Firebird Documentation Index → Firebird 1.5 Quick Start → Installing Firebird |
Firebird server – and any databases you create or connect to – must reside on a hard drive that is physically connected to the host machine. You cannot locate components of the server, or any database, on a mapped drive, a filesystem share or a network filesystem.
You can mount a read-only database on a CD-ROM drive but you cannot run Firebird server from one.
Although it is possible to install Firebird by a filesystem copying method – such as
“untarring” a snapshot build file or decompressing a structured WinZip
.zip
file – it is strongly recommended that you use
the distributed release kit the first time you install Firebird. The Windows executable
installation script, the Linux rpm (RPM
Package Manager, originally RedHat Package
Manager) program and the official .tar.gz
for other Posix platforms perform some essential setup
tasks. Provided you follow the instructions correctly, there should be nothing for you to do
upon completion but log in and go!
The Firebird installer lets you choose between Superserver and Classic Server installation. As said before, you should choose Superserver unless you know the differences and have reasons to prefer Classic.
If you install Firebird under Windows 95/98/ME, uncheck the option to install the Control Panel applet. It doesn't work on these platforms. We'll give you a link to a usable applet later on in this guide.
On server platforms – Windows NT, 2000 and XP – the Firebird service will be running when the installation completes. Next time you boot up your server machine, it will be started automatically.
The non-server Windows platforms – Windows 95, 98 and ME – do not support services. The installation will start Firebird server as an application, protected by another application known as the Guardian. If the server application should terminate abnormally for some reason, the Guardian will attempt to restart it.
In all cases, read the release notes that pertain to the version of Firebird that you are going to install. There may be significant variations from release to release of any Posix operating system, especially the open source ones. Where possible, the build engineers for each Firebird version have attempted to document any known issues.
If you do not find a copy of the release notes in your kit, go back to the Downloads page of the Firebird website at http://www.firebirdsql.org and download a copy from there.
If you have a Linux distribution that supports rpm installs, consult the appropriate platform documentation for instructions about using RPM Package Manager. In most distributions you will have the choice of performing the install from a command shell or through a GUI interface.
For Linux distributions that cannot process rpm programs,
and for the various UNIX flavors, use the .tar.gz
kit. You will find detailed instructions in the release notes.
Shell scripts have been provided. In some cases, the release notes may instruct you to modify the scripts and make some manual adjustments.
If everything works as designed, the Firebird server process will be running on your server upon completion of the installation. It will start up automatically whenever you restart your server.
At this point, it is assumed that you will use the recommended TCP/IP protocol for your Firebird client/server network.
For information about using NetBEUI protocol in an all-Windows environment, refer to Chapter 6, Network Configuration in the Using Firebird manual.
IPX/SPX networks are not supported by Firebird.
Usually, the first thing you will want to do once installation is complete is ping the server. This just gives you a reality check to ensure that your client machine is able to see the host machine in your network. For example, if your server's IP address in the domain that is visible to your client is 192.13.14.1, go to a command shell and type the command
ping 192.13.14.1
substituting this example IP address for the IP address that your server is broadcasting.
If you get a timeout message, study the Using Firebird manual – Chapter 6: Network Configuration, and Chapter 7: Troubleshooting Connections – for further instructions.
Note that if you are connecting to the server from a local client – that is, a client running on the same machine as the server – you can ping the virtual TCP/IP loopback server:
ping localhost –or– ping 127.0.0.1
After installation, Firebird server should be running as a service on Windows NT, 2000 or XP or on Linux.
Open Control Panel -> Services (NT) or Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Services (2000, XP).
This illustration shows the Services applet display on Windows 2000. The appearance may vary from one Windows server edition to another.
If the Guardian is running (as shown in the screenshot, over) it may have a different service name because of version changes.
On Windows 2000 and XP, the Guardian is a convenience rather than a necessity, since these two operating systems have the facility to watch and restart services. It is recommended that you keep Guardian active for other platforms if a SYSDBA is not available to restart the server manually in the event that it is stopped for some reason.
On Windows 9x or ME Firebird server should be running as an application, monitored by the Guardian. The Guardian's icon should appear in the tray with a green graphic. If the icon is flashing or showing as a red graphic, it indicates that Guardian is either attempting to start the server or has failed.
If you used an installation kit that installed but did not automatically start the Guardian and the Firebird server, you can set it up as follows:
Locate the executable file for the Guardian program
(fbguard.exe
) and create a shortcut for it in the Startup area of
your machine's Start Menu.
Open the Properties dialog of the shortcut and go to the field where the command line is.
Edit the command line so it reads as follows:
fbguard.exe -a
(for Superserver)
fbguard.exe -c
(for Classic Server)
Save and close the Properties dialog.
Double-click on the shortcut to start the Guardian. The Guardian will proceed to
start fbserver.exe
or
fb_inet_server.exe
.
The Guardian should start up automatically next time you boot your Windows 9x or ME machine.
Alternatively, you can use a Control Panel applet to control the starting and stopping of the Firebird server.
Since version 1.0.3, a control panel applet is included in the Firebird distribution. Whilst the applet is not essential, it does provide a convenient way to start and stop the server.
Unfortunately, the bundled applet only works on Windows NT, 2000 and XP. On Windows 9x and ME, if you want a handy applet like this, visit this webpage:
and download the Firebird Control Center fbcc-0.2.6.exe.
This applet looks different from the above screenshot, but offers the same functionality.
Use the top command in a command shell to inspect the
running processes interactively. If a Firebird Superserver is running, you should see a
process named fbguard
. This is the
Guardian process. Further, there will be one main and zero or more child processes named
fbserver
.
For Classic Server versions, the process name is
fb_inet_server
. There will be one
instance of this process running for each network connection. Note that if there are no
active connections, or if there are only direct local connections, you won't find
fb_inet_server
in the process
list.
The following screen shows the output of top, restricted
by grep to show only processes with names starting with the
characters fb
:
frodo:/inkomend/firebird # top -b -n1 | grep fb 2587 firebird 24 0 1232 1232 1028 S 0.0 0.3 0:00.00 fbguard 2588 firebird 15 0 4124 4120 2092 S 0.0 0.9 0:00.04 fbserver 2589 firebird 15 0 4124 4120 2092 S 0.0 0.9 0:00.00 fbserver 2604 firebird 15 0 4124 4120 2092 S 0.0 0.9 0:00.00 fbserver 2605 firebird 15 0 4124 4120 2092 S 0.0 0.9 0:00.02 fbserver 2606 firebird 15 0 4124 4120 2092 S 0.0 0.9 0:00.00 fbserver 2607 firebird 15 0 4124 4120 2092 S 0.0 0.9 0:00.00 fbserver
As an alternative to top, you can use ps -ax or ps -aux and pipe the output to grep.
If you are on a managed network, get the server's IP address from your system administrator.
If you have a simple network of two machines linked by a crossover cable, you can set up your server with any IP address you like except 127.0.0.1 (which is reserved for a local loopback server) and, of course, the IP address which you are using for your client machine. If you know the “native” IP addresses of your network cards, and they are different, you can simply use those.
If you are intending to try out a single-machine installation of both client and server, you should use the local loopback server address – localhost, with the IP address 127.0.0.1
It is possible to connect directly to a local Windows Superserver, without using the TCP/IP loopback. This is not a TCP/IP connection and it is not a thread-safe way to connect to a local server. For using single instances of the command-line tools (gsec, gbak etc.) it works just fine. By contrast, direct database connections - even multiple - under a Linux Classic server are completely safe.
The SYSDBA user has all privileges on the server. Depending on version, OS, and architecture, the installation program will either
install the SYSDBA user with the password masterkey
(actually,
masterke
: characters after the eighth are ignored), or
ask you to enter a password during installation, or
generate a random SYSDBA password and store that in
/opt/firebird/SYSDBA.password
If your server is exposed to the Internet at all and the password
is masterkey
, you should change it immediately using the
gsec command-line utility.
Firebird comes with a command-line tool called gsec that is used to manipulate user accounts.
With some Firebird installations, you can only run gsec
if you are logged into the operating system as Superuser (root
on Linux) or as the user the Firebird server process
runs under. On Windows server platforms, you typically need to be in the Power User
group or higher to run gsec successfully.
If you have enough privileges but invoking gsec results
in a message like “unavailable database - unable to open
database
”:
you're either running Windows Classic Server and you didn't provide a correct
-database
argument (see below), or
the server may not be running at all. In that case, go back to Testing your installation and fix the problem.
Let's say you decide to change the SYSDBA password to
icuryy4me
.
Go to a command shell on your server and change to the directory where the command-line utilities are located. Refer to the Firebird installation components table to find this location.
Type the following command, except if you run Windows Classic Server:
gsec -user sysdba -password masterkey
In case of a Windows Classic Server, you must specify the full network location of the security database (unfortunately!):
gsec -user sysdba -password masterkey -database "localhost:C:\Program Files\Firebird\Firebird_1_5\security.fdb" (adapt the path if necessary)
On Linux, type ./gsec rather than gsec. Otherwise there's a chance that a “wrong” gsec is launched, or that it isn't found at all.
Paths and file names are case-sensitive on all platforms except Windows; passwords are always case-sensitive.
In either case, you should now see the shell prompt for the gsec utility:
GSEC>
Type this command:
modify sysdba -pw icuryy4me
Press Enter. The new password icuryy4me
is
now encrypted and saved and masterkey
is no longer valid.
Now quit the gsec shell:
quit
Because Firebird ignores all characters in a password past the eighth character,
icuryy4m
will work, as will icuryy4monkeys
.
The Firebird kit does not come with a GUI admin tool. It does have a set of
command-line tools, executable programs which are located in the bin
subdirectory of your Firebird installation.
The range of excellent GUI tools available for use with a Windows client machine is too numerous to describe here. A few GUI tools written in Borland Kylix, for use on Linux client machines, are also in various stages of completion.
Inspect the Downloads > Contributed > Admin Tools page at http://www.ibphoenix.com for all of the options.
You can use a Windows client to access a Linux server and vice-versa.
Each remote client machine needs to have the client library – libfbclient.so
on Posix clients, fbclient.dll
on Windows clients – that matches the release
version of the Firebird server.
Firebird versions from 1.5 onward can install symlinks or copies named after the 1.0 libs (with the “old” InterBase names), to maintain compatibility with third-party products which need these files.
Some extra pieces are also needed for the client-only install.
At present, no compact installation program is available to assist with installing the client pieces on a Windows client. If you are in the common situation of running Windows clients to a Linux or other Posix Firebird server (or another Windows machine), you need to download the full Windows installation kit that corresponds to the version of Firebird server you install on your Linux or other server machine.
Fortunately, once you have the kit, the Windows client-only install is easy to do. Run the installation program, just as though you were going to install the server – but select the CLIENT ONLY option from the install menu.
A small-footprint client install program for Linux clients is not available either. Additionally, some Posix flavors – even within the Linux constellation – have somewhat idiosyncratic requirements for filesystem locations. For these reasons, not all *x distributions for Firebird even contain a client-only install option.
For most Linux flavors, the following procedure is suggested for a Firebird
client-only install. Log in as root
for
this.
Look for libfbclient.so.1.
(m.n
m.n
being the minor plus patch version number) in /opt/firebird/lib
on the server where Firebird server is
installed. Copy it to /usr/lib
on the
client.
Create chained symlinks using the following commands:
ln -s /usr/lib/libfbclient.so.1.
m.n
/usr/lib/libfbclient.so.1ln -s /usr/lib/libfbclient.so.1 /usr/lib/libfbclient.so
replacing
with your version
number, e.g. 1.m.n
1.5.0
or 1.6.1
If you're running applications that expect the legacy libraries to be present, also create the following symlinks:
ln -s /usr/lib/libfbclient.so /usr/lib/libgds.so.0
ln -s /usr/lib/libfbclient.so /usr/lib/libgds.so
Copy the firebird.msg
file to /opt/firebird
In the system-wide default shell profile, or using setenv()
from a shell, create the FIREBIRD
environment variable and point it to
/opt/firebird
, to enable the API routines to
locate the messages.
Firebird Documentation Index → Firebird 1.5 Quick Start → Installing Firebird |