Oracle® Database Gateway for APPC Installation and Configuration Guide 11g Release 1 (11.1) for AIX 5L Based Systems (64-Bit), HP-UX PA-RISC (64-Bit), Solaris Operating System (SPARC 64-Bit), and Linux x86 Part Number E10076-01 |
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This chapter describes how to configure the network.
The instructions in this section will show you how to configure the network if the gateway is utilizing the SNA or TCP/IP communication protocol.
The gateway must be defined to the Oracle Net Listener, and a service name must be defined for accessing the gateway. To do this, perform the following steps:
If you are using SNA:
(SID_DESC= (SID_NAME=PGA) (ORACLE_HOME=/oracle/pga/11.1) (PROGRAM=pg4asrv) )
where: /oracle/pga/11.1
is your gateway Oracle home and PGA
is the gateway SID name.
Or, if you are using TCP/IP:
(SID_DESC= (SID_NAME=PGA) (ORACLE_HOME=/oracle/pga/11.1) (PROGRAM=pg4t4ic) )
where: /oracle/pga/11.1
is the gateway Oracle home and PGA
is the gateway SID name.
Add a service name for the gateway to the tnsnames.ora
file on the system where your Oracle database is located. The service name is specified in the USING
parameter of the database link defined for accessing the gateway from the Oracle database. For example, if you are using the IPC protocol adapter and your gateway sid
is PGA, then add the following entry to tnsnames.ora
:
pgaipc= (DESCRIPTION = (ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = ipc) (KEY=key)) (CONNECT_DATA = (SID=PGA)) (HS=) )
In this example, key
is the IPC key defined in the listener.ora
file for the IPC protocol. You can use the IPC protocol only if the Oracle database and the gateway are on the same system.
If you are using the TCP/IP protocol adapter, and if your gateway sid
is PGA, then add the following entry to tnsnames.ora
:
pgatcp= (DESCRIPTION = (ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL= TCP)(Host= gateway)(Port= port)) (CONNECT_DATA = (SID=PGA)) (HS=) )
In this example, port
is the TCP port defined in the listener.ora
file for the TCP protocol, and gateway
is the TCP/IP host name of the system where the gateway is located.
Note:
For the following cases:If your gateway and Oracle database are not on the same system,
If the gateway and the Oracle database are on the same system but the Oracle database Listener is different than the gateway listener
You must define the Oracle database to PGAU by adding a service name to tnsnames.ora
on the system where your gateway is located. For example:
ora_server = (DESCRIPTION= (ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL= TCP) (PORT= port) (HOST= ora_srv) ) (CONNECT_DATA= (SID= ora_server)) )
In this example:
Ensure that you start the defined listener(s).
See Also:
Oracle Database Net Services Administrator's Guide for more information about configuring the networkProceed with Configuring the Communication Package for the Gateway
If your communication protocol is SNA, you must now configure the SNA communication package profiles for APPC connections.
Configure the profiles to define LU6.2 conversations with the OLTP. Refer to the appropriate chapter from the following list to read about the SNA communication package or the TCP/IP package for your platform.
For Linux for Intel Pentium-based 32-bit systems, refer to Chapter 6, "Configuring the SNA Communication Package on Linux".
For AIX-Based Systems, refer to Chapter 7, " Configuring the SNA Communication Package on AIX-Based Systems".
For HP-UX, refer to Chapter 8, "Configuring the SNA Communication Package on HP-UX".
For Solaris Operating System (SPARC 64-bit), refer to Chapter 9, "Configuring the SNA Communication Package on Solaris".
For configuring your TCP/IP communication for the gateway, refer to Chapter 10, "Configuring the TCP/IP Communications Package for IMS Connect".
In addition, if your communication protocol is SNA, refer to "Sample listener.ora file for a Gateway Using SNA" and "Sample tnsnames.ora file for a Gateway Using SNA" in Appendix A.
If your communication protocol is TCP/IP, refer to "Sample listener.ora File for a Gateway Using TCP/IP" and "Sample tnsnames.ora File for a Gateway Using TCP/IP" in Appendix B.