PeopleSoft PUM Image Maintenance
The PeopleSoft PUM Image VMs seems to work pretty well once installed. There is very little maintenance that I have had to perform on these environments and I can always start over by rebuilding the VM if I really break something. Still, there have been some small issues recently that have required digging into the these environments so here are some notes to help.
1. Login to the VM as root (this account was setup when you installed the image)
2. Switch to the oracle account. This is the database owner.
3. You then need to know the database name to connect to. The easiest way is to look for the pmon process. In the example below the database name would be CDBHCM.
You could also look at the listener to get the database name.
Database Administration
The Oracle Database runs within the same VM and can be accessed using TNS with SQLPlus, SQL Developer, or most other Oracle-compatible tools. However, I recently needed to make some adjustments to the SYSADM privileges. For this I needed to connect as SYSDBA.1. Login to the VM as root (this account was setup when you installed the image)
2. Switch to the oracle account. This is the database owner.
su - oracle
3. You then need to know the database name to connect to. The easiest way is to look for the pmon process. In the example below the database name would be CDBHCM.
ps -ef | grep pmon
You could also look at the listener to get the database name.
First, get the listener name...
Note that the images now use Oracle 12c databases, so the database name above may not be what you have named your PeopleSoft instance, it is the "Container Database" that then contains the PeopleSoft "Pluggable Databases".
Next, you need to export the ORACLE_SID environment variable.
Now you can login to the database.
At this point you are in the container database. Remember, Oracle 12c! You need to switch to the PeopleSoft "Pluggable Database" before you can do anything to the PeopleSoft environment. This will be the name you gave your database during the image installation.
You should now be able to work with the PeopleSoft users, schemas, etc.
1. Login to the VM, switch to psadm2 user then run psadmin
2. PUM Images includes services for the Application Server, Process Scheduler, PIA and database. Look for these under /etc/inid.d, they they are named psft-*.
You can use the Linux services commands to control these.
The disk drives configured in the PeopleSoft PUM VMs are relatively small and can fill up quickly when there are issues. I have noticed some of the recent images, especially Interaction Hub, creating quite a few core dumps in the Application Server directories. These will quickly consume all available space on the Application Server volume and cause the application to stop responding.
The steps below will help to identify and cleanup these files.
1. Login to the VM
2. Check the available disk space. You will probably see a volume with no free space.
3. Switch to the psadm2 user.
4. Review the Application Server and Process Scheduler directories and remove any core dump files, or other log or trace files, as needed.
The default server names are APPDOM and PRCSDOM. If you have changed these then adjust the commands below as necessary.
Note: If you are uncertain about the naming of the servers you can list the names using psadmin command line tools.
5. Restart the Application Server and Process Schedulers when you are done.
Another hint, if you wanted to script some of this you could... In fact, there are some great new features available through the psadmin comand line. The list command is one I find particularly useful.
The basic steps involved are...
1. Login to VM
2. Update password in the database. Substitute appropriate Connect ID and Password
3. Reconfigure Application Server and Process Scheduler with new password
For now, this script will ask for the database name, the old password and the new password. It will then update the password in the database then reconfigure the PeopleSoft servers. This will shutdown the environments to perform the reconfigure so you will need to restart them afterwards. See above for steps to do that.
cat $ORACLE_HOME/network/admin/listener.ora
Note that the images now use Oracle 12c databases, so the database name above may not be what you have named your PeopleSoft instance, it is the "Container Database" that then contains the PeopleSoft "Pluggable Databases".
export ORACLE_SID=CDBHCM ###this is the container identified above
Now you can login to the database.
sqlplus /nolog connect / as sysdba
At this point you are in the container database. Remember, Oracle 12c! You need to switch to the PeopleSoft "Pluggable Database" before you can do anything to the PeopleSoft environment. This will be the name you gave your database during the image installation.
alter session set container = <psdbname>; -- ex. alter session set container = hrdmo92;
You should now be able to work with the PeopleSoft users, schemas, etc.
Restart Application Server, Process Scheduler or Web Server
You can do this a couple different ways.1. Login to the VM, switch to psadm2 user then run psadmin
su - psadm2 psadmin
2. PUM Images includes services for the Application Server, Process Scheduler, PIA and database. Look for these under /etc/inid.d, they they are named psft-*.
You can use the Linux services commands to control these.
sudo service psft-appserver restart sudo service psft-prcs restart sudo service psft-pia restart
PeopleSoft PUM Image Environment not Responding
The disk drives configured in the PeopleSoft PUM VMs are relatively small and can fill up quickly when there are issues. I have noticed some of the recent images, especially Interaction Hub, creating quite a few core dumps in the Application Server directories. These will quickly consume all available space on the Application Server volume and cause the application to stop responding.
The steps below will help to identify and cleanup these files.
1. Login to the VM
2. Check the available disk space. You will probably see a volume with no free space.
df -h
3. Switch to the psadm2 user.
su - psadm2 cd $PS_CFG_HOME
4. Review the Application Server and Process Scheduler directories and remove any core dump files, or other log or trace files, as needed.
The default server names are APPDOM and PRCSDOM. If you have changed these then adjust the commands below as necessary.
cd $PS_CFG_HOME/appserv/APPDOM rm -f core.* cd $PS_CFG_HOME/appserv/prcs/PRCSDOM rm -f core.*
Note: If you are uncertain about the naming of the servers you can list the names using psadmin command line tools.
### returns application servers psadmin -c list ### returns list of process schedulers psadmin -p list
5. Restart the Application Server and Process Schedulers when you are done.
Another hint, if you wanted to script some of this you could... In fact, there are some great new features available through the psadmin comand line. The list command is one I find particularly useful.
### delete appserver coredumps for DOMAIN in `psadmin -c list`; do rm -f $PS_CFG_HOME/appserv/${DOMAIN}/core.*; done ### delete process scheduler coredumps for DOMAIN in `psadmin -p list`; do rm -f $PS_CFG_HOME/appserv/prcs/${DOMAIN}/core.*; done
Change Connect ID Password
You may want to change the Connect ID or password in your PeopleSoft image environment. Maybe to run compares to existing environments or just to be able to use your already-installed Application Designer instance.The basic steps involved are...
1. Login to VM
2. Update password in the database. Substitute appropriate Connect ID and Password
su - psadm2 sqlplus sysadm@hrdmo92 alter user <connect_id> identified by <connect_password>; exit
3. Reconfigure Application Server and Process Scheduler with new password
su - psadm2 psadmin
Scripting
We could also do some scripting to handle this type of task. Again, some of the new psadmin command line parameters are very handy! I may need to write up something focusing on those...For now, this script will ask for the database name, the old password and the new password. It will then update the password in the database then reconfigure the PeopleSoft servers. This will shutdown the environments to perform the reconfigure so you will need to restart them afterwards. See above for steps to do that.
#!/bin/bash echo "" echo "=============================================================================" echo "Change PEOPLE Password in Database, Application Server and Process Scheduler " echo "=============================================================================" echo "" ### cleanup directories on PUM Image environments, otherwise update steps will fail for APP_DOMAIN in `psadmin -c list` do #cleanup rm -f $PS_CFG_HOME/appserv/$APP_DOMAIN/core.* done for PRCS_DOMAIN in `psadmin -p list` do #cleanup rm -f $PS_CFG_HOME/appserv/prcs/$PRCS_DOMAIN/core.* done # get DBNAME currdbname= while [ -z ${currdbname} ] do echo -n 'Enter Database Name: ' read currdbname echo "" done echo "" echo "" # get old PEOPLE password pwpeople= while [ -z ${pwpeopleold} -o ${pwpeopleold} != ${pwpeopleold2} ] do stty -echo if [ -z ${pwpeopleold} ] then echo -n 'Enter old PEOPLE Database Password: ' else echo -n 'Retry old PEOPLE Database Password: ' fi read pwpeopleold echo "" echo -n 'Confirm Password: ' read pwpeopleold2 stty echo echo "" done echo "" echo "" # get new PEOPLE password pwpeople= while [ -z ${pwpeople} -o ${pwpeople} != ${pwpeople2} ] do stty -echo if [ -z ${pwpeople} ] then echo -n 'Enter NEW PEOPLE Database Password: ' else echo -n 'Retry NEW PEOPLE Database Password: ' fi read pwpeople echo "" echo -n 'Confirm Password: ' read pwpeople2 stty echo echo "" done echo "" echo "" if [ -z ${PS_HOME} ] then echo "ERROR: Must be under the PeopleSoft user to run this script! For DEMO images this is psadm2. " else ### change PEOPLE password sqlplus -s /nolog << EOF CONNECT PEOPLE/${pwpeopleold}@${currdbname}; alter user PEOPLE identified by ${pwpeople}; exit; EOF echo "" ### iterate through domains using the psadmin list commands (see psadmin --help for details) for APP_DOMAIN in `psadmin -c list` do echo "Processing Domain: ${APP_DOMAIN}" #reconfigure cp -p ${PS_CFG_HOME}/appserv/${APP_DOMAIN}/psappsrv.cfg ${PS_CFG_HOME}/appserv/${APP_DOMAIN}/psappsrv.cfg.$(date +%Y%m%d%H%M%S); psadmin -c configure -d ${APP_DOMAIN} -cfg [Startup]/ConnectId=PEOPLE#[Startup]/ConnectPswd=${pwpeople} echo "Domain ${APP_DOMAIN} Complete" echo "" done for PRCS_DOMAIN in `psadmin -p list` do echo "Processing Domain: ${PRCS_DOMAIN}" #reconfigure cp -p ${PS_CFG_HOME}/appserv/prcs/${PRCS_DOMAIN}/psprcs.cfg ${PS_CFG_HOME}/appserv/prcs/${PRCS_DOMAIN}/psprcs.cfg.$(date +%Y%m%d%H%M%S) psadmin -p configure -d ${PRCS_DOMAIN} -cfg [Startup]/ConnectId=PEOPLE#[Startup]/ConnectPswd=${pwpeople} echo "Domain ${PRCS_DOMAIN} Complete" echo "" done fi echo "Done!"
I am feeling great to read this.you gave a nice info for us.please update more.
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