JDE 9.00 Installation

EONECNC

Well Known Member
I need to install JD Edwards EnterpriseOne 9.00 on Windows 2003 SP2 operating system in a Lab environment.

As per MTR

1. Oracle 10g R2: Windows 2003 - 32 Bit is only supported with the 32-bit version of Oracle 10g R2.

2. Oracle 10g R2: Windows 2003 R2 – 32 Bit is only supported with the 32-bit version of Oracle 10g R2 with 10.2.0.2 Minimum Required.

3. Oracle 10g R2: Windows 2003 - 64 Bit is only supported with the 64-bit version of Oracle 10g R2 with 10.2.0.2 Minimum Required.

4. Oracle 10g R2: Windows 2003 R2 – 64 Bit is only supported with the 64-bit version of Oracle 10g R2 with 10.2.0.2 Minimum Required.


As per the point no. 1, Can anyone tell me which subversion of Oracle 10g R2 - 32 bit is supported with Windows 2003 SP2( 10.2.0.1, 10.2.0.2 ???).


Since JD Edwards EnterpriseOne is a 32 bit application,
is it possible to install Oracle 10g-64 bit and EnterpriseOne on the same Windows 2003-64 bit server ?
(I am planning install Database and Enterprise server on the same machine)
 
Lovelylovekit,

I'm pretty sure that if you want to use 64 bit oracle, you can, but not on the same server. You will need to seperate the database away from the enterprise server. We're a SQL house not an Oracle house, but I think that is the way that it can be configured.

- Gregg
 
[ QUOTE ]

is it possible to install Oracle 10g-64 bit and EnterpriseOne on the same Windows 2003-64 bit server ?
(I am planning install Database and Enterprise server on the same machine)

[/ QUOTE ]

It's possible - but not recommended. Its preferential for scalability and reliability to have the database server separate from the 32bit application (enterprise) server. This should not be a cost issue, the cost for an application server is at the most $2000 to $3000 these days. Nor should it be a licensing issue, since the cost of Standard Edition Win2K3 is not expensive.

Since the cost of OneWorld is in the hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars, the hardware costs these days (on the Intel platform) are literally a drop in the bucket.

Having at MINIMUM a second application server (for scalability, performance, reliability) is also not a licensing issue - since the cost is trivial, and JDE does not differentiate the cost for additional servers.

Make sure that you are using gigabit between the database and the application servers.
 
If you look more closely, you should see that the subversions up to 10.2.0.4 are listed as supported.

As for point #2, if you look at the Enterprise Server MTR, you should see that only with the new Tools Release 8.98.1.x is running the 32-bit E1 services supported on 64-bit Windows.

Ditto what Jon said about separating the Database from the Enterprise, but I worry about that mainly in a Production setting. Since you say you are doing this for a lab setup, I don't see any particular reason why you have to separate the two. Just make sure you have enough memory for everything.
 
[ QUOTE ]
...Since you say you are doing this for a lab setup

[/ QUOTE ]I didn't see that - sorry. Yes, in a lab theres no issue.
 
Thanks Gregg and Jon.

Actually i have Oracle 10g R2 10.2.0.1.0.
So from the above MTR, i wanted to know whether Oracle 10.2.0.1.0 is supported on Windows 2003 SP1 or not ?
(Point no. 1)
 
The MTR specifically states:

[ QUOTE ]
Windows 2003 -



Oracle Server Standard Edition One
Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.1
Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.2
Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.2
Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.3
Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.3
Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.4
Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.4
Oracle 11g R1 - 64 Bit 11.1.0.6
Oracle 11g R1 - 64 Bit 11.1.0.7






Oracle Server Standard Edition
Oracle 9i R2 - 32 Bit 9.2.0.8

Oracle 9i R2 - 64 Bit – Not supported with JD Edwards EnterpriseOne

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.1

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.2

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.2

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.3

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.3

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.4

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.4

Oracle 11g R1 - 64 Bit 11.1.0.6

Oracle 11g R1 - 64 Bit 11.1.0.7






Oracle Server Enterprise Edition
Oracle 9i R2 - 32 Bit 9.2.0.8

Oracle 9i R2 - 64 Bit – Not supported with JD Edwards EnterpriseOne

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.1

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.2

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.2

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.3

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.3

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.4

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.4

Oracle 11g R1 - 64 Bit 11.1.0.6

Oracle 11g R1 - 64 Bit 11.1.0.7





Oracle Server RAC Option
Oracle 9i R2 - 32 Bit 9.2.0.8

Oracle 9i R2 - 64 Bit – Not supported with JD Edwards EnterpriseOne

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.1

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.2

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.2

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.3

Oracle 10g R2 – 64 Bit 10.2.0.3

Oracle 10g R2 - 32 Bit 10.2.0.4

Oracle 10g R2 - 64 Bit 10.2.0.4

Oracle 11g R1 – 64 Bit 11.1.0.6

Oracle 11g R1 - 64 Bit 11.1.0.7

[/ QUOTE ]
And that should be for SP1, SP2, R2, Standard, Enterprise, or Data Center Edition of Windows 2003.

Unfortunately, that also looks like you're out of luck if you're going to use 64-bit 10.2.0.1, since it's not listed. That doesn't mean it won't work. Just that Oracle may not provide support if you call in with a problem on that configuration.
 
Back
Top