I downloaded Oracle Linux 8.2. I need xclock and somehow it is no where to be found. Check the V996906-01.iso (download from edelivery oracle) and OracleLinux-R8-U2-x86_64-dvd.iso from TechNet oracle, there is nothing in the media with xorg-X11-apps. Anybody have any idea how to get this installed?

Similar issue, slightly different twist. Built a new Satellite 6.11 server. I can see xorg-x11-apps in the Packages view in the Codeready repo. None of my content hosts can see it as available though. What obvious thing am I missing? ;-)


Xorg-x11-apps Oracle Linux 8 Download


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The rpm xorg-x11-apps is currently not available for RHEL 9 in the Codeready Builder repository. Is this something that is going to be made available for RHEL 9? If not, this article needs to be updated and remove the RHEL 9 reference.

There are several techniques to connect Amazon EC2 instances to manage OS level configurations. Typically, you use SSH clients (such as PuTTY or SSH client) to establish the connection from the Windows OS-based bastion or jump servers to connect with Amazon EC2 instances running linux-based OS. Most commonly, database administrators use a common Database Management, bastion host, or jump servers to connect database servers. They do this instead of directly using their laptops connecting to the database servers. They can install all the needed tools in one server to perform database administrative or support activities. During the application installation or configuration, you might need to install software such as an Oracle database or a third-party database using GUI methods. This blog talks about steps that must be done in order to forward the X11 screen to your highly secure Windows OS-based bastion hosts. You can consider using NICE DCV as an alternative option for running GUI-based applications. Please refer to the prior link for more details and steps to enable NICE DCV.

Note: The xorg-x11-apps package has been provided in the CodeReady Linux Builder Repository for RHEL8. So, I skipped installing this package, which has xclock and I used only xterm to test the X11 forwarding.

In this blog, I demonstrated how to configure Amazon EC2 instances running on various linux-based operating systems to forward X11 to the Windows OS-based bastion host. This is helpful to any application installation that requires GUI-based installation methods. This is also helpful to any bastion hosts that provide highly secure and low latency environments to perform SSH related operations including GUI-based installations as this does not require any additional network configuration other than opening the port 22 for standard SSH authentication. Please try this tutorial for yourself, and leave any comments following!

I am trying to to setup a headless web server on my EC2 AWS running on RHEL 8.2. As it is a headless server with no GUI, I just need to the firefox browser to do some web configurations. With that said, on on the client side, I am using Putty to SSH to the server remotely and Xming to display the browser. I think PowerTools is needed in order to install xorg-x11-apps in RHEL 8.2 in my case to get the display installed in my VM so that I can run my firefox remotely via Putty SSH.

Next, if you are on Oracle Enterprise Linux, install this package: oracle-rdbms-server-12cR1-preinstall or if you are installing 11g, install this package: oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall. The command is simply (as root):

This will install all the oracle required packages, and configure the Oracle user, and set certain OS settings. This is the easiest way to do it. If you are using Oracle Enterprise Linux, you can skip to Part 2: Setting up Xwindows on your Dekstop.

The search service can find package by either name (apache),provides(webserver), absolute file names (/usr/bin/apache),binaries (gprof) or shared libraries (libXm.so.2) instandard path. It does not support multiple arguments yet... The System and Arch are optional added filters, for exampleSystem could be "redhat", "redhat-7.2", "mandrake" or "gnome", Arch could be "i386" or "src", etc. depending on your system. System Arch RPM resource xorg-x11-appsA collection of common X Window System applications.

What worked for me was to setup xming server on my windows machine, set X11 forwarding option in putty when I connect to the linux host and put in my windows ip address with the display port and then the display variable with my windows IP address:0.0

The issue here is the highlighted line above, basically dnf cannot find the oracle-database-preinstall-18c package. Neither the --skip-broken option helps, as that option will just skip the RPM because a missing dependency is considered a broken package too:

You will see, as in the output above, that the dependencies are resolved automatically and that three packages (compat-libcap1, compat-libstdc++-33 and, of course, oracle-database-preinstall-18c) are pulled from the old Linux 7 repository, indicated by the ol7_latest repository name. However, once you confirm with y, you will hit another issue:

The library libnsl.so.1 is not installed by default on Oracle Linux 8 any longer, but also not listed as a dependency in the oracle-database-preinstall-18c package either. Luckily that library is available as a separate RPM package, simply called libnsl, and just needs to be installed before the Oracle 18c XE RPM. This is because dnf might decide to install the libnsl library after the Oracle 18c XE RPM, which would still cause the above error. So, in order to avoid that, just install it first via dnf install libnsl :

If you want to make sure that you truly get all dependencies, you can apply a tiny little trick here. If you have the OL7 repo configured, you can use dnf to see all dependencies of oracle-database-preinstall-18c via dnf repoquery --requires oracle-database-preinstall-18c:

So, to play it safe, you could just make sure to install all of these packages explicitly, minus the two compat-* packages and the rpmlib components, plus the libnsl package. The result will remain the same, but this way you have all dependencies that are actually needed, whether they are already installed or not: dnf install /bin/bash /bin/sh /etc/redhat-release bc bind-utils binutils ethtool glibc glibc-devel initscripts ksh libaio libaio-devel libgcc libstdc++ libstdc++-devel make module-init-tools net-tools nfs-utils openssh-clients pam procps psmisc smartmontools sysstat unzip util-linux-ng xorg-x11-utils xorg-x11-xauth libnsl

There is another option that you could pursue. The delta between Oracle Database 18c and 19c is actually not that big. So you could just install the available oracle-database-preinstall-19c package, which has the advantage of setting up the oracle OS user and a couple of other things, and install the missing libnsl package and last but not least perform the manual rpm install of Oracle Database 18c XE.

On Oracle Linux, you can install both, the 19c preinstall RPM and the libnsl package in one go via: dnf install oracle-database-preinstall-19c libnsl. For other Linux distributions, you will first have to download the preinstall RPM from _64/getPackage/oracle-database-preinstall-19c-1.0-2.el8.x86_64.rpm and then follow the same procedure: 2351a5e196

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