Red Hat Advanced Server has the high-availability features you mentioned. You may want to take a look at that. (Costs money, but nowhere near the price of Oracle anyway :)
-Tim On Wed, 2002-10-23 at 09:45, Banker, Craig wrote: > Thanks Alvaro, > > I've got those same disks; I got the db running (only had a few problems due > to a very buggy installer) Oracle on Linux is not a problem. I'm more > concerned with a "High Availability" (not necessarily a application > clustering) configuration with linux and oracle (i.e. shared storage, a > heartbeat nick, and failover scripts...) > > Any such luck with something like this? > > Thanks, > > Craig > > -----Original Message----- > From: Alvaro Zuniga [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 9:43 AM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [brlug-general] Oracle on Linux / High Availability > > > Craig, > > I have a couple disks if you would like to try it yourself. One is the > Enterprise Edition 8i Release 2 and the other is Oracle WebDB. Both are > linux version. > > I am not sure if how they work. I got this disks from Oracle about two > years ago and never really used them because they arrived to late. They > are the versions that you can obtain if you register with them. I > believe they are fully functional otherwise I woudl not have bother with > them. > > Alvaro > > > On Tue, 2002-10-22 at 15:20, Banker, Craig wrote: > > > > > > > > Has anyone had experience with Oracle on Linux in a high availability > > configuration? > > > > Please do tell..... > > > > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > General mailing list > [email protected] > http://oxygen.nocdirect.com/mailman/listinfo/general_brlug.net > > _______________________________________________ > General mailing list > [email protected] > http://oxygen.nocdirect.com/mailman/listinfo/general_brlug.net
