Le mer 19/02/2003 à 08:38, Alexander Reelsen a écrit : > Hi > > On Tue, Feb 18, 2003 at 08:00:06PM -0500, Theodore Knab wrote: > > I also heard that Oracle uses its own filesystem on top of > > whatever filesystem you use. > Yes, that's true. It's not a really filesystem, it's just an independant filesystem block oriented data in files. > You often just use a raw file system to install oracle, so oracle wont > suffer from I/O problems of a second involved file system, as oracle > comes with its own buffermechanism for files. This is more efficient. It's false on linux actually, ext2, ext3 and JFS are more efficients because of really good I/O buffers. > > > Additionally, the RedHat people compile special kernels for > > running Oracle. You might want to see why. > Really? I had mind increasing shared memory size was sufficient. Might be > some special tweaking kernel stuff. I confirm about shared memory. Specials kernels of Red Hat are for clusters. > > Someone knows more? > > > This howto might be helpful even though it is for RedHat. > > http://www.puschitz.com/OracleOnLinux.shtml > Nice one, bookmarked > > > MfG/Regards, Alexander > > -- > Alexander Reelsen http://tretmine.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- Bertrand PERRINE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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