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Saturday, December 11, 2010
Thursday, July 29, 2010
SESSIONS
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Property
|
Description
|
Parameter type
|
Integer
|
Default value
|
Derived: (1.1 * PROCESSES) + 5
|
Modifiable
|
No
|
Range of values
|
1 to 231
|
Basic
|
Yes
|
SESSIONS specifies the maximum number of sessions that can be created in the system. Because every login requires a session, this parameter effectively determines the maximum number of concurrent users in the system. You should always set this parameter explicitly to a value equivalent to your estimate of the maximum number of concurrent users, plus the number of background processes, plus approximately 10% for recursive sessions.
Oracle uses the default value of this parameter as its minimum. Values between 1 and the default do not trigger errors, but Oracle ignores them and uses the default instead.
The default values of the ENQUEUE_RESOURCES and TRANSACTIONS parameters are derived from SESSIONS. Therefore, if you increase the value of SESSIONS, you should consider whether to adjust the values of ENQUEUE_RESOURCES and TRANSACTIONS as well. (Note that ENQUEUE_RESOURCES is obsolete as of Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2).)
In a shared server environment, the value of PROCESSES can be quite small. Therefore, Oracle recommends that you adjust the value of SESSIONS to approximately 1.1 * total number of connections.
V$TRANSACTION_ENQUEUE
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V$TRANSACTION_ENQUEUE displays locks owned by transaction state objects.
Column | Datatype | Description |
ADDR | RAW(4 | 8) | Address of lock state object |
KADDR | RAW(4 | 8) | Address of lock |
SID | NUMBER | Identifier for session holding or acquiring the lock |
TYPE | VARCHAR2(2) | Type of lock. TX indicates transaction enqueue. |
ID1 | NUMBER | Lock identifier #1 (depends on type) |
ID2 | NUMBER | Lock identifier #2 (depends on type) |
LMODE | NUMBER | Lock mode in which the session holds the lock:
|
REQUEST | NUMBER | Lock mode in which the process requests the lock:
|
CTIME | NUMBER | Time since current mode was granted |
BLOCK | NUMBER | The lock is blocking another lock |
Oracle data dictionary views
Last updated: 2009-11-12 Thursday |
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
How to read Unix file /etc/group
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/etc/group is a text file which defines the groups to which users belong under Linux and UNIX operating system. Under Unix / Linux multiple users can be categorized into groups. Unix file system permissions are organized into three classes, user, group, and others. The use of groups allows additional abilities to be delegated in an organized fashion, such as access to disks, printers, and other peripherals. This method, amongst others, also enables the superuser to delegate some administrative tasks to normal users.
It stores group information or defines the user groups i.e. it defines the groups to which users belong. There is one entry per line, and each line has four parts separated by a colon (:)
Users on Linux systems are assigned to one or more groups for following reasons:
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/etc/group is a text file which defines the groups to which users belong under Linux and UNIX operating system. Under Unix / Linux multiple users can be categorized into groups. Unix file system permissions are organized into three classes, user, group, and others. The use of groups allows additional abilities to be delegated in an organized fashion, such as access to disks, printers, and other peripherals. This method, amongst others, also enables the superuser to delegate some administrative tasks to normal users.
It stores group information or defines the user groups i.e. it defines the groups to which users belong. There is one entry per line, and each line has four parts separated by a colon (:)
- group_name: It is the name of group. If you run ls -l command, you will see this name printed in the group field.
- Password: Generally password is not used, hence it is empty/blank. It can store encrypted password. This is useful to implement privileged groups.
- Group ID (GID): Each user must be assigned a group ID. You can see this number in your /etc/passwd file.
- Group List: It is a list of user names of users who are members of the group. The user names must be separated by commas.
Users on Linux systems are assigned to one or more groups for following reasons:
- To share files or other resource with a small number of users
- Ease of user management
- Ease of user monitoring
- Group membership is perfect solution for large Linux (UNIX) installation.
- Group membership gives you or your user special access to files and directories or devices which are permitted to that group
How to read UNIX file /etc/passwd
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File
To search for a username called tom, enter:
/etc/passwd file permission
The permission on the /etc/passwd file should be read only to users
Output:
Your password is stored in /etc/shadow file
Your encrpted password is not stored in
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File
/etc/passwd
in UNIX contains one entry per line for each user (or user account) of the system. There are seven fields separated by a colon (:) symbol:- Username: It is used when user logs in. It should be between 1 and 32 characters in length.
- Password: An x character indicates that encrypted password is stored in
/etc/shadow
file. - User ID (UID): Each user must be assigned a user ID (UID). UID 0 (zero) is reserved for root and UIDs 1-99 are reserved for other predefined accounts. Further UID 100-999 are reserved by system for administrative and system accounts/groups.
- Group ID (GID): The primary group ID (stored in
/etc/group
file) - User ID Info: The comment field. It allows you to add extra information about the users such as user's full name, phone number etc. This field use by finger command.
- Home directory: The absolute path to the directory the user will be in when they log in. If this directory does not exists then users directory becomes /.
- Command/shell: The absolute path of a command or shell
(/bin/bash
). Typically, this is a shell. Please note that it does not have to be a shell.
$ cat /etc/passwd
To search for a username called tom, enter:
$ grep tom /etc/passwd
/etc/passwd file permission
The permission on the /etc/passwd file should be read only to users (-rw-r--r--)
and the owner must be root:$ ls -l /etc/passwd
Output:
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2659 Sep 17 01:46 /etc/passwd
Your password is stored in /etc/shadow file
Your encrpted password is not stored in /etc/passwd
file. It is stored in /etc/shadow
file. Almost, all modern Linux / UNIX line operating systems use some sort of the shadow password suite, where /etc/passwd
has asterisks (*) instead of encrypted passwords, and the encrypted passwords are in /etc/shadow which is readable by the superuser only.