No, it should not matter.
Are you signed on as 'oracle' ?
I see the prompt is: # (typically for root).
- Kirti
-Original Message-
Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2003 1:39 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
My ORACLE_SIDs are lower case. Does that make a difference.
bvdesi02 #
.1.7
Jared
"Schauss, Peter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
03/26/2003 12:33 PM
Please respond to ORACLE-L
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject:sysresv doesn't work on AIX
ltiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject:sysresv doesn't work on AIX
Poking around metalink I found a reference to a utility called
sysresv (note 123322.1). According to the document it
displays the id and key for each for the shared mem
12:33 PM
Please respond to ORACLE-L
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject:sysresv doesn't work on AIX
Poking around metalink I found a reference to a utility called
sysresv (note 123322.1). According to the
I did some testing with this on HP-UX 11.00 and 11.11. What appears to
matter is the userid, should be the owner of the the shmem seg. For
instance I have a machine with multiple instances. Some are owned by
oraa and the others are owned by orab. These databases have different
Oracle homes. Ea
"Schauss, Peter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
03/26/2003 12:33 PM
Please respond to ORACLE-L
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject: sysresv doesn't work on AIX
Poking around m
Hi peter,
you need to use sysresv with oracle user.
Is it what you do ?
HTH
At 12:33 26/03/2003 -0800, you wrote:
>Poking around metalink I found a reference to a utility called
>sysresv (note 123322.1). According to the document it
>displays the id and key for each for the shared memory segme
ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc:
Subject: sysresv doesn't work on AIX
Poking around metalink I found a reference to a utility called
sysresv (note 123322.1). According to the document it
displays the id and key for each for the shared memory segments
which the Oracle
Poking around metalink I found a reference to a utility called
sysresv (note 123322.1). According to the document it
displays the id and key for each for the shared memory segments
which the Oracle instances have created.
I tried it on an AIX 4.3 system running three Oracle instances and it
does