On Fri, 2006-08-11 at 13:59 +, DavidA wrote:
>
> Hancock, David (DHANCOCK) wrote:
> > So, I¹d appreciate any pointers to documentation, code, etc. to let me log
> > queries to a file.
>
> David,
>
> While not exactly what you want, I wrote a simple middleware class to
> track
Hi,
On 8/11/06, Corey Oordt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> David,
>
>
> Not sure if this helps, but the only way I found (using postgresql) was to
> turn on query logging in postgresql. Then you truly see everything that is
> passed to the database.
>
> I'm not familiar with Oracle at all, but
David,Not sure if this helps, but the only way I found (using postgresql) was to turn on query logging in postgresql. Then you truly see everything that is passed to the database.I'm not familiar with Oracle at all, but I'm sure it has a way to do that.Corey OordtOn Aug 11, 2006, at 8:38 AM,
On 8/11/06, Hancock, David (DHANCOCK) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> To get to the next step with the Oracle patch, I'd really like to learn
> what to change to force ALL queries to be logged.
I think I read a message on this group about a middleware that does
this (the guy was selling it
On Fri, 2006-08-11 at 08:38 -0400, Hancock, David (DHANCOCK) wrote:
> I haven’t completely given up on getting Oracle and Django working
> together, but I did revert to 0.95 and installed MySQL, which are
> meeting my needs.
>
> To get to the next step with the Oracle patch, I’d really like to
>
Title: How to log ALL queries
I haven’t completely given up on getting Oracle and Django working together, but I did revert to 0.95 and installed MySQL, which are meeting my needs.
To get to the next step with the Oracle patch, I’d really like to learn what to change to force ALL queries
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