Oracle Fusion Applications 11.1.2.9 Installation Part 2 Preparing for an Installation
2.1 Mounting the Shared Storage
Mount the shared storage on each server according to the information
defined in the Oracle Fusion Applications Installation Workbook -
Storage tab -> Shared Storage table.
Ensure that the file system is mounted as read-write.
If you are using different shared storage for Oracle Identity
Management and Oracle Fusion Applications, follow these steps to mount each
shared drive:
■ The Oracle Identity Management shared
storage should be mounted on the servers running Oracle Identity Management
components (see the Topology tab in the Oracle Fusion Applications
Installation Workbook).
■ The Oracle Fusion Applications shared
storage should be mounted on the servers running Oracle Fusion Applications
components (see the Topology tab in the Oracle Fusion Applications
Installation Workbook).
Verifying the /etc/oraInst.loc File
2.2 Preparing Servers
Preparing the Oracle Identity Management Server (IDM01)
Ensure Software Install Location is 45
Characters or Fewer
When planning the Oracle Identity Management deployment, ensure that
the Software Installation Location directory path is 45 characters or
fewer in length. You specify this directory on the Installation and
Configuration page when you create the provisioning profile. A longer pathname
can cause errors during Oracle Identity Management provisioning.
Configure Kernel Parameters
UNIX: The kernel parameter and shell limit values shown below are
recommended values only. For production database systems, Oracle recommends
that you tune these values to optimize the performance of the system. See your
operating system documentation for more information about tuning kernel
parameters. Kernel parameters must be set to a minimum of those below on all
nodes in the cluster. The values in the following table are the current Linux
recommendations. For more information, refer to Oracle Fusion Middleware
System Requirements and Specifications. If you are deploying a database
onto the host, you might need to modify additional kernel parameters. Refer to
the 11g Release 2 Oracle Grid Infrastructure Installation Guide for
your platform.
Linux:
To set these parameters:
1. Log in as root and add or amend the entries in /etc/sysctl.conf.
2. Save the file.
3. Activate the changes by issuing the command:
/sbin/sysctl –p
Set the Open File Limit
On all UNIX operating systems, the minimum Open
File Limit should be 150000.
To change the shell limits, login as root and edit the /etc/security/limits.conf
file.
Add the following lines:
* soft nofile 150000
* hard nofile 150000
* soft nproc 16384
* hard nproc 16384
If you are installing on Oracle Linux Server release 6, edit /etc/security/limits.d/90-nproc.conf
to make sure it has the following line:
* soft nproc 16384
After editing the file, reboot the machine.
Synchronize Time Between Nodes
Synchronize the time on the individual Oracle Internet Directory nodes
using Greenwich Mean Time so that there is a discrepancy of no more than 250
seconds between them.
Preparing the Oracle Fusion Applications Server(FA01)
Increase the Open Files Limit
Increase the limit of open files to 327679 or higher for the operating
system.
For Linux x86-64:
Modify /etc/security/limits.conf to read as follows:
■ FUSION_USER_ACCOUNT soft nofile 327679
■ FUSION_USER_ACCOUNT hard nofile 327679
Edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config as follows:
1. Set UsePAM to Yes.
2. Restart sshd.
3. Logout (or reboot) and log in again.
Increase the maximum open files limit.
Edit /proc/sys/fs/file-max and set it to 6553600. The change becomes
effective immediately but does not persist after a reboot. To make the change
permanent edit /etc/sysctl.conf and set fs.file-max = 6553600. This change will
not be effective until the sysctl command is run or the server is rebooted.
Increase the Max User Processes
For all platforms, typically, you would have max user processes set to
16384:
$ulimit -u
16384
Increase the maximum user process to 16384 or higher.
Linux:
To check the max user processes:
$ulimit -u
16384
To change the max user processes:
Modify /etc/security/limits.conf to read as follows:
FUSION_USER_ACCOUNT soft nproc 16384
FUSION_USER_ACCOUNT hard nproc 16384
Preparing the Oracle Fusion Applications Server(DBNODE01)
Set the Kernel Parameter Value
Before you install the Oracle Database using the Provisioning Wizard,
ensure that the
value of the kernel parameter shmmax on the database host is greater
than the value of
the System Global Area (SGA) Memory.
The value of SGA Memory (sga_target) is 9 GB in the default Database
Configuration
Assistant (DBCA) template for the Starter database. If you are running
DBCA using
the production DBCA template packaged with Oracle Fusion Applications
Provisioning, the value of the SGA Memory is 18 GB. Ensure that shmmax
> (shmall *
shmmni) > SGA Memory, where shmmax, shmall, shmmni are kernel
parameters.
Linux:
For example, to retrieve the values of these kernel parameters, use
the following
command:
user@host> /sbin/sysctl -a | grep shm
kernel.shmmni = 4096
kernel.shmall = 3145728
kernel.shmmax = 12884901888
To set the value of a kernel parameter:
user@host> /sbin/sysctl -w
sys.kernel.shmmax=value
2.3 Create the hwrrepo directory
If you are provisioning the Oracle Fusion Human Capital Management (Oracle Fusion
HCM) application offerings, namely Workforce Development and Workforce
Deployment, and planning to use the Workforce Reputation Management
feature, you
need to perform the following tasks after provisioning is complete:
1. Create a directory named /mnt/hwrrepo (Windows: C:\mnt\hwrrepo) for
the
provisioning hosts.
2. Mount a shared disk as needed by the Workforce
Reputation (HWR) application.
Windows: net share hwrrepo=C:\mnt\hwrrepo /unlimited
/GRANT:userdomain\username,FULL
3. Grant directory permission to the user/group who owns the Oracle
Fusion
Applications WLS domain(s).This user can start or shut down the Oracle
Fusion
Applications environment.
UNIX: Run this shell command as root and replace <user id>:<group
id> with
appropriate user and group identifiers:
chown <user id>:<group id> /mnt/hwrrepo
Windows: icacls C:\mnt\hwrrepo /grant:r userdomain\username:(F)
4. Change read/write permission for the directory /mnt/hwrrepo to be
globally
readable/writable.
UNIX: Run this shell command as root:
chmod 750 /mnt/hwrrepo
You will see a warning message in the provisioning log during the
preverify phase
when you select the Workforce Development and Workforce Deployment
offerings for
provisioning if the directory is not setup. The warning message is a reminder.
You can
proceed with provisioning the environment and mount the shared disk after
provisioning is complete and before you start using the Workforce
Reputation
application.
2.4 Edit Host Names (UNIX)
For UNIX platforms, confirm that the host names are correctly formatted in
/etc/hosts, for each host that is participating in provisioning.
Review /etc/hosts for
each participating host and edit any host entries that do not meet the
following
recommendations:
1. The format for each host entry should follow this format:
IP_address canonical_hostname [aliases]
The canonical_hostname should be the same as the fully qualified host
name.
Errors can occur if a short version, or alias, of the host name is
specified first in
/etc/hosts. The usage of aliases is optional and can be left empty.
Examples of
correct and incorrect entries follow:
(Correct) 141.80.151.100 myMachine.company.com myMachine
(Incorrect) 141.80.151.100 myMachine
myMachine.company.com
2.5 Verify Required Operating System Packages and Libraries
Oracle Fusion Applications require specific operating system packages and libraries in
the hosts where the software is installed.
For Database Host
1. Navigate to REPOSITORY_LOCATION/installer/database/Disk1.
2. Run the command:
UNIX: ./runInstaller -executePrereqs -silent
Windows: setup.exe -executePrereqs -silent -jreLoc REPOSITORY_
LOCATION\jdk6
3. Review the output located at:
oraInventory/logs/installAction<timestamp>.log. For example,
oraInventory/logs/installActionyyyy-mm-dd_hh-mm-ssPM.log.
Other Oracle Fusion Applications Hosts
1. Navigate to REPOSITORY_LOCATION/installer/<product>/Disk1,
where
<product> represents:
■ atgpf
■ biappsshiphome
■ bishiphome
■ dbclient
■ ecm_bucket2
■ fusionapps
■ odi
■ soa
■ wc
■ webgate
■ webtier
Optionally, you can
also include the following products:
■ bhd
■ gop
2. Run
the command:
UNIX:
./runInstaller -sv
-jreLoc REPOSITORY_LOCATION\jdk6
3. Review the output located at: oraInventory/logs/install<timestamp>.out.
For
example, oraInventory/logs/installyyyy-mm-dd_hh-mm-ssAM.out.
4. Repeat Step 1 to Step 3 for all products listed
in Step 1.
If you want to Install the following production you need to install true type fonts
Appears only if you have selected Oracle Sales,
Oracle Marketing, or Oracle Financials offerings. Enter the directory where the
TrueType fonts are installed. The location varies on different operating
systems, but is typically found here:
How to install Microsoft TrueType Fonts in OEL 6.7
Download the Microsoft core fonts rpm package.
[root@fa01]# wget
https://www.itzgeek.com/msttcore-fonts-2.0-3.noarch.rpm
Install rpm package.
[root@geeksite~/[# rpm -Uvh
msttcore-fonts-2.0-3.noarch.rpm
Microsoft True Type core fonts successfully
installed on OEL 6.7.Continue: Oracle Fusion Applications 11.1.2.9 Installation Part 3
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