Difference between revisions of "DB2 installation"

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(Call it a VE consistently)
(use the new settings)
 
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== Create a new VE ==
 
== Create a new VE ==
  
I created a new VE for the Debian distribution using debootstrap.
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I created a new VE for the Debian distribution using debootstrap, as described in [[Debian template creation]].
  
 
== Set VE resource limits appropriately ==
 
== Set VE resource limits appropriately ==
  
DB2 installation can fail and it will not be possible to operate the database if your resource limits are too low. I used these limits for a small database:
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These are tested resource limits for x86-64 system running Debian/GNU Linux 5.0.6:
  
* kmemsize to 10,000,000
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* kmemsize to 26214400:29491200
* privvmpages to 300,000
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* privvmpages to 2097152:unlimited
* shmpages to 80,000
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* shmpages to 1572864
* numproc to 150
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* numproc to 400
* tcpsndbuf to 700,000
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* tcpsndbuf to 1720320:2703360
* tcprcvbuf to 700,000
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* tcprcvbuf to 1720320:2703360
* diskspace to 6,000,000
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* vmguardpages to 2097152:unlimited
 +
* oomguardpages to 26112:unlimited
 +
 
 +
And according to DB2 9 documentation, the following minimal guest kernel options must be set in /etc/sysctl.conf:
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<pre>kernel.shmmax = 1073741824
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kernel.sem = 250 256000  32 1024
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kernel.msgmax = 65535
 +
kernel.msgmnb = 65535</pre>
  
 
== Install additional packages ==
 
== Install additional packages ==
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Please provide feedback in the discussion (Talk) page about improvements to this HOWTO.
 
Please provide feedback in the discussion (Talk) page about improvements to this HOWTO.
 +
 +
[[Category:HOWTO]]

Latest revision as of 07:49, 20 September 2010

DB2 has been certified by IBM for use inside Virtuozzo. It works in OpenVZ too!

IBM provides a free download of DB2 Express-C which is what I installed.

Here is a rough guide to installing DB2 into a freshly-created VE.

Create a new VE[edit]

I created a new VE for the Debian distribution using debootstrap, as described in Debian template creation.

Set VE resource limits appropriately[edit]

These are tested resource limits for x86-64 system running Debian/GNU Linux 5.0.6:

  • kmemsize to 26214400:29491200
  • privvmpages to 2097152:unlimited
  • shmpages to 1572864
  • numproc to 400
  • tcpsndbuf to 1720320:2703360
  • tcprcvbuf to 1720320:2703360
  • vmguardpages to 2097152:unlimited
  • oomguardpages to 26112:unlimited

And according to DB2 9 documentation, the following minimal guest kernel options must be set in /etc/sysctl.conf:

kernel.shmmax = 1073741824
kernel.sem = 250 256000  32 1024
kernel.msgmax = 65535
kernel.msgmnb = 65535

Install additional packages[edit]

  • libstdc++5 (required for installation)
  • pdksh (required for operation?)
  • ssh (may be required for operation)
  • xbase-clients (for xauth)
  • firefox (for post-installation)
  • strace and telnet (for debugging)
  • libdbi-perl gcc libc6-dev make (for building CPAN DBD::DB2 package)

Download the DB2 Express-C package[edit]

DB2 Express-C version 9 is available from this page: [[1]]

You will need to register with IBM before you can download.

  • Untar the received file as root
  • Run exp/disk1/db2setup
  • Follow the prompts:
    • Setup user 'dasusr1'
    • Setup user 'db2inst1' and database instance 'db2inst1'

Post-install actions[edit]

This is where it gets yukky. DB2 wants to run a browser inside the VE. It wants to run Java applets inside the browser. I installed Iceweasel, but the post-install script does not recognise it. I was eventually able to hack the script to recognise and use the browser but it crashed on one of the Java applets. I think you can get by without running the post-install.

Here's what to do instead:

First, su to the instance owner:

  • su - db2inst1

Try starting and stopping the database:

  • db2start
  • db2stop

If these don't work it means your environment variables are not set properly. IBM set these for me:

CLASSPATH=/home/db2inst1/sqllib/java/db2java.zip:/home/db2inst1/sqllib/java/db2jcc.jar:/home/db2inst1/sqllib/java/sqlj.zip:/home/db2inst1/sqllib/function:/home/db2inst1/sqllib/java/db2jcc_license_cu.jar:.
DB2INSTANCE=db2inst1
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/games:/home/db2inst1/sqllib/bin:/home/db2inst1/sqllib/adm:/home/db2inst1/sqllib/misc

Try creating IBM's sample database:

  • db2sampl

Setup a development environment[edit]

I develop in perl so I was most interested in access to the database though the DBI library. I did this:

  • Use CPAN to download and install DBD::DB2

If you don't use CPAN you can also do this (as root):

Setup DB2 for autostart[edit]

It seems that DB2 can be auto-started at VE boot time, but not auto-stopped. I used this script:

#!/bin/sh
#
# Script to start DB2 instances on bootup.
#

set -e

. /lib/lsb/init-functions

case "$1" in
start)
        echo Starting DB2
        /opt/ibm/db2/V9.1/instance/db2istrt
        ;;
stop)
        ;;
restart|reload)
        ;;
esac

exit 0

And I used this command to create the symlink to make it start at VE "boot" time:

update-rc.d db2 start 95 2 .

Testing your installation[edit]

From the db2inst1 user, do:

  • db2

Inside the db2 client, try:

connect to sample
grant dbadm on database to user fred
connect reset

Enjoy![edit]

Please provide feedback in the discussion (Talk) page about improvements to this HOWTO.