You might want to go to Oracle's site. They have tutorials and online
documentation that will help you. I suggest you sign up for
otn.oracle.com, it gives you more access to the docs. One generally
builds databases from scripts. This allows for the variance of table
sizes, extents, etc. Once
Hi,
I'm having a tough go trying to grasp what I think should be a simple
concept in Oracle. I've installed Oracle 8i 8.1.5 on a Red Hat 6.1
machine. The installation went fine. A database was created, and I can
create and manipulate the tables provided by the sample SQL scripts.
What I don't
I am using Redhat 6.2. I have installed Oracle 8.16 enterprise version
on linux. sqlplus is working perfectly. Now I want to use oracle
enterprise manager through browser or GUI. I am unable to fing any
configuration or command to use the enterprise manager. Please help!!
kapil
___
On Sat, 30 May 1998, Brian C Hand wrote:
>
> I cam into this discussion rather late however, I am exteremly interested
> in getting Oracle onto Linux. Any information in the successful
> implementation would be great including running Oracle on
> RH5.0 or 4.2.
>
> I am also interested in whic
> "Brian" == Brian C Hand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I cam into this discussion rather late however, I am exteremly
> interested in getting Oracle onto Linux. Any information in the
> successful implementation would be great including running Oracle on
> RH5.0 or 4.2.
There appears to be
e SCO versions of
> > Oracle work very well under Linux -- contrary to what others have
> > stated here. There are groups within Oracle Corp that use SCO Oracle
> > on Linux as production servers. (I'm saying this as a soon-to-be
> > ex-employee with firsthand knowledge.)
I wouldn't expect Oracle to move to the open source model nor would I
expect it to be any cheaper than an SCO Intel port. But having a native
Linux version, supported by Oracle, would be significant in terms of
'selling' Linux to upper management.
Gene
On Fri, 29 May 1998, Sabat wrote:
> I am
On Thu, 28 May 1998, David Masterson wrote:
> need it. I'd also be interested in any sanitized reports that you
> could share on how well Oracle on Linux works (sanitized in the sense
> of removing names to protect the innocent).
The reports I have are all word-of-mouth,
ever, the SCO versions of
> Oracle work very well under Linux -- contrary to what others have
> stated here. There are groups within Oracle Corp that use SCO Oracle
> on Linux as production servers. (I'm saying this as a soon-to-be
> ex-employee with firsthand knowledge.)
> I have
On Wed, 27 May 1998, Michael Jinks wrote:
> I have no basis for disputing your doubts, but we _have_ had very good
> luck making large, complex SCO apps run with nothing other than iBCS and
> the proper, normal configuration (user setups, permissions, jazz like
> that).
Hm. Well, it appears th
There
are groups within Oracle Corp that use SCO Oracle on Linux as production
servers. (I'm saying this as a soon-to-be ex-employee with firsthand
knowledge.)
I have a collection of howto info that can help you get it up and running;
installation is the only tricky part. Once it's up
-Original Message-
From: Michael Jinks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: James Boorn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wednesday, May 27, 1998 12:13 PM
Subject: Re: ORACLE on Linux
>(Adaptec leaps to mind, and I'm convinced that Lotus Not
James Boorn wrote:
> The only way to get companies to support a platform is to let them know
> you want it. So if you want it ask for it. And if a company is really so
> incompetent to not know if they have a linux version or not thats a
> company no one should be doing business with.
All true
The only way to get companies to support a platform is to let them know
you want it. So if you want it ask for it. And if a company is really so
incompetent to not know if they have a linux version or not thats a
company no one should be doing business with.
On Wed, 27 May 1998, Michael Jinks w
James Boorn wrote:
> Try asking Oracle.
This isn't useful. A lot of companies don't know whether their product will work on
Linux or not, and in some cases I
suspect that they deny it in order to avoid having to support it, or possibly to avoid
pissing off the commercial OS
folks.
You'll als
Try asking Oracle.
On Wed, 27 May 1998, Anand P. Kale wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Does anyone has the idea if ORACLE is available on Linux ? If so where
>can I find more information. ?
>
> Thanks in advance
>
> Anand
>
/
William T Wilson wrote:
> On Wed, 27 May 1998, Anand P. Kale wrote:
>
> > Does anyone has the idea if ORACLE is available on Linux ?
>
> It isn't. But there is a sizable number of people at Oracle who think it
> should be ported. Tell them you want it and it might do some good.
>
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Wed, 27 May 1998, Anand P. Kale wrote:
>
> > Does anyone has the idea if ORACLE is available on Linux ?
>
> It isn't. But there is a sizable number of people at Oracle who think it
> should be ported. Tell them you want it and it might do some good.
>
>
Hy !!!
On Wed, 27 May 1998, Anand P. Kale wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Does anyone has the idea if ORACLE is available on Linux ? If so where
>can I find more information. ?
>
> Thanks in advance
>
> Anand
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ˇ Oracle HOWTO, by Paul Haigh <[EMA
On Wed, 27 May 1998, Anand P. Kale wrote:
> Does anyone has the idea if ORACLE is available on Linux ?
It isn't. But there is a sizable number of people at Oracle who think it
should be ported. Tell them you want it and it might do some good.
I don't know whether the SCO version
Hi all,
Does anyone has the idea if ORACLE is available on Linux ? If so where
can I find more information. ?
Thanks in advance
Anand
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Subject:
>
> redhat-digest DigestVolume 98 : Issue 376
>
> Today's Topics:
>
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