Oracle Linux 6.3 Release Notes

Updated June 2012

Introduction

This document covers the following topics regarding Oracle Linux 6.

For the latest updates please refer to the online version of release notes available at:

http://oss.oracle.com/ol6/docs/

NOTE: An upgrade of Oracle Linux from a beta release is not supported.

Further, an in-place upgrade between major versions of Oracle Linux is not supported. Oracle does not recommend an upgrade from earlier major versions of Oracle Linux even though anaconda provides an option to do this upgrade. A fresh installation is strongly recommended rather than a system upgrade between major versions.

Customers who want to use new features in Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel can do so without upgrading to Oracle Linux 6 as Oracle Linux 5.8 already includes Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel.

Packages added by the Upstream Release

The following packages have been added to the upstream release:

Changes from the Upstream Release

Packages modified from upstream release

The following packages are modified from the upstream release. All changes are trademark and look/feel related unless otherwise noted below under the specific package.

Packages removed from upstream release

The following packages have been removed.

New Packages added by Oracle

The following packages have been added to the base release

Kernel

Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 ships with two sets of kernel packages:

Note: By default, both the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel and the Red Hat Compatible Kernel for the specific architecture (i386 or x86_64) are installed, and the system boots the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel by default. If needed, /etc/grub.conf and /etc/sysconfig/kernel can be modified to make the system boot with the Red Hat Compatible Kernel by default.

Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2

The Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 is based on the upstream kernel 3.0.16 stable source tree.

Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 Driver Updates from Update 2

Network Drivers updates

Storage Drivers updates

Features

This release of the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel has been improved/enhanced by Oracle in several areas, including bug fixes and extended functionality. All of these modifications have been contributed back upstream and are available in mainline Linux.

Btrfs

Btrfs provides a flexible way to manage storage, without needing a separate volume manager. It provides built-in RAID support and ensures data integrity by using redundancy and checksums. Btrfs also supports lightweight copies/clones of files or directories with snapshots as well as online data compression. The Btrfs code in the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 includes many new features as well as numerous performance improvements, that were merged from a number of long running projects and cleanup queues.

Note: The standard installation media does not have support for creating a btrfs root filesystem on initial install. If you want to install Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 and use btrfs as your root filesystem, please use the alternative boot ISO media which uses btrfs as the default root filesystem. Using the boot.iso requires that the full installation source be available via a network method, i.e. FTP, HTTP or NFS.

New Btrfs features/functionality

Btrfs bug fixes and performance improvements

Xen domU improvements

Several bug fixes and improvements have been incorporated to make the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel scale and cooperate better as a guest (domU) in Oracle VM and Xen.

Other improvements

Upgrading to Oracle Linux 6 Update 3

As Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 now ships with the latest Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2, upgrading via the installation media will evaluate whether or not to install this latest kernel based on the currently installed kernel.

The following upgrade scenarios should be considered:

  1. Upgrading from Oracle Linux 6 GA, Update 1 or Update 2 without UEK2 installed
  2. If you have an existing Oracle Linux 6 GA, Update 1 or Update 2 install that does not have the already released Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 installed, the Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 media will not install this kernel by default. Note that the Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 installation media does not contain any updates to the original Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel, so in this scenario, only the latest Red Hat Compatible Kernel will be installed.
  3. Upgrading from Oracle Linux 6 GA, Update 1 or Update 2 with the UEK2 installed
  4. If you have an existing Oracle Linux 6 GA, Update 1 or Update 2 install that already has the released Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 installed, the Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 media will install the latest version of this kernel.

Upgrades that are performed via YUM will use whatever repositories are configured to upgrade the system. The latest Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 can be found in the ol6_<arch>_UEK_latest repository, i.e. either ol6_i386_UEK_latest or ol6_x86_64_UEK_latest. You should ensure that this repository is enabled either via the Unbreakable Linux Network or in the /etc/yum.repos.d/public-yum-ol6.repo file if you want to install this kernel.

Known Issues

  1. Hardware virtualized with Paravirtualized Drivers (PVHVM) guests on Oracle VM 3.0 crash during Oracle Database install
  2. This can occur on Oracle VM 3.0 if the guest is set with a maximum memory (maxmem) parameter greater than the amount set at boot (memory). To avoid this issue, please ensure the maxmem and memory parameters are equal. This issue has been resolved in Oracle VM 3.1.1.
  3. Post-install Anaconda Errors
  4. In certain cases, after successfully completing installation and rebooting the system, it is possible that the following error stack appears:
    Error in sys.excepthook:
     Traceback (most recent call last):
       File "/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/meh/handler.py", line 161, in
     (lambda)
       File "/usr/lib/anaconda/exception.py", line 44, in handleException
       File "/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/meh/handler.py", line 106, in
     handleException
       File "/usr/lib/anaconda/gui.py", line 1169, in mainExceptionWindow
     ImportError: No module named ui.gui
    Or:
    14:05:55 CRITICAL: anaconda 11.5.0.47 exception report
    Traceback (most recent call first):
      File "/usr/lib64/python2.6/site-packages/gtk-2.0/gtk/_lazyutils.py", line 32,
    in __
    getattr__
      File "/usr/lib/anaconda/gui.py", line 1453, in keyRelease
        if ((event.keyval == gtk.keysyms.KP_Delete
    ImportError: No module named keysyms
    These errors would also be logged in anaconda.log in /root after installation. These errors can safely be ignored.
  5. Cannot start FCoE Target service with Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel
  6. The upstream release has added support for FCoE target service. This is not supported with the previous release of the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel (2.6.32). Customers wishing to use this service must boot into the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 (2.6.39) or the Red Hat Compatible Kernel.
  7. Cannot start CGroups Config service with Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel
  8. This service is not supported with the previous release of the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel (2.6.32). Customers wishing to use this service must boot into the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2 (2.6.39) or the Red Hat Compatible Kernel.
  9. mlx4_core conflicts between mlnx_en and ofa packages
  10. Both the new mlnx_en and ofa packages contain mlx4_core. Only one of the two packages should be installed. Attempts to install both packages on a single server will result in a package conflict error. To determine which package to use, if you have a Mellanox Ethernet Controller, please use mlnx_en. If you have a Mellanox Infiniband Controller, please use ofa. If you have both, please use ofa as it supports both Ethernet and Infiniband controllers.
  11. kdump service fails to start with Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel
  12. When configuring the crash kernel for the UEK, only standard crash kernel settings, e.g. crashkernel=128M@32M, are supported. The new setting used by the RHCK, i.e. crashkernel=auto, is not supported and will cause the kdump service to fail to start.
  13. "iTCO_wdt: failed to reset NO_REBOOT flag, device disabled by hardware/BIOS" error in dmesg when running the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2
  14. To get rid of this error at boot time, add the line "blacklist iTCO_wdt" to /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-watchdog
  15. "iTCO_wdt: failed to reset NO_REBOOT flag, reboot disabled by hardware" error in dmesg when running the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel
  16. To get rid of this error at boot time, add the line "blacklist iTCO_wdt" to /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-watchdog
  17. Hardware virtualized (HVM) guests with Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel always use paravirtualized (PV) drivers
  18. The Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel adds support for paravirtualized drivers in a HVM guest on Oracle VM. The default is to present only paravirtualized drivers when running in a hardware virtualized guest. To run kernel-uek --including the drivers-- fully hardware virtualized, an additional kernel boot parameter "xen_emul_unplug=never" must be added to the boot parameters in /etc/grub.conf:
    kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.32-300.2.1.el6uek ro root=/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00  xen_emul_unplug=never
    
    Adding this kernel boot parameter makes the kernel also present the emulated drivers as it did before (e.g. the 8139cp network driver).

  19. Incorrect package count (11684244)
  20. Selecting all packages in certain groups during installation might not show the correct count.
  21. Default reverse path filtering mode affects certain Oracle products (10649976)
  22. Oracle Linux 6 defaults to strict reverse path filtering. Some Oracle products and network storage devices work more reliably when using loose reverse path filtering. To enable loose mode reverse path filtering, issue the following command (assuming you are changing settings for the network interface called eth1). The default setting is 1.
      sysctl net.ipv4.conf.eth1.rp_filter=2 
    
  23. Receive Packet Steering errors for certain network operations (11071685)
  24. Certain network operations that utilize receive packet steering could cause errors on the system.
  25. Spurious udev messages during restore of a failed path (11682171)
  26. When failed paths are restored in a multipath configuration, you may see udevd-work error messages in /var/log/messages. The failed paths do get restored despite these messages.
  27. Default NFS v4 mount options
  28. The default NFS mount option has changed to NFS v4. To mount an NFS volume using NFS v3 (the default in Oracle Linux 5), use the following mount options:
    -o vers=3,mountproto=tcp
    
  29. Setting serial console in a hardware virtualized (HVM) guest
  30. To set the serial console a hardware virtualized (HVM) guest use following settings in the guest:
  31. Oracle RDBMS Server 11gR2 Preinstall Settings not visible after installation
  32. If, during installation on an x86_64 system, the pam.i386 package is installed either manually or via package dependency, and the oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall package is also selected, the Oracle Database related settings in /etc/security/limits.conf will be overwritten by the installation of the pam.i386 package. This is most likely to occur when using a kickstart-based automated installation that includes non-standard package selections. To restore these settings, run the oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall-verify script.
  33. Unbreakable Linux Network
  34. After an install of Oracle Linux 6, the screens after the first reboot will guide you to register your system to the Unbreakable Linux Network (ULN). If you did not configure your network during the initial installation, the registration process to ULN will not succeed. In this case, you should configure your network by running NetworkManager first (as root). Then restart the ULN registration by running uln_register (as root).
  35. Console appears to hang while booting on certain systems (10094052)
  36. On some hardware, the console may appear to hang during the boot process after starting udev. But the system does boot up properly and is accessible. A workaround to this problem is to add nomodeset as a kernel boot parameter in /etc/grub.conf:
        kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.32-300.2.1.el6uek.x86_64 ro root=/dev/sd0 nomodeset
    
  37. Default IO scheduler
  38. For the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel, the default IO scheduler is the 'deadline' scheduler.
    For the Red Hat Compatible Kernel, the default IO scheduler is the 'cfq' scheduler.
  39. sched_yield() settings for CFS
  40. For the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel, kernel.sched_compat_yield=1 by default.
    For the Red Hat Compatible Kernel, kernel.sched_compat_yield=0 by default.

Technology Preview Features

The following Technology Preview features are currently not supported under Oracle Linux 6 and may not be functionally complete:

The following Technology Preview features are only available when running the Red Hat Compatible Kernel (RHCK):

These features are not suitable for production use. However, these features are included to provide the feature with wider exposure.

Configuring Updates for Oracle Linux 6 Update 3

Oracle Linux 6 no longer contains up2date for access to Unbreakable Linux Network. Instead packages are managed using Yum. To register with ULN, use the following command:

# uln_register

Unbreakable Linux Network

To access Linux updates via Unbreakable Linux Network, you must purchase a Linux support subscription. For more information please visit http://linux.oracle.com.

During ULN registration the server will be automatically registered with two channels: the latest channel for the base repository as well as the latest channel for the Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 2. If you have upgraded from a previous release and do not wish the UEK Release 2 to be installed, you will need to manually unsubscribe the server from this channel.

The Unbreakable Linux Network includes Oracle-specific software packages, for example Oracle's ASMlib userspace package and the Oracle Instant Client. To enable access to these packages, login to the Unbreakable Linux Network and subscribe to the "Oracle Software" channel.

Public Yum

Oracle now provides all errata and updates for Oracle Linux via the public yum service. This service does not require a Linux support subscription, but only includes updates to the base distribution and does not include Oracle-specific software. To enable updates via public-yum, please visit http://public-yum.oracle.com and follow the instructions on that website.

By default, all new installs of Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 are automatically configured to use the public-yum update service. No modification is required to use this service. The public-yum service is automatically disabled when a server is registered with the Unbreakable Linux Network.

Installation Media

Note: Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 now contains two distinct repository sources on the installation media. To configure yum to use the installation media as a yum source, create the following file /etc/yum.repos.d/Media.repo with content similar to the following:

[ol6_base_media]
name=Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 Base Media
baseurl=file:///media/Server
gpgcheck=0
enabled=1

[ol6_uek_media]
name=Oracle Linux 6 Update 3 UEK Media
baseurl=file:///media/UEK2
gpgcheck=0
enabled=1

You may need to adjust the baseurl parameter to match where you mount the ISO media on your server.