= Turn SLES10 into OES2 =
**Summary**: How to configure SLES10 into OES2. \\
**Date**: Around 2010 \\
**Refactor**: 8 March 2025: Checked links and formatting. \\
{{tag>linux edirectory}}
This is a small collection of screenshots and hits on what you need to different to turn your SLES 10 installation into an OES 2 installation. To make myself clear, OES 2 is SLES 10 SP1 with a software addon. The most important difference between these two is that OES 2 most important feature is the support for eDirectory out of the box.
== Media addon ==
When installing SLES 10 SP1 you get the chance during the installation process to add an addon media to the installation:
[{{addon1.jpg}}] \\
After checking the checkbox and selecting the addon source you can add the correct CD to the drive:
[{{addon2.jpg}}] \\
After accepting the EULA you'll see the extra installation source:
[{{addon3.jpg}}] \\
If you see this correctly you'll get the chance to install Open Enterprise Server services to the server.
== Open Enterprise Server services ==
During the software selection you can change which services you need to install. In my case, a groupwise server for a second domain, it was this selection:
[{{softwareselection.jpg}}] \\
If you are, just like me, installing NSS you have to consider a lot about partitioning. This [[http://www.novell.com/documentation/oes2/inst_oes_lx/index.html?page=/documentation/oes2/inst_oes_lx/data/bu4x508.html|Novell documentation]] can help you on your way. If you have multiple disks don't configure anything about NSS or EVMS, and let NSS reside on the separate disks.
== Partitioning ==
By default SLES 10 SP1 still uses reiserfs as it's file system. Personally I think reiserfs is a great filesystem but the creator is sadly in jail. Support is hard to get, so for production servers I select ext3 nowadays days. There is another thing I change on my partitions, the access time. This speeds up the file system a little:
[{{partitioning.jpg}}]
== OES configuration ==
Near the end of the installation you'll have to configure OES to join an existing tree. Of course you can create a new tree, but this article joins an existing one:
[{{oes1.jpg}}] \\
[{{oes2.jpg}}] \\
[{{oes3.jpg}}] \\
[{{oes4.jpg}}] \\
[{{oes5.jpg}}] \\
[{{oes6.jpg}}] \\
//This wiki has been made possible by://