T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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451.1 | I'm checking on this | OOTOOL::CRAIG | | Mon Mar 17 1997 10:26 | 34 |
| Hi Peter,
Just so you don't think that we are ignoring you, I've sent
mail to the people responsible for the DBAPack for Rdb asking
them to review your question and provide me some information.
Expert and Trace are seperate products and are not part
of the DBAPack for Rdb7.
Currently Expert 3.2 and Trace 2.2 are the current releases for
Rdb and are distributed as part of the Rdb Tools CD.
For Oracle 7 Expert and Trace are both part of OEM Performance
Pack. These are seperate products and have nothing to do with Rdb.
Future releases of OEM for Rdb will include Trace and Expert as
part of the performance pack on Rdb.
I don't have a copy of the CD in question, so if you could give
me some additional information it would help me to track this
down.
When you say that Trace and Expert are on the CD with Rdb is the
CD a strictly Rdb CD or does it also have Oracle7 products?
Is there actually a kit for Trace and Expert on the CD? Does the
Rdb DBApack documentation reference Trace and Expert?
Hope that this hasn't confused you more. If you have additional
clarification on where the confusion lies I will get the product
managers to address the issue.
Thanks,
Sheri
|
451.2 | | UKVMS3::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Mon Mar 17 1997 11:31 | 38 |
| > I don't have a copy of the CD in question, so if you could give
> me some additional information it would help me to track this
> down.
The full title is "Oracle RDB7 Client for WIN3.1/WIN NT/Win 95/Nt
Alpha/MAC/SOLARIS/DIGITAL UNIX". The part number is A48650-1.
> When you say that Trace and Expert are on the CD with Rdb is the
> CD a strictly Rdb CD or does it also have Oracle7 products?
The list of products is Oracle Enterprise Manager DBAPack for Rdb;
Oracle ODBC driver for Rdb; Oracle SQL/Services for DECnet; Oracle
SQL/Services for TCP/IP; and Oracle SQL/Services for SPX/IPX.
Despite this the OEM kit looks like an Oracle7 product as far as I can
tell.
> Is there actually a kit for Trace and Expert on the CD? Does the
> Rdb DBApack documentation reference Trace and Expert?
There appear to be Trace and Expert kits, and there is definitely
documentation for them (and Oracle7). The documentation exclusively
concerns using Trace and Expert with Oracle7. E.g. Rdb is not mentioned
in the list of products instrumented for Trace.
There is no real "Rdb DBApack" documentation. Just some Windows help
files, one of which appears to be corrupt.
> Hope that this hasn't confused you more. If you have additional
> clarification on where the confusion lies I will get the product
> managers to address the issue.
My guess is that a complete Oracle7 OEM kit was included, but since
most customers who receive it will be Rdb only customers. The
documentation (i.e. the readme files) needs to be clearer.
Would you like me to submit a documentation bug?
Peter
|
451.3 | More specific info needed... | BOUVS::OAKEY | I'll take Clueless for $500, Alex | Mon Mar 17 1997 12:44 | 35 |
| >> <<< Note 451.2 by UKVMS3::PJACKSON "Oracle UK Rdb Support" >>>
>> The full title is "Oracle RDB7 Client for WIN3.1/WIN NT/Win 95/Nt
>> Alpha/MAC/SOLARIS/DIGITAL UNIX". The part number is A48650-1.
I don't have the official CD but I have what should be a copy of it...
>> Despite this the OEM kit looks like an Oracle7 product as far as I can
>> tell.
What exactly do you mean by this? That you're thinking you should be able
to launch Rdb client apps from OEM?
>> There appear to be Trace and Expert kits, and there is definitely
>> documentation for them (and Oracle7). The documentation exclusively
What directory are you looking it? I didn't see anything that looked to me
like Trace or Expert kits but I could have easily missed it.
>> concerns using Trace and Expert with Oracle7. E.g. Rdb is not mentioned
>> in the list of products instrumented for Trace.
What specific documentation are you looking at? There is a bunch on CD and
some isolation would help.
>> There is no real "Rdb DBApack" documentation. Just some Windows help
>> files, one of which appears to be corrupt.
Which file?
>> Would you like me to submit a documentation bug?
I think we need more specific information on where on the CD you're looking
would help before submitting a bug.
|
451.4 | | UKVMS3::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Tue Mar 18 1997 04:55 | 51 |
| >>> The full title is "Oracle RDB7 Client for WIN3.1/WIN NT/Win 95/Nt
>>> Alpha/MAC/SOLARIS/DIGITAL UNIX". The part number is A48650-1.
>I don't have the official CD but I have what should be a copy of it...
We always try to get the official kit so that we can see what
customer's actually receive.
>>> Despite this the OEM kit looks like an Oracle7 product as far as I can
>>> tell.
>What exactly do you mean by this? That you're thinking you should be able
>to launch Rdb client apps from OEM?
I mean that is looks like an Oracle7 product. I am told that you can
launch the DBApack products from it, but I haven't tried that.
>>> There appear to be Trace and Expert kits, and there is definitely
>>> documentation for them (and Oracle7). The documentation exclusively
>What directory are you looking it? I didn't see anything that looked to me
>like Trace or Expert kits but I could have easily missed it.
WIN32\EXPERT and WIN32\TRACE
>>> concerns using Trace and Expert with Oracle7. E.g. Rdb is not mentioned
>>> in the list of products instrumented for Trace.
>What specific documentation are you looking at? There is a bunch on CD and
>some isolation would help.
It is not well organised. The acrobat files are named by the part
number, and I haven't found any index or list of contents. One set of
documentation is in WIN95\DOC. A43689_1 is the "Oracle Enterprise
Manager Oracle Expert User's Guide". A43696_1 is the "Oracle Enterprise
Manager Oracle Trace Instrumenting Guide". I've just found that you can
get to a list of the documentation, by selecting the first item in the
table of contents - it was not obvious. A43697_1 is the "Oracle
Enterprise Manager Oracle Trace User's Guide". This is the one that
lists Oracle7 and SQL*Net as being the products that are already
instrumented.
>>> There is no real "Rdb DBApack" documentation. Just some Windows help
>>> files, one of which appears to be corrupt.
>Which file?
I reported it in RDB_70. It is WIN95\RDBCLI\R7OEMCFG.HLP.
Peter
|
451.5 | Specifics are always helpful... | BOUVS::OAKEY | I'll take Clueless for $500, Alex | Tue Mar 18 1997 09:38 | 28 |
| >> <<< Note 451.4 by UKVMS3::PJACKSON "Oracle UK Rdb Support" >>>
>> We always try to get the official kit so that we can see what
>> customer's actually receive.
Okay.
>> I mean that is looks like an Oracle7 product. I am told that you can
>> launch the DBApack products from it, but I haven't tried that.
I guess I still don't know what you mean by "looks like an Oracle7
product". OEM is an Oracle product and can be used for both Oracle7 and
Rdb7. The integration for Rdb7 is less than that for Oracle7 but you can
launch the Rdb7 DBAPack apps from it.
I'm assuming that you've installed this to see for yourself? How are you
invoking OEM? I'm also assuming that you're thinking this is an "Oracle7
product" because when you access the program group you see the Oracle7
tools and not the Rdb tools?
Unfortunately, I can't install OEM with DBAPack since I'm running Windows
NT 4.0 for which currently the OEM on the CD is not supported. DBAPack
will install, but not OEM.
>> WIN32\EXPERT and WIN32\TRACE
I can look at this when I get in....
|
451.6 | | UKVMS3::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Tue Mar 18 1997 10:09 | 13 |
| >I'm assuming that you've installed this to see for yourself? How are you
>invoking OEM? I'm also assuming that you're thinking this is an "Oracle7
>product" because when you access the program group you see the Oracle7
>tools and not the Rdb tools?
I didn't say I thought it was an Oracle7 product, I said I thought it
looked like an Oracle7 product. This is because all the documentation
is about how to use it with Oracle7. I haven't found any about using it
with Rdb on the CD.
I haven't installed it because the disk on our PC is full.
Peter
|
451.7 | I'll look into it further | OOTOOL::CRAIG | | Tue Mar 18 1997 10:14 | 10 |
| Thanks for the additional information Peter and Kathy,
I've sent a message out to see if I can locate the CD in
question and have the product management involved.
I'll let them work the issue of clarifying the packaging
of the product to lessen the confusion.
Thanks,
Sheri
|
451.8 | There is a method to the madness | OOTOOL::CRAIG | | Tue Mar 18 1997 16:24 | 25 |
| Hi,
I've determined that in order for OEM to install for
Rdb it needs to see the Trace and Expert directories.
This is because the Rdb developers pulled the OEM
code (from the Oracle7 side) and that's how the OEM installation
code worked. So they pulled the entire directory with the files
as it was at the time for Trace, Expert, and any of the other OEM
components, even though they all aren't available yet on the Rdb side.
Did the customer find some DBApack documentation that said something
about Expert and Trace? Were they just looking around at the directories
and found the files and started reading them? It's important for me to
understand how they got to the files and the confusion, so that I can try
to resolve this for future releases.
The Rdb group is going to look to see if they can place just the empty
directories there for the next release to avoid confusion.
I'll work on this more and put additional information in as it becomes
available.
Thanks,
Sheri
|
451.9 | | UKVMS3::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Wed Mar 19 1997 05:45 | 41 |
| > This is because the Rdb developers pulled the OEM
> code (from the Oracle7 side) and that's how the OEM installation
> code worked. So they pulled the entire directory with the files
> as it was at the time for Trace, Expert, and any of the other OEM
> components, even though they all aren't available yet on the Rdb side.
I guessed that that was what happened.
> Did the customer find some DBApack documentation that said something
> about Expert and Trace? Were they just looking around at the directories
> and found the files and started reading them? It's important for me to
> understand how they got to the files and the confusion, so that I can try
> to resolve this for future releases.
The customer was looking around the directories to find out what OEM
would do for him, and how to install it. He has used Rdb, Trace, and
Expert, but not Oracle7.
> The Rdb group is going to look to see if they can place just the empty
> directories there for the next release to avoid confusion.
I think a simpler solution would be to improve the readme files. If
they listed everything that is on the CD, and explained where to find the
documentation and installations instructions for each product there
would be no confusion. There are some customers for whom one combined
OEM kit for Oracle7 and Rdb7 is what they want.
Maybe something like this would do.
"We have supplied a complete installation kit for the Oracle Enterprise
Manager as part of the DBAPack for Rdb, allowing you to manage both
Oracle7 and Rdb7 databases from one application. Some tools are only
available for one database type. In particular, the versions of Oracle
Trace and Oracle Expert are for Oracle7 only. Our aim is to add support
for both databases for as many tools as possible in future."
The readme files should also point out that SQL*NET is supplied on the
CD, and a version of Oracle7 (and should say that in future it will be
possible to use an Rdb database instead).
Peter
|
451.10 | Some more information | OOTOOL::CRAIG | | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:37 | 33 |
| Hi,
I have the master copy of the CD. Under the top level
directory on the CD there is a README file that
tells what products and platforms are included on the CD.
It has a list of directories, one for each installable platform.
(the WIN32 directory is not mentioned, since it isn't one of
the platforms, just a directory that was needed for the installation)
The top level README says to look in the directory that
corresponds to the platform you will be using for the appropriate
README.
This seems like a logical way to document this kit.
I've asked engineering to see if they can remove the unused files,
and at the minimum remove all stray README files to help avoid future
confusion.
This includes the README files under the WIN32/SYSMAN/DOC,
and the various other README files under the other WIN32
subdirectories. I think that if they can remove the unused
files, all subdirectories under the WIN32 will be empty.
I also noticed that there is a readme.doc under the WIN95
directory that talks about Personal Oracle7. I'll ask them
if that is needed.
I will turn this over to the Rdb engineers and let them determine
the best solution.
Hope this helps,
Sheri
|
451.11 | | UKVMS3::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Mon Mar 24 1997 04:29 | 42 |
| > I have the master copy of the CD. Under the top level
> directory on the CD there is a README file that
> tells what products and platforms are included on the CD.
> It has a list of directories, one for each installable platform.
> (the WIN32 directory is not mentioned, since it isn't one of
> the platforms, just a directory that was needed for the installation)
> The top level README says to look in the directory that
> corresponds to the platform you will be using for the appropriate
> README.
> This seems like a logical way to document this kit.
Yes, it would be if it listed everything that is on the CD.
> This includes the README files under the WIN32/SYSMAN/DOC,
> and the various other README files under the other WIN32
> subdirectories. I think that if they can remove the unused
> files, all subdirectories under the WIN32 will be empty.
SQL*Net is in there. Since SQL Services can already use SQL*Net as a
transport, and will soon be able to act as an SQL*Net listener, I think
it is right for it to be there. Of course, it should at least be
mentioned in the readme files.
> I've asked engineering to see if they can remove the unused files,
> and at the minimum remove all stray README files to help avoid future
> confusion.
Alternatively, they could document everything that is there.
> I also noticed that there is a readme.doc under the WIN95
> directory that talks about Personal Oracle7. I'll ask them
> if that is needed.
I was told is was included as a temporary measure since for either SQL*Net
or OEM has a requirement for a database, and Rdb can't currently be
used. Eventually it should be possible to use an Rdb database instead.
Peter
|
451.12 | Please submit your request for changes to the DBApack group | OOTOOL::CRAIG | | Mon Mar 24 1997 10:00 | 19 |
| Hi Peter,
At this point, I would request that you file a
very specific documentation request with the
Rdb DBApack group for the changes you'd like to see
to the Readme file.
That will be beneficial so that your request
is officially documented with the appropriate
people and they understand specifically where you
think the improvements should be made.
This will allow them to work with you directly
to understand your needs.
Thanks,
Sheri
|
451.13 | BugNo:470359 | UKVMS3::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Tue Mar 25 1997 05:51 | 1 |
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