Oracle Audio Technologies B31679-01 User Manual

Page 68

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60

Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database Installation Guide

– Data Manager only

– Client only

• Prompts you for the location of your TimesTen installation and

specific files, if installing as a non-root user.

• Prompts you to specify the daemon port number. If no instances of

TimesTen are installed on the machine, or if no instances use the
default port number 17000 for 32-bit installations and 17001 for 64-
bit applications, prompts you to use the default port number.

• Prompts you to determine if Access Control should be enabled,

except for Client-only installs. Default answer is “No.” In that case,
no other changes are needed to your installation or your use of
TimesTen. For more details on Access Control, see

Chapter 1,

“Access Control

in this guide.

• Prompts you for the TimesTen Server port number.

• Removes any previous installation of this release of TimesTen if you

are installing an upgrade.

• Untars the appropriate tar file for the component(s) being installed

into the install directory, default /usr/lpp/TimesTen/tt70.

• Copies the daemon scripts into the appropriate directories.

• If installed by user

root

, configures the system to start the daemon

when the system boots.

• Creates the directory where data stores created by the TimesTen

demo applications will reside. By default they reside in

/var/

TimesTen/

TTinstance

/DemoDataStore.

• Starts the daemon.

• If there are other instances of the same patch release of TimesTen

installed on the same machine, prompts you to provide a unique port
to be used by the TimesTen daemon.

• If the TimesTen Server is being installed, prompts you to configure

the Server: server name, port number and logging options.

• Prompts you to install the TimesTen documentation.

The daemon writes a timestend.pid file into the directory the
daemon was started from:

/var/TimesTen/

TTinstance

/

if installed

by the user

root

or

install_dir/info

if installed by a non-root user.

This file contains the daemon’s process ID. When the script to stop the
daemon is run, this ID is used to determine which process to terminate.
Once the process is terminated, the timestend.pid file is removed.

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