Thanks for the answer.
Yep, it seems more like JDBC proxy with analyzing capabilities than a
regular traffic analyzer which sits aside & sniffs some packets.
May I ask, how much time have you spent on writing such thing?

I'm planning to write something similar, but on SQL*Net level...

Tanel.


----- Original Message ----- 
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 3:44 AM


> Tanel,
>
> I've implemented it as a JDBC driver that is installed as a layer between
> your application and the vendor driver that you are using (eg. Oracle,
> Postgress, SQL Server, etc.)
>
> [Java application] - Layer 1
> [JDBC Expert] - Layer 2
> [Oracle Thin Driver] - Layer 3
>      |
> network
>      |
> [Oracle Server] - Layer 4
>
>
> It does not parse Java source code and is not a code analyzer, however the
> tool will intercept all calls that an application makes on the JDBC API,
> analyze them and forward them onto the vendor driver.  In this way the
tool
> is transparent to the application and can be installed or removed without
> modification to the application code.
>
> I would not call it a traffic analyzer because to me that term implies
that
> it sits on a network and analyzes network traffic much like an Intrusion
> Detection System might do.
>
> Regards,
> Craig Munday.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> At 04:11 AM 30/09/2003 -0800, you wrote:
> > > I've encountered this problem so often that I decided to write a tool
> > > (called JDBC Expert) that would help us DBAs (and developers) detect
> > > Statement and ResultSet "leaks" in Java applications.   I've found
this
> > > tool so useful and effective at finding resource leaks that I insist
any
> >in
> > > house developed or third party Java applications are tested with it
before
> > > we release them.
> >
> >Just interested, how have you implemented it? Is it a code or traffic
> >analyzer?
> >
> >Tanel.
> >
> >
> >--
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> >Author: Tanel Poder
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> -- 
> Author: Craig Munday
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-- 
Author: Tanel Poder
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