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Full Discussion: RAC on Linux
Operating Systems Linux Gentoo RAC on Linux Post 302288535 by sixstrings on Tuesday 17th of February 2009 01:44:20 PM
Old 02-17-2009
For rac, you are going to need several separate shared disks between the two servers.

You need at least 1 OCR and 1 Voting disk.... no bigger than 100M each. Best practice is to have 2 OCR and 3 Voting, but this is a test environment so that is a bit of overkill. Then you will at least need 1 shared disk for data. My suggestion is to use ASM over ocfs. ASM is far better and most big RAC environments that I have worked on use it.

As much as I love Gentoo, RedHat seems to work best with Oracle. You might want to look at CentOs as the OS to run.

There are pretty comprehensive guides to running Oracle on RedHat here

ORACLE-BASE - Linux and Oracle

That might help you get started.
 

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LINUX-VERSION(1)					      General Commands Manual						  LINUX-VERSION(1)

NAME
linux-version - operate on Linux kernel version strings SYNOPSIS
linux-version compare VERSION1 OP VERSION2 linux-version sort [--reverse] [VERSION1 VERSION2 ...] linux-version list [--paths] DESCRIPTION
linux-version operates on Linux kernel version strings as reported by uname -r and used in file and directory names. These version strings do not follow the same rules as Debian package version strings and should not be compared as such or as arbitrary strings. compare VERSION1 OP VERSION2 Compare version strings, where OP is a binary operator. linux-version returns success (zero result) if the specified condition is satisfied, and failure (nonzero result) otherwise. The valid operators are: lt le eq ne ge gt sort [--reverse] [VERSION1 VERSION2 ...] Sort the given version strings and print them in order from lowest to highest. If the --reverse option is used, print them in order from highest to lowest. If no version strings are given as arguments, the version strings will instead be read from standard input, one per line. They may be suffixed by arbitrary text after a space, which will be included in the output. This means that, for example: linux-version list --paths | linux-version sort --reverse will list the installed versions and corresponding paths in order from highest to lowest version. list [--paths] List kernel versions installed in the customary location. If the --paths option, show the corresponding path for each version. AUTHOR
linux-version and this manual page were written by Ben Hutchings as part of the Debian linux-base package. 30 March 2011 LINUX-VERSION(1)
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