Oracle® Database Release Notes 10g Release 2 (10.2) for Linux Itanium Part Number B15673-02 |
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Release Notes
10g Release 2 (10.2) for Linux Itanium
B15673-02
January 2006
This document contains important information that was not included in the platform-specific or product-specific documentation for this release. This document supplements Oracle Database Readme and may be updated after it is released.
To check for updates to this document and to view other Oracle documentation, see the Documentation section on the Oracle Technology Network (OTN) Web site:
http://www.oracle.com/technology/documentation/
For additional information about this release, refer to the readme files located in the $ORACLE_HOME/relnotes
directory.
This document contains the following topics:
The latest certification information for Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2) is available on OracleMetaLink at:
http://metalink.oracle.com
Products and Components Not Certified at the Time of This Publication
At the time of this publication, Oracle Cluster File System version 2 is not certified on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9.
When you restart a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 system, raw devices revert to their original owners and permissions by default. If you are using raw devices with this operating system for your Oracle files, for example, for ASM storage or Oracle Clusterware files, you need to override this default behavior. To do this, add an entry to the /etc/rc.d/rc.local
file for each raw device containing the chmod
and chown
commands required to reset them to the required values.
As an example, here are sample entries in a /etc/rc.d/rc.local
file that control the restart behavior of raw devices for two ASM disk files (/dev/raw/raw6
and /dev/raw/raw7
), two Oracle Cluster Registry files (/dev/raw/raw1
and /dev/raw/raw2
), and three Oracle Clusterware voting disks (/dev/raw/raw3
, /dev/raw/raw4
, and /dev/raw/raw5
):
# ASM chown oracle:dba /dev/raw/raw6 chown oracle:dba /dev/raw/raw7 chmod 660 /dev/raw/raw6 chmod 660 /dev/raw/raw7 # OCR chown root:oinstall /dev/raw/raw1 chown root:oinstall /dev/raw/raw2 chmod 660 /dev/raw/raw1 chmod 660 /dev/raw/raw2 # Voting Disks chown oracle:oinstall /dev/raw/raw3 chown oracle:oinstall /dev/raw/raw4 chown oracle:oinstall /dev/raw/raw5 chmod 644 /dev/raw/raw3 chmod 644 /dev/raw/raw4 chmod 644 /dev/raw/raw5
The following products are not supported with Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2):
Grid Control Support
Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2) can be managed as a target by Grid Control 10.1.0.4. However, Oracle Database 10g release 2 is not supported by Grid Control 10.1.0.4 as a repository.
Before upgrading to or installing Oracle Database 10g release 2, install the libaio
package.
Install oracleasm-support
package version 2.0.0.1 or higher to use ASMLib on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 Advanced Server or SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9.
Review the following sections for information about issues that affect Oracle Database installation, configuration, and upgrade:
If you are upgrading a 9.2 RAC environment to Oracle Database 10g release 2 on Red Hat Linux 3.0, then you must upgrade the operating system kernel version to 2.4.21-37.EL.
Additionally, you must apply a patch to GLIBC
before proceeding with the Oracle Clusterware installation. Follow the instructions documented in OracleMetaLink note 284535.1.
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 3006854.
Before running root.sh
in the first node of a shared Oracle Clusterware home, add the following line in the $ORA_CRS_HOME/opmn/conf/ons.config
file:
usesharedinstall=true
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 4454562.
To install Enterprise Security Manager (ESM), install Oracle Client and choose the Administrator installation type.
When upgrading from 10.1.x to 10.2, if the host name directory under /etc/oracle/scls_scr
includes the domain name, then you will see the following error message when running rootupgrade.sh
and the Oracle Clusterware stack will not start:
A file or directory in the path name does not exist.
/etc/init.cssd[509]: /etc/oracle/scls_scr/host_name/root/cssrun: 0403-005
Cannot create the specified file.
Workaround: Move the directory /etc/oracle/scls_scr/
hostname
.domain_name
to /etc/oracle/scls_scr/
hostname
and rerun rootupgrade.sh
.
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 4472284.
To enable the extjob
executable to locate required libraries, the $ORACLE_HOME/lib
directory and all of its parent directories must have execute permissions for group
and other
.
When modifying the name, IP address, or netmask of an existing virtual IP address (VIP) resource, use the following command:
srvctl modify nodeapps
and include the existing interfaces for the VIP in the -A
argument. For example:
srvctl modify nodeapps -n mynode1 -A 100.200.300.40/255.255.255.0/eth0
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 4500688.
The following sections contain information about issues related to Oracle Database 10g and associated products:
If the postgresql-devel
package is installed on the system, then you must add the following directory to the beginning of the sys_include
parameter in the $ORACLE_HOME/precomp/admin/pcscfg.cfg
file before building Pro*C applications:
$ORACLE_HOME/precomp/public
If you do not make this change, then you may encounter errors similar to the following when linking the applications:
/tmp/ccbXd7v6.o(.text+0xc0): In function `drop_tables': : undefined reference to `sqlca'
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 3933309.
If your system uses a European language, then you must not use the UTF-8 locale. For example, if your system uses German, set the LANG
and LC_ALL
environment variables to de_DE
instead of de_DE.UTF-8
.
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 3957096.
The following note applies if you are using Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 and using raw devices to store the Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) and the voting disk for Oracle Clusterware, or using raw devices for Automatic Storage Management (ASM) database files. For each raw device used for the purposes listed, you must add two entries in the /etc/rc.d/rc.local
file after running the root.sh
script following the installation of Oracle Clusterware.
For each OCR file, the entries should look as follows, where oinstall
is the Oracle install group and /dev/raw/raw
n
is an individual device file:
chown root:oinstall /dev/raw/rawn chmod 640 /dev/raw/rawnmar
For each voting disk file, the entries should look as follows, where oracle
is the Oracle user, oinstall
is the Oracle install group, and /dev/raw/raw
n
is an individual device file:
chown oracle:oinstall /dev/raw/rawn chmod 644 /dev/raw/rawnmar
For each ASM file, the entries should look as follows, where oracle
is the Oracle user, oinstall
is the Oracle install group, and /dev/raw/raw
n
is an individual device file:
chown oracle:oinstall /dev/raw/rawn chmod 660 /dev/raw/rawnmar
This section lists the issues with Cluster Verification Utility on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9:
Cluster Verification Utility (CVU) does not support shared checks for raw disks used for Oracle Cluster File System version 2 on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9.
The preinstallation stage verification checks for Oracle Clusterware and Oracle Real Applications Clusters and reports missing packages. Ignore the following missing packages and continue with the installation:
compat-gcc-7.3-2.96.128 compat-gcc-c++-7.3-2.96.128 compat-libstdc++-7.3-2.96.128 compat-libstdc++-devel-7.3-2.96.128
To use hugepages
or to accommodate the VLM window size on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0, you must increase the default maximum size of the per-process locked memory. To increase the per-process max locked memory limit, add the following lines to the /etc/security/limits.conf file
, where oracle
is the user that administers the database:
oracle soft memlock 3145728 oracle hard memlock 3145728
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0, Oracle C++ Call Interface (OCCI) does not yet support GCC 3.4.3. The current GNU C++ compiler version that OCCI supports with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 is GCC 3.2.3.
Workaround: Install Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 with GCC 3.2.3.
Note: For updates on GCC support, refer to the OCCI home page on OTN:http://www.oracle.com/technology/tech/oci/occi/index.html |
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0, Oracle XML Developer's Kit (XDK) is not supported with GCC. XDK is supported with Intel C++ compiler (ICC).
Installing Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2.0.1) on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 Update 1 (2.6.9-11.ELsmp) produces a link error during creation of liborasdkbase.so.10.2
. The following error message is thrown:
INFO: gcc: INFO: /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.5: No such file or directory INFO: INFO: $OH/bin/genorasdksh: Failed to link liborasdkbase.so.10.2
This is because Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2) requires Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3.0 libraries (/usr/lib/libstdc++.so.5
).
Workaround: Install the compatible libraries as follows:
rpm -ql compat-libstdc++-33-3.2.3-47.3
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 4605635.
Do not remove the key values for the wait class metrics. Doing so removes them permanently and currently there is no easy way to recover them.
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 4602952.
cvuqdisk-1.0.1-1.rpm (i386 rpm)
does not work as expected in Linux Itanium. You need to install cvuqdisk-1.0.1-1.ia64.rpm
for cluster verification utility to verify the sharedness check of raw disks for 10.2 Linux Itanium.
When you use Oracle Universal Installer or Database Configuration Assistant in Japanese environment, you must set the LANG
environment variable to C.
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 4764895.
If you plan to install Oracle HTML DB with Oracle HTTP Server from companion CD on the system where Oracle Database 10g has already been installed, you need to start ONS before you start the companion CD installation. This is required to prevent the companion CD installation from allocating the ports already allocated to ONS Server in the Database installation.
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 4701821.
This section lists corrections to installation guides for Linux Itanium.
In the "Software Requirements" section of quick installation guides and Chapter 2 of installation guides, the following should be the list of the supported operating systems:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS/ES 3.0 (Update 4 or later)
Red Hat Linux 4.0 (Update 1 or later)
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9.0 with SP2 or later
SUSE Linux Enterpreise Server 8.0 is not supported with this release.
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Oracle Database Release Notes, 10g Release 2 (10.2) for Linux Itanium
B15673-02
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