Re: 12c grid control

From: Gus Spier <gus.spier_at_gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 1 Jul 2013 18:05:12 -0400
Message-ID: <CAG8xnicnqFGa=VPRsKH73mw4QfMZ0RtT_S_52_F1RzUAcmmmYg_at_mail.gmail.com>



This has been an extraordinarily informative conversation. I appreciate the expertise of all of you.
The most daunting task for me and my team is simply the transition from "management by script/cronjob" to modern, gui-driven enterprise management and cloud control. We are contracted to perform "first echelon maintenance". That is monitor,"break/fix", backup, and restore. Clearly, we are going to have to understand OEM from the ground up, eventually. But for right now, just getting a handle on tablespaces, file systems, listeners, and data block corruption is an adventure. Adapting OEM 12c for first line maintenance troops, in terms suitable for those of the most minimal comprehension may be unattainable.

I am plowing through the YouTube Oracle Learning channel and about to start cruising the OBE pages. If someone knows more direct route, I'd be happy to hear it.

Thanks,

Gus

On Mon, Jul 1, 2013 at 9:41 AM, Steve Harville <steve.harville_at_gmail.com>wrote:

> *>>>Resilience is a good point, which can potentially stop cloud control
> being a free product.*
> *>>>We will soon replace this by installing a single VM with both DB and
> management server. We will use VMware to provide resilience here.*
> Hi Tim,
>
> We are doing the same thing except we are using an Oracle VM on Exalogic.
> We may move it to VMware in the future. The OEM/RMAN repository is the only
> Oracle DB running on the hardware so no extra licensing costs are involved.
>
> Steve Harville
>
> http://SteveHarville.com <http://steveharville.com/>
>
>
> --
> http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-l
>
>
>

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Received on Tue Jul 02 2013 - 00:05:12 CEST

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