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#1
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#2
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I wonder what are the requirements for the minimally sized redhat-like distribution (or centos, or fedora) which allow oracle to run without issues? suppose I just don't want do download and install those GBs for the system. what would be minimalistic distribution to run oracle? and another question: what is the reason for not porting oracle to bsd family systems? are there really serious technical/philosophical differences which make porting not an option? I saw some pages which describe installing oracle on non-supported linuxes (like gentoo): do this, do that and basically you're done and oracle works. but when it comes to bsd the only information was reporting Oracle 8.0.5 and 9i run on freebsd. it looks like tough task to run oracle on bsd. why? thank you -- geos followup-to set for this message to: comp.databases.oracle.server |
#3
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and another question: what is the reason for not porting oracle to bsd family systems? |
#4
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It could just be linux was a religion that got pushed late last century. |
#5
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Google: minimal gladstone oracle install |
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Don't know about bsd, 22 years ago I ran O6 on SunOS which was then a bsd variant. I speculate something about shared memory and interprocess communication details. It could just be linux was a religion that got pushed late last century. |
#6
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joel garry wrote: Google: minimal gladstone oracle install joel, did you mean this site: http://diznix.com/2011/03/21/gladstone/ Don't know about bsd, 22 years ago I ran O6 on SunOS which was then a bsd variant. *I speculate something about shared memory and interprocess communication details. *It could just be linux was a religion that got pushed late last century. thanks, geos |
#7
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I wonder what are the requirements for the minimally sized redhat-like distribution (or centos, or fedora) which allow oracle to run without issues? suppose I just don't want do download and install those GBs for the system. what would be minimalistic distribution to run oracle? |
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and another question: what is the reason for not porting oracle to bsd family systems? are there really serious technical/philosophical differences which make porting not an option? |
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I saw some pages which describe installing oracle on non-supported linuxes (like gentoo): do this, do that and basically you're done and oracle works. but when it comes to bsd the only information was reporting Oracle 8.0.5 and 9i run on freebsd. it looks like tough task to run oracle on bsd. why? |
#8
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You can run a Linux emulation layer which allows you to run any Linux executable on *BSD - but they cater to different markets - *BSD is a workhorse server for lots of functionality, but not for Oracle and the like... |
#9
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You can run a Linux emulation layer which allows you to run any Linux executable on *BSD - but they cater to different markets - *BSD is a workhorse server for lots of functionality, but not for Oracle and the like... |
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I don't understand what you mean by that. How do you differentiate "a workhorse server for lots of functionality" from Linux or from a system which is capable of running Oracle databases? |
#10
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On Sat, 31 Mar 2012 11:27:02 +0200, Robert Klemme wrote: You can run a Linux emulation layer which allows you to run any Linux executable on *BSD - but they cater to different markets - *BSD is a workhorse server for lots of functionality, but not for Oracle and the like... I don't understand what you mean by that. *How do you differentiate "a workhorse server for lots of functionality" from Linux or from a system which is capable of running Oracle databases? The *BSD's are (or would be), of course, more than capable of running Oracle *if* Oracle chose to certify them. What I meant about "workhorse server" is that the *BSD's have taken on the role of "invisible workhorse of the internet". Basically the *BSD's got "screwed" by the licencing disputes in the mid- to late-90's - Linux had the momentum - Torvalds himself has said that he wouldn't have bothered to develop Linux if BSD had been available. Another example of superior technology being beaten by bad luck... Paul... * *robert |
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