Ingres II HOWTO
Pal Domokos
[email protected]
Copyright � 1999, 2000 by Pal Domokos
V1.1, 20 June, 2000
Revision History
Revision V1.1 20 June, 2000 Revised by: pd
Extended with material on the full version of Ingres II 2.0
Revision V1.01 23 December, 1999 Revised by: pd
Minor fixes
Revision V1.0 7 November, 1999 Revised by: pd
Original version
This document helps install the Ingres II Relational Database
Management System on Linux. It covers the setup of both the free
Software Development Kit and the full version of Ingres. Further
sections try to make it easier to start working with Ingres.
_________________________________________________________________
Table of Contents
1. [1]Introduction
1.1. [2]Copyright
1.2. [3]Disclaimer
1.3. [4]New Versions of the HOWTO
1.4. [5]Credits
1.5. [6]Audience
2. [7]Ingres
2.1. [8]University Ingres and Commercial Ingres
2.2. [9]The Software Development Kit
2.3. [10]The Beta Version
2.4. [11]The Ingres II Full Edition
2.5. [12]The Unicenter TNG Framework
3. [13]System Requirements
3.1. [14]Hardware
3.2. [15]Software
3.3. [16]Kernel Parameters
3.4. [17]The ingres User and II_SYSTEM
4. [18]Preparing for the Installation
4.1. [19]Ingres Environment Variables
4.2. [20]II_LOG_FILE and II_DUAL_LOG
4.3. [21]Database Locations
4.4. [22]The iidbdb Database
4.5. [23]II_DATABASE
4.6. [24]II_CHECKPOINT
4.7. [25]II_DUMP
4.8. [26]II_JOURNAL
4.9. [27]II_WORK
4.10. [28]Other Ingres Environment Variables
5. [29]The Installation Process
5.1. [30]Starting the Installation Program
5.2. [31]Express Install
5.3. [32]Manual Install
5.4. [33]Completing the Initial Configuration
5.5. [34]Re-installation
5.6. [35]Command Line Install (SDK)
5.7. [36]Client Installation (Full Version)
5.8. [37]The Installer's Log
5.9. [38]Checking the Installation
6. [39]Basic System and Database Administration
6.1. [40]Starting and Stopping Ingres
6.2. [41]New Ingres Users and Locations
6.3. [42]Creating and Destroying Databases
6.4. [43]Collation Sequences
6.5. [44]Backup and Recovery
6.6. [45]Configuring Ingres
6.7. [46]Monitoring Ingres
6.8. [47]Message Files
7. [48]Ingres/Net
7.1. [49]User Authentication
7.2. [50]Login Account Passwords
7.3. [51]Installation Passwords
7.4. [52]ingvalidpw
7.5. [53]Setting up the Client
7.6. [54]Setting up the Server
7.7. [55]Using Net
8. [56]ICE (Internet Commerce Enabled)
8.1. [57]Configuring Apache
8.2. [58]ICE Setup
9. [59]Miscellaneous Topics
9.1. [60]Automatic Startup and Shutdown
9.2. [61]ingmenu
9.3. [62]Circumventing Ingres Net
9.4. [63]Forms-Based Development Tools
9.5. [64]Ingperl and Perl DBI
9.6. [65]Ingres links
1. Introduction
1.1. Copyright
Copyright � 1999, 2000 by Pal Domokos.
Please freely copy and distribute (sell or give away) this document in
any format. It is requested that corrections and/or comments be
forwarded to the document maintainer. You may create a derivative work
and distribute it provided that you:
1. Send your derivative work (in the most suitable format such as
SGML) to the LDP ([66]Linux Documentation Project) or the like for
posting on the Internet. If not the LDP, then let the LDP know
where it is available.
2. License the derivative work with this same license or use GPL.
Include a copyright notice and at least a pointer to the license
used.
3. Give due credit to previous authors and major contributors. If you
are considering making a derived work other than a translation, it
is requested that you discuss your plans with the current
maintainer.
_________________________________________________________________
1.2. Disclaimer
To put it briefly: there is no warranty about the validity of any
other statement in this document. Read and use at your own risk.
Furthermore, I am not an employee of Computer Associates International
and I have no official links with CA. This HOWTO is not official
documentation.
All copyrights are held by their respective owners. Use of a term in
this document should not be regarded as affecting the validity of any
trademark or service mark.
_________________________________________________________________
1.3. New Versions of the HOWTO
The latest version of this HOWTO can always be found on the [67]Linux
Documentation Project's site, in various formats:
* [68]HTML - multiple pages
* [69]HTML - multiple pages: tarred and gzipped
* [70]HTML - single page
* [71]PDF
* [72]PostScript - gzipped
* [73]Text
* [74]SGML (DocBook) source - gzipped
The LDP has many mirrors around the world, as listed on
[75]
http://www.linuxdoc.org/mirrors.html. Some of these mirrors may be
out of date, though. Therefore I suggest you check [76]LDP's primary
site for new versions.
HOWTOs are also bundled with most Linux distributions. If you are
reading this HOWTO from your Linux CD, also take a look at [77]LDP's
main site to check if a newer version exists.
_________________________________________________________________
1.4. Credits
I would like to thank for all the feedback I have received so far. I
found especially valuable the contributions of Jorgen Heesche (on
forms-based development tools), and Gerhard Hofmann (on the automatic
startup and shutdown of Ingres).
Last, but not least, my thanks go to CA for making it possible for me
to examine the Ingres II 2.0 Enterprise Edition for Linux.
Naturally, I continue to welcome any comments, criticisms and
suggestions. Just email me at <[78]
[email protected]>.
_________________________________________________________________
1.5. Audience
This HOWTO aims to help install Ingres II on (Intel) Linux. As always,
help is useful for those who need it and can utilize it as well.
Therefore:
* If you are an Ingres pro familiar with Linux then you do not
really need to read this HOWTO. Skim through it though if you have
time.
* If you have no previous background in relational database
management (experience with at least one real RDBMS, not some
dBase-like file management system), you do not know UNIX and have
just started using Linux, this HOWTO will not make an easy reading
for you. Even then, I do not want to persuade you not to try to
install and use Ingres. Do not give up easy!
If you are not a novice in database management and have some working
knowledge of Linux, this HOWTO is for you! We are not going to discuss
the basics of relational database management or SQL in this document,
neither are we going to elaborate on how to edit text files on Linux.
You can find as much information on these topics as you want in
numerous places. This HOWTO is not an Ingres guide, either: the Ingres
manuals serve that purpose.
The objective of this HOWTO is that the reader can prepare for, then
implement the installation of Ingres II on Linux, through simple and
understandable steps. It also gives starting points for basic Ingres
system and database administration.
I can only hope that the HOWTO reaches its goal.
_________________________________________________________________
2. Ingres
In this section the Ingres II Relational Database Management System is
introduced and you come to know how to get it.
_________________________________________________________________
2.1. University Ingres and Commercial Ingres
Let us start with an important fact: there are two different types of
Ingres. The original one, which was designed and developed in the
seventies by a research group led by Michael Stonebraker at the
University of California, Berkeley, was the first open source
relational database management system: it was free to use and
distribute, source code included. In fact, it is still free software,
although its development stopped in 1989. Its last version (version
8.9) made it into some Linux distributions as well. If you are
interested in it, you can download it from, say, the SuSE site. The
packages are:
* [79]The main software
* [80]The tools
In 1979, with the foundation of Relational Technology, the career of
Commercial Ingres started. Since 1995 it has been distributed by
Computer Associates. Its latest version is Ingres II 2.0. This HOWTO
deals with the installation of this type of Ingres.
_________________________________________________________________
2.2. The Software Development Kit
Ingres, being commercial software, is not free to use. However, CA,
like most RDBMS vendors, offers a free version of it (the Software
Development Kit) to everyone who is interested in learning Ingres. The
SDK has two variants, one for Windows NT and one for Linux. These
variants are not quite the same as far as the included components are
concerned. Obviously, we are engaged in installing the SDK for Linux
here. This contains the following elements:
* Intelligent DBMS: the database engine.
* Internet Commerce Enabled (ICE): Ingres' propriatery CGI solution
to connect a database to the Web.
* Enhanced Security: the tool supporting mandatory access control.
* C2 Security Auditing: the possibility of C2 level auditing.
* Terminal Monitors: forms-based and command line SQL interfaces.
* Querying and Reporting Tools: forms-based querying, report-writing
and report-running tools plus a forms editor.
* Querying and Reporting Runtime: like the previous one, but without
the forms editor.
* Vision Pro: integrated, forms-based development environment with a
code generator.
* Embedded SQL Precompilers: precompilers for embedding SQL
statements in 3GL applications. Supported languages are: C, C++,
COBOL, and Fortran.
You can order a free copy of the Ingres SDK CD on
[81]
http://www.cai.com/registration/cd_ingres.htm.
Remember that you are not allowed to use the SDK in a business
environment. It is for evaluating Ingres and prototyping applications
only.
The SDK CD contains both the Windows NT and the Linux versions of the
Software Development Kit. You can find the Linux files in the
following directories:
* /doc: the manuals in PDF format, together with the Linux version
of Acrobat Reader (linux-ar-40.tar.gz). The installer will not
copy the documentation to hard disk. These manuals are also
available on
[82]
http://www.cai.com/products/ingres/documentation_set.htm. I
will reference some of them later in this document.
* /int_lnx: this directory contains ingres.tar, the tarball to be
installed. ingres.tar can be installed directly from the CD or you
can copy it to hard disk first.
Do not forget to read the Readme file in the root directory on the CD.
_________________________________________________________________
2.3. The Beta Version
The freshest beta version of the SDK can always be downloaded from
[83]
http://www.cai.com/products/betas/ingres_linux/ingres_linux.htm.
Note: At the time of writing, the version of the downloadable beta
is 2.5. The next revision of the HOWTO will cover the installation
of this version, too. The 2.0 beta is still available on
[84]
ftp://ftp.cai.com/pub/marketing/ingres/ingresII9808libc6.tar.
_________________________________________________________________
2.4. The Ingres II Full Edition
In February 2000 Computer Associates announced the general
availability of Ingres II 2.0 for Linux. Besides the components found
in the SDK, the full edition contains more modules, such as:
* Net: this component makes possible for Ingres utilities and user
applications to access databases residing on different
installations.
* Replicator: support for replication functions.
* Star: for handling distributed databases.
* Enterprise Access: communication with different database
management systems and other, non-relational data sources (used to
be called Gateways).
* Protocol Bridge: for communicating with clients on different types
of networks.
* Spatial Object Library: for handling two-dimensional spatial
objects.
The CD, besides the /doc and /int_lnx directories that are common with
the SDK, contains install.sh, the general Ingres installer and its
files. More on install.sh later, in subsection [85]Starting the
Installation Program.
_________________________________________________________________
2.5. The Unicenter TNG Framework
At last, let me note that the Linux version of CA's Unicenter TNG
Framework also includes Ingres as its embedded database management
system. For this reason, knowing Ingres may come in handy when using
Unicenter, too. You can order a free Unicenter TNG Framework CD on
* [86]
http://www.cai.com/registration/tng_framework_linux/index.htm
for RedHat, or
* [87]
http://www.cai.com/registration/tng_framework_linux/suse_linux
.htm for SuSE.
_________________________________________________________________
3. System Requirements
In this section you will see what hardware and software requirements
must be met before you can install Ingres. The ingres user, owner of
the installation, makes a debut, too.
_________________________________________________________________
3.1. Hardware
The minimal hardware capable of running Ingres is:
* 486x33 processor, Pentium recommended.
* 16 Mb RAM, with 32 Mb swap space (64 Mb RAM recommended).
* 200 Mb disk space if you install everything (150 Mb will do for
the SDK). You do not need to have this space in one file system:
we will discuss the possibilities in the section [88]Preparing for
the Installation.
Note: This is the minimum recommended configuration. Ingres, like
most other RDBMSs, is a fairly resource-hungry application. While
your development system will probably run beatifully on a 166 MHz
Pentium with 64 Mb RAM, a live system with potentially many
concurrent users would require more iron.
_________________________________________________________________
3.2. Software
The following software must be present for Ingres to run:
* kernel 2.0.34 or higher.
* libcrypt.so - this library is not included in every Linux
distribution. If this is the case with your system, check your
distribution's Web site: they must have it somewhere.
* uncompress - certain Linux distributions (such as Caldera's Open
Linux 2.2) do not contain the ncompress package. Again, check your
distribution's Web site if you do not have it.
Working glibc versions:
glibc SDK Full Version
glibc 2.07 (eg RedHat 5.2) Yes. No.
glibc 2.1 (eg RedHat 6.0) Yes but you need the RedHat compatibility
packages and an Ingres patch to be able to use the forms-based
development tools. See [89]Forms-Based Development Tools for details.
Yes.
glibc 2.1.1, 2.1.2 (eg RedHat 6.1) No. Yes.
glibc 2.1.3 (eg RedHat 6.2) See glibc 2.1. Yes.
If you are unsure of the version of your glibc, check the /lib
directory:
# ls -l /lib/libc*so
The output should be something like:
-rwxr-xr-x ... /lib/libc-2.1.3.so
The version of my glibc is apparently 2.1.3.
Note: There is no guarantee that if your system meets the above
requirements you will be able to install Ingres on it. Sticking to
a distribution that is explicitly mentioned in the release notes of
your Ingres version is the best way to avoid installation problems.
_________________________________________________________________
3.3. Kernel Parameters
The default settings of the Linux kernel are adequate for a
development Ingres environment. For a live system, however, probably
to increase the size of the database cache(s), you may want to change
the built-in value of the SHMMAX parameter. This parameter sets the
maximum size of a shared memory segment. By default, it is 32 Mb which
allows for a somewhat lesser buffer cache.
You have two choices to change the value of SHMMAX:
As root, simply echo the new value into /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax:
#echo 83886080 > /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax
In the example above, we set the value of SHMMAX to 80 Mb. The change
takes effect immediately but after a reboot, the original value is
restored.
The other possibility is to change SHMMAX's default value in the
kernel source (the relevant header file is
/usr/src/linux/include/asm/shmparam.h if you have installed the
source). In this case, you may also have to modify other parameters in
the file, then rebuild the kernel. I suggest you do it only if you
know what you are doing. For information on how to configure and
compile the kernel see [90]The Linux Kernel HOWTO by Brian Ward.
_________________________________________________________________
3.4. The ingres User and II_SYSTEM
We need an account called ingres to install and run Ingres. He will
own the installed software and only he can perform system management
tasks such as starting and stopping Ingres.
The ingres user may belong to any group. In the following example, we
will create a separate group for him.
The verified (therefore, recommended) shell for the ingres user is
bash. All examples in this paper apply to this shell. If you use some
other shell (which is probably just as fine), take into account the
differences in syntax.
The binaries, shared libraries, configuration files and other files
which make up the Ingres software, will be located in a tree structure
after installation. You will set the root of this tree via the shell
variable II_SYSTEM in the environment of the ingres user (to be exact,
the root directory will be $II_SYSTEM/ingres).
If you plan to install the whole software, either the SDK, or the full
version, make sure you have the following free space under
$II_SYSTEM/ingres:
SDK Full Version
70 Mb 90 Mb
10 Mb extra free space is needed during installation.
Tip: If this is the first time you install Ingres (I hope you start
with the SDK, not a live system), I suggest you keep the whole
installation (the Ingres software, databases, backups, sort areas,
etc.) in one place so that you can find every component easily. If
you have at least 150-200 Mb free space under $II_SYSTEM/ingres and
you do not plan to create large databases (at least, not for some
time), your system will work without problems. Should you at any
later time run out of space, you will always have the possibility
to relocate some of your databases to other partitions.
In the following, I will assume that II_SYSTEM is set to /opt.
Logging in as root, execute the tasks mentioned above:
# useradd -d /opt/ingres -s /bin/bash ingres
# chmod 755 /opt/ingres
# passwd ingres
The useradd command creates a group with the same name as the new user
if you do not specify the group on the command line. It also creates
the user's home directory.
We set the home directory of ingres to /opt/ingres
($II_SYSTEM/ingres). This is not mandatory but convenient.
Finally, append the following lines to the .bashrc file of ingres:
umask 022
export II_SYSTEM=/opt
export PATH=$II_SYSTEM/ingres/bin:$II_SYSTEM/ingres/utility:$PATH
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/lib:/usr/lib:$II_SYSTEM/ingres/lib
export ING_EDIT=/bin/vi
if [ -n "$DISPLAY" ]
then
export TERM_INGRES=vt100fx
else
export TERM_INGRES=vt100f
fi
ING_EDIT sets the editor that can be called from Ingres utilities or
application programs. Naturally, you can use any editor, not just vi.
You must, however, specify the whole access path to the program. (If
you stick to vi, check if it is under /bin: it may be somewhere else
in your system.)
Note: If the EDITOR shell variable is set, it overrides the value
of ING_EDIT.
Setting TERM_INGRES is necessary for the terminal to work properly.
Forms-based Ingres utilities, such as the installer itself, and also
applications created with traditional Ingres development tools (ABF,
Vision) make heavy use of function keys. The .bashrc above sets
TERM_INGRES according to the terminal type (X, or VT100-like).
These settings must be included in the .bashrc file of every Ingres
user.
_________________________________________________________________
4. Preparing for the Installation
This is the longest section and so it should be: after careful
planning the installation itself should be an easy task.
_________________________________________________________________
4.1. Ingres Environment Variables
You will use Ingres environment variables to determine where to put
further elements (besides the software itself) of the Ingres
installation. These variables, unlike II_SYSTEM, are not shell
variables but rather parameters of Ingres stored in a file. Some of
them can be changed at any time after the installation, but altering
the value of others requires a whole re-install. Later you will see
which of them are of this "stable" nature.
During installation, you can choose between setting these variables
manually or letting the installer set them to their default values
(Express Install option).
In the following, we will take the relevant Ingres environment
variables one by one and see what each of them is good for. It may
help if you put their planned values on paper. You can find an
Installation Worksheet in the Getting Started Guide which you can
print out and use for this purpose.
_________________________________________________________________
4.2. II_LOG_FILE and II_DUAL_LOG
Ingres uses an installation-wide transaction log file to record
information on all changes made to any database. This information
broadly consists of:
* Before images of updated or deleted rows. These are necessary for
rolling back uncommitted transactions, should it be required
(undo).
* The changes made to database objects. Recording them makes it
possible to redo committed transactions after a system crash if
the new data had not been written to the database prior the crash.
The transaction log resides in the II_LOG_FILE/ingres/log directory,
where II_LOG_FILE is an Ingres environment variable. The name of the
log file is ingres_log.
Express Install creates a log file of the minimum possible size, 16
Mb. Such a log file may not be large enough even in a development
system. If you have free disk space and choose manual install (in
which case you can specify the size of the log), set it to something
much larger.
Both the location and the size of the log file can be changed at any
time after installation. The method of doing this is described in the
System Reference Guide.
You also have to decide if you want dual logging (mirroring the
transaction log). If the log gets corrupted for any reason, Ingres
stops and you have to recover your databases from backup. Therefore,
in a live system, it is almost compulsory either to have some type of
RAID protection of the log or to have it mirrored by Ingres. If you
use dual logging, the copy of the log file can be found under
II_DUAL_LOG/ingres/log. Its name is dual_log.
In a development or test environment, mirroring the log is not always
necessary.
_________________________________________________________________
4.3. Database Locations
There can be any number of databases in an Ingres installation. A
database, on the other hand, consists of files of different types.
These are:
* Control file: it stores certain basic information about the
database. You can see this information with the infodb command
after you have completed the installation.
* Data files: every system table, user table, and also every index
goes in a separate file.
* Checkpoint files: checkpoint is the term Ingres uses for a
database backup. A backup can consist of more than file.
* Dump files: online backups are possible in Ingres, that is, the
database may be in use while the backup program is running. For
this reason, the database may change while it is being
checkpointed. Ingres, so that it can restore the database to the
state it was in at the beginning of the backup, saves the before
images of those data blocks (pages) that have changed during the
backup process. These pages are saved in the dump files.
* Journal files: from time to time, Ingres writes the records of
committed transactions from the log file to journal files (at
least, this is the default behavior: journalling may be set off at
the database or table level). The frequency of the journalling
activity is a tunable function of the amount of information that
is written to the transaction log. Journalling protects the
installation against media failures: if the disk containing the
database crashes, you can restore the last (just before the
failure occurred) committed state of the database using a backup
(checkpoint) of the database and the journals created after that
checkpoint was taken. If you lose the log disk, you can restore
the last committed state the database was in at the time the last
journal file was written.
* Work files: Ingres, if it needs to sort large volumes of data,
creates temporary files on disk.
The files constituting a database reside in different directories,
according to their types. These directories are specified indirectly,
by means of Ingres locations.
There are five location types:
* Data location: place for data files of a database. A database can
have more than one data location (adding data locations to a
database is called extending the database). However, every
database has a primary data location. The system tables and the
control file always reside in the primary location. When creating
a table, if you do not specify the location(s) to put it in, it
will be placed in the primary data location of the database.
* Checkpoint location: by default, backups are created here. Not
necessarily, however: the ckpdb command allows you to specify an
arbitrary place for the backup, this way you can checkpoint a
database directly to tape as well.
* Dump location: for dump files.
* Journal location: this is where the journal files for a database
reside.
* Work location: Ingres creates temporary sort files in this
location. Just like with data locations, a database may have more
than one work location. If this is the case, Ingres, by default,
uses all of them for each sort operation.
Let us see how these locations work in practice. Say we have a
database, called test, with the following locations:
* DATALOC1: data location --> /opt
* CKPLOC: checkpoint location --> /opt
* DMPLOC: dump location --> /opt
* JRNLLOC: journal location --> /opt
* WORKLOC1: work location --> /opt
Every location of the test database points to the /opt directory.
Elements of the database go in these directories:
* data files: /opt/ingres/data/default/test
* checkpoint files: /opt/ingres/ckp/default/test
* dump files: /opt/ingres/dmp/default/test
* journal files: /opt/ingres/jnl/default/test
* temporary files: /opt/ingres/work/default/test
Let us suppose now, that we extend the database to the following
locations:
* DATALOC2: data location --> /opt
* DATALOC3: data location --> /disk2
* WORKLOC2: work location --> /disk2
The database is effectively extended to the following directories:
* data files: /disk2/ingres/data/default/test
* temporary files: /disk2/ingres/work/default/test
DATALOC2 points to /opt, just like DATALOC1. Tables to be created in
location DATALOC2 will go to /opt/ingres/data/default/test, the same
directory where tables created in location DATALOC1 reside.
As is apparent from the example, we could have created just one
location for DATALOC1, DATALOC2, CKPLOC, DMPLOC, JRNLLOC, and
WORKLOC1.
Summarizing the main points about locations:
* Every location points to the root of a directory tree.
* More than one location can point to the same directory.
* A location can be used for storing different types of files.
* Databases can share locations. You can see from the example why
this is true: the name of the database becomes part of the
directory tree, hence files of different databases never mix.
_________________________________________________________________
4.4. The iidbdb Database
Every Ingres installation has a master database called iidbdb. Ingres
stores information about users, locations and user databases in this
database. iidbdb is created by the installer.
You have to set the locations for iidbdb during installation. These
locations are stored in the following Ingres environment variables:
* II_DATABASE: data location
* II_CHECKPOINT: checkpoint location
* II_DUMP: dump location
* II_JOURNAL: journal location
* II_WORK: work location
These variables determine the default locations for every user
database as well, if you do not override them when creating those
databases. See [91]Creating and Destroying Databases for more
information.
Warning
Changing the value of II_DATABASE, II_CHECKPOINT, II_DUMP, II_JOURNAL,
or II_WORK requires a complete re-install of Ingres.
Let us see these variables one by one.
_________________________________________________________________
4.5. II_DATABASE
II_DATABASE determines the data location of iidbdb. Its default value
is $II_SYSTEM (in case of a manual install you can enter a different
value for II_DATABASE, while Express Install inevitably sets it to
$II_SYSTEM).
The size of iidbdb after the installation is somewhat more than 5 Mb.
It can only grow significantly if you create hundreds of Ingres users,
databases or locations.
_________________________________________________________________
4.6. II_CHECKPOINT
II_CHECKPOINT contains the value for the checkpoint location of
iidbdb. By default, it is also set to $II_SYSTEM.
The size of a checkpoint is just about the same as that of the
database itself (at least until you modify the template file of the
checkpoint program: it is possible, as you will see in [92]Backup and
Recovery). The installer takes the first checkpoint of iidbdb.
If you plan to place checkpoints of user databases under II_CHECKPOINT
then you have to provide for more space here.
A further factor that must be taken into account is how long you want
to keep backups. When starting the checkpoint program, you can request
the deletion of older backups if you do not have too much free space.
_________________________________________________________________
4.7. II_DUMP
II_DUMP determines the dump location of the iidbdb database. By
default, its value equals to that of II_CHECKPOINT.
By the end of the installation process, II_DUMP will contain a very
small amount of data. If you always create checkpoints off-line then
you will not need much space here.
_________________________________________________________________
4.8. II_JOURNAL
II_JOURNAL contains the value for the journal location of the iidbdb
database. Its default value is the same as II_CHECKPOINT's.
The first checkpoint, taken by the installer causes the first, small
journal file to appear here. If you do not use different journal
locations for user databases then the necessary amount of free space
under II_JOURNAL depends on three factors:
* Whether you want Ingres to journal at all. If you take checkpoints
of your databases regularly and do not mind losing the changes you
have made to them since the latest checkpoint, you may switch off
journalling. Naturally, running a live system without journalling
is usually not acceptable.
* If journalling is switched on, then the growth rate of the journal
area is determined by the volume of changes made to the databases.
Frequent, large updates require quite a bit of space under
II_JOURNAL.
* The third factor is, how long you wish to keep old journal files.
If, when taking a checkpoint, you instruct ckpdb to delete the old
checkpoints, then previous journal files will be removed as well.
_________________________________________________________________
4.9. II_WORK
II_WORK determines the work location of the iidbdb database. It also
defaults to II_CHECKPOINT.
The problem of sizing the work location only arises if II_WORK serves
as a work location for user databases as well. It is next to
impossible to estimate the temporary disk space that will be needed
here; however, having the size of the largest table multiplied by
three should work as a starting point.
Remember that a database can have more than one work location. If the
original location turns out too small, you can always extend the
database to further work locations.
_________________________________________________________________
4.10. Other Ingres Environment Variables
Besides the Ingres environment variables that determine locations
there are a couple more that you have to set during installation (or
have Express Install set them to their default value). These are:
* II_INSTALLATION: a two-character code, identifying the
installation. Every Ingres installation on a machine must have its
own, unique, installation code. The default value for
II_INSTALLATION is II. Once set, it cannot be changed.
* II_NUM_OF_PROCESSORS: number of processors in the machine. By
default, it is 1. If you set it to a higher value, Ingres will use
spin-locks when accessing the database cache. If you do not know
what spin-locks are, do not bother. The point is to set
II_NUM_OF_PROCESSORS to 2 if you have a multiprocessor machine.
Its value can be changed at any time later.
* II_CHARSET: this variable determines the code set of all character
data stored in all databases you will create in the installation.
Its default value is ISO88591. Perhaps it is not surprising that
changing it to a different value after installation may corrupt
data stored in your existing databases. Since the iidbdb database
is created by the installer program, you should not choose Express
Install if ISO88591 does not suit you.
* II_TIMEZONE_NAME: name of the time zone, by default NA-PACIFIC.
During manual install you can select its value from a list of
valid codes. Ingres stores all date and time values in GMT and
adjusts them according to II_TIMEZONE_NAME when communicating with
the client. Therefore, if you set II_TIMEZONE_NAME to a different
value, you will see all date-time values in the databases change.
For this reason, set this variable to its final value before
creating the first user database.
The (manual) installer prompts you for the value of two further
parameters which are not Ingres environment variables:
* Expected number of concurrent users in the system: this is 32 by
default. Based on this number, the installer sets the value of a
number of other parameters, such as the size of the database
cache. These derived parameters can later be adjusted.
* SQL-92 compatible databases: by default, Ingres databases differ
from the SQL-92 standard in some ways. For example, object names
not protected by single or double quotes are converted to lower
case rather than upper case. You can find the other differences in
the SQL Reference Guide.
After you have made up your mind on the values of all installation
parameters, you know whether the default values for those variables
that cannot be changed after installation are acceptable to you. If
they are, you can choose Express Install.
_________________________________________________________________
5. The Installation Process
In this section, the actual installation of Ingres takes place.
_________________________________________________________________
5.1. Starting the Installation Program
In the following I will presume that you install directly from the CD
which is mounted under /cdrom. Depending on whether you install the
SDK or the full version of Ingres, you have to start the installation
differently.
For the SDK:
1. Log in as ingres.
2. cd to $II_SYSTEM/ingres if it is not your home directory.
3. Unpack the install subdirectory from the tar file.
4. Start the ingbuild program.
$ cd $II_SYSTEM/ingres
$ tar xf /cdrom/int_lnx/ingres.tar install
$ install/ingbuild
For the full version:
1. Log in as root.
2. Start the installer.
# /cdrom/install.sh
In this latter case, you have to let the installer know the owner of
the installation (ingres), and the value of II_SYSTEM. After that,
install.sh starts ingbuild for you.
From this point on, the installation process is the same for both
options.
On the starting screen of ingbuild you have to specify the path to the
tar file and select the type of install: Custom or Package. I suggest
you go for Custom Install to be able to choose exactly those elements
you want to install.
After choosing Custom Install, a table on the next screen shows all
components of your Ingres version together with their respective
sizes. Because of common parts in different components, the sizes
added up indicate much more disk space than is really needed for the
installation.
By default every component is set to be installed. If you want to
exclude some of them, write "No" in their "Install?" field.
You had previously decided if the default values for the "stable"
Ingres environment variables were acceptable for your installation. If
this is the case, you can choose Express Install here. Remember that
you can alter the value of II_LOG_FILE as well as the size of the
transaction log at any time later.
Tip: If this is your first Ingres install, you have the necessary
space under $II_SYSTEM/ingres and the "stable" parameters' default
values are OK, I suggest you choose Express Install.
Therefore, let us see this option first.
_________________________________________________________________
5.2. Express Install
In the case of Express Install, the installer executes the following
tasks:
* It untars all chosen components from the ingres.tar file to the
$II_SYSTEM/ingres/install/tmp directory.
* Checks the integrity of the components.
* Puts the components in appropriate subdirectories under
$II_SYSTEM/ingres.
* Sets the Ingres environment variables to their default values.
* Starts Ingres.
* Creates the iidbdb database.
* Takes a checkpoint of iidbdb.
* Stops Ingres.
* Sets up those components that require this (ABF, Enhanced
Security, etc).
If the installation process went OK, the program tells you that every
installed component is ready to use. In the table on the screen the
"Install?" column shows "Ready" for every selected component.
Ingres is installed on your machine. Jump to [93]Completing the
Initial Configuration.
_________________________________________________________________
5.3. Manual Install
If you choose Install rather than Express Install, the installer
untars ingres.tar, checks the integrity of the components and puts
them in their respective directories. Then it asks you if you want to
setup these components now.
If you decide to do the setup later, the installer stops. In the table
containing the components the "Install?" column shows "Not Set Up" for
every selected component. You can run ingbuild again at any time and
choose one of the options Setup All or Setup to set up all or one of
the components. A component cannot be used until it has been set up.
Let us see what happens if you choose to set up the components.
First, you have to set up the DBMS server. On the screens to follow
you will see a fair amount of explanatory text about the parameters we
have covered earlier.
During the setup phase, the installer prompts you for the values of
the Ingres environment variables and the other necessary parameters:
* II_INSTALLATION.
* II_DATABASE.
* II_CHECKPOINT: if you set it to the same value as II_DATABASE, the
installer warns you of the dangers of losing a database and its
backup at the same time. You have to repeat II_CHECKPOINT's value
for the program to accept it.
* II_JOURNAL.
* II_DUMP.
* II_WORK.
* II_LOG_FILE: the installer reminds you of Ingres' capability of
mirroring the transaction log. Naturally, it only makes sense if
the mirrored log file is on a different disk than the primary log
file. The installer asks you if you want to disable dual logging.
Then you have to specify the size of the log (16 Mb by default,
make it bigger if you have free disk space as I suggested
earlier). After this you have to tell the installer where to put
the primary log file, and, if you did not switch off dual logging,
the dual log file (II_DUAL_LOG).
* II_NUM_OF_PROCESSORS.
* II_TIMEZONE_NAME.
* II_CHARSET.
* Expected number of concurrent users.
* SQL-92 compatible databases.
At every prompt, enter the appropriate parameter's previously decided
value.
The installer may also ask you about other components you have chosen
to install. Accept the defaults for these.
Full Version
If you requested the installation of Net, make ingbuild set it up. Do
not bother setting an installation password, unless you know what it
is: we will complete Net's configuration later, in its own section
([94]Ingres/Net).
_________________________________________________________________
5.4. Completing the Initial Configuration
After an Express Install (but perhaps after a manual install as well),
you may want to change the values of some of the Ingres environment
variables. You will see how to do this here. Stay logged in as ingres.
You can view the current values of Ingres environment variables with
the ingprenv command:
$ ingprenv
You can change the value of any variable with the ingsetenv command:
$ ingsetenv II_TIMEZONE_NAME GMT1
In the example we set II_TIMEZONE_NAME to GMT1 (Greenwich Mean Time +
1 hour), which happens to be the time zone Hungary is placed in. You
can find all possible values for II_TIMEZONE_NAME in the file
$II_SYSTEM/ingres/files/tz.crs (look for the lists beginning with the
word VALID).
You can change the value of any other Ingres environment variable in a
similar way. ingprenv and ingsetenv do not require a running Ingres
server.
The System Reference Guide contains the description of every Ingres
environment variable. Let me mention two of those that we have not
covered yet.
II_DATE_FORMAT determines the display format of dates. By default, its
value is US which provides the format dd-mmm-yy.
Note: The setting of II_DATE_FORMAT has no effect on the way dates
are stored in the database. Ingres always stores full date values,
century included. Hence, you can change the setting of
II_DATE_FORMAT without the risk of corrupting data. In order to
avoid Y2K problems in your applications, you should use a date
format that contains the century, such as MULTINATIONAL4
(dd/mm/yyyy) or FINLAND (yyyy-mm-dd). The latter seems especially
proper under Linux :-)
Another Ingres environment variable that has a good chance to be
changed from its default value is II_MONEY_FORMAT. This one is
responsible for how values of money type are displayed.
Note: Just like with dates, the value of II_MONEY_FORMAT has no
impact on the storage format of money columns.
II_MONEY_FORMAT consists of two parts: the first part tells whether
the currency sign precedes the amount (L = Leading or T = Trailing),
the second part describes the currency itself ($, DM, Ft, etc.: this
part is a string of maximum 4 characters). The two parts are separated
by a colon. II_MONEY_FORMAT defaults to L:$.
Only the ingres user is allowed to use ingsetenv, since these Ingres
environment variables apply to the whole installation. However, some
Ingres environment variables (including II_DATE_FORMAT and
II_MONEY_FORMAT) can be overridden in the users' shell, via Linux
variables of the same name. You can check the System Reference Guide
about which other variables fall into this category.
Warning
Be careful: Ingres will not prevent you from changing the value of any
Ingres environment variable, including II_DATABASE, II_CHECKPOINT,
II_CHARSET, etc. (the "stable" parameters as we saw earlier). However,
if you change one of these, prepare for the nastiest possible
consequences, the mildest one of which is that Ingres will not run.
You can find information on how to setup Net and ICE in separate
sections ([95]Ingres/Net, and [96]ICE, respectively).
_________________________________________________________________
5.5. Re-installation
If you want to re-install Ingres for any reason, remember to do the
following first:
* Backup everything you need from $II_SYSTEM/ingres (user databases,
source code of applications stored there, etc.). Also backup any
other databases you want to keep that are stored in different
locations. You can use the unloaddb utility for creating portable
copies of databases. On unloaddb see the System Reference Guide.
* Stop Ingres.
* Remove everything under $II_SYSTEM/ingres. Also remove the
contents of every other location where you stored any part of any
database.
Warning
Databases that are not completely removed can cause problems when you
try to re-create them.
_________________________________________________________________
5.6. Command Line Install (SDK)
For installing the SDK, you can run ingbuild in batch mode as well.
The easiest way to do an Express Install is to start ingbuild in the
following way (logged in as ingres):
$ cd $II_SYSTEM/ingres
$ tar xf /cdrom/int_lnx/ingres.tar install
$ install/ingbuild -express /cdrom/int_lnx/ingres.tar
In this case a regular Express Install takes place without having to
press another key.
_________________________________________________________________
5.7. Client Installation (Full Version)
If you have the full Ingres version, you may want to set up a client
installation. If your application will run on a different machine than
the database server, all you need on the application server is a
client Ingres installation.
For a client install, choose PackageInstall in ingbuild, then mark
"Ingres Networked Client" to be installed. After the installation has
been finished, go to section [97]Ingres/Net to set up Net.
_________________________________________________________________
5.8. The Installer's Log
No matter which type of install you have chosen (Express or Manual),
you can find all of ingbuild's messages in
$II_SYSTEM/ingres/files/install.log. I suggest you check this file
after an Express Install to see what happened during the installation
process. On the other hand, if ingbuild stops with an error message,
also check this log for possible clues to the cause of the error.
_________________________________________________________________
5.9. Checking the Installation
After you have installed and configured Ingres, it is time to check if
it works properly. Supposing you are still logged in as ingres, start
the Ingres system:
$ ingstart
Create a new database:
$ createdb test
Start the command line SQL interface:
$ sql test
Create a table, insert a row into it and query the table's contents:
create table t1 (col1 char(10));
insert into t1 values ('abcde');
select * from t1;
\g
If everything went OK, you should see something like the following:
$ sql test
INGRES TERMINAL MONITOR Copyright (c) 1981, 1998 Computer Associates Intl, Inc.
Ingres Linux Version II 2.0/9808 (lnx.us5/95)libc6 login
Sun Oct 3 03:43:54 1999
continue
* create table t1 (col1 char(10));
* insert into t1 values ('abcde');
* select * from t1;
* \g
Executing . . .
(1 row)
col1
abcde
(1 row)
continue
*
You can leave sql with the command \q.
_________________________________________________________________
6. Basic System and Database Administration
In this section I outline some of the basic tasks of the Ingres system
administrator and the Ingres database administrator. You will also see
what tools Ingres provides to perform these tasks. In the following I
suppose you are logged in as ingres.
_________________________________________________________________
6.1. Starting and Stopping Ingres
You have already seen how to start Ingres:
$ ingstart
To stop Ingres, use the ingstop command:
$ ingstop
ingstop only stops Ingres if the are no active user sessions. If you
want to stop the system regardless of user sessions, use the following
form:
$ ingstop -force
In this case, after you have killed Ingres, check if it released all
shared memory segments and semaphores it had used:
$ ipcs -a
If you see shared memory segments or semaphores in ipcs's output that
are still attached to the ingres user, release them with Ingres'
ipcclean utility:
$ ipcclean
Warning
Take care: forcing Ingres to stop might make your databases
inconsistent.
_________________________________________________________________
6.2. New Ingres Users and Locations
In order for any user to have access to the Ingres installation, you
have to define them as Ingres users with the accessdb utility.
Start accessdb:
$ accessdb
Select the Users option, then Create.
Here, enter the name of the user. You do not have to modify
permissions.
Save, then End, and End.
You can also use accessdb to create new locations, change their types
or extend databases to new locations. The usage of accessdb is covered
in the System Reference Guide and in the Database Administrator's
Guide.
As an alternative to accessdb, you can maintain users and locations by
running SQL commands on iidbdb (create user, create location, etc.).
The syntax of these commands can be found in the SQL Reference Guide.
Warning
Since the ingres user has unlimited power of changing and possibly
destroying any element of an Ingres installation, it is highly
advisable that you only use this account for carrying out
administrative tasks. Create another Linux user and set its
environment to that of ingres. Register it as an Ingres user via
accessdb and use this account for everyday work.
_________________________________________________________________
6.3. Creating and Destroying Databases
In subsection [98]Checking the Installation you created a new
database. You did not specify any options in the
$ createdb test
command. Therefore the values stored in II_DATABASE, II_CHECKPOINT,
etc., became locations for the test database. You could have specified
each location explicitly:
$ createdb test -d<data location> -c<checkpoint location> -j<journal location>
-b<dump location> -w<work location>
You can remove a database with the destroydb command:
$ destroydb test
Warning
Be careful, because Ingres will not prompt you before destroying the
database.
_________________________________________________________________
6.4. Collation Sequences
The collation sequence determines which of any two character strings
should be considered less than the other. In Ingres, every database
can have its own sort order. You can specify the collation sequence
when creating the database:
createdb test -lhun
If you omit the -l parameter, the database will have the default
collation sequence which is determined by the implicit sort order of
the code set of the Ingres installation (II_CHARSET).
If you want to use your own collation sequence (it is hun in the
example above), you have to create a definition file first. The
structure of this file must obey to simple rules by which you specify
the absolute or relative ordering of letters and/or strings in your
language. This file must then be compiled by the aducompile utility
for Ingres to be able to use it.
The Spanish collation sequence and the collation based on the DEC
Multinational Character Set are available both in source (spanish.dsc
and multi.dsc), and compiled form (spanish and multi).
You specify these collation sequences in the following way:
createdb test -lspanish
or
createdb test -lmulti
The compiled definition files for a collation sequence must be in the
$II_SYSTEM/ingres/file/collation directory. The syntax rules of the
definition files can be found in the System Reference Guide. It may
also be useful to examine the definition files for the Spanish and the
DEC Multinational collations.
_________________________________________________________________
6.5. Backup and Recovery
You can back up an Ingres database or certain tables in it with the
ckpdb utility. The following command backs up the test database:
$ ckpdb test
Note: Checkpoints can be taken online.
Restoring a database can be done with the rollforwarddb command:
$ rollforwarddb test
By default, rollforwarddb, using the latest checkpoint and all journal
files created since that checkpoint, restores the database to its last
committed state. However, you can specify a point in time to restore
the database to the state it was in at that time. You can go back as
far as 16 checkpoints (Ingres stores data for the last 16 checkpoints
in the control file of the database).
Both ckpdb and rollforwarddb accept many parameters. You can read more
about these commands in the System Reference Guide. Besides, you
should read Michael Leo's paper on Ingres backup and recovery at
[99]
http://www.naiua.org/papers/backup99.zip.
Both ckpdb and rollforwarddb use a template file
($II_SYSTEM/ingres/files/cktmpl.def). By modifying this file, you can
customize the Linux commands that do the physical backup and restore
of the data files. Consult the Database Administrator's Guide for the
syntax of this file.
_________________________________________________________________
6.6. Configuring Ingres
Most Ingres parameters can be set via the cbf utility. This is the
program by which you can specify the number of DBMS servers, the sizes
of different caches and a lot of other variables. The usage of cbf is
detailed in the System Reference Guide.
_________________________________________________________________
6.7. Monitoring Ingres
You can use the ipm utility to monitor a running Ingres system (Visual
DBA only runs on Win32). With ipm, you can monitor and manage user
sessions, and also the locking and logging subsystems.
_________________________________________________________________
6.8. Message Files
The Ingres message files reside in the $II_SYSTEM/ingres/files
directory. The most important of these is errlog.log. Should any
problems arise during the running of Ingres, this is the file to check
first.
_________________________________________________________________
7. Ingres/Net
Ingres/Net is not part of the SDK. You only get it with the full
version of Ingres. It allows applications (Ingres utilities and user
programs alike) to access Ingres databases on other installations
(usually on different machines as well). On the machine where the
application runs, a client Ingres installation must be set up. We
covered the installation of the client in subsection [100]Client
Installation. (Naturally, the client can also be a full Ingres
installation.)
In this section you will see how to set up Net on both the client and
server to provide remote access to the DBMS server. For a complete
description of Ingres/Net I suggest you consult the Ingres/Net User
Guide.
Before starting with Net, however, we need some information on how
Ingres authenticates its users.
_________________________________________________________________
7.1. User Authentication
We saw earlier that only valid Ingres users can access an Ingres
installation. Ingres keeps information on its users in the iidbdb
database. But how does Ingres authenticate users?
In case of local access, the answer is simple: Ingres asks the
operating system who the user is.
There is an exception to this rule: certain users may be granted the
privilige to impersonate other Ingres users when starting an Ingres
utility or application. That is why it is not necessary for every
Ingres user to have an OS account. This privilege, however, can only
be granted as all-or-none: if you give it to somebody, he/she will be
able to impersonate any other Ingres user, including the ingres
account. Therefore, never grant it to anyone.
Leaving the authentication of users to the operating system works fine
for local access. But what about users who want to use the database
from a remote machine? They do not log in to the machine the database
resides on (the server), therefore the server's operating system will
not authenticate them (they may not even have an OS account on the
server machine).
There are two possible ways Ingres can authenticate these users. We
will cover them in the next two subsections.
_________________________________________________________________
7.2. Login Account Passwords
The first solution to the remote user authentication problem is to
require that the client provides a local (to the server machine) user
name and password. Then the Ingres server authenticates these through
standard OS facilities, just like the operating system would do with
real local accounts.
In this case, you do not have to set anything in Net on the server.
The only thing you will need is the ingvalidpw Ingres utility. It will
check (by using the getspnam and crypt OS functions) if the user's
name and password are valid on the server machine. On how to install
ingvalidpw, see subsection [101]ingvalidpw.
_________________________________________________________________
7.3. Installation Passwords
The other way of authenticating remote users is that the server
accepts their user ID on the client machine. In this case, the remote
users do not have to be known to the OS on the server.
How will the server validate clients in this case? It is obvious that
we need some kind of authentication: anybody can create an ingres
account on a client machine, then he/she could connect to the
installation as the ingres super-user.
This is where the installation password comes in: you set an
installation password on the server. You then set this password on the
client machines for those accounts that you want to allow to access
the server under their name on the client.
The Ingres server can then authenticate the client by simply checking
its installation password.
_________________________________________________________________
7.4. ingvalidpw
As ingbuild apparently does not bother installing ingvalidpw, you have
to build it yourself.
Login as root, set the environment as that of ingres, then simply type
# mkvalidpw
This script builds and installs ingvalidpw.
_________________________________________________________________
7.5. Setting up the Client
You will use the netutil utility to set up Net on the client side,
and, in the case of installation passwords, also on the server. Let us
see the client side first. Log in as the account you want to grant
access to, or ingres, if you want to set up general access. Then type:
$ netutil
You can see three tables on netutil's screen. Let us see what fields
each of them contains:
* Virtual Node Name: this is the name by which you identify the
remote Ingres installation, similarly as you would define an ODBC
data source name. The name is of local scope and has nothing to do
either with the server machine's name or the remote installation's
code.
* Login/Password Data: one or two entries of the following:
+ Type: can be Global, or Private. If Private, the entry will
only pertain to the current account. If Global, it will be
used for all users on the client machine, except for those
with a Private entry.
+ Login: the user account on the server machine. In case of an
installation password, it should be *.
+ Password: the password on the server machine (the above
user's password, or the installation password).
* Connection Data: at least one entry of the following:
+ Type: can be Global, or Private. The same applies as in
Login/Password Data.
+ Network Address: the server machine's address.
+ Protocol: the network protocol. On Linux, it is probably
tcp_ip.
+ Listen Address: listen address of the communication server as
set up by cbf. By default, it is the same as the installation
code.
_________________________________________________________________
7.6. Setting up the Server
If you want to use an installation password, you have to configure Net
on the server, too. In netutil, create a virtual node with the
following data:
* Virtual Node Name: must be the machine's name.
* Login/Password Data
+ Type: Global.
+ Login: *.
+ Password: enter the installation password.
* Connection Data: you do not have to enter any data here.
_________________________________________________________________
7.7. Using Net
After you have configured Net with netutil on the client, and, if
necessary, on the server, use netutil's Test menu option to see if the
connection works. If it does, you can access a remote database in the
following manner (let us suppose the name of the database is test, the
virtual node name for the remote Ingres installation is ingserv1):
$ sql ingserv1::test
_________________________________________________________________
8. ICE (Internet Commerce Enabled)
ICE is Ingres' proprietary gateway to the Web. Basically, it is a CGI
program that can talk to an Ingres server through the native Ingres
API. ICE supports a couple of macro commands which you can embed in
HTML documents. When rendering such a document, ICE first executes the
macros then outputs the resulting web page.
On other platforms you can configure ICE as a server extension to the
Spyglass web server which is bundled with Ingres. The Linux version of
Ingres does not include Spyglass. Therefore, in this section I will
show you how to setup ICE as a standalone CGI program under Apache,
the world's most popular web server.
You need the ingvalidpw program for ICE to work. See subsection
[102]ingvalidpw on how to install it.
_________________________________________________________________
8.1. Configuring Apache
Building, installing and configuring Apache is beyond the scope of
this HOWTO. (You had better learn Apache if you are putting your
databases on the Web, with ICE or otherwise.)
I suggest to download the newest stable version of Apache in source
and build it yourself for maximum flexibility. I also suggest you keep
a separate Apache installation just for ICE.
In this subsection I will only cover those parameters of Apache that
are important from ICE's point of view.
Things to watch out for:
* The installed software should be owned by the ingres user. This is
not strictly necessary but will make things easier.
* Compile the mod_env module into the server, preferably statically
(do not use DSOs unless you have to: they make Apache slower).
After you have compiled and installed Apache, set the following
parameters in httpd.conf:
Port 8000 -- must be greater than 1023
User ingres -- all server processes run as ingres
Group ingres -- the ingres user's group
PassEnv II_SYSTEM
PassEnv LD_LIBRARY_PATH
The last two lines must be added to httpd.conf. These variables will
be passed from the environment of the ingres user to the environment
of CGI programs started by Apache (specifically iceinst and ice, the
two executables of ICE).
_________________________________________________________________
8.2. ICE Setup
Now you can configure ICE and its Tutorials. You can do this with a
browser and the iceinst program. Let us suppose that your CGI
directory is /opt/ingres/apache/cgi-bin and Apache is listening on
port 8000. Let the name of your machine be ingserv1. Then you can
start iceinst in the following manner:
$ iceinst -d/opt/ingres/apache/cgi-bin -u/cgi-bin -s
http://ingserv1:8000
-b/opt/netscape/netscape
Option -d is the full path to the CGI directory, -u is this
directory's address within the site, -s is the Internet address of the
server, while -b is the full path to the browser. If you omit option
-b and write -remote instead, then iceinst will not try to start the
browser. You can configure ICE from another machine then, directing
your browser to [103]
http://ingserv1/cgi-bin/iceinst.
First the program asks for the value of II_SYSTEM. Then you should
visit every screen and set all parameters presented on them. Have
iceinst install the Dynamic SQL Tutorial and the Macro Processor
Tutorial as well. These show the usage of ICE via applications and a
database (icedb by default).
It is important to create a directory under Apache's DocumentRoot
where ICE can store the output it creates for clients' requests. ICE
will not start until you create this directory and specify its name in
iceinst.
After you have completed every form, choose the Install option. If you
have set everything properly, the configuration of ICE and the
installation of the tutorials take place. ICE is ready to use.
_________________________________________________________________
9. Miscellaneous Topics
Further hints to the use of Ingres.
_________________________________________________________________
9.1. Automatic Startup and Shutdown
If you want Ingres to start automatically whenever Linux boots and
stop when you shutdown or reboot the system, do the following:
Log in as root.
Check if your Linux variant has System V or BSD style init (init's man
page will tell that).
If your system conforms to System V, the /etc/rc.d/init.d directory
must exist. Create a file there (call it ingres or any other name you
wish). The file should contain at least the following:
#!/bin/sh
case $1 in
start)
echo "Starting Ingres"
su - ingres -c "ingstart"
;;
stop)
echo "Stopping Ingres"
su - ingres -c "ingstop"
;;
*)
echo "Usage: ingres {start|stop}"
exit 1
;;
esac
exit 0
Link the file as K01ingres to the directories that correspond to the
run levels in which Ingres should stop:
# ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/ingres /etc/rc.d/rc0.d/K01ingres
# ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/ingres /etc/rc.d/rc1.d/K01ingres
# ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/ingres /etc/rc.d/rc6.d/K01ingres
Also link it as S99ingres to the directories that correspond to the
run levels in which Ingres should start:
# ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/ingres /etc/rc.d/rc2.d/S99ingres
# ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/ingres /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/S99ingres
# ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/ingres /etc/rc.d/rc4.d/S99ingres
# ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/ingres /etc/rc.d/rc5.d/S99ingres
It is not important to call the links K01ingres and S99ingres, the
point is that the name starting with K should contain a small number
(so that Ingres stops early when changing to a lower runlevel) and the
name starting with S should contain a large number (so that Ingres
starts after everything else has started). Naturally, the file names
must not clash with names of existing files.
If you have a BSD style init, put the following lines into
/etc/rc.d/rc.local:
echo "Starting Ingres"
su - ingres -c "ingstart"
This will start Ingres. (As a matter of fact, you can use
/etc/rc.d/rc.local even if you have a System V style init.)
To stop Ingres automatically, create a file in /etc/shutdown.d (call
it, say, ingres) that contains the commands:
echo "Stopping Ingres"
su - ingres -c "ingstop"
No matter which type your system is, the files you create must be
executable files, owned by root.
Naturally, if your system provides a utility for configuring programs
to start and stop automatically (such as chkconfig in RedHat), use
that if you wish.
_________________________________________________________________
9.2. ingmenu
The easiest way to access an Ingres database (at least, for beginners)
is via the ingmenu program. From ingmenu, you can reach Ingres'
forms-based utilities, by which you can create, update and query
tables, create, edit and run reports and ABF or Vision applications.
Its usage is:
$ ingmenu test
Test is the name of the database.
_________________________________________________________________
9.3. Circumventing Ingres Net
Without Ingres/Net, in theory it is not possible for Ingres
applications to access databases on different machines. However, there
exists a method, not supported by CA, by which sometimes you can come
around this problem.
Let us suppose your application runs on host ingdev and the database
(called test) you would like to update or query resides on host
ingserv. Your first task is to find out the port number of the
appropriate DBMS server running on ingserv. You can use ipm for this
purpose: as ingres, start ipm on ingserv and choose option Server
List. In the list of servers select one that is of type INGRES and
handles the test database (you have to see either test or ALL in
column Connecting to Databases). You find the port number of the DBMS
server in the first column. Let us suppose it is 1259.
On machine ingdev, set the shell variable II_DBMS_SERVER in the
following way:
$ export II_DBMS_SERVER='ingserv::1259'
Now run the command:
$ sql test
If it works, you have access to the test database on host ingserv.
This solution is applicable only if both machines are of the same
architecture, the same operating system is running on both of them,
the character set is the same in both Ingres installations, and so on:
I do not know the full list of necessary conditions. Therefore, I
cannot guarantee that this trick will work.
On the other hand, if you restart Ingres on host ingserv, the DBMS
server process will get a different TCP/IP port, therefore you
probably have to automate the fetching of the current port number to
the application server. You can use the show command of the iinamu
utility for this purpose. The following command line gives the port
number of the DBMS server if there is only one server running:
$ echo show | iinamu | grep INGRES | tr -s ' ' '\t' | cut -f4
_________________________________________________________________
9.4. Forms-Based Development Tools
The Ingres installation includes a sample application, created by ABF,
the traditional development tool of Ingres. You can load it with the
abfdemo command. Unfortunately, the manuals of ABF and Vision cannot
be found either on the Ingres CD or on the CA site.
There is a problem with the SDK under glibc 2.1: applications created
by ABF or Vision cannot be either compiled or run directly from the
database. This problem is solved in the full Ingres version. For the
SDK, install the RedHat glibc 2.0 compatibility packages. If you do
not have RedHat, download them from the following URLs:
* [104]
ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/redhat-6.0/i386/RedHat/RPMS/c
ompat-binutils-5.2-2.9.1.0.23.1.i386.rpm
* [105]
ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/redhat-6.0/i386/RedHat/RPMS/c
ompat-egcs-5.2-1.0.3a.1.i386.rpm
* [106]
ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/redhat-6.0/i386/RedHat/RPMS/c
ompat-glibc-5.2-2.0.7.1.i386.rpm
* [107]
ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/redhat-6.0/i386/RedHat/RPMS/c
ompat-libs-5.2-1.i386.rpm
Besides the compatibility packages, you need an Ingres patch. It was
posted on the [108]Ingres newsgroup in September, 1999. I have a copy
of it, email me if you wish to install it.
The compatibility packages and the patch probably do not work for all
Linux distributions. I only tested them on RedHat and Caldera Open
Linux.
_________________________________________________________________
9.5. Ingperl and Perl DBI
Previous Perl versions, version 4 included, made Ingres access
possible via libraries known as ingperl. You can find information on
ingperl at [109]
http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~lfm/ingperl.html.
In Perl 5 a new, unified database interface, called Perl DBI,
appeared. Its site is
[110]
http://www.symbolstone.org/technology/perl/DBI/index.html.
You can download the Ingres module of DBI from that site.
_________________________________________________________________
9.6. Ingres links
I leave you with a few pointers to important Ingres sites:
* [111]
http://www.cai.com/ingres/: home page of the Ingres RDBMS on
CA's site.
* [112]
http://support.cai.com/ingressupp.html: Ingres Technical
Support.
* [113]
http://www.cai.com/ingres/inquire/: inquire_ingres: Ingres
technical magazine.
* [114]
http://www.naiua.org: the North American Ingres Users
Association's site. Check the FAQ page, and the /papers directory.
* [115]news:comp.databases.ingres: the Ingres newsgroup.
* [116]
http://www.deja.com/group/comp.databases.ingres: the archived
Ingres newsgroup on Deja.
* [117]
http://munkora.cs.mu.oz.au/~yuan/Ingres/ingres.html: William
Yuan's Ingres Reference Page with lots of Ingres information.
* [118]
http://www.mercurie.co.uk/ingres/: Prijesh Patel's Unofficial
Ingres Web Page with edited posts from the Ingres newsgroup.
Have fun!
References
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