Installation methods that require manual configuration (Linux and UNIX) >
Installing DB2 products
with payload files (Linux and UNIX®)
This task describes how to install DB2® products, components, and features from DB2 payload files. This is not a
recommended method for installation. It is recommended that you use
the DB2 Setup wizard or the
response file method.
Prerequisites
Before you deploy DB2 payload files:
- Review the installation prerequisites and ensure the requirements
are met.
- Ensure that DB2 dependencies
are met. While reviewing the installation prerequisites, make note
of any DB2 products that must
be installed with each other. Then be sure to deploy the tar.gz file
for a product, as well as any of the tar.gz files for required products.
- Get the payload files, which are contained on the DB2 product DVD or can be downloaded from IBM® Passport Advantage®: http://www-306.ibm.com/software/howtobuy/passportadvantage/.
Restrictions
You cannot manually install
a DB2 product, component, or
feature using an operating system's native installation utility such
as rpm, SMIT, swinstall or pkgadd.
To install DB2 products,
components, and features from DB2 payload
files:
- For root installations, log on as a root user. For non-root
installations, log on with the user ID that is to own the DB2 installation.
- Insert and mount the appropriate DVD or access the file
system where the installation image is stored.
- Locate the DB2 component
you want to install. Each DB2 product
DVD provides a file that lists the components available for installation.
The component list is in a file called ComponentList.htm and
is located in the /db2/platform directory
on your DVD, where platform is the platform that you are installing
on.
- Uncompress the payload file.
Note:
For DB2 products and components to work
together, they must be installed to a single path. This is not to
be confused with the ability to install DB2 products
to multiple paths. But, for products and components to work together,
they must be installed to the same path, and must be at the same release
level. If a component has prerequisites, look in the DB2DIR/.metadata/COMPONENT/prereqs file
inside each payload to see what the prerequisites are. If any required
components are missing, that functionality will not work.
To
uncompress the payload file, run the appropriate command:
where
- DB2DIR is the full path name where you are installing:
- For non-root installations, DB2DIR must be $HOME/sqllib.
This directory must be empty
- For root installations, the default path is:
- /opt/IBM/db2/V9.7 for AIX, HP-UX or Solaris
- /opt/ibm/db2/V9.7 for Linux
If you choose not to use the default path, you can specify
a different installation path.
DB2 installation paths have the
following rules:
- Can include lowercase letters (a-z), uppercase letters (A-Z),
and the underscore character ( _ )
- Cannot exceed 128 characters
- Cannot contain spaces
- Cannot contain non-English
characters
- dvd represents the mount point of the DB2 DVD.
- filename is the name of the DB2 component
you are installing.
- To ensure the embedded library search path on each DB2 executable and library file
uses the installation path, run the following command:
DB2DIR/install/db2chgpath
where DB2DIR is
the full path name where you are installing.
- Important notes:
-
- After you run the db2chgpath command, program
files cannot be moved.
- If you install additional features to the same path at a subsequent
time, you must run the db2stop command, and rerun
the db2chgpath command.
- For root installations, you can create a DB2 instance at this time using the db2icrt command. If there is no need to create an instance, you should at least
run the db2ilist command. Either the db2icrt command
or the db2ilist command must be run at this time,
because a side-effect of running either command is that the installation
is registered with the global registry.
- For non-root installations, run $HOME/sqllib/db2nrcfg to
configure the non-root instance.
- Set up the db2ls utility. The db2ls utility
allows you to query information about installed DB2 copies. To set up the db2ls utility:
- Determine which DB2 copy
is the most updated copy by running the following command:
db2greg -dump
Output
such as the following will display:
S,DB2,9.5.0.0,/opt/ibm/copy1,-,,0,,,1159464765,0
S,DB2,9.5.0.1,/opt/ibm/copy2,,,1,0,,1159466596,0
In the
sample output, 9.5.0.1 in the second line indicates that copy2 is
at a higher level than copy1, which is at 9.5.0.0.
- Check /usr/local/bin to see if
a link to db2ls exists. If it exists, check which DB2 copy it points to.
- If either of the following conditions are true, create
a link to /opt/ibm/<latest_copy>/install/db2ls in
the /usr/local/bin directory (where <latest_copy> is
the DB2 copy with the highest
level):
- /usr/local/bin/db2ls does not exist
- /usr/local/bin/db2ls exists, but points to
an installed DB2 copy which
is not the most updated copy on the system
- Set up the DB2 fault
monitor in /etc/inittab by running the db2fmcu command,
which is available in a server installation. For example:
DB2DIR/bin/db2fmcu -u -p /etc/inittab
where DB2DIR is
the full path name where you are installing.
- For non-root installations, after the DB2 product is installed, you need to open a
new login session to use the non-root DB2 instance.
Alternatively, you can use the same login session if you source the DB2 instance environment with $HOME/sqllib/db2profile (for
Bourne shell and Korn shell users) or $HOME/sqllib/db2chsrc (for
non C shell users), where $HOME is the non-root
user's home directory.
After payload deployment, there are further manual configuration
tasks which must be performed. Refer to the Related tasks for details.
[ Top of Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Contents ]