Re: Brute Force Quickie Developer needs minor assistance finding code tool . . .

From: nobody <nobody_at_spam.com>
Date: 23 Dec 2002 13:40:04 -0800
Message-ID: <au7vrk025m3_at_drn.newsguy.com>


Did you try typing the words Oracle SQL and trace into google? I got many hits.

In article <bmnc0v4dfifrtn4g9nskm1o7v34h4pmrj1_at_4ax.com>, Syster says...
>
>
>Hello,
>
>I am new to Oracle. I've been programming various client and web
>based utilities for MS SQL for years, now we have an Oracle server and
>I can't proceed in the same fashion of brute force coding that I used
>to do.
>
>The hospital I work for buys turnkey solutions, and I work on the
>"workarounds". For MS SQL, I use trace to find any information
>regarding how the client software accesses the database. I use that
>information to build my add-on utilities, report and query tools.
>
>My next project is to build a automatic faxing system for our
>laboratory database. I built the last one for our MS SQL lab system,
>but we've since upgraded to Oracle. It some version 7 Unix server
>that I'm not very familiar with.
>
>Here's the problem. I need a tool that will trace the sql statements
>that pass from the client to the server, similar to SQL Trace for MS
>SQL. I need to be able to filter what gets traced, say by IP Address
>or perhaps the workstation name etc.
>
>I would greatly appreciate your wisdom.
>
>
>Sincerely,
>
>Tony Garrido
Received on Mon Dec 23 2002 - 22:40:04 CET

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