Re: Are there any good 3rd party monitoring tools for Oracle on Unix?

From: CCI <xcomm_at_interaccess.com>
Date: 1995/08/03
Message-ID: <xcomm.40.0182ECBB_at_interaccess.com>#1/1


In article <MARY.95Aug2094038_at_gulper.mitra.com> mary_at_mitra.com (Mary E. Hunt) writes:

>We are developing an application which will use Oracle (7.1.3) on a
>Sun Solaris 2.4. Customers who will be running this application will
>not know anything about Oracle.
 

>I want to simplify the monitoring process. I was wondering if there
>are any 3rd party easy-to-use monitoring tools. I.e. Something that
>shows them how much free space is left in a tablespace. Something
>that will help them to extent the tablespace, etc... Preferably a GUI
>interface would be great.
 

>Also, are there other companies out there that are in a similar
>situation, where they package Oracle with there software? What do you
>provide a customer who doesn't know anything about Oracle and DBA
>activities? Any advice about this would be greatly appreciated.
>Thanks in advance for any help.
>Mary Hunt

The Company I work for has developed some interesting monitoring products for use with Oracle, or other DBs for that matter, as well as solutions you can put on your customers systems.

They're based around the new wireless technologies that can provide a real-time link between support personnel and system problems, through alpha pagers and other wireless devices.

For Unix systems, HipLink(tm) Monitor provides a real simple table driven mechanism for watching processes and (log) files. That catches most situations.

Customers love it too, as an option to be "linked to their system." They are quick to purchase such enhanced services too.

Let me know if you'd like additional information......

Kw Received on Thu Aug 03 1995 - 00:00:00 CEST

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