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Sql Developer For Mac Os X

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Written by: ilmarkerm
Category: Blog entry
Published:
  • To start SQL Developer, go to the sqldeveloperdirectory under the directory, and do one of the following, as appropriate for your operating system: On Linux and Mac OS X systems, run sh sqldeveloper.sh. On Windows systems, double-click sqldeveloper.exe.
  • Since I started a new job I also wanted to try out MacBook as my new laptop. I've never been a Mac user, but there seems to be a large group of people who think Macs are the best, so I needed to find out the goodness of Macs myself 🙂 A quick tip: Don't upgrade to Yosemite if you laptop is bound to Active Directory.

    One part of setting up my new laptop was also setting up SQL Developer WITH Oracle Driver, because a year or two ago I rolled out radius authentication for all users who need to access the production databases directly and radius (and other non-default-password authentication schemes) do not work with thin JDBC driver. Being new to Macworld and not finding any guides for this task online, it was quite a struggle in the beginning. Here I'm trying to share my experiences if anybody else find themselves in the similar situation. If you find any mistakes here, please let me know – I'm new to the world of MacOS 🙂

    Sql Developer For Mac Os X

    Jan Karremans just today published a similar article about Mac and Instant client, but the goal of my blog post is to get SQL Developer connected through Instant Client.

    JDK

    First you need Java installed, I installed 64-bit JDK8, but it would be better to install 64-bit JDK7, since SQL Developer 4.0 is not supported on JDK8.

    SQL Developer

    When I'm writing this, SQL Developer 4.1 is in Early Adopter release and 4.0 is in production. I installed SQL Developer 4.0.3.

    Azure Data Studio (formerly SQL Operations Studio) is a free GUI management tool that you can use to manage SQL Server on your Mac. You can use it to create and manage databases, write queries, backup and restore databases, and more. Azure Data Studio is available on Windows, Mac and Linux. RazorSQL is an SQL query tool, database browser, SQL editor, and database administration tool for Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, and Solaris. RazorSQL has been tested on. Commercial Mac Windows Linux Import CSV data Portable Refactoring SQLite. Then just open SQL Developer, go to your OS settings where the Display preferences are, and as you adjust, you should see SQL Developer's UI change as well. I tried this on latest OS X with a 4k Dispay and Windows 10 with a standard ‘regular' monitor.

    Oracle Instant Client

    There is another reason to choose SQL Developer 4.0 over 4.1 – 4.1 requires version 12.1 of the Oracle Client and that is not yet released for MacOS. SQL Developer 4.0 requires Oracle Client 11.2.0.3 and that is available for MacOS. I downloaded Instant Client 11.2.0.3 (64-bit – since I installed 64-bit JDK): instantclient-basic-macos.x64-11.2.0.3.0.zip and instantclient-sqlplus-macos.x64-11.2.0.3.0.zip to be precise. I unzipped both these files under /opt so my Instant Client installation directory is /opt/instantclient_11_2. After unzipping, Instant Client installation instructions require creating the following symlinks:

    Configuring SQL Developer

    Open SQL Developer, open Preferences and go to Database > Advanced. Configure Oracle Client paths and check Use Oracle Client and Use OCI/Thick driver Maya bazarsoftware projects. boxes. Here is the sample screenshot from my settings.
    When you press the Configure He that healeth thee. button to set the Oracle client path, there is also a button to Test if the Client was loaded correctly. Currently this test should fail.

    Setting the environment variables

    We need to set two environment variables: DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH to make sure applications can find and load the instant client libraries and TNS_ADMIN so instant client could find sqlnet.ora and tnsnames.ora files. In my case sqlnet.ora is essential, since I need to use Radius authentication.

    First I added these environment variables to ~/.profile:

    After restarting terminal and verifying that these environment variables are indeed set, execute SQL Developer app directly from terminal by executing open /Applications/SQLDeveloper.app/.

    Open preferences and press the Oracle Client Test button again, now the test should succeed and SQL Developer is connected through Instant Client.
    All good! Great success! Guess again… Close SQL Developer and launch it from Docker/Launchpad and you will see the Oracle Client test failing again. This is because the environment variables under ~/.profile or ~/.bash_profile are loaded only inside Terminal.

    Setting environment variables on login

    This seems to be the most complex part of this story since it seems to change with every MacOS release. The method that is working for me under Yosemite (and in no way am I declaring that it is the best method, I am a Mac newbie after all), is this:

    Open application Script Editor and paste the following AppleScript there:

    Sql

    Jan Karremans just today published a similar article about Mac and Instant client, but the goal of my blog post is to get SQL Developer connected through Instant Client.

    JDK

    First you need Java installed, I installed 64-bit JDK8, but it would be better to install 64-bit JDK7, since SQL Developer 4.0 is not supported on JDK8.

    SQL Developer

    When I'm writing this, SQL Developer 4.1 is in Early Adopter release and 4.0 is in production. I installed SQL Developer 4.0.3.

    Azure Data Studio (formerly SQL Operations Studio) is a free GUI management tool that you can use to manage SQL Server on your Mac. You can use it to create and manage databases, write queries, backup and restore databases, and more. Azure Data Studio is available on Windows, Mac and Linux. RazorSQL is an SQL query tool, database browser, SQL editor, and database administration tool for Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, and Solaris. RazorSQL has been tested on. Commercial Mac Windows Linux Import CSV data Portable Refactoring SQLite. Then just open SQL Developer, go to your OS settings where the Display preferences are, and as you adjust, you should see SQL Developer's UI change as well. I tried this on latest OS X with a 4k Dispay and Windows 10 with a standard ‘regular' monitor.

    Oracle Instant Client

    There is another reason to choose SQL Developer 4.0 over 4.1 – 4.1 requires version 12.1 of the Oracle Client and that is not yet released for MacOS. SQL Developer 4.0 requires Oracle Client 11.2.0.3 and that is available for MacOS. I downloaded Instant Client 11.2.0.3 (64-bit – since I installed 64-bit JDK): instantclient-basic-macos.x64-11.2.0.3.0.zip and instantclient-sqlplus-macos.x64-11.2.0.3.0.zip to be precise. I unzipped both these files under /opt so my Instant Client installation directory is /opt/instantclient_11_2. After unzipping, Instant Client installation instructions require creating the following symlinks:

    Configuring SQL Developer

    Open SQL Developer, open Preferences and go to Database > Advanced. Configure Oracle Client paths and check Use Oracle Client and Use OCI/Thick driver Maya bazarsoftware projects. boxes. Here is the sample screenshot from my settings.
    When you press the Configure He that healeth thee. button to set the Oracle client path, there is also a button to Test if the Client was loaded correctly. Currently this test should fail.

    Setting the environment variables

    We need to set two environment variables: DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH to make sure applications can find and load the instant client libraries and TNS_ADMIN so instant client could find sqlnet.ora and tnsnames.ora files. In my case sqlnet.ora is essential, since I need to use Radius authentication.

    First I added these environment variables to ~/.profile:

    After restarting terminal and verifying that these environment variables are indeed set, execute SQL Developer app directly from terminal by executing open /Applications/SQLDeveloper.app/.

    Open preferences and press the Oracle Client Test button again, now the test should succeed and SQL Developer is connected through Instant Client.
    All good! Great success! Guess again… Close SQL Developer and launch it from Docker/Launchpad and you will see the Oracle Client test failing again. This is because the environment variables under ~/.profile or ~/.bash_profile are loaded only inside Terminal.

    Setting environment variables on login

    This seems to be the most complex part of this story since it seems to change with every MacOS release. The method that is working for me under Yosemite (and in no way am I declaring that it is the best method, I am a Mac newbie after all), is this:

    Open application Script Editor and paste the following AppleScript there:

    Yes, it is also necessary to set TNS_ADMIN, since setting the TNS admin directory path under SQL Developer preferences does not work if you need to use specific settings in sqlnet.ora, for example authentication.

    Save the script and in the save dialog set File format: Application. And finally System settings -> Users & Groups -> Login items press + sign and select the application you just saved. Now, log out from MacOS and log back in. Now SQL Developer should work with Instant Client even when you launch it from Launchpad.

    I got this method from a Stackoverflow thread.

    Today I could not install any SQL Developer extension on my Mac OS X machine. I did not get an error message during the installation. After a restart of SQL Developer the extension simply was missing. When I tried to re-install it – selecting 'Check for updates…' in the 'Help' menu – I've got the following message:

    Restarting SQL Developer did not help. This message was shown again and no extension was installed. I've tried to remove the $HOME/.sqldeveloper directory and reinstalled SQL Developer, but the problem persisted. I've tried SQL Developer version 4.0.3.16.84 and the brand new version 4.1.0.19.07. Same result.

    What was the problem?

    After some analysis I found the root cause. SQL Developer creates a file named jdeveloper-deferred-updates.txt in the directory $HOME/.sqldeveloper Best free pc mp3 player. (e.g. /Users/phs/.sqldeveloper). This file is read and copied into a temporary directory as part of the installation process. On non-Windows platforms the name of the temporary directory is $TMPDIR/$USER (e.g. /var/folders/lf/8g3r0ts900gfdfn2xxkn9yz00000gn/T/phs). If a file with such a name already exists, the directory cannot be created and the whole installation of the extension fails.

    Download Oracle Sql Developer For Mac Os X Platform

    What is the solution (workaround)?

    Download Sql On Mac

    Open a terminal window (e.g. type terminal in the spotlight window) and execute the following command to delete the existing temporary file, which is causing the name conflict:

    Sql For Mac Download

    Afterwards restart SQL Developer and install the extension. Restart SQL Developer once again to complete the installation.





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