RE: Enterprise Manager Restricted Use License

From: Pete Sharman <pete.sharman_at_oracle.com>
Date: Fri, 10 Apr 2015 02:08:36 +1000
Message-ID: <032501d072df$6ffba2a0$4ff2e7e0$_at_oracle.com>



You’re reading more into my example than what I meant, Mladen. I’m not saying either of them are OLTP or DW. Just they have different use cases and may require different tuning, which is simply easier when things are separated. Same as it is for OLTP and DW.  

Pete

Pete Sharman
Database Architect, DBaaS
Enterprise Manager Product Suite
33 Benson Crescent CALWELL ACT 2905 AUSTRALIA

Phone: <tel:+61262924095> +61262924095 | | Fax: <fax:+61262925183> +61262925183 | | Mobile: +61414443449


"Controlling developers is like herding cats."

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Bruce Pihlamae, long term Oracle DBA


 

From: oracle-l-bounce_at_freelists.org [mailto:oracle-l-bounce_at_freelists.org] On Behalf Of Mladen Gogala (Redacted sender "mgogala_at_yahoo.com" for DMARC) Sent: Friday, April 10, 2015 1:53 AM
To: oracle-l_at_freelists.org
Subject: Re: Enterprise Manager Restricted Use License  

On 04/09/2015 11:29 AM, Pete Sharman wrote:

One other point – while you CAN use the same database for your RMAN catalog and the OMR, I would not recommend that unless you’re short of hardware. The usages of the two are completely different. Think of it in a similar manner (though not to the same extent of course) as putting together an OLTP and a DW database. You would tune them differently – exactly the same as you would for the RMAN catalog and the OMR.

Which one of the two is OLTP? RMAN catalog is usually very low traffic, almost no demands. I've even housed my private one on Oracle Express Edition, and it worked just fine.

-- 
Mladen Gogala
Oracle DBA
http://mgogala.freehostia.com




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Received on Thu Apr 09 2015 - 18:08:36 CEST

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