I *think* (not sure here) that the only exception to that is the time
that gets logged to the event named "single-task message".


Cary Millsap
Hotsos Enterprises, Ltd.
http://www.hotsos.com

Upcoming events:
- Hotsos Clinic 101, Mar 25-27 Oxford
- Hotsos Clinic 101, Apr  8-10 Chicago


-----Original Message-----
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 10, 2003 1:04 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
connec

Thanks Tom,

I never knew that.  Amazing how one can work with totally false
assumptions
for years and never have them trip you up until you expose your
ignorance to
the whole world :).

Thanks!

Jay

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Monday, March 10, 2003 1:57 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Cc: Miller, Jay
connec tion


Jay,

from what I remember, *all* connections go thru SqlNet - even those that
reside on the server.  Oracle made this change a few years back
(actually,
quite a few years back) in preparing themselves for the internet world.
and
also so that a new release of the database does not require a complete
re-compile of everything.

Tom Mercadante
Oracle Certified Professional


-----Original Message-----
Sent: Monday, March 10, 2003 1:04 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
connection


A developer/analyst was running 4 reports on our datawarehouse,
connecting
locally using SQL Plus from a telnet session on the Unix box.  He then
started 4 queries, spooling the output to the unix server (again,
local).

He was curious as to why the sessions were both taking so long and why
they
alternated between showing as Active and Inactive in v$session.

When I checked v$session_wait for his sessions I saw that they were a
mix of
SQL*Net message from client                                     
and
SQL*Net message to client   


Since he's not connecting through the listener, why would this wait
event
show up?  There should be no network activity at all (I double checked
that
the SQL is not using any database links).  Any ideas?

Oracle 8.1.6.2
Solaris 2.6


Thanks,
Jay Miller




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