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Re: Oracle, Linux & OFA - Fevered Dreams?

From: Jim Smith <usenet01_at_ponder-stibbons.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Apr 2007 09:12:27 +0100
Message-ID: <nf5ZJSNrVfGGFwGM@jimsmith.demon.co.uk>


In message <1176075863.060202.267510_at_n76g2000hsh.googlegroups.com>, Jack <jrscrns_at_comcast.net> writes
>I tried to install Oracle 10g R2 on RHEL 4 Linux this weekend and it
>was a nightmare.
>
>Since Oracle is pushing people to use the OFA architecture for
>installations, especially for multiple version on the same box, I
>decided to use this structure for the installation. I configured LVM
>space for the Oracle installation using a mount point of /u01/app/
>oracle as the ORACLE_BASE and created $ORACLE_BASE/product/10.2.0.1.0
>as ORACLE_HOME. I modified the PATH environment variable to have
>$ORACLE_HOME/bin at the front.
>
>After fighting the Oracle Universal Installer for an hour (xhost
>problems among other things), I got it working(?). Despite setting the
>environmental variables for the user oracle to the values that I chose
>and selecting the /u01/app/oracle/product/10.2.0.1.0 directory on OUI
>for the ORACLE_HOME, the OUI decided to install a lot of modules in
>the /oracle/home/oracle directory and make a mess of things in
>general. Why did the OUI decided to used the /oracle/home/oracle
>directory after I "told" it to use the /u01 directory??? One of the
>minor problems was that it created this directory and made root its
>owner and then it refused to read and aborted because the OUI user was
>oracle??? It was one problem after another of a similar nature. I
>NEVER had such stupid problems like this with Sybase installations on
>any operating system.
>

You must have done something very basic wrong. It works fine for the vast majority of people. If you can't deal with "xhost problems" then you probably need to start from the basics. Perhaps you didn't export the variables.

>My question is: Does Oracle treat Linux like it is a Microsoft OS?

No.

>Does Oracle put the installation where it wants to put it and not
>where you want it? I had the same problem when I installed Oracle
>Express on Linux a while ago. It looks like Oracle does not consider
>Linux to be a real Unix OS.

It looks like you don't know how to use your OS.

>Or is the OFA message a bunch of BS?
>

-- 
Jim Smith
Ponder Stibbons Limited <http://oracleandting.blogspot.com/>
RSS <http://oracleandting.blogspot.com/atom.xml>
Received on Mon Apr 09 2007 - 03:12:27 CDT

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