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Installing node-oracledb

Copyright (c) 2015, 2017, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

You may not use the identified files except in compliance with the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License.")

You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.

See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

Contents

  1. Overview
  2. Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with Instant Client RPMs
  3. Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with Instant Client ZIP files
  4. Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with a Local Database
  5. Advanced Installation on Linux
  6. Node-oracledb Installation on macOS with Instant Client
  7. Node-oracledb Installation on Windows
  8. Copying node-oracledb Binaries on Windows
  9. Node-oracledb Installation on AIX on Power Systems with Instant Client ZIP files
  10. Node-oracledb Installation on Oracle Solaris x86-64 (64-Bit) with Instant Client ZIP files

1. Overview

The node-oracledb add-on for Node.js powers high performance Oracle Database applications.

The steps below create a Node.js installation for testing. Adjust the steps for your environment.

This node-oracledb release has been tested with Node 4, 6 and 7 on 64-bit Oracle Linux and Windows. The add-on can also build in some macOS, 32-bit Linux, 32-bit Windows, Solaris and AIX environments, but these architectures have not been fully tested. Node 0.10 and 0.12 have been supported in the past and may still be usable.

Prerequisites

Installation requires Oracle 11.2, 12.1 or 12.2 client libraries. These are included in Oracle Instant Client RPMs or ZIPs, a full Oracle Client, or a database on the same machine. Oracle's standard client-server network interoperability applies, see Oracle Support's Doc ID 207303.1. In summary, Oracle Client 12.2 can connect to Oracle Database 11.2 or greater. Oracle Client 12.1 can connect to Oracle Database 10.2 or greater. Oracle Client 11.2 can connect to Oracle Database 9.2 or greater.

A compiler is required. Use Visual Studio on Windows, GCC on Linux or Xcode on macOS. When building with Node 4 onward, the compiler must support C++11. Note the default compiler on Oracle Linux 6 and RHEL 6 does not have the required support. Install GCC 4.7 or later or upgrade to Oracle Linux 7.

Python 2.7 is needed by node-gyp. If another version of Python occurs first in your binary path then, when you install node-oracledb, use the --python option to indicate the correct version. For example: npm install --python=/whereever/python-2.7/bin/python oracledb.

Which Instructions to Follow

Instructions may need to be adjusted for your platform, environment and versions being used.

I have ... Follow this ...
Windows Node-oracledb Installation on Windows
Apple macOS Node-oracledb Installation on macOS with Instant Client
Linux. My database is on another machine Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with Instant Client RPMs or Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with Instant Client ZIP files
Linux. My database is on the same machine Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with a Local Database
Linux. I have the full Oracle client (installed via runInstaller) on the same machine Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with a Local Database
AIX on Power Systems Node-oracledb Installation on AIX on Power Systems with Instant Client ZIP files
Solaris x86-64 (64-Bit) Node-oracledb Installation on Oracle Solaris x86-64 (64-Bit) with Instant Client ZIP files
Another OS with Oracle Database 11.2 or 12c, or client libraries available Update binding.gyp and make any code changes required, sign the OCA, and submit a pull request with your patch.

Other Resources Useful for node-oracledb

Node-oracledb can be installed on the pre-built Database App Development VM for VirtualBox, which has Oracle Database 12c pre-installed on Oracle Linux. If you want to install your own database, installing the free Oracle Database 11.2 'XE' Express Edition is quick and easy. Other database editions may be downloaded here. If you want to install Oracle Linux yourself, it is free from here.

2. Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with Instant Client RPMs

Questions and issues can be posted as GitHub Issues.

2.1 Install Prerequisites

GCC 4.7 (or later) is needed to install because compiling for Node 4 (or later) requires a C++11 compatible compiler.

The default compiler on Oracle Linux 6 and RHEL 6 does not have the required C++11 support. Install GCC 4.7 or later or upgrade to Oracle Linux 7.

2.2 Install Node.js

Download and extract the Node.js "Linux Binaries" package. For example, if you downloaded version 6.9.4 for 64-bit you could install Node.js into /opt:

cd /opt
tar -Jxf node-v6.9.4-linux-x64.tar.xz

Set PATH to include Node.js:

export PATH=/opt/node-v6.9.4-linux-x64/bin:$PATH

2.3 Install the free Oracle Instant Client 'Basic' and 'SDK' RPMs

Download the free Basic and SDK RPMs from Oracle Technology Network and install them as the root user:

yum install oracle-instantclient12.2-basic-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm
yum install oracle-instantclient12.2-devel-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm

If you have a ULN subscription, you can alternatively use yum to install these packages from the Oracle Software for Oracle Linux channel for your version of Linux.

2.4 Install the add-on

If you are behind a firewall you may need to set your proxy, for example:

export http_proxy=http://my-proxy.example.com:80/

Install node-oracledb from the NPM registry:

npm install oracledb

Node-oracledb will automatically be configured to use the highest version Instant Client RPMs installed. To use a different version, follow the instructions to install on Linux with Instant Client ZIP files instead, setting the install-time variables OCI_LIB_DIR and OCI_INC_DIR to the appropriate directories.

If you have other Oracle software installed on the same machine, and the run time linker is configured to find this other software via LD_LIBRARY_PATH or ldconfig, then update the environment to use the Instant Client RPM libraries, for example /usr/lib/oracle/12.2/client64/lib.

Note: A compiler supporting C++11 is required when building with Node.js 4 or later, otherwise the NAN component will fail to build.

2.5 Run an example program

Download the example programs from GitHub.

Edit dbconfig.js and set the database credentials to your environment, for example:

module.exports = {
  user          : "hr",
  password      : "welcome",
  connectString : "localhost/XE"
};

Run one of the examples:

node select1.js

3. Node-oracledb Installation on Linux with Instant Client ZIP files

Questions and issues can be posted as GitHub Issues.

3.1 Install Prerequisites

GCC 4.7 (or later) is needed to install because compiling for Node 4 (or later) requires a C++11 compatible compiler.

The default compiler on Oracle Linux 6 and RHEL 6 does not have the required C++11 support. Install GCC 4.7 or later or upgrade to Oracle Linux 7.

3.2 Install Node.js

Download and extract the Node.js "Linux Binaries" package. For example, if you downloaded version 6.9.4 for 64-bit you could install Node.js into /opt:

cd /opt
tar -Jxf node-v6.9.4-linux-x64.tar.xz

Set PATH to include Node.js:

export PATH=/opt/node-v6.9.4-linux-x64/bin:$PATH

3.3 Install the free Oracle Instant Client 'Basic' and 'SDK' ZIPs

Download the free Basic and SDK ZIPs from Oracle Technology Network and install them into the same directory:

cd /opt/oracle
unzip instantclient-basic-linux.x64-12.2.0.1.0.zip
unzip instantclient-sdk-linux.x64-12.2.0.1.0.zip
mv instantclient_12_2 instantclient
cd instantclient
ln -s libclntsh.so.12.1 libclntsh.so

You will need libaio installed. On some platforms the package is called libaio1.

To run applications, you will need to set the link path:

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/oracle/instantclient:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH

Alternatively, if there is no other Oracle software on the machine that will be impacted, permanently add Instant Client to the run-time link path. Do this on Linux by creating a file /etc/ld.so.conf.d/oracle-instantclient.conf that contains the library location /opt/oracle/instantclient, and then run ldconfig as the root user.

3.4 Install the add-on

Tell the installer where to find Instant Client:

export OCI_LIB_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient
export OCI_INC_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient/sdk/include

Use absolute paths for the variable values. These variables are only needed during installation.

If Instant Client is in the default location /opt/oracle/instantclient and you have no other Oracle software installed, then these variables are not actually required. See Oracle Client Location Heuristic on Linux.

If you are behind a firewall you may need to set your proxy, for example:

export http_proxy=http://my-proxy.example.com:80/

Install node-oracledb from the NPM registry:

npm install oracledb

If you are installing with sudo, you may need to use sudo -E to preserve the environment variable values.

3.5 Run an example program

Download the example programs from GitHub.

Edit dbconfig.js and set the database credentials to your environment, for example:

module.exports = {
  user          : "hr",
  password      : "welcome",
  connectString : "localhost/XE"
};

Run one of the examples:

node select1.js

Note: Remember to set LD_LIBRARY_PATH or equivalent first.

4. Node-oracledb installation on Linux with a Local Database

Questions and issues can be posted as GitHub Issues.

4.1 Install Prerequisites

GCC 4.7 (or later) is needed to install because compiling for Node 4 (or later) requires a C++11 compatible compiler.

The default compiler on Oracle Linux 6 and RHEL 6 does not have the required C++11 support. Install GCC 4.7 or later or upgrade to Oracle Linux 7.

The ORACLE_HOME can be either a database home or a full Oracle client installation installed with Oracle's runInstaller.

For easy development, the free Oracle XE version of the database is available on Linux. Applications developed with XE may be immediately used with other editions of the Oracle Database.

4.2 Install Node.js

Download and extract the Node.js "Linux Binaries" package. For example, if you downloaded version 6.9.4 for 64-bit you could install Node.js into /opt:

cd /opt
tar -zxf node-v6.9.4-linux-x64.tar.gz

Set your PATH variable to include Node.js:

export PATH=/opt/node-v6.9.4-linux-x64/bin:$PATH

4.3 Install the add-on

Set required Oracle environment variables, such as ORACLE_HOME by executing:

source /usr/local/bin/oraenv

Or, if you are using Oracle XE, by executing:

source /u01/app/oracle/product/11.2.0/xe/bin/oracle_env.sh

The node-oracledb installer will automatically look for Oracle libraries and headers under $ORACLE_HOME, see Oracle Client Location Heuristic on Linux. However, if you also have Instant Client RPMs installed and don't wish the RPMs to be used, you must explicitly set two environment variables:

export OCI_LIB_DIR=$ORACLE_HOME/lib
export OCI_INC_DIR=$ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/public

Use absolute paths for the variable values. These variables are only needed during installation.

If you are behind a firewall you may need to set your proxy, for example:

export http_proxy=http://my-proxy.example.com:80/

Install node-oracledb from the NPM registry:

npm install oracledb

If you are installing with sudo, you may need to use sudo -E to preserve the environment variable values.

4.4 Run an example program

Set LD_LIBRARY_PATH to the Oracle library directory, if it was not set by oraenv or oracle_env.sh:

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ORACLE_HOME/lib

Make sure the Node.js process has directory and file access permissions for the Oracle libraries and other files.

Download the example programs from GitHub.

Edit dbconfig.js and set the database credentials to your environment, for example:

module.exports = {
  user          : "hr",
  password      : "welcome",
  connectString : "localhost/XE"
};

Run one of the examples:

node select1.js

5. Advanced Installation on Linux

Oracle Client Location Heuristic on Linux

On Linux, the node-oracledb installer looks for Oracle client libraries and headers in the following search order:

  1. Using install-time environment variables $OCI_LIB_DIR and $OCI_INC_DIR
  2. In the highest version Instant Client RPMs installed
  3. In $ORACLE_HOME
  4. In /opt/oracle/instantclient

Instant Client RPMs and RPATH

On Linux, if Instant Client RPMs are auto-detected and used during installation, then the Instant Client library directory is added to the run time library search path via the rpath linker option.

This means that using node-oracledb with Instant Client RPMs does not require the node-oracledb installation variables OCI_LIB_DIR or OCI_INC_DIR to be set, and does not require LD_LIBRARY_PATH or ldconfig configuration for run time. Installation is simply:

yum install oracle-instantclient12.2-basic-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm
yum install oracle-instantclient12.2-devel-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm
npm install oracledb
node example.js

Forcing RPATH

If rpath is not automatically enabled when installing node-oracledb on Linux, you can force it to be used. Do this by setting the node-oracledb installation variable FORCE_RPATH to any value. For example when installing with a local database:

source /usr/local/bin/oraenv    # this sets ORACLE_HOME and LD_LIBRARY_PATH
FORCE_RPATH=1 npm install oracledb
node example.js

Using Instant Client RPMs without RPATH

If you want to use Instant Client RPMs without using rpath, then set OCI_LIB_DIR and OCI_INC_DIR prior to installation, for example:

export OCI_LIB_DIR=/usr/lib/oracle/12.2/client64/lib
export OCI_INC_DIR=/usr/include/oracle/12.2/client64
npm install oracledb
unset OCI_LIB_DIR OCI_INC_DIR
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/oracle/12.2/client64/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
node example.js

This is useful if you will need to upgrade Oracle Instant Client RPMs to a new major or minor version (for example from 11.2 to 12.1) without re-installing node-oracledb.

6. Node-oracledb Installation on macOS with Instant Client

Note: If you use Instant Client 11.2 because you need to connect to Oracle Database 9.2, refer to these older instructions. Otherwise follow the instructions below for Instant Client 12.1.

Questions and issues can be posted as GitHub Issues.

6.1 Install Prerequisites

Install Xcode from the Mac App store.

6.2 Install Node.js

Download the Node.js package for macOS 64-bit and install it.

6.3 Install the free Oracle Instant Client 12.1 'Basic' and 'SDK' ZIPs

Download the free Basic and SDK 64-bit ZIPs from Oracle Technology Network and install them into the same directory, for example:

cd /opt/oracle
unzip instantclient-basic-macos.x64-12.1.0.2.0.zip
unzip instantclient-sdk-macos.x64-12.1.0.2.0.zip
mv instantclient_12_1 instantclient
cd instantclient
ln -s libclntsh.dylib.12.1 libclntsh.dylib

6.4 Install the add-on

Tell the installer where to find Instant Client:

export OCI_LIB_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient
export OCI_INC_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient/sdk/include

Use absolute paths for the variable values. These variables are only needed during installation.

If Instant Client is the default location /opt/oracle/instantclient then these variables are not actually required.

If you are behind a firewall you may need to set your proxy, for example:

export http_proxy=http://my-proxy.example.com:80/

Install node-oracledb from the NPM registry:

npm install oracledb

If you are installing with sudo, you may need to use sudo -E to preserve the environment variable values.

6.5 Run an example program

Download the example programs from GitHub.

Edit dbconfig.js and set the database credentials to your environment, for example:

module.exports = {
  user          : "hr",
  password      : "welcome",
  connectString : "localhost/XE"
};

Run one of the examples:

node select1.js

To run a database on macOS, one option is to use VirtualBox, see The Easiest Way to Install Oracle Database on Mac OS X.

7. Node-oracledb Installation on Windows

Questions and issues can be posted as GitHub Issues.

Note: An Oracle Technology Network article Installing node-oracledb on Microsoft Windows has step-by-step Windows installation instructions that you can alternatively refer to.

7.1 Install Prerequisites

Install a C/C++ build environment such as Microsoft Visual Studio 2013. To build with Node 6 or later, use VS 2015. Compilers supported by Oracle libraries are found in Oracle documentation for each version, for example Oracle Database Client Quick Installation Guide 12c Release 1 (12.1) for Microsoft Windows x64 (64-Bit).

The PATH variable needs to include the appropriate Visual Studio redistributables for the Oracle client. This should be part of your VS install. Specifically, if you use Oracle client 11.2 then the Visual Studio 2005 redistributable is required. The Oracle client 12.1 requires the Visual Studio 2010 redistributable.

Install the Python 2.7 MSI from www.python.org. Select the customization option to "Add python.exe to Path".

If you use a 32-bit Node.js, make sure to use a 32-bit Oracle client during build and run time. Otherwise use a 64-bit Node.js with a 64-bit Oracle client. The instructions below use a 64-bit stack.

7.2 Install Node.js

Install the 64-bit Node.js MSI (e.g. node-v6.9.4-x64.msi) from nodejs.org. Make sure the option to add the Node and npm directories to the path is selected.

7.3 Install the free Oracle Instant Client ZIPs

Building and running node-oracledb needs appropriate Oracle client libraries installed first. These libraries:

  • are included in (i) Oracle database, or (ii) in the full Oracle client, or (iii) in Oracle Instant Client. You need one of these.
  • must be version 11.2 or greater
  • must match the Node.js 32 or 64-bit architecture

If you need appropriate Oracle client libraries, then download the free Instant Client Basic and SDK ZIP files from Oracle Technology Network.

Extract instantclient_basic-windows.x64-12.1.0.2.0.zip and instantclient_sdk-windows.x64-12.1.0.2.0.zip to the same directory.

Optionally rename the resulting Instant Client directory to the default location used by the node-oracledb installer:

ren C:\instantclient_12_1 C:\oracle\instantclient

Add the directory to PATH. For example on Windows 7, update PATH in Control Panel -> System -> Advanced System Settings -> Advanced -> Environment Variables -> System variables -> PATH and add your path, such as C:\oracle\instantclient.

If you have multiple versions of Oracle libraries installed, make sure the desired version occurs first in the path.

7.4 Install the add-on

Start Visual Studio and open a Developer Command Prompt within it.

Use set PATH in the shell to confirm the Python, Node.js and Oracle directories are correctly set. If they are not, then set PATH manually in the shell, or set it in the System Properties panel and restart the command shell.

Make sure the Microsoft Visual Studio environment variables are set appropriately. Use set PATH and verify it contains your Visual Studio paths. If they are not set, use vcvars64.bat (or vcvars.bat if you building with 32-bit binaries) to set the environment. Alternatively you can open the 'Developer Command Prompt for Visual Studio' which has environment variables already configured.

Tell the installer where to locate the Oracle client libraries and header files by setting the OCI_LIB_DIR and OCI_INC_DIR variables. Do not add them to PATH.

For Instant Client use:

set OCI_LIB_DIR=C:\oracle\instantclient\sdk\lib\msvc
set OCI_INC_DIR=C:\oracle\instantclient\sdk\include

Use absolute paths for the variable values. These variables are only needed during installation.

If you are installing with a local database or the full Oracle client, then locate the Oracle directory and set the node-oracle installer variables similar to:

set OCI_LIB_DIR=C:\oracle\product\12.1.0\dbhome_1\oci\lib\msvc
set OCI_INC_DIR=C:\oracle\product\12.1.0\dbhome_1\oci\include

In this case, also make sure that PATH contains C:\oracle\product\12.1.0\dbhome_1\bin.

If you are behind a firewall you may need to set your proxy, for example:

set http_proxy=http://my-proxy.example.com:80/

Install node-oracledb from the NPM registry:

npm install oracledb

7.5 Run an example program

Download the example programs from GitHub.

Edit dbconfig.js and set the database credentials to your environment, for example:

module.exports = {
  user          : "hr",
  password      : "welcome",
  connectString : "localhost/XE"
};

Run one of the examples:

node select1.js

8. Copying node-oracledb Binaries on Windows

Node-oracledb binaries can be copied between compatible Windows systems.

Both computers must also have the same version and architecture of Node.js.

Oracle client libraries of the same architecture and the same version used for building node-oracledb should be in the destination computer's PATH.

After node-oracle has been built on the source computer, copy the node_modules\oracledb directory to the destination computer's node_module directory.

The destination computer's PATH needs to include Visual Studio redistributables. If you used Oracle client 11.2 then the Visual Studio 2005 redistributable is required. For Oracle client 12.1, use the Visual Studio 2010 redistributable.

You can also find out the version required by locating the library OCI.DLL on the source computer and running:

dumpbin /dependents oci.dll

The version of MSVC*.DLL in the output indicates which redistributable is required on the destination computer. For example, if you see MSVCR100.dll then you need the VC++ 10 redistributable.

9. Node-oracledb Installation on AIX on Power Systems with Instant Client ZIP files

Questions and issues can be posted as GitHub Issues.

9.1 Install Node.js

Download Node.js for AIX on Power Systems.

Execute the downloaded shell script. For example, if you downloaded Node 4.2 then run:

sh node-v4.2.1-aix-ppc64.bin

It will prompt for the Install Folder and Link Folder. Give the desired location, for example /opt, where the Node binary will be built.

On completion, a success message will be displayed

Set PATH to include the Node.js and Node-gyp binaries:

export PATH=/opt/node-v4.2.1/bin:/opt/node-v4.2.1/lib/node_modules/npm/bin/node-gyp-bin:$PATH

For Node.js 0.10 and 0.12, set LIBPATH to include libstdc++.a and libgcc_s.a:

export LIBPATH=/opt/freeware/lib64

This setting is not required for Node.js 4 or later.

9.2 Install the free Oracle Instant Client 'Basic' and 'SDK' ZIPs

Download the free Basic and SDK ZIPs from Oracle Technology Network and Install them into the /opt/oracle.

cd /opt/oracle
unzip instantclient-basic-aix.ppc64-12.1.0.2.0.zip
unzip instantclient-sdk-aix.ppc64-12.1.0.2.0.zip

To run applications, you will need to set the link path:

export LIBPATH=/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_1:$LIBPATH

9.3 Install the add-on

Tell the installer where to find Instant Client:

export OCI_LIB_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_1
export OCI_INC_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_1/sdk/include

Use absolute paths for the variable values. These variables are only needed during installation.

If you are behind a firewall you may need to set your proxy, for example:

export http_proxy=http://my-proxy.example.com:80/

Install node-oracledb from the NPM registry:

npm install oracledb

Note: The version of make should be GNU Make 4.1-1 or above.

9.4 Run an example program

Download the example programs from GitHub.

Edit dbconfig.js and set the database credentials to your environment, for example:

module.exports = {
  user          : "hr",
  password      : "welcome",
  connectString : "localhost/XE"
};

Run one of the examples:

node select1.js

10. Node-oracledb Installation on Oracle Solaris x86-64 (64-Bit) with Instant Client ZIP files

Questions and issues can be posted as GitHub Issues.

10.1 Install Node.js

Download the Node.js source code.

Compile and build the Node.js engine into a directory of your choice, such as /opt/node:

./configure --dest-cpu=x64 --dest-os=solaris --prefix=/opt/node
make
make install

Note: if warnings are shown for objdump and dtrace, then set PATH to include these binaries. This is most likely /usr/gnu/bin and /usr/bin, respectively.

Set PATH to include the Node.js and Node-gyp binaries

export PATH=/opt/node/bin:/opt/node/lib/node_modules/npm/bin/node-gyp-bin:$PATH

10.2 Install the free Oracle Instant Client 'Basic' and 'SDK' ZIPs

Download the free Basic and SDK ZIPs from Oracle Technology Network and install them into /opt/oracle.

cd /opt/oracle
unzip instantclient-basic-solaris.x64-12.2.0.1.0.zip
unzip instantclient-sdk-solaris.x64-12.2.0.1.0.zip

To run applications, you will need to set the link path:

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH_64=/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_2:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH_64

10.3 Install the add-on

Tell the installer where to find Instant Client:

export OCI_LIB_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_2
export OCI_INC_DIR=/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_2/sdk/include

Use absolute paths for the variable values. These variables are only needed during installation.

If you are behind a firewall you may need to set your proxy, for example:

export http_proxy=http://my-proxy.example.com:80/

Install node-oracledb from the NPM registry:

npm install oracledb

10.4 Run an example program

Download the example programs from GitHub.

Edit dbconfig.js and set the database credentials to your environment, for example:

module.exports = {
  user          : "hr",
  password      : "welcome",
  connectString : "localhost/XE"
};

Run one of the examples:

node select1.js