Stephen Lee scribbled on the wall in glitter crayon:
No No. THOSE guys did replication. Then the worst of the bunch
worked in conjunction with the authors of graduate Math texts to come
up with Advanced Queuing.
somehow this makes me glad i work for cheap places that don't use any of
The old simple snapshot replication is OK. It's just that some of this
later stuff makes you think they rounded up all the guys who have tape on
their glasses and wear suspenders with their pants that are too short, gave
them a drug to put them in an *extra* geeky mood, gave them unlimited
Stephen Lee scribbled on the wall in glitter crayon:
The old simple snapshot replication is OK. It's just that some of
this later stuff makes you think they rounded up all the guys who
have tape on their glasses and wear suspenders with their pants that
are too short, gave them a drug to put
sql syntax to your text editor.If your brain is fried this is kinda
nice.
Niall
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Koivu, LisaSent: 17 June 2003 18:50To: Multiple
recipients of list ORACLE-LSubject: OEM
question
Hello
No No. THOSE guys did replication. Then the worst of the bunch worked in
conjunction with the authors of graduate Math texts to come up with Advanced
Queuing.
-Original Message-
I have tried to automate various things with OEM jobs and events and
eventually decided that at and dbms_job
You got it..
I use OEM in the stand-alone mode only, without the repository. However, not all
functionality is
available in this mode. But it will get you going to taste OEM ;)
- Kirti
--- Koivu, Lisa [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-
OEM question
Hello all,
I'm
Title: OEM question
Lisa,
You can put the catalog in any database. I
have mine in a separate database right now and use rman to back it up. I
run it in archivelog mode of course. It takes less than a minute to back
itup, including the archivelogs. I used to have it with my rman
catalog
Lisa,
Congrats on the flawless upgrade.
As I understand your statement about OEM you are correct. But you can
place the OEM repository on any old server, like the development one or
Linux and then run the OEM using it. Of course there is the issues of
licensing if you use your play station
I have 2 8.1.6 instances running on a NT4 (sp6) server using the same
listener.
With Enterprise manager (oem server is a different machine), I can see -
discover one of the instances but not the other. If I use toad or sqlplus I
can connect to the other instance.
Any guesses as to what I need to
- Original Message -
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2002 17:20
I have 2 8.1.6 instances running on a NT4 (sp6) server using the same
listener.
With Enterprise manager (oem server is a different machine), I can see -
discover
: OEM question
- Original Message -
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2002 17:20
I have 2 8.1.6 instances running on a NT4 (sp6) server using the same
listener.
With Enterprise manager (oem server is a different machine
Shaw,
Check these things.
1. Check whether OEM agent is running on NT4. (On unix the command is -
lsnrctl dbsnmp_status). Perhaps on NT this might work.
2. One OEM agent is enough on one machine. This agent would monitor all the
databases running on that machine.
3. Now, in the second step,
Hi John,
Have you bounced the IA since this instance was created. My
understanding is that upon discovery the IA looks in a file called
services.ora and/or snmp_ro.ora to see which services have been
discovered. On NT this file is created with the IA is started by
checking listener.ora,
And make sure the 2nd instance is in your services.ora.
-Original Message-
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2002 12:20 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Shaw,
Check these things.
1. Check whether OEM agent is running on NT4. (On unix the command is -
lsnrctl dbsnmp_status).
RTFM
-Original Message-
Sent: Monday, April 09, 2001 8:10 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Hi all,
I installed Oracle Enterprise Mananger on NT. Not sure
about the OEM version, how to find it out actually,
without getting the install CD again. When I tries to
connect to a
Andrea,
When OEM console starts up it is asking for an OEM username / password.
The default OEM administrator is sysman with a password of oem_temp.
Do you have the OMS service running on your NT box - I presume you set that
up and pointed it at your chosen management database.
To find out
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