3. Configuring an ASE Server

So far we have copied the software into the file system, now we will do the actual setup of a database server. First we need to make sure the sybase user is set up properly, then we can start the configuration utilities and enter the correct settings there.

3.1. Pre-Configuration steps

  1. To begin with, read the LICENSE file if it exists. Once you agree with this, continue down this list.

  2. There are some useful steps done by the installation scripts in the RPM packages that you may want to do by hand if you installed with extra RPM switches or used alien. One is that directories in ASE 12.5 get shortcuts created with shorter names. ASE-12_5 gets a symlink named ASE, OCS-12_5 has a symlink named OCS. You can set these up yourself to save some typing later.
    
bash$ cd /opt/sybase
    bash$ ln -s SYBASE_ASE ASE
    bash$ ln -s SYBASE_OCS OCS
    bash$ ln -s shared-1_0 shared
    bash$ ln -s SYSAM-1_0 SYSAM
    

  3. Change the installation to be owned by the sybase user.
    
bash$ su - root
    bash# chown -R sybase.sybase /opt/sybase
    bash# chmod -R ug+w /opt/sybase
    
    This is more or less what the sybinstall.sh script does for you. In SQL Server 11.0.3.3 there is a script which attempts to set all permissions right, $SYBASE/install/setperm_all

  4. Make sure you allow ASE to allocate the necessary amount of shared memory. Your current maximum is what you find from ipcs -lm (in KiloBytes) or cat /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax (in bytes) or sysctl kernel.shmmax (in bytes). This can be set with
    
sysctl -w kernel.shmmax=[number of bytes]
    or by directly
    echo [number of bytes] > /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax
    as root. Make sure this is permanently changed on every reboot by either inserting a line in /etc/sysctl.conf or place the echo command in a rc startup file (such as rc.local) as the Sybase documentation says. Depending upon the version, here is the memory requirements for ASE:

    Table 3. ASE Memory Requirements

    VersionMinimum Memoryshmmax"total memory"
    11.0.3.3˜15 MB15360000 bytes7500 2K pages
    11.9.2.x32 MB33554432 bytes16384 2K pages
    12.5.0.x50 MB52428800 bytes25600 2K pages

  5. Make sure the sybase user has all relevant environment variables set correctly.

    Table 4. Sybase environment variables

    VersionVariableSet to
    11.0.3.3 and 11.9.2.x  
     $LANGMust not be set!
     $LC_ALL"default"
     $SYBASETop-level of installation, default is /opt/sybase/
     $PATHAdd /opt/sybase/bin to the start of the existing $PATH
     $LD_LIBRARY_PATHAdd /opt/sybase/lib to the start of the existing $LD_LIBRARY_PATH
     $SYBPLATFORM"linux"
    12.5.0.xAll of the above plus 
     $SYBASE_ASESubdirectory (not full path) to the ASE part of the installation
     $SYBASE_OCSSubdirectory (not full path) to the Open Client / Open Server part of the installation
    Create a script with all environment variables that you can source in, or modify startup files such as .cshrc or .profile. Here are the needed settings:

    sh/bash/ksh type shells
    
unset LANG
    export LC_ALL="default"
    export SYBASE="/opt/sybase/"
    export PATH="$SYBASE/bin:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_ASE/bin:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_OCS/bin:
    $SYBASE/$SYBASE_SYSAM/bin:$PATH"
    export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$SYBASE/lib:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_ASE/lib:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_OCS/lib:
    $LD_LIBRARY_PATH"
    export SYBPLATFORM="linux"
    export SYBASE_ASE="ASE"
    export SYBASE_OCS="OCS"
    export SYBASE_FTS="FTS"
    export SYBASE_SYSAM="SYSAM"
    
    csh/tcsh type shells
    
unsetenv LANG
    setenv LC_ALL default
    setenv SYBASE /opt/sybase/
    setenv PATH $SYBASE/bin:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_ASE/bin:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_OCS/bin:
    $SYBASE/$SYBASE_SYSAM/bin:$PATH
    setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$SYBASE/lib:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_ASE/lib:$SYBASE/$SYBASE_OCS/lib:
    $LD_LIBRARY_PATH
    setenv SYBPLATFORM=linux
    setenv SYBASE_ASE ASE
    setenv SYBASE_OCS OCS
    setenv SYBASE_FTS FTS
    setenv SYBASE_SYSAM SYSAM
    

  6. Prepare the data area.

3.2. Preparing the Data Area

Since the file system for the software is now prepared, we can decide where to locate the data storage used to hold the data inserted into the databases. The first decision is whether to use raw devices or file system. Traditionally, raw devices were used. You had to partition a disk and set a certain label to have it recognized as raw. Linux didn't have this previously and the Sybase virtual devices were instead written to files in a file system.

So, what is the difference between these approaches and when should you choose each? Unfortunately, it is one of the areas where the answer is a very clear and unambiguos "it depends". Raw devices were introduced first with kernel patches and then included in the 2.4 series. You use the command raw to create bindings between partitions and the /dev/rawn devices. This means that you will need to have a free partition on a disk. Changing this later can also be difficult. The advantages of raw devices are that you know exactly where on disk they are located - you can place them on the fastest cylinders if you like. Writes to the raw devices will be unbuffered, they will go directly to disk. In case of a failure (such as power outage, disk controller failure or process crash) the finished writes are guaranteed to be on disk instead of only having been written to a buffer waiting for the disk to be ready. Also, the ASE server will to asynchronous I/O on these devices. It can queue a series of I/O instead of having to do a single I/O, wait for it to finish and then do the next operation. While the I/O result is pending, the ASE server will perform other work. With a virtual device written to a file on a file system (ext2, ext3 and Reiserfs are all supported), the writes will normally be done to the file system buffers. The actual file may be located anywhere on the partition and may not be contiguous. Note that there is no need for a journalling file system since these will only log the changes to the inode, not the contents of the data blocks. The Sybase ASE transaction log will do exactly this kind of "journalling" of the data modifications for you. The buffering means that reading data not held in ASE cache may take place from the file system buffer instead of having to read it from disk, thereby speeding up these. However, writes will probably take longer time to finish since they have to pass through the file system driver layer. In order to have safe writes to file system devices you can configure ASE to open the device using the O_DSYNC flag, which will cause writes to be flushed to disc immediately when writing.

In ASE 11.0.3.3 ESD #6 there is support for raw devices. This will need certain patches shipped in the GPL directory, one for raw device access, one for KAIO. There are instructions for how to apply these to the kernels and distributions that were current at the time.

In 11.9.2.x it was decided not to include any experimental raw device support before the Linux kernel officially included and supported this. In order to guarantee safe writes, the O_DSYNC flag is always enabled by default. You can globally disable this with traceflag 1625; add -T1625 as a parameter to the RUN_SERVER file.

In ASE 12.5.0.x there was a change starting in 12.5.0.2 where the server is now compiled to use the kernel 2.4 functionality. That means you can create raw devices on OS level and configure ASE to use these without any special patches. If you prefer file system devices, you can set the O_DSYNC flag to be used with the dsync=true parameter when creating the device with disk init, or the sp_deviceattr stored procedure to modify it later.

3.3. Starting the Configuration

To configure a SQL Server 11.0.3.3 you log in as the sybase user and start the sybinit utility. You can run this in a console, make changes and hit Ctrl-A for "accept" and Ctrl-X to go back to the previous menu.

In ASE 11.9.2.x and 12.5.0.x, you normally use the srvbuild command, but you will need an X server to display it. For those not using X, an option is to use the shell script "sybinit4ever", available on the web from SyPron, see the 3rd party utilities section later. This will give you a classic sybinit menu interface to the configuration process. An alternative from Sybase is the srvbuildres utility which uses a resource file containing all configuration options which you can edit with your settings, these options are described in an appendix of the Installation Guide.

The exact entries for configuring a server are described in more detail in the /opt/sybase/doc/howto/howto-ase-quickstart.html file from the ASE 11.0.3.3 documentation RPM, and in the "Configuration Guide for UNIX" for the newer versions. The information you will need for all versions are:

Once you have decided on these settings, start the configuration program. If you use srvbuild, you will need to set your $DISPLAY variable correctly. Type in the requested settings and let the configuration utility build the server. Some parts of this, such as creating the database devices and loading the system stored procedures, will take time. Once the process has finished, you server should have been built and be up and running, ready for requests.

3.4. Finishing Off

If you want automatic startup and shutdown, consider the rc.sybase script a good start. You can copy this to where all your other startup scripts are and create the correct start and stop links from your runlevel directories.

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