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Caché Installation Guide - InterSystems Documentation

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Installing <strong>Caché</strong> on UNIX and Linux<br />

Where instname is the instance name that you chose during the installation. If it hangs, use the<br />

following command to force it down:<br />

ccontrol force <br />

3. Remove the instance using the following command:<br />

ccontrol delete <br />

4. Remove the installation directory using the following operating system command:<br />

rm -r <br />

Important:<br />

Be aware that this removes files you may wish to keep. For example: the license<br />

key (cache.key), the configuration file (cache.cpf), and the user database file<br />

(cache.dat).<br />

RPM Uninstall<br />

If you installed <strong>Caché</strong> using the RPM package, uninstall using the following option:<br />

# rpm -e cache-server<br />

The uninstall procedure removes all files installed and created during normal <strong>Caché</strong> processing,<br />

including journal and temporary database files.<br />

Important:<br />

The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 platform uses asynchronous scriptlets, so the<br />

uninstall process cannot guarantee that <strong>Caché</strong> stops before it removes files. <strong>InterSystems</strong><br />

recommends you stop <strong>Caché</strong> on this platform before you run the RPM uninstall<br />

command.<br />

4.7.5 Tru64 UNIX<br />

See the Tru64 UNIX Platform Notes section of the Calculating System Parameters for UNIX and<br />

Linux appendix for detailed kernel configuration information.<br />

4.7.5.1 Tru64 UNIX File and Directory Ownership<br />

For the Tru64 UNIX supported releases, unlike other UNIX file systems, group ownership does not<br />

come from the group ID of the creating process. Instead, by default, the operating system sets the<br />

group ID of the file to the group ID of its parent directory.<br />

However, if you set the vfs subsystem attribute, sys_v_mode, to 1, the OS sets the group ID of the file<br />

either to the group ID of the process or to the group ID of the parent directory if the S_ISGID bit of<br />

the parent directory is set. If the group ID of the new file does not match the effective group of the<br />

process or one of its supplementary group IDs, the S_ISGID bit of the new file is cleared.<br />

52 <strong>Caché</strong> <strong>Installation</strong> <strong>Guide</strong>

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