Val - I had a horrible problem using RMAN over NFS. Just hanging. Eventually
it turned out that NFS was configured for only a few connections (I can't
recall the exact term used). The assumption was that if we were only doing
one thing, then that should be adequate. It turned out this needed to be
increased. Hope that is some help.


Dennis Williams 
DBA, 40%OCP 
Lifetouch, Inc. 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 10:40 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L



Yes there are NFS mounts involved. What you said about the OS locks on the
audit directory makes a lot of sense. My SA's are back to thinking it's a OS
problem because it crashed again with the database shut down. 

The odd thing is that there is nothing written to the Oracle alert log file
nor are there any entries in the trace files. But when the system is
rebooted and I bring the db back up, Oracle knows it previously crashed and
recovers itself. That's in the alert log file. Its like the system is losing
its pointers or something. I suggested reinstalling the OS and Oracle then
put my database back and see if that helps. Are there huge risks with this
scenario?

Another odd thing that the SA's can't figure out is there are no entries in
the message file nor can they get a dump file to determine why the system
crashed. There is nothing. It crashed over the weekend with no activity and
they got some sort of i-nodes error. 

Thanks for all your replies. Any ideas are helpful and I will relay them to
our SA's... 

Val 

-----Original Message----- 
Sent: Friday, January 03, 2003 10:09 AM 
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L 



I wonder if a file lock is being left in place when the instance crashes, 
and the OS does not clear the lock until a reboot.  I would think the OS 
should clear this without a reboot, but stranger things have been seen with 
OS's ... even Unix.  This doesn't explain why the instance crashes.  I 
wonder if fuser would show anything.  Are there any NFS mounts involved? 

-----Original Message----- 
Yes, you're correct and it can write the file to $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/audit 
once the system is rebooted. Its just that when the database crashes, it 
can't write to that location until its rebooted. 
Is it possible that I need to beef up my init.ora parameters? 
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