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  1. Establish a SSH connection to the Solaris machine or log in on the text console. You should either log in as root or obtain root permissions after login via su or sudo command.
  2. Be sure your system meets the installation prerequisites.

Installing the ESB

  1. If you have not done so already, download the latest version of the ESB as described in Downloading the Product.
  2. Extract the archive file to a dedicated directory for the ESB, which will hereafter be referred to as <PRODUCT_HOME>.

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  • Set the properties from a script. Setting your system properties in the startup script is ideal, because it ensures that you set the properties every time you start the server. To avoid having to modify the script each time you upgrade, the best approach is to create your own startup script that wraps the WSO2 startup script and adds the properties you want to set, rather than editing the WSO2 startup script directly.
  • Set the properties from an external registry. If you want to access properties from an external registry, you could create Java code that reads the properties at runtime from that registry. Be sure to store sensitive data such as username and password to connect to the registry in a properties file instead of in the Java code and secure the properties file with the secure vault.

You are now ready to run the product.

 

Excerpt
hiddentrue

Instructions to install WSO2 ESB on Solaris.