Happy Thanksgiving to everyone in the US! And happy belated thanksgiving to everyone in Canada since you celebrated back at the beginning of October. :) I’ve been doing a lot of scripting work lately. Although I can’t write about everything I’m doing, I would like to post a pattern that I thought could be useful … Continue reading
Before I started consulting, I was an Oracle engineer in a very large software development organization. The company had a number of major products and the one I worked with was used by hospitals and radiology offices world-wide. (These guys are one of the biggest companies worldwide in the field.) Our product included the hardware … Continue reading
Is asmlib obsolete on a modern Linux system? I’m still undecided but starting to lean toward “yes”. Everybody knows that asmlib was very useful when it was first introduced with Oracle 10.1 to simplify a host of issues on Linux: direct async device access without raw devices, file permissions & ownership without custom code, and … Continue reading
So Collaborate is over and I’m back in Chicago… home sweet home. I thoroughly enjoyed the week in Denver, in spite of the snow! Thursday, the last day, was especially fun. First was a panel debate “To RAC or Not To RAC: What’s Best for HA.” Dan Norris invited me to participate in this panel … Continue reading
Just a quick post to say that I’ve uploaded the slides from my services presentation at Collaborate and you can find them over on the publications page. Thanks to everyone who attended!! Great questions and comments throughout the session. Next time I’ll try to get through everything faster so that there’s more time for Q&A! … Continue reading
About a month ago I wrote an overview of Linux Caching and I/O Queues as they pertain to Oracle. I was working on a project to architect, install and configure the beginnings of an 8-node cluster consisting of either one or two RAC databases. During the project, while I was waiting for the OS guys … Continue reading
The trouble with Linux? No… the trouble with computers in general – is that they keep changing! Solaris 10 comes out, Oracle 11g, Red Hat 5… and everything works different!! It’s a full-time job just trying to keep up with everything. Almost exactly one year ago I wrote about using udev on 2.6 kernels to … Continue reading
Well it’s been awhile since I’ve written anything for the blog – during the past four months I went on a trip to Asia, celebrated Thanksgiving and Christmas with both my family and my girlfriend’s family and then in January I got engaged! I’ve also been working on some continuing educational goals – so needless … Continue reading
Two days until I leave for Asia. (You have no idea how busy I’ve been for the past month!) If anyone’s curious about trip details I’ve posted about it over on the non-technical side of my blog.
Last night I posted a case study where I used the AWR (a blessed new feature) to investigate “gc buffer busy” wait events in a RAC environment. I concluded the write-up by theorizing that the single freelist was pointing all nodes of the cluster to the same small group of blocks for inserts and thereby … Continue reading
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