Links
Home
Oracle DBA Forum
Frequent Oracle Errors
TNS:could not resolve the connect identifier specified
Backtrace message unwound by exceptions
invalid identifier
PL/SQL compilation error
internal error
missing expression
table or view does not exist
end-of-file on communication channel
TNS:listener unknown in connect descriptor
insufficient privileges
PL/SQL: numeric or value error string
TNS:protocol adapter error
ORACLE not available
target host or object does not exist
invalid number
unable to allocate string bytes of shared memory
resource busy and acquire with NOWAIT specified
error occurred at recursive SQL level string
ORACLE initialization or shutdown in progress
archiver error. Connect internal only, until freed
snapshot too old
unable to extend temp segment by string in tablespace
Credential retrieval failed
missing or invalid option
invalid username/password; logon denied
unable to create INITIAL extent for segment
out of process memory when trying to allocate string bytes
shared memory realm does not exist
cannot insert NULL
TNS:unable to connect to destination
remote database not found'>ora-02019
exception encountered: core dump
inconsistent datatypes
no data found
TNS:operation timed out
PL/SQL: could not find program
existing state of packages has been discarded
maximum number of processes exceeded
error signaled in parallel query server
ORACLE instance terminated. Disconnection forced
TNS:packet writer failure
see ORA-12699
missing right parenthesis
name is already used by an existing object
cannot identify/lock data file
invalid file operation
quoted string not properly terminated
Oracle for Windows XP with INTEL inside

Oracle for Windows XP with INTEL inside

2004-09-27       - By Jared Still
Reply:     <<     11     12     13     14     15     16     17     18  

On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 09:37:13 +0100, Niall Litchfield
<niall.litchfield@(protected) > wrote:
> On Sun, 26 Sep 2004 19:34:24 -0700, Jared Still <jkstill@(protected) > wrote:
> > I may have been thinking of Remote Terminal
> > Services, which I believe requires the listener
> > to be started, as you are not actually on the console
> > when you connect to the database.
>
> That used to be true, but is no longer true from 9i.

Guess I will have to try that, not to prove it , but just to
reinforce in my head that it works. :)

>
> > As someone else already stated, it is the 'wrong ' OS.
> >
> > Windows complicates everything it touches.
>
> I disagree with the first statement quite strongly, and with the
> second statement a bit. Windows does have a number of technical
> limitations that inhibit its scalability for more than (say) 150/200
> concurrent sessions or utilising more than 1.7gb or so of RAM per

Maybe I should clarify.

When I said 'complicates ', I wasn 't referring to configuration, I was
referring to monitoring and maintenance. For instance:

*) Monitoring the alert.log in real time:

Dead easy on unix
Difficult on windows

*) getting the environment setup correctly for the task at
hand on a server with multiple versions of Oracle:

Fairly easy on unix.
Fairly difficult on windows.

If you have 10g and 9i or less on the same windows server, it
becomes very difficult. The Oracle Home selector does not
work with 10g, and doesn 't work all that well to start with.
ie. no command line, non-interactive version.

*) Ensuring that all critical services/daemons are started on
any other particular server, and restarting them if not:

Fairly simple on unix.
Fairly difficult on windows.

I don 't say this because of because of bias towards unix/linux, but
because of several years experience administering Oracle on both
platforms, and finding many things more difficult to do on Windows
than on *nix.

This doesn 't mean the OS is not capable: it is. But MS has made it
very difficult to get at various bits of the OS, the kind that any admin
needs for something beyond the point-n-click variety of administration.

Yet another example of that: named pipes. It would have been pretty
cool if MS made this part of the stdlib, but they didn 't. This is why
named pipes are not available for use with Oracle utilities from the
command line. SQL*Loader is the lone exception, and there are
limitations with that.

Jared



--
Jared Still
Certifiable Oracle DBA and Part Time Perl Evangelist
--
http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-l