It isn't completely up to me, I am a short term contractor...but I think I can convey the message effectively.
On Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 5:10 PM, Remco Post <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > do not use TSM server 6.1, not even if you have no other options. 6.1 does > not even begin to approach alpha quality software. IBM should never have > shipped it. I can't think of a single good reason to install 6.1. Go with > 6.2.3 or newer or 6.3 something. > > > > On 27 feb. 2012, at 22:57, George Huebschman wrote: > > > We are getting the "Deployment Engine Failed to Initialize" when running > > ./install.bin for TSM Server 6.1 on a clean new RHEL server. > > I see lots of noise out here about this error, in and out of the TSM > world. > > > > (We have another TSM installation of TSM 6.3 on a VM that isn't even QA > as > > such, just a practice install.) > > Documetation specifies that there be 2GB available in the home directory. > > We only have 1.6 GB, BUT so does the successful 6.3 install. > > We had the error on the first and subsequent 3 attempts to run the > > install. We did not find any .lock or .lck files. > > I am told that SELINUX is set to permissive. > > > > Except for the home directory, the other space guidelines were met. > > The install is being done as root. > > > > Looking at the TSM related posts about this issue, I didn't notice any > for > > releases after 6.1. > > Is that because I didn't look hard enough? Or, was documentation > improved, > > or was a bug fixed? > > Should I talk someone into 6.2 to get past this? > > > > Most of my experience has been with 5.* > > I have read the install guide (most of it) for 6.2, which is what I > thought > > we were installing. Do I need to step back in documentation? > > > > > > -- > > George Huebschman > > > > "When you have a choice, spend money where you would prefer to work if > you > > had NO choice." > > -- > Met vriendelijke groeten/Kind Regards, > > Remco Post > [email protected] > +31 6 248 21 622 > -- George Huebschman Cell 410 522-8581 "When you have a choice, spend money where you would prefer to work if you had NO choice."
