You could do all of this in 7.0.  Only problem is that at the end of the day,
while you can complete and install, you can not run an instance of the
database.  At least I can not.  I am hoping htis gets solved soon.  Until it
does I am on 6.2.

Paul Anderson

J Hayward wrote:

> >From the release notes:
>
> The Oracle installation program (versions 8.1.7, 8.1.6, and possibly others)
> does not work properly with glibc 2.2 and above.  The problem is that it is
> linking object files compiled against different glibc  (binary compatibility
> is ensured only for linked executables and shared libraries through symbol
> versioning).  You may work around this by installing the Red Hat Linux 6.2
> compatibility packages (compat-egcs, compat-glibc and compat-libs) and
> issuing the following commands before running the Oracle installer:
>
>         export LD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.2.5
>         . /usr/i386-glibc21-linux/bin/i386-glibc21-linux-env.sh
>
> The second line exports environment variables which will cause gcc and ld to
> look for glibc 2.1.3 compatibility headers and libraries.
>
> No I haven't tried it yet.
>
> Regards,
>         Jim H
>
> On Tuesday 17 April 2001 07:19, you wrote:
> > After all the fun I had with trying to install the Oracle under 7.0 I
> > thought I would ask before I cut my wrists trying to do this again.  I
> > know there is not official support for the glibc, but can a database
> > even run?
> >
> > Paul Anderson
> >
> >
> >
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>
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