January 2003
Revision History | |
---|---|
Revision 1.0 | 2003-01-18 |
Initial Release, reviewed by LDP (Tab) | |
Revision 0.1.2 | 2003-01-13 |
Corrected some factual and grammatical mistakes. Submitted document to LDP. | |
Revision 0.1.1 | 2003-01-01 |
Mary Gardiner converts mini-HOWTO into Docbook XML 4.1.2. | |
Revision 0.1 | 2002-09-20 |
My first mini-HOWTO, wrote install instructions Lotus Domino 5.08 & 5.09a for Mandrake Linux 8.1 and SuSE 7.3 Professional. |
Table of Contents
This mini-HOWTO gives you explicit instructions on installing Lotus Domino R5 for Linux on the Intel x86-based distributions of Mandrake Linux 8.1 and SuSE 7.3 Professional. After installing Domino R5, you can connect to your Domino server from a remote Notes machine, and administer it locally (on the same Linux machine) using the Web Administrator.
I faced Domino for Linux in February 2002. It happened because of unstable Domino R5 functioning on an Windows NT Server with powerful hardware resources. I read the “Understanding Domino for Linux” white paper and I decided to move our Domino server to Linux. My first Linux distribution was Mandrake 8.1. I know this French distribution is one of the easiest and friendly for a newbie. Now it has worked pretty well for more than 10 months without any interference. Cool :) A few months ago the chairmen decided to implement one more Domino server at our high school; we had no money to purchase a powerful server and I made up my mind to deploy it on Linux again with existing hardware. Now we have a very stable second one on SuSE 7.3 (I have studied this distribution already) with poor hardware (CPU: Celeron 400, RAM: 192MB, HDD: 20GB IDE).
As time permits, I hope to provide hints and tips for improving performance of Domino on Linux, and for configuring the environment on various Linux distributions.
If you plan to save your employer's money and get amazing stability (and save your time) you should think about Domino on Linux. This mini-HOWTO helps you to install and configure Domino on the Linux distributions supported by IBM Lotus Software (SuSE) and others (Mandrake). I describe specific prerequisites and quirks for each distribution. I do not want anyone to repeat my sleepless nights and all-day-long red eyes.
Mykola Buryak is the originator and current maintainer of this mini-HOWTO.
Please send all suggestions for improvement, criticisms, or more-or-less
related questions to me at <m.b.@gmx.co.uk>
or
<1upus@gmx.ch>
. Please do not send me spam or hate mail.
Mykola Buryak has been employed by National Mining University, Ukraine, as Lotus System Administrator since September 2000. Before that time he was working as Computer/Network Technician there. He has 3 year experience with Web Development, 2 year in Lotus Domino/Notes Administration, 1 year in Linux and IBM DB2 UDB. In his spare time he teaches RUP and Python at the Geoinformatics Department, National Mining University. He holds an Hon. Masters Degree in Information Control Systems and Technologies and the following certifications for the present:
Certified Lotus Specialist - Domino R5 System Administrator
IBM Certified Specialist - DB2 UDB V6.1/V7.1 User
Mary Gardiner did an awesome job of editing the original version for style and consistency.
Additional thanks to Dan Scott and his DB2 Version 7.1 for Linux HOWTO which I got the document structure from.
Copyright (c) 2002, 2003 Mykola Buryak
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no invariant sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, with no Back-Cover Text. A copy of the license is included in Section 6, “GNU Free Documentation License”.
This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See Section 6, “GNU Free Documentation License” for more details.
What are prerequisites? Prerequisites are what you, your machine, and your distribution require before you will be able to successfully install or use Lotus Domino R5. The required prerequisites come straight from Notes, Domino and Domino Designer RELEASE NOTES, Chapter 2. The suggested prerequisites come from experience. For your convenience, I've divided them into hardware and software requirements.
x86 compatible (for example, Intel, AMD, or Cyrix). I've successfully installed Domino Application Server 5.08 on an AMD Duron 800, Intel Celeron 400 and Enterprise Server 5.09a on an AMD Athlon 1000. Your experiences with other x86 processors would be appreciated.
I've found 128 MB of RAM is enough to run a single Domino Application Server and test out your applications. In my case, I was working with a AMD Duron 800 processor and 128 MB of RAM. However, more memory is recommended if you're putting your application into production or running multiple services. Swap file should be 3 times the physical RAM or greater.
For a typical non-partioned installation of the Lotus Domino R5 Application Server, you will need about 300 MB of free disk space.
Domino for Linux will need to be able to find a certain file with filename
libjitc.so
. This required file is absent from Mandrake Linux 8.1.
You will be unable to work correctly with the Agent Manager and Statistic Agent if
you ignore this section of mini-HOWTO.
To find out if the file is absent, you can use the locate command.
First, issue the following command at the command prompt (login as “root”):
bash# updatedb
This command searches the hard drive and updates a database for the locate command in use. It can take a few minutes to run, but probably it will take only 20-30 seconds or so. Afterwards, issue the command:
bash# locate libjitc.so
If libjitc.so
is on your hard drive somewhere, locate will find it and
list where it is. If not, locate will list nothing. If libjitc.so is
already there, it is probably already in your search path, until you get
an error trying to work with Agent Manager and Statistic Agent indicating
otherwise, just assume it is. If you do not have libjitc.so
, you will
need to get it separately; it is not included as a part of the Domino for Linux
package.
The file libjitc.so
is included as a part of the IBM Developer Kit for
Linux, which is IBM's port of Sun's JDK (Java Development Kit) 1.1.8
to Linux/x86. libjitc.so
is the Java “Just-In-Time”
compiler. The reason that this file is absent from SuSE 7.3 is that this Linux
distribution comes with a different Java package named Kaffe Virtual
Machine.
You can download the IBM Developer Kit for Linux from http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/java/jdk/118/linux/?dwzone=java.
Prepare a directory to download JDK into. Change to the /root
directory:
bash#cd /
bash#cd /root
and make a new directory named jdk118
:
bash# mkdir jdk118
Download the JDK into /root/jdk118
. Install the IBM
Developer Kit for Java by issuing the following command as root:
bash# rpm -ivh IBMJava118-SDK-1.1.8-5.0-i386.rpm
After successful installation of the IBM Developer Kit you need to copy
libjitc.so
to the /lib
directory:
bash# cp /usr/jdk118/lib/linux/native_threads/libjitc.so /lib
You can uninstall the IBM Developer Kit with Software or Package Manager to clean things up, but consider keeping the rpm file IBMJava118-SDK-1.1.8-5.0-i386.rpm. You may decide later that JDK 1.1.8 is something you want to install (for example, it's necessary for using the IBM DB2 UDB V7.x Linux Control Center).
Domino for Linux will need to be able to find a certain file with filename
libjitc.so
. This required file is absent from SuSE 7.3 Professional. You
will be unable to work correctly with the Agent Manager and Statistic Agent if
you ignore this section of mini-HOWTO.
To find out if it is absent, you can use the locate command. First, issue the following command at the command prompt (log in as “root”):
bash# updatedb
This command searches the hard drive and updates a database for the locate command in use. It can take a few minutes to run, but probably it will take only 20-30 seconds or so. Then issue the command:
bash# locate libjitc.so
If libjitc.so
is on your hard drive somewhere,
locate will find it and list where it is. If not,
locate will list nothing. If libjitc.so
is
already there, it is probably already in your search path, until you get
an error trying to work with Agent Manager and Statistic Agent indicating
otherwise, just assume it is. If you do not have libjitc.so
, you will need
to get it separately; it is not included as a part of the Domino for Linux
package.
The file libjitc.so
is included as a part of the IBM Developer Kit for
Linux, which is IBM's port of Sun's JDK (Java Development Kit) 1.3 to
Linux/x86. libjitc.so is the Java “Just-In-Time” compiler.
The reason that this file is absent from SuSE 7.3 is that this Linux
distribution comes with a different Java package named Java 2 SDK,
Standard Edition.
Install IBM Developer Kit version 1.3 with YaST2 control center. IBM Developer Kit is located on one of the seven SuSE 7.3 Professional installation CD-ROMs.
After successful installation of the IBM Developer Kit, you need to copy
libjitc.so
to /lib
:
bash# cp /usr/lib/jdk1.3/jre/bin/libjitc.so /lib
Log in as “root”. Open a terminal session. Add a user and group to
your system called notes
:
bash# adduser notes
Give this new user a password by entering:
bash# passwd notes
Mount the CD-ROM, and enter the following command to install the Lotus Domino R5 package:
bash# /mnt/cdrom/dom509ux/linux/install
The install program displays a series of screens about the IBM Lotus license agreement. Use the TAB key to accept a setting and advance to the next screen, the ESC key to back up to the previous screen, the space bar to toggle through possible choices other than the default, and ENTER to edit a text field.
Select a setup type. Choose Domino Mail Server, Domino Application Server, or Domino Enterprise Server and press TAB.
Select the program file location. The default is
/opt/lotus
.
Make sure you have enough space. The installed files in the program directory
are approximately 70 MB. If you select a program directory other than
/opt/lotus
, then a soft link will be created from
your program directory to /opt/lotus
so that
commands may be executed from that path.
Indicate if you plan a number of Domino servers on the current
physical machine. The default is No
.
Select the data file location. The default is
/local/notesdata
. If you do
not have a large root partition it will not work. If so, change the
directory to /usr/local/notesdata
.
If you ignore this during installation process, later you will get an error like this one:
Error validation settings: There is not enough disk space for the data directory at /local/notesdata 125889K is required, and only 95370K would be available. Make sure you have enough space.
The installed files in the data directory are approximately 160 MB.
Select the user and group for this server. Choose the default
that you set up earlier (notes
in the example).
The install program displays the settings you selected. Use the TAB key to accept these settings and begin the installation, or press the ESC key to back up to change any settings. The install program will then begin installing the files.
During installation process you may see the warning:
The following system commands were not located: rsh.
It does not influence the local server installation.
After successful installation, this message will be displayed among others:
The installation completed successfully.
Log in as “root.” Open a terminal session. Add a user and group to
your system called notes
:
bash#groupadd notes
bash#useradd notes -g notes
Give this new user a password by entering:
bash# passwd notes
Mount the CD-ROM, and enter the following command to install the Lotus Domino R5 package:
bash# /mnt/cdrom/dom509ux/linux/install
The install program displays a series of screens about the IBM Lotus license agreement. Use the TAB key to accept a setting and advance to the next screen, the ESC key to back up to the previous screen, the space bar to toggle through possible choices other than the default, and ENTER to edit a text field.
Select a setup type. Choose Domino Mail Server, Domino Application Server, or Domino Enterprise Server and press TAB.
Select the program file location. The default is
/opt/lotus
. Make
sure you have enough space. The installed files in the program directory
are approximately 70 MB. If you select a program directory other than
/opt/lotus
, then a soft link will be created
from your program directory to /opt/lotus
so
that commands may be executed from that path.
Indicate if you plan a number of Domino servers on the current
physical machine. The default is No
.
Select the data file location. The default is
/local/notesdata
.
It works perfectly. Make sure your have enough space. The installed files
in the data directory are approximately 160 MB.
Select the user and group for this server. Choose the default
that you set up earlier (notes
in the example).
The install program displays the settings you selected. Use the TAB key to accept these settings and begin the installation, or press the ESC key to back up to change any settings. The install program will then begin installing the files.
After successful installation, this message will be displayed among others:
The installation completed successfully.
Log on to Linux as the user you established earlier (notes
in
the example).
Change to the directory /usr/local/notesdata
(/local/notesdata
for SuSE) by entering:
bash# cd / bash# cd /usr/local/notesdata and then enter the following: bash# /opt/lotus/bin/http httpsetup
A series of messages indicate the start of the Domino server. For example:
05/09/2002 8:39:09 PM Created new log file as /usr/local/notesdata/log.nsf 05/09/2002 8:39:09 PM *************************************** * Lotus Domino Server Setup * * To setup this server, please connect* * your web browser to port 8081 * * Example: http://example.com:8081 * *************************************** 05/09/2002 8:39:09 AM JVM: Java Virtual Machine initialized. 05/09/2002 8:39:10 AM HTTP Web Server started
You begin the configuration process by connecting to your Linux server with a Web browser, either from an external machine, or the Linux machine.
To perform setup from another machine, enter:
http://example.com:8081
To perform setup from the Linux machine, enter:
http://localhost:8081
or
http://linux:8081
for SuSE 7.3 Professional.
where example.com
is either the IP address or DNS name of your
Linux server. At this point, the standard Domino configuration screens are
displayed in your browser. Follow the instructions on these screens and
click the button on the final screen to complete the initial
configuration. Online help is available on each of these screens.
The HTTP Setup program will have created SERVER.ID
and
CERT.ID
files in
/usr/local/notesdata
. The USER.ID
file is attached to a person document in NAMES.NSF
.
Before starting your Domino server, make sure no other Web server is running because it will block the Domino HTTP task from operating correctly, and you will be unable to use a Web browser to administer your server after the initial setup.
Log on to Linux as the user you established earlier (notes
in
the example).
From the /usr/local/notesdata
directory
(/local/notesdata
for SuSE), enter:
bash# /opt/lotus/bin/server
The server starts and the usual server console messages appear.
Before you can perform any more administration on your Domino for Linux server, you will need to extract the administrator ID file and move it to the machine you plan to use for administration.
After the HTTP Web Server task has started, switch to your administration machine and use a Web browser to connect to your new server:
http://example.com
where example.com
is either the IP address or DNS name of your
Linux server. The default Lotus Domino navigator screen displays.
Now open the address book by entering:
http://example.com/names.nsf
Click to the People view and open the Person document for the
administrator you created earlier and download the USER.ID
file to your
administration machine. If you are using a Netscape browser, you may have
to rename the id file to USER.ID
.
This web site contains white papers, redbooks, FAQs etc., published by IBM about Lotus Domino/Notes.
You can download a 90-day trial version of Domino/Notes and other Lotus products here.
Very useful, but archived Lotus Domino for Linux Feedback Forum.
This HOWTO explains how to install Domino Server on the Caldera OpenLinux Server3.1.1.
Advisor presents the unmatched advice of top experts in a full range of media, including magazines, journals, e-mail newsletters, conferences, seminars, workshops, CDs, on-site training, and dozens of Web sites. The expertise presented by Advisor comes from hard-won hands-on involvement with the leading technology products (as Lotus Domino/Notes) and services, and technical and business practices.
It's a Domino Specific Search Engine. Recommended for all Lotus Domino/Notes newbies.
Version 1.1, March 2000
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