Re: (RADIATOR) Radiator + Oracle Bug?

2003-07-21 Thread Hugh Irvine
Hello Wesley - If the SQL database access times out, Radiator by default will wait 10 minutes before trying again. You can adjust the Timeout and FailureBackoffTime parameters in the AuthBy SQL clause. See sections 6.28.4 and 6.28.5 in the Radiator 3.6 reference manual. regards Hugh On

Re: (RADIATOR) Radiator + Oracle Bug?

2003-07-21 Thread Dan Melomedman
Hugh Irvine wrote: Hello Wesley - If the SQL database access times out, Radiator by default will wait 10 minutes before trying again. You can adjust the Timeout and FailureBackoffTime parameters in the AuthBy SQL clause. See sections 6.28.4 and 6.28.5 in the Radiator 3.6 reference

Re: (RADIATOR) Radiator + Oracle Bug?

2003-07-21 Thread Hugh Irvine
Hello Dan - No it shouldn't stop/freeze the process (except that Radiator will stop during the Timeout period). regards Hugh On Tuesday, Jul 22, 2003, at 08:22 Australia/Melbourne, Dan Melomedman wrote: Hugh Irvine wrote: Hello Wesley - If the SQL database access times out, Radiator by

(RADIATOR) Radiator + Oracle Bug?

2003-07-20 Thread Wesley Hof
Hi, I'm using radiator v1.91, when a customer try's an authentication it first checks a few berkeley files. If the user isn't found inside the berkeley radiator querys an oracle db. Now, because of the large numbers of querys on the oracle db (other applications) it sometimes happens that a

(RADIATOR) Oracle Accounting Log Trouble

2003-03-04 Thread Jack Burkhalter
When I run radpwtst, radiator 3.5 writes a start and stop entry into the radius_connection_log table perfectly but in live actual use I get zero entries. Any Ideas? _ Jack Burkhalter WebXites.com 713.781.1187 ext.3108 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: (RADIATOR) Oracle Accounting Log Trouble

2003-03-04 Thread Hugh Irvine
Hello Jack - Thanks for sending the files. The logfile you sent does not show any live requests, but if you are not seeing any accounting data I would supsect that the NAS is not sending any accounting requests. Could you check a trace 4 debug to confirm? regards Hugh On Wednesday, Mar 5,

Re: (RADIATOR) oracle on a remote machine

2002-02-05 Thread Hugh Irvine
Hello Eli - On Wed, 6 Feb 2002 18:07, Eli Klein wrote: Hey all, just in search of some clear explanation for what to use as the DBSource when trying to connect to a remote Oracle database.. let's say for arguments sake that the machine is called database1 and the SID is int...

Re: (RADIATOR) Oracle SQL timeout causing crash

2001-08-31 Thread Viraj Alankar
Hello, Awhile ago I posted the message below regarding Radiator dying on a SQL timeout. I received some suggestions to update the DBI/DBD modules, which I did and am also running v2.18.2 of Radiator. I see the same thing in the log, and restart_wrapper reports: Your program

Re: (RADIATOR) Oracle SQL timeout causing crash

2001-08-31 Thread Hugh Irvine
Hello Viraj - I have copied this mail to Mike to see if he has any ideas. regards Hugh At 11:59 -0400 01/8/31, Viraj Alankar wrote: Hello, Awhile ago I posted the message below regarding Radiator dying on a SQL timeout. I received some suggestions to update the DBI/DBD modules, which I

(RADIATOR) Oracle SQL timeout causing crash

2001-06-28 Thread Viraj Alankar
Hello, We are using v2.18.1 on Linux x86. Whenever there is a SQL timeout, the Radiator process just exits. Thu Jun 28 08:57:40 2001: ERR: Execute failed for 'select ...': SQL Timeout It then exits with error code 0. We have the restart_wrapper in place which restarts it, but is there

(RADIATOR) Oracle on Sun or Linux?

2001-03-07 Thread Sudjiwo Husodo
Hi all !! We are moving our Radiator on mysql/linux to Oracle due to our billing systems that is developed on Oracle. We are debating whether to use Oracle/Linux or Oracle/Sun. Can anybody comment as to which platform is better for Radiator? We currently have 27 pops (35,000 subscribers) and

Re: (RADIATOR) Oracle on Sun or Linux?

2001-03-07 Thread Jeremy Burton
Our situation is we are using Radiator running on a couple of Solaris/x86 machines, with Oracle running on the others. When set up correctly, with enough hardware thrown at it, I much prefer the reliability of Solairs - our db server has only crashed once in two years. It *averages* 120 days

Re: (RADIATOR) Oracle on Sun or Linux?

2001-03-07 Thread Mariano Absatz
We are running a smaller setup, about 10,000 subscriber in only one POP for 99% on-line wireless connections (not dial-up), meaning, mostly long connections (but when the NAS falls for some reason and comes back alive again, we have hundreds of requests all at once). We are using radiator on

RE: (RADIATOR) Oracle on Sun or Linux?

2001-03-07 Thread Chris Given
To: Sudjiwo Husodo Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: (RADIATOR) Oracle on Sun or Linux? Our situation is we are using Radiator running on a couple of Solaris/x86 machines, with Oracle running on the others. When set up correctly, with enough hardware thrown at it, I much prefer the reliability

Re: (RADIATOR) Oracle on Sun or Linux?

2001-03-07 Thread Hugh Irvine
Hello Sudjiwo - On Wednesday 07 March 2001 21:09, Sudjiwo Husodo wrote: Hi all !! We are moving our Radiator on mysql/linux to Oracle due to our billing systems that is developed on Oracle. We are debating whether to use Oracle/Linux or Oracle/Sun. Can anybody comment as to which

(RADIATOR) Oracle to_date with integer-date's Date format

2000-11-09 Thread cistron
On 17th October in reply to frederik querry that how to convert integer date to oracle date format, Mike McCauley had mentioned that he should formatted date as mentioned in Radiators manual. AcctColumnDef SDATE,Timestamp, formatted-date,to_date('%e %m %Y %H:%M:%S',DD MM HH24:MI:SS'). When

(RADIATOR) Oracle to_date with integer-date's DateFormat?

2000-10-16 Thread Anheuser, Frederik {POYN~Kaiseraugst}
Hi, I would like to store Radius accounting data into an Oracle SQL database. However, I cannot get the necessary "to_date" conversion to work with the (new) configurable integer-date accounting column definition format, the quotes are always at the wrong place. Can anybody send me a piece of

Re: Fwd: (RADIATOR) Oracle to_date with integer-date's DateFormat?

2000-10-16 Thread Mike McCauley
Hello Frederik, For Oracle date columns, you should use formatted-date: AcctColumnDef SDATE,Timestamp,formatted-date,to_date('%e %m %Y %H:%M:%S', 'DD MM HH24:MI:SS') Hope that helps. Cheers. On Oct 17, 2:53pm, Hugh Irvine wrote: Subject: Fwd: (RADIATOR) Oracle to_date with integer

Re: (RADIATOR) (Oracle) SQL Timeouts..

2000-09-29 Thread Chris Keladis
David Lloyd wrote: I was just about to post the fix to this problem; we are using Solaris/Oracle. The problem I think is in the way Solaris does alarm(0). The solution is this: Thanks for this David. Merged your changes into my tree and it looks good, i'll leave it a while longer just to

(RADIATOR) (Oracle) SQL Timeouts..

2000-09-28 Thread Chris Keladis
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hi all, I am having a rather peculiar timeout problem with Radiator authenticating from an Oracle SQL database.. Firstly, the details.. Solaris 2.6 (sparc) OS Radiator 2.16.3 Oracle 8.0.5 (sparc) perl 5.005_03 Digest-MD5 2.12

(RADIATOR) Oracle + FreeBSD

2000-08-16 Thread Mike McCauley
--- Forwarded mail from [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Wed, 16 Aug 2000 17:10:22 +1000 (EST) From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: BOUNCE [EMAIL PROTECTED]:Non-member submission from ["Lachlan Fletcher" [EMAIL PROTECTED]] From mikem Wed Aug 16 17:10:17 2000 Received: by

(RADIATOR) Radiator + Oracle + FreeBSD

2000-08-16 Thread Lachlan Fletcher
Hi, We currently have Oracle servers running on both Linux and Solaris, but all our other servers are FreeBSD. Is there any way we can run our Radius server on a FreeBSD server (to keep our network guys happy) accessing the Oracle servers running on either Linux or Solaris? I know we could do

RE: (RADIATOR) Radiator + Oracle + FreeBSD

2000-08-16 Thread Chris Knight
-Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Lachlan Fletcher Sent: Wednesday, 16 August 2000 18:56 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: (RADIATOR) Radiator + Oracle + FreeBSD Hi, We currently have Oracle servers running on both Linux and Solaris, but all our

(RADIATOR) Oracle and FreeBSD

2000-08-16 Thread Mike McCauley
I dont know if anyone has mentioned this yet, but the best way to get to Oracle (or any other SQL) from an unsupported platform is to use the DBI::Proxy stuff in the latest DBI releases. That involves running a DBI::Proxy server on the supported box, and using something like

(RADIATOR) oracle

1999-07-22 Thread Ricardo Guerra
Hi! How can i authenticate using oracle on a remote machine?? where should i setup the host and port where radiator must serch for oracle? === Archive at http://www.thesite.com.au/~radiator/ To unsubscribe, email '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' with 'unsubscribe radiator' in the body of the message.