Oracle-database-ee-19c-1.0-1.x86-64.rpm Today
However, with that speed comes opinionated defaults. For non‑standard, highly available, or mission‑critical deployments, the traditional silent install using response files remains the gold standard. For everyone else—especially developers and testers—the RPM method is a welcome evolution in Oracle database deployment.
wget --user=<myotnuser> --password=<mypass> \ https://yum.oracle.com/repo/OracleLinux/OL8/7/base/x86_64/oracle-database-ee-19c-1.0-1.x86_64.rpm sudo yum -y localinstall oracle-database-ee-19c-1.0-1.x86_64.rpm or for RHEL: oracle-database-ee-19c-1.0-1.x86-64.rpm
| Component | Value | | :--- | :--- | | | /opt/oracle/product/19c/dbhome_1 | | ORACLE_SID | ORCLCDB | | Listener Port | 1521 | | PDB Name | ORCLPDB1 | | Init System | systemd service: oracle-database-ee-19c.service | However, with that speed comes opinionated defaults
sudo dnf -y localinstall oracle-database-ee-19c-1.0-1.x86_64.rpm The RPM places the binaries, but the database is not yet created. Run: or mission‑critical deployments
Connect as sysdba :
| Requirement | Specification | | :--- | :--- | | | Oracle Linux 7.x, 8.x, or RHEL 7.x/8.x (x86_64) | | RAM | Minimum 2 GB (4 GB+ recommended for EE) | | Swap | 2x RAM for < 8GB; otherwise 0.5x RAM | | Disk Space | Minimum 6.5 GB for software + ~2 GB for starter DB | | Distribution | Must be registered with ULN or have access to Oracle YUM repo |