What (if any) hardware changes have happened? If you've moved to a machine
with lots more RAM a memory intensive program that was paging and swapping
could all of a sudden keep more data in memory and become more CPU
intensive. That memory could be consumed by either Perl or Oracle or both.
-- J
I would definitely look to Oracle rather than Perl as your
culprit. I don't have anything to back this up, just a suspicion.
-Original Message-
From: Oscar Gomez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, September 08, 2006 10:04 AM
To: dbi-users@perl.org
Subject: switching perl ver
riday, September 08, 2006 9:28 AM
To: Reidy, Ron
Subject: RE: switching perl version
Hi Ron, thanks for your reply
I haven't tried the 10046 trace, because I still am studying how to do
it.
but what is the relationship or the reliance between the cpu performance
and
oracle under the new versio
On Sep 8, 2006, at 11:26 AM, Reidy, Ron wrote:
Did you run 10046 traces on the code?
Have you profiled the code?
I switched to these same versions a couple of years ago, and have
had no
problems.
rr
-Original Message-
From: Oscar Gomez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, Sept
Did you run 10046 traces on the code?
Have you profiled the code?
I switched to these same versions a couple of years ago, and have had no
problems.
rr
-Original Message-
From: Oscar Gomez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, September 08, 2006 9:04 AM
To: dbi-users@perl.org
Subject