I'm going to login as Root again and I'm going to run these two commands, that's not how you paste in PuTTY, you just right-click with the mouse, all that's doing is basically resetting the temporary space in Linux. It's like virtual memory in Linux and the other thing I have to do is I have to go and edit Etcetera FS Tab, because Etcetera FS Tab is the think that brings up the file system when the machine restarts. And what I need to do is I need to set as oppose to default, I need one and a half gig on the sort space which is right here, size equals 1500 meg. And then I'm going to escape, I'm in VI and I'm not on the right window, WQ so that's saved that. So when it restarts it'll come back up with the same size. In the Etcetera Sys Control Configuration File, I need to add these settings. So I'm going to copy paste this, I'm going to go to VI slash Etcetera Sys CTL. I'm getting mixed up because recently I've worked with Solaris as well and HPUX. So those values are not in this file by default, so we're going to paste them in and these are basically Default Settings for 32bit Windows with minimum 2 gigs of RAM. Don't worry about the details, you really want to research them, look up these parameters online and there's a thing in Linux called PAM which we want to do some changes to as well. And we're going to go into this file here, we're going to go down to the bottom. Shift A to insert the end of a line, go back to here, highlight it in the browser, Control C, I'm just telling you what keys I'm pressing. Left-click, right-click to paste, Escape, WQ to save it. And now we look for another file called Etcetera, this stuff I went through a long time ago and I can't remember the exact details of why everything needs to be set, Shift A, Session Required, PAM underbar Limits.SO. What I've done, Session Required PAM Limits SO, is I've actually just copied it from there. In some respects, it's better to actually copy and paste because then you're not going to make a mistake. We'll copy this, Control C from the browser, I'm going to go into Etcetera SE Linux Config. If I move this window out of the way a little bit, I can see the browser window underneath now. VI for Linux, I can do, type Etcetera then SE hit the Tab key and it doesn't find it. Hit the Tab key again, it completes the file name, Config. And as you can see SE Linux is actually already disabled because I installed the operating system properly and I need to make sure that the Firewall is stopped, which it should be, because that's the way I installed it, but I'm going to check it anyway. And I need to also check this thing is turned off. Any of these things will stop my Oracle Database from working if they're not set properly. So now what I'm going to do is I'm going to add the Oracle user and set all the right permissions for the Oracle user which is a copy and a paste of all this, paste, no errors. New password for Oracle, guess what my password is. There's one last thing I have to do for prepare to install on Linux and the first thing I have is a PuTTY Window, before doing anything else, I need to do something in Root. I need to create the directory where I'm actually going to build the Oracle Software which I have in a Notepad. Logged in as Root, I'm going to create a directory and I'm going to give Oracle complete access to it. So Change Ownership, Change Mod. You don't need to know about the details of the Linux Commands but essentially I'm just going to run this. Then I will have, if I go into Root, on the Linux box, somewhere in here I'll have, I already have OInstall, I also have User 01 which is Oracle and OInstall. That's where the Oracle software gets installed, so now when I login as Oracle, I need to change a file called My Bash Profile which I already have a copy in here but it's not the correct one. I'm going to clear this file out, I'm going to Escape, I for Insert. I'm going to go onto my blog and I'm going to copy a standard Bash Profile File I have which generally works for everything unless I change things drastically. So back to here, left-click on the bar, right-click to paste, hit Return. Go up to the top, as you can see I now have Oracle Base User 01 at Oracle. The Oracle software will get installed here and we won't worry about all the other stuff in there for now. In My Bash Profile File that I just copied from my blog, I have a few things I need to change. This is for a rack setup, this is a single instance I have on this machine, we do not need to worry about rack in this course, it's way to complicated and I'm just doing Shift R and then overriding. There isn't anything else that I can see at this point. So I'm going to throw this out and I can start my installation process.
| Course: | Introduction to Oracle 11g |
| Author: | Gavin Powell |
| SKU: | 34312 |
| ISBN: | 978-1-61866-042-8 |
| Release Date: | 2012-04-28 |
| Duration: | 11.5 hrs / 139 lessons |
| Work Files: |
Yes |
| Captions: | No |
| Compatibility: |
Vista/XP/2000, OS X, Linux QuickTime 7, Flash 8 |