Before proceeding, please ensure that you have read Section 5 and Section 6.
These installation notes are based on a single-partition installation using the 2.6.9-55.0.2 EL kernel.
The installation on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 completed successfully, with no problems getting the GUI installer working, and no errors during the install. This smooth installation isn't surprising, given that RHEL 4 is an officially supported platform for DB2.
Basic test results (see Section 21 for more details) were successful.
However, I found that after a reboot, the DB2 instance was not being restarted automatically, so clients could not connect to the database. To correct this problem, execute this command as the instance owner:
db2set DB2AUTOSTART=YES |
Also, to allow DB2 access through the iptables-based firewall (which is enabled by default), it was necessary to modify the iptables firewall ruleset, which is kept in the /etc/sysconfig/iptables file. If you have enabled your firewall (using the iptables service), and you want to enable external connectivity to your DB2 server, you must open up TCP and UDP access to ports 523 and TCP access to any DB2 service ports. To make this work, add these rules to the iptablesfile (anywhere amongst the -j ACCEPT rules):
-A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -p udp -m udp --dport 523 -j ACCEPT -A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 523 -j ACCEPT -A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 50000 -j ACCEPT |
You can use db2 get dbm cfg | grep SVCENAME to retrieve the service names and then check the /etc/services for the equivalent port values to open on your firewall.