JavaScript is required to for searching.
Skip Navigation Links
Exit Print View
Sun Blade X4-2B HTML Documentation Collection
Oracle Technology Network
Library
PDF
Print View
Feedback
search filter icon
search icon

Document Information

Using This Documentation

Hardware Installation

Operating System Installation

Solaris

About Oracle Solaris OS Installation

Oracle Solaris Installation Task Table

Supported Oracle Solaris Operating System Versions

Supported OS Versions and Latest Information

Latest Information in Product Notes

OS Installation Options

Single-Server Installation Methods

Assisted OS Installation

Manual OS Installation

Oracle System Assistant

Oracle System Asssistant Overview

Oracle System Assistant OS Installation Task

Obtaining Oracle System Assistant

Preparing to Install the OS

Obtaining Oracle Solaris Documentation

Selecting the Installation Method

Set Up the Local Console

Set Up the Remote Console

Setting Up BIOS

Load BIOS Optimal Default Settings

Select the BIOS Boot Mode

Installing the Oracle Solaris OS

Installing the Oracle Solaris OS

Install the Solaris OS (Oracle System Assistant)

Install the Oracle Solaris OS (Manually)

Identify Logical and Physical Network Interface Names

Install Server System Tools (Optional)

Access System Drivers

Linux

About Linux OS Installation

Supported Linux OS Versions and Latest Information

Supported Linux Operating Systems

Oracle Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel for Linux

Linux OS Installation Options

Single-Server Installation Methods

Assisted OS Installation

Manual OS Installation

Oracle System Assistant

Oracle System Assistant OS Installation Task

Obtaining Oracle System Assistant

Preparing to Install the OS

Downloading Installation Media Kits

Download Oracle Linux Media Kits

Download SLES Media Kits

Download RHEL Media Kits

Selecting the Installation Method

Set Up the Local Console

Set Up the Remote Console

Setting Up BIOS

Load BIOS Optimal Default Settings

Select the BIOS Boot Mode

Installing the Operating System

Identifying Logical and Physical Network Interface Names

Identify Logical and Physical Network Interface Names (Oracle Linux or RHEL)

Identify Logical and Physical Network Interface Names (SLES)

Install a Linux OS (Oracle System Assistant)

Installing a Linux OS Manually

Install Oracle Linux Manually

Install SLES Manually

Install RHEL Manually

Installing Server System Tools and Updating Drivers

Install Server System Tools

Update or Install System Drivers

Updating a Linux OS to a New Version

Update the Oracle Linux Operating System Version

Update the SLES Operating System Version

Update the RHEL Operating System Version

OVM

About Oracle VM Software Installation

Oracle VM Installation Task Table

Oracle VM Overview

Supported Oracle VM Software

Oracle VM Installation Options

Single-Server Installation Methods

Multiple-Server Installation Options

Oracle System Assistant

Oracle System Asssistant Overview

Oracle System Assistant Install OS Task

Obtaining Oracle System Assistant

Preparing for Oracle VM Server Installation

Selecting the Installation Method

Set Up the Local Console

Set Up the Remote Console

Creating a Virtual Disk and Setting the Boot Disk

Setting Up BIOS

Select the BIOS Boot Mode

Disable VT-d and SR-IOV in BIOS

Installing Oracle VM Server

Install Oracle VM Server (Oracle System Assistant)

Installing Oracle VM Server (Manually)

Install Oracle VM Server (Local or Remote Media)

Installing Oracle VM Server (PXE Server)

PXE Server Installation Requirements

Install Oracle VM Server (PXE Server)

Completing the Oracle VM Installation

Access Server System Tools

Install Oracle VM NEM Drivers

Creating and Managing Oracle VM Resources

Windows

About Windows OS Installation

Supported OS Versions and Latest Information

Supported Windows Operating Systems

OS Installation Options

Single-Server Installation Methods

Assisted OS Installation

Manual OS Installation

Windows Deployment Services OS Installation

Oracle System Assistant

Oracle System Assistant OS Installation Task

Obtaining Oracle System Assistant

Preparing to Install the OS

Selecting the Installation Method

Set Up the Local Console

Set Up the Remote Console

Setting Up BIOS

Load BIOS Optimal Default Settings

Select the BIOS Boot Mode

Installing the Windows OS

Install Windows (Oracle System Assistant)

Install Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows Server 2008 SP2 (Manually)

Install Windows Server 2012 or 2012 R2 (Manually)

Install Windows Server (PXE)

Installing Server System Tools and Updating Drivers

Install Server System Tools

Update System Drivers

ESX

About VMware ESXi Installation

Installation Task Map

VMware ESXi 5 and Server Module Documentation

Supported VMware ESXi Software

Software Installation Options

Interactive Installation Methods

Preparing for ESXi 5 Installation

Set Up the Local Console

Set Up the Remote Console

Gather Required Information

Select the BIOS Boot Mode

Creating a Virtual Disk and Setting the Boot Disk

Installing VMware ESXi 5

Install VMware ESXi 5 (Local or Remote Interactive Installation)

Install VMware ESXi 5 Drivers

Update VMware ESXi 5

Service

Index

Identify Logical and Physical Network Interface Names (Oracle Linux or RHEL)

During installation and configuration of the Oracle or Red Hat Enterprise Linux OS, you reach a point where you must enter the logical and physical names (MAC addresses) of the network interfaces.

This section explains how to launch a user shell during the Linux configuration to obtain the logical and physical network interface names that you need to continue with the configuration.

  1. At the boot prompt type: linux rescue and then press Enter.

    The Choose a Language screen appears.

  2. In the Choose a Language screen, select the appropriate language, and click OK.

    The Keyboard Type screen appears.

  3. In the Keyboard Type screen, select the appropriate configuration, and then click OK.

    The Setup Network screen appears.

  4. In the Setup Network screen, click No.

    The Rescue screen appears.

  5. In the Rescue screen, click Skip.

    The user shell appears.

  6. At the command prompt (#) in the user shell, type the following command to display all network interfaces, and then press Enter.
    # ifconfig -a
                            

    The output of the Linux named network interfaces appear.

    If you have multiple network interfaces and the output of interfaces scrolls off the top of the screen, you can display the output per interface.

  7. To view the output of each network interface, type the following at the command prompt, and then press Enter:
    # ifconfig eth#
                               
                            

    where eth# is the interface number. For example, if you type:

    # ifconfig eth0
                            

    the output for eth0 appears:

    eth0   Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 00:14:4F:8D:52:BE
              inet addr:10.182.92.196  Bcast:10.182.93.255  Mask:255.255.254.0
              inet6 addr: fe80::214:4fff:fe8d:52be/64 Scope:Link
              UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST  MTU:1500  Metric:1
              RX packets:14461296 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
              TX packets:1061312 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
              collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000
              RX bytes:1282625453 (1.1 GiB)  TX bytes:118834056 (113.3 MiB)
              Interrupt:54 Base address:0xc000 
    • The eth0 entry in the first column is the Oracle Linux logical named interface. This first column in the output identifies the logical names Oracle Linux or RHEL assigned to the network interface.
    • The 00:14:4F:8D:52:BE entry in the second column (first row) is the physical MAC address of the network port.
  8. Record the logical network interface name with the physical port MAC address for future reference. You need to refer to this record when configuring the network interfaces during the Oracle Linux or RHEL OS installation.
  9. When you are done, do one of the following to exit the user shell.
    • From Oracle ILOM, select Remote Control > Remote Power Control > Reset.
    • From the Oracle ILOM Remote Console in the Keyboard menu, select Control Alt Delete.
    • From other consoles, press Ctrl-Alt-Delete.
  10. Restart the OS installation program.

Next Steps