:20 D00
- drwxr-x--x 5 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:35 IDS
- lrwxr-xr-x 1 root sapsys 7 May 5 11:35 SYS -> IDS/SYS
- drwxrwxr-x 2 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 13:00 tmp
- drwxrwxr-x 11 idsadm sapsys 512 May 4 14:20 trans
+ additional directory:
+
+ &prompt.root; pwd
+/compat/linux/usr/sap
+&prompt.root; ls -l
+total 4
+drwxr-xr-x 3 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:20 D00
+drwxr-x--x 5 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 11:35 IDS
+lrwxr-xr-x 1 root sapsys 7 May 5 11:35 SYS -> IDS/SYS
+drwxrwxr-x 2 idsadm sapsys 512 May 5 13:00 tmp
+drwxrwxr-x 11 idsadm sapsys 512 May 4 14:20 trans I also found SAP notes (0029227 and 0008401) describing
this behaviour.[RFCRSWBOINI_IND_IND] during R3SETUPSet STATUS of the offending step from ERROR to OK (file
- CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After installation, you have
- to execute the report RSWBOINS from transaction SE38. See SAP
- note 0162266 for additional information about phase RFCRSWBOINI
- and RFCRADDBDIF.
+ CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After
+ installation, you have to execute the report RSWBOINS from
+ transaction SE38. See SAP note 0162266 for additional
+ information about phase RFCRSWBOINI and RFCRADDBDIF.[RFCRADDBDIF_IND_IND] during R3SETUPSet STATUS of the offending step from ERROR to OK (file
- CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After installation, you have
- to execute the report RADDBDIF from transaction SE38. See SAP
- note 0162266 for further information.
+ CENTRDB.R3S) and restart R3SETUP. After
+ installation, you have to execute the report RADDBDIF from
+ transaction SE38. See SAP note 0162266 for further
+ information.
Advanced TopicsIf you are curious as to how the Linux binary compatibility
works, this is the section you want to read. Most of what follows
is based heavily on an email written to &a.chat; by Terry Lambert
tlambert@primenet.com (Message ID:
<199906020108.SAA07001@usr09.primenet.com>).How Does It Work?FreeBSD has an abstraction called an execution class
loader. This is a wedge into the &man.execve.2; system
call.What happens is that FreeBSD has a list of loaders, instead of
a single loader with a fallback to the #!
loader for running any shell interpreters or shell scripts.Historically, the only loader on the UNIX platform examined
the magic number (generally the first 4 or 8 bytes of the file) to
see if it was a binary known to the system, and if so, invoked the
binary loader.If it was not the binary type for the system, the
&man.execve.2; call returned a failure, and the shell attempted to
start executing it as shell commands.The assumption was a default of whatever the current
shell is.Later, a hack was made for &man.sh.1; to examine the first two
characters, and if they were :\n, then it
invoked the &man.csh.1; shell instead (we believe SCO first made
this hack).What FreeBSD does now is go through a list of loaders, with a
generic #! loader that knows about interpreters
as the characters which follow to the next whitespace next to
last, followed by a fallback to
/bin/sh.For the Linux ABI support, FreeBSD sees the magic number as an
ELF binary (it makes no distinction between FreeBSD, Solaris,
Linux, or any other OS which has an ELF image type, at this
point).The ELF loader looks for a specialized
brand, which is a comment section in the ELF
image, and which is not present on SVR4/Solaris ELF
binaries.For Linux binaries to function, they must be
branded as type Linux;
from &man.brandelf.1;:&prompt.root; brandelf -t Linux fileWhen this is done, the ELF loader will see the
Linux brand on the file.When the ELF loader sees the Linux brand,
the loader replaces a pointer in the proc
structure. All system calls are indexed through this pointer (in
a traditional UNIX system, this would be the
sysent[] structure array, containing the system
calls). In addition, the process flagged for special handling of
the trap vector for the signal trampoline code, and sever other
(minor) fix-ups that are handled by the Linux kernel
module.The Linux system call vector contains, among other things, a
list of sysent[] entries whose addresses reside
in the kernel module.When a system call is called by the Linux binary, the trap
code dereferences the system call function pointer off the
proc structure, and gets the Linux, not the
FreeBSD, system call entry points.In addition, the Linux mode dynamically
reroots lookups; this is, in effect, what the
union option to FS mounts
(not the unionfs!) does. First, an attempt
is made to lookup the file in the
/compat/linux/original-path
directory, then only if that fails, the
lookup is done in the
/original-path
directory. This makes sure that binaries that require other
binaries can run (e.g., the Linux toolchain can all run under
Linux ABI support). It also means that the Linux binaries can
load and exec FreeBSD binaries, if there are no corresponding
Linux binaries present, and that you could place a &man.uname.1;
command in the /compat/linux directory tree
to ensure that the Linux binaries could not tell they were not
running on Linux.In effect, there is a Linux kernel in the FreeBSD kernel; the
various underlying functions that implement all of the services
provided by the kernel are identical to both the FreeBSD system
call table entries, and the Linux system call table entries: file
system operations, virtual memory operations, signal delivery,
System V IPC, etc… The only difference is that FreeBSD
binaries get the FreeBSD glue functions, and
Linux binaries get the Linux glue functions
(most older OS's only had their own glue
functions: addresses of functions in a static global
sysent[] structure array, instead of addresses
of functions dereferenced off a dynamically initialized pointer in
the proc structure of the process making the
call).Which one is the native FreeBSD ABI? It does not matter.
Basically the only difference is that (currently; this could
easily be changed in a future release, and probably will be after
this) the FreeBSD glue functions are
statically linked into the kernel, and the Linux glue functions
can be statically linked, or they can be accessed via a kernel
module.Yeah, but is this really emulation? No. It is an ABI
implementation, not an emulation. There is no emulator (or
simulator, to cut off the next question) involved.So why is it sometimes called Linux emulation?
To make it hard to sell FreeBSD! 8-). Really, it
is because the historical implementation was done at a time when
there was really no word other than that to describe what was
going on; saying that FreeBSD ran Linux binaries was not true, if
you did not compile the code in or load a module, and there needed
to be a word to describe what was being loaded—hence
the Linux emulator.