Oracle® Collaboration Suite Readme Release 2 Patch Set 1 (9.0.4.2.0) for hp-ux PA-RISC (64-bit), Linux x86, and Solaris Operating Environment (SPARC 32-bit) Part Number B13767-02 |
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The Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 Patch Set 1 (9.0.4.2.0) contains new features for the product, in addition to fixing certain product bugs. Fixes have been made to the infrastructure, information storage, and middle tier components of Oracle Collaboration Suite.
This document accompanies the Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 Patch Set 1 (9.0.4.2.0), and includes instructions for installing the patch set and pre- and postinstallation instructions for each component of Oracle Collaboration Suite for the following two scenarios, as applicable:
Existing Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 (9.0.4.0.0) or Release 2 (9.0.4.1.0) installations that are configured and running
New Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 (9.0.4.1.0) installations that will install the patch set prior to the product going live
This preface contains the following topics.
Note: The information in this document is accurate to the best of our knowledge at the time of publication. You can access the latest information on the Oracle Technology Network at http://otn.oracle.com. |
This book is intended for anyone interested in Oracle Collaboration Suite.
The organization of this book is as follows:
The following documents have been revised for this patch set and can be found at
http://otn.oracle.com
Suite-Level Documents
Oracle Files Documents
Oracle Web Conferencing Documents
The Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 Patch Set 1 (9.0.4.2.0) is shipped on three CDs, as follows:
Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 Patch Set 1 (9.0.4.2.0) CD 1 of 2
Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 Patch Set 1 (9.0.4.2.0) CD 2 of 2
Oracle Collaboration Suite Release 2 Patch Set 1 (9.0.4.2.0) Client CD
CD 1 and 2 contain the Oracle Collaboration Suite patch set.
The Client CD contains the following:
Oracle Email Migration Tool version 9.0.4.2
Oracle Voicemail & Fax server patch (Windows 2000-specific)
Oracle Web Conferencing document and voice conversion servers patch (Windows-specific)
The following clients:
Oracle Calendar
Oracle Files
This section describes the conventions used in the text and code examples of this documentation set. It describes:
Conventions in Text
Conventions in Code Examples
Conventions for Windows Operating Systems
Conventions in Text
We use various conventions in text to help you more quickly identify special terms. The following table describes those conventions and provides examples of their use.
Convention | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
Bold | Bold typeface indicates terms that are defined in the text or terms that appear in a glossary, or both. | When you specify this clause, you create an index-organized table. |
Italic | Italic typeface indicates book titles or emphasis. | Oracle10i Database Concepts Ensure that the recovery catalog and target database do not reside on the same disk. |
UPPERCASE monospace (fixed-width) font |
Uppercase monospace typeface indicates elements supplied by the system. Such elements include parameters, privileges, datatypes, RMAN keywords, SQL keywords, SQL*Plus or utility commands, packages and methods, as well as system-supplied column names, database objects and structures, usernames, and roles. | You can specify this clause only for a NUMBER column.
You can back up the database by using the Query the Use the |
lowercase monospace (fixed-width) font |
Lowercase monospace typeface indicates executables, filenames, directory names, and sample user-supplied elements. Such elements include computer and database names, net service names, and connect identifiers, as well as user-supplied database objects and structures, column names, packages and classes, usernames and roles, program units, and parameter values.
Note: Some programmatic elements use a mixture of UPPERCASE and lowercase. Enter these elements as shown. |
The password is specified in the orapwd file.
Back up the datafiles and control files in the The Set the QUERY_REWRITE_ENABLED initialization parameter to true. Connect as The |
lowercase italic monospace (fixed-width) font |
Lowercase italic monospace font represents placeholders or variables. | You can specify the parallel_clause
|
Text within angle brackets < > |
Angle brackets represent variables in the Oracle Calendar sections of this document. | Enter the <hostname> , <port> . |
Conventions in Code Examples
Code examples illustrate SQL, PL/SQL, SQL*Plus, or other command-line statements. They are displayed in a monospace (fixed-width) font and separated from normal text as shown in this example:
SELECT username FROM dba_users WHERE username = 'MIGRATE';
The following table describes typographic conventions used in code examples and provides examples of their use.
Convention | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
[ ] | Brackets enclose one or more optional items. Do not enter the brackets. | DECIMAL (digits [ , precision ]) |
{ } | Braces enclose two or more items, one of which is required. Do not enter the braces. | {ENABLE | DISABLE } |
| |
A vertical bar represents a choice of two or more options within brackets or braces. Enter one of the options. Do not enter the vertical bar. | {ENABLE | DISABLE }
|
... | Horizontal ellipsis points indicate either:
|
CREATE TABLE ... AS subquery; SELECT col1, col2, ... , coln FROM employees; |
. . . |
Vertical ellipsis points indicate that we have omitted several lines of code not directly related to the example. |
SQL> SELECT NAME FROM V$DATAFILE; NAME ------------------------------------ /fsl/dbs/tbs_01.db /fs1/dbs/tbs_02.dbf . . . /fsl/dbs/tbs_09.dbf 9 rows selected. |
Other notation | You must enter symbols other than brackets, braces, vertical bars, and ellipsis points as shown. |
acctbal NUMBER(11,2); acct CONSTANT NUMBER(4) := 3; |
Italics | Italicized text indicates placeholders or variables for which you must supply particular values. |
CONNECT SYSTEM/system_password DB_NAME = database_name |
UPPERCASE |
Uppercase typeface indicates elements supplied by the system. We show these terms in uppercase in order to distinguish them from terms you define. Unless terms appear in brackets, enter them in the order and with the spelling shown. However, because these terms are not case sensitive, you can enter them in lowercase. |
SELECT last_name, employee_id FROM employees; SELECT * FROM USER_TABLES; DROP TABLE hr.employees; |
lowercase |
Lowercase typeface indicates programmatic elements that you supply. For example, lowercase indicates names of tables, columns, or files.
Note: Some programmatic elements use a mixture of UPPERCASE and lowercase. Enter these elements as shown. |
SELECT last_name, employee_id FROM employees; sqlplus hr/hr CREATE USER mjones IDENTIFIED BY ty3MU9; |
Text within angle brackets < > |
Angle brackets represent variables in the Oracle Calendar sections of this document. Enter the <hostname> , <port> . |
%$ORACLE_HOME/bin/ldapmodify -h <host> -p <port> -D cn=orcladmin -w <password> -f index.ldif |
Conventions for Windows Operating Systems
The following table describes conventions for Windows operating systems and provides examples of their use.
Convention | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
Choose Start > | How to start a program. | To start the Database Configuration Assistant, choose Start > Programs > Oracle - HOME_NAME > Configuration and Migration Tools > Database Configuration Assistant. |
File and directory names | File and directory names are not case sensitive. The following special characters are not allowed: left angle bracket (<), right angle bracket (>), colon (:), double quotation marks ("), slash (/), pipe (|), and dash (-). The special character backslash (\) is treated as an element separator, even when it appears in quotes. If the file name begins with \\, then Windows assumes it uses the Universal Naming Convention. |
c:\winnt"\"system32 is the same as C:\WINNT\SYSTEM32 |
C:\> | Represents the Windows command prompt of the current hard disk drive. The escape character in a command prompt is the caret (^). Your prompt reflects the subdirectory in which you are working. Referred to as the command prompt in this manual. |
C:\oracle\oradata> |
Special characters | The backslash (\) special character is sometimes required as an escape character for the double quotation mark (") special character at the Windows command prompt. Parentheses and the single quotation mark (') do not require an escape character. Refer to your Windows operating system documentation for more information on escape and special characters. |
C:\>exp scott/tiger TABLES=emp QUERY=\"WHERE job='SALESMAN' and sal<1600\" C:\>imp SYSTEM/password FROMUSER=scott TABLES=(emp, dept) |
HOME_NAME | Represents the Oracle home name. The home name can be up to 16 alphanumeric characters. The only special character allowed in the home name is the underscore. | C:\> net start OracleHOME_NAMETNSListener |
ORACLE_HOME and ORACLE_BASE | In releases prior to Oracle8i release 8.1.3, when you installed Oracle components, all subdirectories were located under a top level ORACLE_HOME directory. For Windows NT, the default location was C:\orant .
This release complies with Optimal Flexible Architecture (OFA) guidelines. All subdirectories are not under a top level ORACLE_HOME directory. There is a top level directory called ORACLE_BASE that by default is All directory path examples in this guide follow OFA conventions. Refer to Oracle10i Database Platform Guide for Windows for additional information about OFA compliances and for information about installing Oracle products in non-OFA compliant directories. |
Go to the ORACLE_BASE\ORACLE_HOME\rdbms\admin directory. |
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