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This article describes the steps required to install Oracle9i on the Microsoft Windows
operating system. It is assumed that this is a fresh install and that no other Oracle
products are installed on your system. If this is not the true, then these instructions may
not work on your system. These instructions may or may not work for Personal
Oracle9i, Oracle9i Lite.
Note. Oracle9i is only certified for NT/2000/XP Pro on the Windows platforms. It
is not certified for XP Home 98/95.
If you downloaded the Oracle9i from Oracle, verify that the file sizes listed on Oracle
software download page match the files on your local disk then you need to unzip the
files into a three temporary directories (Disk1, Disk2, Disk3) after unzipping all the 3
disks in respective directories go to Disk1 folder and double click on the setup.exe
program to get the installation process started.
It is assumed that this is a fresh install so no other Oracle products should be installed
at this time.
Click on the Next button to move to the File Locations screen as shown below:
In this screen, the Source and Destination locations must be selected.
The Source path should reflect either your CD-ROM or the directory in which you
unzipped the source files. Leave this as the default.
For the Destination, leave the Oracle Home named OraHome92 as the default. Choose a
hard disk drive that has at least 10 gigabytes of free space. In the example here, we are
using the D: drive.
Leave the \Oracle\Ora92 path as it is (the default). If you must change this to a
different drive, only change the drive letter and not the directories.
Click on the Next button to load the Product information. This may take up to few
minutes (depending on the speed of your machine). Once the product information has
been read, the following 3 "Available Products" options are presented:
Leave default select option on Oracle9i Database 9.2.0.1.0 and click on the Next
button.
The "Installation Types" screen will appear next. For this installation, we chose the
Enterprise Edition.
The "Database Configuration" screen will appear next:
For this install, we chose the "General Purpose" Database option. Click on the Next
button to continue.
The next step is to identify the port number for Microsoft Transaction server leave it
on default.
In next step is for Database Identification.
If some default Global database name and SID are given, keep them. Otherwise, use
the following (make a note of these for later on):
Global Database Name is orcl
Oracle SID is orcl
Click on the Next button to continue to the "Data File Location " screen
In this step, you need to select where the Oracle data files will be located. In large
operations, we typically keep the data files on a separate disk (or disks), for this install,
we are storing the data files in the D:\oracle directory tree. Keep the default as
shown and click on the Next button to continue.
In the next screen, choose the default character set for the database:
Click on the Next button to move to the "Summary" screen:
In this screen (shown above), the products and files that will be installed are
summarized. Note that in this example, it will take 10.10 GB MB of disk space for the
installation of the software. Additional space will be required for the default database.
If everything looks OK at this point, click on the Install button to begin the
installation.
During the install, you will notice various Oracle products being copied over to the
hard disk. Also you will notice few DOS Prompt windows do not close those windows
they will be closed automatically once the installation is finish and this is important.
Once the installation is completed, the next step will be to configure the various
additional services and the database. This is shown below:
Each of the configuration programs will be executed in turn. The HTTP Server
(Oracle/Apache) should launch automatically and open up TCP/IP port 80. You should
notice a new Command window as follows:
The Net Configuration Assistant and Oracle Intelligent Agent should run automatically
and not present any sustained screens.
The Oracle Database Configuration Assistant will appear for some time while the
default database is created and opened. As below:
Once the default database has been installed, the following screen will appear:
You will type password for sys and system accounts it is important that you keep note
of these password losing them mean you have to reinstall the database.
Clicking on the Password Management button and shows the default accounts as
shown below:
This should conclude the configuration of the database and the "End of Installation"
screen should appear as below. Click on the Exit button and click on the following
Yes button to confirm exiting the Installation program.
At this point, be sure to reboot your computer so any final changes can take affect.
Note the last one OracleServiceORCL is the actual database process itself.
OracleOraHome92TNSListener is the listener process for remote connections to the
database. OracleOraHome92Agent is the Oracle Agent used to communicate with
management services. Finally, the OracleOraHome92HTTPServer is the
Oracle/Apache web server.
Since the OracleServerORCL service is set to start automatically, the database wll start
and mount each time the computer is started up. To manage the database processes
directly, one can use the Enterprise Manager Console in Stand-alone mode. From the
Start menu, choose Programs -> Oracle - OraHome92 -> Enterprise Manager
Console and select Launch Standalone. The following screen should appear:
Click on the plus sign to expand the Databases branch and then once again to expand
the ORCL branch. When prompted for username and password, use the SYSTEM account
and choose to log in as SYSDBA. In SYSDBA mode, the SYSTEM user can perform most
any manipulation of the database.
Once logged in, clicking on the Instance tree and then the Configuration tree
should display the current state of the database:
Testing the Installation
Once the database is running, the SQL*Plus tool can be used to connect to the
database.
The default Database Administrator's account has a username of SYSTEM and a default
password of MANAGER. You may have changed the SYSTEM account password in a
previous step so use the new password.
Fill in the Username and password fields with the SYSTEM account and leave the
Host String field blank. Since we are connecting to a local Oracle database, no Host
String is required. Click on the OK button as shown below:
If the database is running and the username and password are typed correctly,
SQL*Plus should log the SYSTEM user in and present the SQL> prompt as shown
below:
By default, you can also log in with the SCOTT/TIGER account. That is, there is a
demo account already set up in the database with username SCOTT and password
TIGER. Many of the examples in the Oracle documentation use the tables included in
the SCOTT user's account.