Remove the OracleRemExecService before doing the Oracle Client 12c Release 1 32-bit or 64-bit installation on the same Microsoft Windows x64 (64-bit) server after installing the Oracle Client 64-bit or 32-bit software. – Go to the Windows Administrative Tools - Services – Stop OracleRemExecServiceV2.
Active11 months ago
I have Windows 8.1 64-bit OS running on 64-bit architecture. I am installing a fresh copy of Oracle 12C, means I haven't installed any version before on my system.
During the installation, I encountered the following error message;
The error code is [INS-30131]. I've the full privileges of an administrator-ship. I also tried to resolve this problem via the following command;
But in no vain. Can you please help me sort out this issue.
DavidPostill
6,43988 gold badges2929 silver badges4646 bronze badges
user3226056user3226056
14 Answers
The error is caused due to administrative shares are being disabled. If they cannot be enabled then perform the following workaround:
6.2.23 INS-30131 Error When Installing Oracle Database or Oracle Client
If the administrative shares are not enabled when performing a single instance Oracle Database or Oracle Client installation for 12c Release 1 (12.1) on Microsoft Windows 7, Microsoft Windows 8, and Microsoft Windows 10, then the installation fails with an
INS-30131 error.
Workaround:
Execute the
net share command to ensure that the administrative shares are enabled. If they are disabled, then enable them by following the instructions in the Microsoft Windows documentation. Alternatively, perform the client or server installation by specifying the following options:
This issue is tracked with Oracle bug 21452473.
Source: Oracle Database Release Notes (Section 6.2.23)
aff
16311 gold badge44 silver badges1515 bronze badges
Dan CaldwellDan Caldwell
Looking at Oracle's support site, it could be one of two things (may be #2 in your case, but including both).
Problem 1:
Problem 2: Remove the OracleRemExecService before doing the Oracle Client 12c Release 1 32-bit or 64-bit installation onthe same Microsoft Windows x64 (64-bit) after installing the Oracle 64-bit or 32-bit software .
( This service is having a intelligence .Once someone tries to stop it this service gets deleted. This is due to the fact ,that this service is not running from the Oracle Home like other oracle services ,but from temp . For example : C:UsersAppDataLocalTemporaremservi.. )
user3451749
I found another situation in which this problem may arise (despite following the steps listed by other users above) and that's when the username of the user you're logged in as has an '_' on it. The path it will try to use to find the temp directory is whatever is set in %TEMP%. I managed to work around it by:
Installed successfully that way.
user4494506user4494506
This error could caused by a username with Chinese characters.
2,19233 gold badges2727 silver badges4242 bronze badges
sui.zhiyuansui.zhiyuan
(Solution) Same problem: Windows 10 vs. Oracle 11g (11.2.0.4)
The problem arises again with the final release of Windows 10 (and Server 2016 Preview 3 too) using e. g. Oracle 11g (11.2.0.4, 64 bit) after installation tasks worked fine with several preview builds of Windows 10. All things said above are o. k. resp. do not work.
The ultimate cause is an incompatibility of OracleRemExecService (vs. RemoteExecService.exe): as known, at the beginning of installation process it is created via %TEMP%oraremservice. If you watch it e. g. with Sysinternals' ProcessMonitor using an appropriate filter, you can see several crashes (the most of them with 'buffer Overflow') and restarts, and there are also corresponding with messages in Windows' 'System' event log.
If you start (after deleting the HKLMSoftwareoracle in the registry) the installation several times (more than three times - see below) it suddenly works.The reason for this behaviour is Windows' 'Fault Tolerant Heap' mechanism (see https://msdn.microsoft.com/de-de/library/windows/desktop/dd744764(v=vs.85).aspx) that creates after three attempts within 60 minutes (see http://blogs.technet.com/b/askperf/archive/2009/10/02/windows-7-windows-server-2008-r2-fault-tolerant-heap-and-memory-management.aspx) a FTH entry in HKLMSoftwareMicrosoftFTHState and a corresponding shim in HKLMSOFTWAREMicrosoftWindows NTCurrentVersionAppCompatFlagsLayers.Although the content of the FTH entry is related to the current process of RemoteExecService.exe you can import the registry keys to a system before you start the DB installation. If you set Windows' %TEMP% environment variable and also %TMP% (due to the fact that Oracle uses both directories while creating the things around OracleRemExecService) to a predefined value (e. g. C:TEMP) you are able to use this for all your installation tasks as follows (unfortunately, it works only with Windows 10, not Server 2016 - updated 2015-09-24, see below):
Update 2015-09-24: With Server 2016 (Preview 3), it's a little bit more tricky: first you also have to set the environment variable %TEMP% e. g. to C:Temp and to import the registry keys above (after this, it's no bad idea to restart the system).Than you start the Oracle installation using an additional parameter:
setup.exe -debug
If you watch what happens in %TEMP% you can see that the folder %TEMP%oraremservice is created twice: after first creation, the installer seems to notice that the service does not work, deletes the folder and creates it again. After this, the Installation process works as expected.
Update 2015-11-27: - Using Windows Server 2016 Preview 4, the workaround via 'setup.exe -debug' is not necessary anymore; you can proceed as described for Windows 10.- Of course, you do not need the procedure with new C:TEMP vs. %TEMP% and %TMP% if you have a defined user (e. g. Administrator). Then you can use modified registry items like this:
Update 2017-01-31: Tested all builds of Windows 10 (Insider Preview) until now, so we have seen a new problem coming up with build 15002: the Oracle setup isn't able to determine the PATH variable anymore (the variable itself, not a wrong content or so on!). So all attempts to install the Oracle DB fail. M1000 firecracker wiki 2016. Comparing the registry of the Windows versions and 'playing around' with this variable and their contents did not help. The only work-around is to edit the related XML file 64bit|32bitstagecvucvu_prereq.xml and delete in the section all tags .. (or this tag only in the last item 'Windows Server 2012'). And btw: despite of we are primary using Oracle 11g this new installation problem also occurs using the up to date setup of Oracle 12c..
200999200999
The main problem in your case would be failure of accessing localhostc$
If you get an error while trying to access the Windows hidden C share (C$):
C:> net use localhostc$
System error 53 has occurred. The network path was not found.
You may find the following articles useful: KB254210 and KB951016.
A simple thing is just to make sure your TCP/IP NetBIOS Helper and Server services are running (Start-Run, services.msc) and try again:
C:> net use localhostc$
The command completed successfully.
Of course, your user must be either an administrator or be part of the administrator group.
If it still fails, manually edit the registry (Start-Run, regedit). Browse to:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem
and create a new DWORD value LocalAccountTokenFilterPolicy set to 1
After solving this issue and installing Oracle Database Server, you can disable back your TCP/IP NetBIOS Helper service if you don't need it anymore. References: http://groglogs.blogspot.ro/2013/11/windows-cannot-access-hidden-c-admin.html For others: If you don't have the problem with localhostc$, then you might have the other problem with your username as the others stated (e.g. username with '_' in it): This will get solved by changing TEMP and TMP environment variables from a command line and then running setup.exe from there.
Launch EXE to APK converter tool After launching the software, select “I have a portable application” and click next in the Exe to APK Converted Tool. Select the portable application to convert Now select the EXE file that you want to convert. Aug 15, 2018 EXE to APK converter Therefore, these EXE files cannot be directly used and hence are converted into APK file extension so that the software of Windows can be run on Android mobile. Apk file converter.
If this still doesn't work:
Try running setup.exe with '-debug' option and see what happens in there. You may also want to check what's in the .log files created in your %TEMP% folder (e.g. ssproiut_%number%.log)
MichaelMichael
Try cleaning your hosts file.
I spent about half a day on this, and none of these answers worked for me. I finally found the solution hinted at on OTN (the last place I look when I run into Oracle issues), and someone mentioned looking at the hosts file. I had recently modified the hosts file because this particular machine didn't have access to DNS.
I had a line for this host:
Commenting out the line above allowed me to install the Oracle client.
user187557user187557
Summarized: Oracle under Windows has problems with usernames containing non-English letters or special characters:
If your machine is fresh installed, first look here. All the network related or 32 vs. 64 related issues may be not significant for you:
As others already pointed out partly, this error is highly related to the name of the TEMP dir.It occurred to me when installing Oracle 11g first time on a totally fresh Windows (e.g. Server 2008 R2 or Win 7, not important).
As I found out, on my machine the problem was, that the username contained a German special character ('ö'). Moreover Oracle cannot handle any special character, I assume, the TEMP path is limited to letters. Other colleagues here have reported problems with underscore and chinese characters.
Explanation:In Windows the TEMP dir (environment variable %TEMP%) is by default in the user directory, for example:
If 'ThisUser' contains special or non-ASCII characters, then in this case this affects the TEMP path, and that is where Oracle is gettings problems.
Setting the TEMP dir to different directory is of course another possibility instead of installing with another username.
Moreover, Oracle is not a fully native Windows citizen which everybody will recognize, if he opens the Oracle install logfile with notepad ;-)Obviously, this is not programmed cleanly and portable, e.g. with using 'std::endl' instead of 'n' .(Yes, Notepad++ and other editors do the job.)
Overall, my impression is, if the database were of the same quality as it's installer, Oracle would not be so successful .
Last remark: Yes, after failed install because of the special characters you see only one Oracle service named OracleRemExecService, but there is no reason to stop this manually as recommended in other solutions, if you are able to install again a fresh OS.
PhilmPhilm
My problem was that I had the Server service stopped and this gave exactly this same issue.So started the Server service and the installation worked.
MeetmauroMeetmauro
You can configure setup.exe to skip this check using the parameters below -
DanielBarbarian
3,4591212 gold badges2727 silver badges3737 bronze badges
JoeHJoeH
This problem arises due to the administrative share.
Here is the solution :
Installing Oracle 12c On Windows 10And for remaining you can follow the above link.
And let me know if it worked or not.
Community♦
sachinpanwarsachinpanwar
If your user account has spaces in it and you have tried all the above but none worked,
I recommended you create a new windows user account and give it an administrative privilege, not standard.
Log out of your old account and log into this new account and try installing again. It worked well.
Young EmilYoung Emil
1,56111 gold badge1616 silver badges2525 bronze badges
I ran into this error when attempting to install 12c 32x client on Windows 10.
'net use localhostc$' worked, but when I substituted 'localhost' the computer's 'name' (e.g., my-computerc$ ), I got the 'System error 53 .. '. Oracle seems to prefer the computer's name.
What fixed it: we temporarily disabled the IPv6 protocol for the computer (our network uses IPv4). How to do this: Control Panel --> Network and Sharing Center --> Change adapter settings --> right click on Ethernet Connection --> Properties --> uncheck 'Internet Protocol Version 6 (TCP/IPv6) --> OK. That should disable it. After that,
my-computerc$ ran successfully in the command prompt. Then the Oracle installer finally completed and we were able to tnsping the database server.
Just to test it out, we re-enabled IPv6 and restarted the computer.
my-computerc$ failed in the cmd prompt, but tnsping still functioned correctly.
I hope this helps somebody in the future.
DebaserDebaser
Mohamed M. Abdel AtyMohamed M. Abdel Aty
protected by Andy♦Aug 11 '17 at 18:55
Thank you for your interest in this question. Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead? Installing Oracle 12c On Windows 2008 R2Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged windowsoracle or ask your own question.OverviewPurpose
This tutorial shows you how to install the Oracle Database 12c software on Microsoft Windows along with a default instance of an Oracle Database that contains example schemas ( including the HR schema).
Time to Complete
Approximately 1 hour.
Introduction
The Oracle Universal Installer (OUI) is used to install the Oracle Database software. OUI is a graphical user interface utility that enables you to:
During the installation process, OUI will start the Oracle Database Configuration Assistant (DBCA) which can install a precreated default database that contains example schemas or can guide you through the process of creating and configuring a customized database.
If you do not create a database during installation, you can invoke DBCA after you have installed the software, to create one or more databases. Hardware and Software Requirements
Before installing the software, OUI performs several automated checks to ensure that your computer fulfills the basic hardware and software requirements for an Oracle Database installation. If your computer does not meet the requirements, an error message is displayed. Some of the requirements to install the software are:
Prerequisites
Before starting this tutorial, you should:
Downloading the Oracle Database Software
Installing Oracle 12c On Windows Server 2016
In this section, you will be downloading the files required to install Oracle database on a Windows environment.
Installing the Oracle Database Software
In this section, you will be installing the Oracle Database and creating an Oracle Home User account.
Verifying the Installation
In this section, you will be performing steps to verify the installation of Oracle Database. If you had changed the default location to install the database, make sure to specify the correct location of the files in the following steps. Alternatively, you can also perform a quick search using the Windows Start Menu to locate files.
View Oracle Services
View Oracle Home on the File System
View the tnsnames.ora File
Connecting to Oracle Database Using SQL*Plus
In this section, you will be connecting to the pluggable database using the SQL*Plus utility.
Summary
In this tutorial, you have learned how to:
Resources
Credits
To navigate this Oracle by Example tutorial, note the following:
Installing Oracle 12c On Windows 10 Youtube
To navigate to a particular section in this tutorial, select the topic from the list.
Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |