Non Appliance Mode Only
The steps below are only applicable for installation in Non-Appliance mode, and should be performed by your Linux administrator.
This video demonstrates how to prepare a RHEL 7.8 operating system for DPOD Non-Appliance mode installation. Use it just as a demonstration, as it is not kept up-to-date with every change in the requirements. When preparing the operating system, you should follow the procedure provided below.
Subject | Action |
---|---|
Supported operating system | Verify that your operation system is one of the supported operating systems described in System Requirements. You may use the following command:
|
Resources allocation | Ensure to select the correct architecture type, and that all resources listed in System Requirements are available. You may use the following commands:
|
Network card | Ensure you have at least one network card installed and configured with full access to network services such as DNS and NTP (the same as your Gateways). See Network Preparation for more details. |
Root access | Installation must be performed by a root user. You cannot use sudo instead. However, you may run it after running the command: su - |
Disks, mount points / file systems and logical volumes | DPOD Standard Edition requires 3 disks (LUNs / physical / virtual) to support throughput, for both production and non-production installations. Please allocate the mount points / file systems on the different disks, as described in Table 1 below. It is strongly recommended to use logical volume manager (LVM) - particularly for the data disks. Once configured, you may verify there are 3 disks using the following command:
Tip: to create the mount points / file systems during RHEL installation:
|
Store service dedicated OS user and group | The Store service requires a dedicated OS user and group to run. Consider executing the following command:
|
OS locale | The supported OS locale is en_US.UTF-8. Check the OS Locale Configuration and change it if necessary. |
Installation file and environment | Ensure your /tmp directory has at least 1GB of free space. Installation from a different directory is possible. If you opt to run the install from a directory other than /tmp, ensure that this directory:
Download the CEF file and transfer it to the installation directory (e.g. /tmp) on the pre-installed OS server. Execute the following command from the pre-installed OS server terminal:
|
Setup DNS | Setup DNS - your network admin may need to assist you with this action. Make sure you can ping to your LDAP, Mail/SMTP Server, NTP Server. |
Using yum on RedHat | For RedHat only: Your system might need to be registered and subscribed to the Red Hat Customer Portal to be able to install all prerequisites using
|
Setup NTP | Setup NTP - it has to be the same one configured in your IBM DataPower Gateways.
|
Setup hosts file | Verify that the /etc/hosts file includes an entry with your server name mapped to your external server IP. To find your server name, you may execute the command:
|
Required RPMs | Verify the existence of the following RPMs from the official RedHat/CentOS yum repositories:
The installation is usually performed by executing yum:
If this command fails to find the packages, you should manually download the RPM files and install them. |
Ensure the httpd service is enabled and started by executing the command:
| |
Install mod_proxy_html:
| |
Optional: Install Kibana OSS (please read Kibana access limitations):
| |
Cleanup | In case you are using yum, it is recommended to clean its cache to make sure there is enough space in /var (yum cache can take a lot of the space there). To clean yum cache, execute the command:
|
Firewall access to DPOD server | To configure your firewall to allow access to DPOD server at port 443, execute the following commands: These commands may not be applicable if your system has no builtin firewall.
You should open port access for the DNS Server, your DataPower Gateways, your SMTP server and others as described in Firewall Requirements. Please assist your network admin and Linux admin to enable access on these ports. |
Table 1 - Prepare your file system
Directory / Mount Point | Disk | Space in Mib | Device Type | File System |
---|---|---|---|---|
biosboot | sys | 2 | Standard Partition | BIOS BOOT |
swap | sys | 8192 | LVM | swap |
/boot | sys | 2048 | Standard Partition | XFS |
/boot/efi | sys | 200 | Standard Partition | EFI System Partition |
/ | sys | 4096 | LVM | XFS |
/var | sys | 4096 | LVM | XFS |
/tmp | sys | 2048 (recommended 16384) | LVM | XFS |
/shared | app | 512 | LVM | XFS |
/app | app | 8192 | LVM | XFS |
/app/tmp | app | 4096 | LVM | XFS |
/installs | app | 8192 | LVM | XFS |
/logs | app | 12,288 | LVM | XFS |
/data | data | As described in Hardware and Software Requirements | LVM | XFS |
Installation Compatibility Checks
There are two types of checks: Critical and Informational.
The critical checks are mandatory in order to install the system. The informational checks are highly recommended for system optimization.
Please take time to review the results of these checks after installation, and perform all applicable optimizations. The compatibility checks report can be found in /installs/logs/appliance_checks-<date time>.log
Supported programs
The only supported programs for installation on the DPOD server are infrastructure / system tools like Antivirus agents, Monitor Agents, Backup Agents etc.
Note that these system tools may affect DPOD's functionality and performance.
If you encounter functionality or performance issues, try first to disable these system tools.