Oracle® Database Companion CD Installation Guide 10g Release 2 (10.2) for hp-ux PA-RISC (64-Bit) Part Number B19072-02 |
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This appendix describes the following advanced installation topics:
Typically, Oracle Universal Installer runs in interactive mode, which means that it prompts you to provide information on graphical user interface (GUI) screens. Alternatively, you can run Oracle Universal Installer in noninteractive mode. This mode is also referred to as silent mode, or silent installation.
You may want to use noninteractive mode to install the Oracle Database Companion CD products in the following scenarios:
You need to perform an unattended deployment of Companion CD products to multiple nodes. You can schedule the noninteractive installation mode from the operating system scheduler or other job subsystem that your site normally uses. This method is particularly useful for large sites that require many Oracle Database installations in which you need to quickly perform multiple installations using similar settings for each computer.
No interaction with the user is intended.
A graphical facility to run Oracle Universal Installer in interactive mode is not available.
This section covers the following topics on how you can use response files to run Oracle Universal Installer in noninteractive mode:
Using Response Files to Install Oracle Components in Noninteractive Mode
Running Oracle Universal Installer in Silent or Suppressed Mode
To use the noninteractive mode, you run Oracle Universal Installer with a response file. A response file is a text file that contains variables and values that Oracle Universal Installer uses during the installation process. Oracle provides a set of sample response files that you can customize, or you can create your own response file by recording your installation selections.
See Also: Oracle Universal Installer and OPatch User's Guide for more information about response file formats |
Table B-1 lists the sample response files provided on the installation media.
Table B-1 Response Files
Response File | Description |
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Oracle HTML DB only installation |
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Oracle HTML DB with Oracle HTTP Server installation |
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Oracle Database 10g Products installation type |
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Oracle Database Companion CD installation type |
To modify a response file template:
Copy the response file from the response file directory to a directory on your system as follows:
$ cp /directory_path/response/response_file.rsp local_directory
In this example, directory_path
is the path of the companion
directory on the installation media or the hard drive. If you have copied the software to a hard drive, then you can also edit the file in the response
directory.
Open the response file in a text editor:
$ vi /local_dir/response_file.rsp
In addition to editing settings specific to the Oracle Database installation, check that the FROM_LOCATION
path is correct and points to the products.xml
file in the stage
directory in the installation media. You may want to set this variable to point to an absolute path, for example:
FROM_LOCATION="/directory_path/response/stage/products.xml"
Remember that you can specify sensitive information, such as passwords, at the command line rather than within the response file.
See Also: Oracle Universal Installer and OPatch User's Guide for detailed information on creating response files. |
To edit the file, follow the instructions in the file.
Note: Oracle Universal Installer or the configuration assistant fails if you do not correctly configure the response file. |
Change the permissions on the file to 700
:
$ chmod 700 /local_dir/response_file.rsp
Caution: A fully specified response file for an Oracle Database installation contains the passwords for database administrative accounts and for a user that is a member of the OSDBA group (required for automated backups). Ensure that only the Oracle software owner user can view or modify response files or consider deleting them after the installation succeeds. |
You can use Oracle Universal Installer in interactive mode to record a response file that you can edit and then use to complete silent-mode or suppressed-mode installations. When you are recording the response file, you can either complete the installation, or you can exit from Oracle Universal Installer on the Summary page, before it starts to copy the software to the system.
If you want to use Record mode during a noninteractive installation, then Oracle Universal Installer copies the variable values that were specified in the original source response file into the new response file.
To record a new response file:
Ensure that the computer on which you are creating the response file meets the requirements specified in Chapter 2.
When you run Oracle Universal Installer to record a response file, it checks the system to verify that it meets the requirements to install the software.
Enter a command similar to the following to start Oracle Universal Installer:
Note: Do not specify a relative path to the response file. If you specify a relative path, then Oracle Universal Installer fails. |
$ /directory_path/runInstaller -record -destinationFile filename
In this command:
On each Oracle Universal Installer screen, specify the required information.
When Oracle Universal Installer displays the Summary screen, perform one of the following steps:
Click Install to create the response file, and then continue with the installation.
Click Cancel, and then click Yes to create the response file but exit from Oracle Universal Installer without installing the software.
The response file is saved in the location that you specified using the -destinationFile
option.
If you do not complete the installation, then delete the Oracle home directory that Oracle Universal Installer created using the path you specified on the Specify File Locations screen.
Before using the recorded response file on another system, use a text editor to edit the file and make any required changes.
Use the comments in the file as a guide when editing it.
Run the response file by following the instructions in the "Running Oracle Universal Installer in Silent or Suppressed Mode" section.
To run Oracle Universal Installer in silent or suppressed mode, follow these steps:
Complete the preinstallation tasks listed in Chapter 2.
Log in as the Oracle software owner user (typically, oracle
).
If you are completing a suppressed-mode installation, set the DISPLAY
environment variable.
Note: You do not have to set theDISPLAY environment variable if you are completing a silent-mode installation. |
To start Oracle Universal Installer in silent or suppressed mode, enter a command similar to the following:
Note: Do not specify a relative path to the response file. If you specify a relative path, then Oracle Universal Installer fails. |
$ /directory_path/runInstaller [-silent] [-noconfig] -responseFile filename
In this example:
directory_path
is the path of the companion
directory on the installation media or the hard drive
-silent
indicates that you want to run Oracle Universal Installer in silent mode
-noconfig
suppresses running the configuration assistants during installation, and a software-only installation is performed instead
filename
is the full path and file name of the installation response file that you configured
See Also: For more information about other options for therunInstaller command, enter the following command:
$ /directory_path/runInstaller -help
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After the installation is completed, log in as the root
user and run the root.sh
script:
$ su # $ORACLE_HOME/root.sh
See Also:
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You can run Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant in noninteractive mode by entering your configuration parameter settings directly in the Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant wfinstall.csh
script. You must specify all required and conditionally required parameters for the features that you want to use.
To run Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant in noninteractive mode:
Go to the $ORACLE_HOME/wf/install
directory, which is the default location of the wfinstall.csh
script.
Open the wfinstall.csh
script in a text editor, and locate the line that is similar to the following:
. . . repository.jar" WorkflowCA /wfdir workflow_directory /orahome oracle_home
For example:
. . . repository.jar" WorkflowCA /wfdir /d1/iasinstall/m21pw1/wf /orahome /d1/iasinstall/m21pw1
Edit the script to append your additional parameters after the /wfdir
, /orahome
, and /ospath
parameters. Enter all the parameters on the same line. Otherwise, the script will not run correctly.
. . . repository.jar" WorkflowCA /wfdir workflow_directory /orahome oracle_home /wfacct workflow_schema /instype installation_type /tnsconndesc connection_string
In the preceding script line:
/wfdir
: The Oracle Workflow directory within your Oracle home directory. The default directory is $ORACLE_HOME/wf
.
/orahome
: Your Oracle home directory location. For example, /u01/app/oracle/product/10.2/db_2
.
/wfacct
: Workflow Account.
/instype
: Specify one of the following installation options:
server
: Configures Workflow Server only; available in both GUI mode and command-line mode
add_language
: Sets the language or languages used; available in both GUI mode and command-line mode
/tnsconndesc
: Connection string to the Oracle Database.
Note: If a parameter can be entered in both user interface mode and noninteractive mode, then this section lists the name of the corresponding field on the Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant screen alongside the noninteractive mode parameter name. |
If you specified add_language
for the /instype
parameter, then enter the /nlsopt
parameter with the languages you want to add.
Enclose the languages in double quotation marks. For example, to specify Arabic, German, and Danish, enter the following value:
"ar d dk"
To use all available languages, set nlsop
to all
. Oracle Workflow Server supports all the languages that Oracle Database supports.
See Also: The "Locale Data" section in Oracle Database Globalization Support Guide for a list of standard language abbreviations |
If you specified server
for the /instype
parameter, then enter the following parameters if you want to integrate Oracle Internet Directory as your Oracle Workflow directory service:
/ldaphost
: LDAP host name
/ldapport
: LDAP non-SSL port
/ldapuser
: LDAP admin user name
/ldaplogbase
: Changelog DN
/ldapuserbase
: User base (for example, /ldapuserbase cn=Users,dc=us,dc=oracle,dc=com
)
If you are upgrading an existing installation of Oracle Workflow that is already integrated with Oracle Internet Directory, then you can omit the LDAP parameters for Oracle Internet Directory integration if they are already defined in your database.
In this case, Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant configures your Oracle Internet Directory integration by using the existing LDAP parameters defined in your database. However, if you specify new LDAP parameters here, then Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant will update your settings.
If you specified server
or all
for the /instype
parameter, then enter the following parameters if you want to use Oracle Workflow Notification Mailer:
/mailserver
: Inbound e-mail account: server name
/mailuser
: Inbound e-mail account: user name
/mailhost
: Outbound e-mail account: server name
/htmlagent
: Message generation: HTML agent
/mailreply
: Message generation: reply-to address
/processfolder
: E-mail processing: name of processed folder
/discardfolder
: E-mail processing: name of discard folder
If you specified server
for the /instype
parameter and if you want to change the tablespace assigned to the Oracle Workflow database account, then set the /tablespace
parameter to a valid existing tablespace name.
To control how Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant writes log information, set the following parameters:
/debug
: Specify true
if you want Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant to write debug information to the workflow.log
file. By default, Oracle Workflow does not log this information.
/logdir
: Specify the path to the directory in which you want Oracle Workflow Configuration Assistant to write the workflow.log
file, or specify nolog
if you do not want to create a log file. By default, the log file is written to the $ORACLE_HOME/wf/install
directory.
Save your changes, and close the wfinstall.csh
file.
To run the wfinstall.csh
script, enter the following command:
$ORACLE_HOME/wf/install/wfinstall.csh
If the wfinstall.csh
script includes the minimum parameters, all entered as a single line of text in the file, then it performs the configuration in noninteractive mode, without displaying the Oracle Workflow Assistant screen. However, as a security precaution, the script may prompt you to enter the following passwords at run time, depending on the installation options that your site uses:
The password for your Oracle Workflow database account
Your SYS
password
The password for the LDAP user account, if you enter LDAP parameters
The password for the notification mailer e-mail account, if you enter mailer parameters