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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat How to switch back from Oracle Kernel to RedHat? Post 303022846 by Aia on Saturday 8th of September 2018 12:09:17 PM
Old 09-08-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by prvnrk
I would like to know how can I switch from Oracle kernel to RHEL kernel without breaking anything.
Since there was no testing previously in an identical testing machine, this box has become the testing one now. No testing, no confidence in anything.
You can test if it doesn't break anything by rebooting and at the grub menu select the red Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server (3.10.0-862.9.1.el7.x86_64) 7.5 (Maipo). If it boots properly, check that if everything is what's expected. If everything is proper then change the entry in the grub.conf that says default=1 to default=2 which is the third kernel menu corresponding to that version of redhat supported kernel.
Perhaps it is easier to issue the command:
Code:
# grub2-set-default 2

That only makes the selection of which kernel to boot from, persistent on reboots and shutdowns.
Depending of the yum configuration there might be issues updating kernels, you might have to set it up to exclude kernels updates in from the oracle repo.
You might want to remove with yum or rpm the title Oracle Linux Server 7.5, with Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel 4.14.35-1818.0.9.el7uek.x86_64 and Oracle Linux Server 7.5, with Linux 3.10.0-862.11.6.el7.x86_64
A lot of testing.
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Session::Store::Oracle(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 Session::Store::Oracle(3)

NAME
Apache::Session::Store::Oracle - Store persistent data in a Oracle database SYNOPSIS
use Apache::Session::Store::Oracle; my $store = new Apache::Session::Store::Oracle; $store->insert($ref); $store->update($ref); $store->materialize($ref); $store->remove($ref); DESCRIPTION
Apache::Session::Store::Oracle fulfills the storage interface of Apache::Session. Session data is stored in a Oracle database. SCHEMA
To use this module, you will need at least these columns in a table called 'sessions': id varchar2(32) # or however long your session IDs are. a_session long To create this schema, you can execute this command using the sqlplus program: CREATE TABLE sessions ( id varchar2(32) not null primary key, a_session long ); If you use some other command, ensure that there is a unique index on the table's id column. CONFIGURATION
The module must know what datasource, username, and password to use when connecting to the database. These values can be set using the options hash (see Apache::Session documentation). The options are DataSource, UserName, and Password. Example: tie %hash, 'Apache::Session::Oracle', $id, { DataSource => 'dbi:Oracle:database', UserName => 'database_user', Password => 'K00l' }; Instead, you may pass in an already-opened DBI handle to your database. tie %hash, 'Apache::Session::Oracle', $id, { Handle => $dbh }; The last option is LongReadLen, which specifies the maximum size of the session object. If not supplied, the default maximum size is 8 KB. AUTHOR
This modules was written by Jeffrey William Baker <jwbaker@acm.org> A fix for the commit policy was contributed by Michael Schout <mschout@gkg.net> SEE ALSO
Apache::Session, Apache::Session::Store::DBI perl v5.12.1 2007-09-28 Session::Store::Oracle(3)
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