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Instalacion Oracle11gXE Windows

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views

Instalacion Oracle11gXE Windows

Uploaded by

Lizardo
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Installing Oracle 11g XE (Express Edition)

Introduction
Oracle 11g XE is a free edition of Oracle database which supports most of the functionality of Standard
edition. 11g XE is available (at least) for Windows and Linux.
As with all free versions of databases, XE also has limitations:
• The maximum database size is 11 GB.
• The maximum amount of RAM XE can use is 1 GB.
• Only one instance of Oracle XE can be installed on a single computer.
• XE uses only a single CPU so it does not distribute operations between several CPUs.

Installation
First, download the Oracle 11g XE and unzip the package. The setup.exe is located at DISK1 directory.
When installation starts, a welcome screen is shown followed by the license agreement. After these,
Oracle checks the requirements for installation, which are:
• Operating system, at least Windows XP
• The user has administrator privileges
• No existing XE instances are found

The next step is to define the installation folder. The default is oraclexe. After that, the installation
prompts for database passwords. Note that this password will be used for both SYS and SYSTEM. You
should use a very strong password as these users are the typical administrators of an Oracle instance.
Also changing for example SYS password to something else after the installation helps to distinguish
these users when logging into the system.

And at the end, before the actual installation, the Summary screen is shown. Note, the default ports that
are used for the instance:
• Listener: 1521
• Services for MTS: 2030
• HTTP listener: 8080
So What Was Installed
After the installation has ended, let’s have a look at the things that were installed.

Services
If you open the computer management and have a look at the services installed, you’ll find five new
services.

• OracleServiceXE
This is the actual database engine.
• OracleXETNSListener
This service is responsible for listening to incoming connections and passing successful
connections to the database engine. Note that if this service is down, you won’t be able to
connect to the database remotely. Existing connections won't be affected.
• OracleJobSchedulerXE
This service is used when external jobs are run. By default, it is disabled. If you plan to run
external jobs (such as executables, batches, etc.), modify the account the service uses to use
proper, low-privileged credentials and start the service.
• OracleXEClrAgent
On Windows platforms, Oracle offers CLR integration. Since a CLR operation is run using an
extproc process, it’s normally done using a dedicated (single threaded) extproc for a
single session. This may not be the optimal way to handle CLR calls. ClrAgent provides a
multi-threaded mechanism so that a single extproc process may serve several CLR calls.
• OracleMTSRecoveryService
This one is responsible of resolving in-doubt transactions when Oracle is participating in
distributed transactions with Microsoft Transaction Server.

Programs
In start menu, few new programs are added. Actually, most of these programs are batch scripts:

• Start and Stop Database are used to control the OracleServiceXE service
• Backup and Restore Database are scripts for backing up or restoring the database data using
rman
• Run SQL Command Line opens a console based SQL*Plus which can be used to execute SQL
commands or to run scripts against the database
• Get Started opens a web site used for investigating
• storage, the amount of disk space used by tablespaces or drill to segments
• current sessions and basic information about the sessions such as client and application
information and active SQL statement
• parameters show current initialization parameter values.

Few Locations to Note


Now when the installation has been done, there are few locations (and files) that should be noted:
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\oraclexe\app\oracle\oradata\XE

This is the folder where the database files are located after the installation. If (when) new database files
are added, the new files can be placed somewhere else, but critical files such as control file, system
database file, undo tablespace, etc. are located here.
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\oraclexe\app\oracle\product\11.2.0\server\network\ADMIN

This directory contains the configuration files for database connections:


• listener.ora configures the listener. For example, by default Oracle is listening port 1521.
This can be changed by changing the configuration in listener.ora and restarting the
listener service. So this file controls the behavior at 'server side'.
• tnsnames.ora defines the network configuration for client programs such as SQL*Plus. For
example, when you establish a connection to XE service, XE is actually an alias which is used
to resolve the real network configuration using tnsnames.ora. If you change the port
listener uses, you must also reflect that change to the tnsnames.ora.
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\oraclexe\app\oracle\diag\rdbms\xe\xe

This folder contains different kind of log and trace files for the database instance. While Oracle still has
the alert_xe.log under trace –directory, there’s now another type of log file under alert –
directory called log.xml. As the name suggests, it’s an XML formatted file containing all important
messages that the database records. However, since there’s no root node in this file, most of the basic
XML editors are unable to show its content. Oracle has provided a tool called ADRCI to investigate the
contents. This tool can be launched from command prompt.
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\oraclexe\app\oracle\diag\tnslsnr\<machinename>\listener

This folder is similar to the corresponding rdbms folder. However, this folder contains log and trace
information for the listener. As with rdbms, the log.xml file can be read using ADRCI.

Additional Tools
Since using pure command line based tools isn’t necessarily very productive, you can download few
additional tools.

SQL Developer

This is a graphical SQL editor actually with lots of functionality. While SQL commands can be
executed, etc. you can view execution plans, get the server output, run different kinds of reports, create
objects, etc.
Currently the 32 bit version includes the necessary JDK, but if you’re installing SQL Developer to a
64-bit windows, you must download the 64-bit version and with this version, the JDK must be
downloaded and installed separately.

SQL Developer Data Modeler

Data Modeler is a tool which you can use to design logical or relational data models. The tool has the
ability to make transformations between these designs. The design model contains the basic building
blocks such as entities, relations and so on, but is also capable of handling data flow diagrams,
domains, data types, etc.

ODP.NET, ODT and ODAC


ODP.NET (Oracle Data Provider for NET) is the Oracle supplied library to use in application
development when Oracle connection is required. ODP.NET utilizes several Oracle specific features
and because of this, it’s much more powerful than for example OLEDB based connections.
ODT (Oracle Developer Tools for Visual Studio) is a set of Visual Studio add-ins for Visual Studio that
help application development. These add-ins include functionality such as automatic code generation,
tuning tools, PL/SQL editor, AQ designers, etc. Unfortunately, ODT cannot be used with Express
Editions of Visual Studio because of the limitations of the Express Edition.
ODAC (Oracle Data Access Components) is a package which contains ODP.NET but also other
connectivity libraries such as ODBC, OLEDB and tools like SQL*Plus. ODAC can be downloaded
with or without ODT.

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