Re: oracle 11.2 crs permission issue
From: Jeremy Schneider <jeremy.schneider_at_ardentperf.com>
Date: Fri, 02 Sep 2011 08:19:22 -0500
Message-ID: <4E60D7DA.5000703_at_ardentperf.com>
Sure... it would be easy if the oracle user could just access and backup everything - web servers, NFS shares, filesys config, etc... Clusterware is really a completely separate product, which manages many applications - of which the database is only one. Really backups should be managed under root, and the oracle-specific parts could be passed off to processes running as the oracle user. (The clusterware is not an oracle-specific part.) FWIW, I don't know of any other clusterware product on the market which can be backed up by a non-root user account. -J
Date: Fri, 02 Sep 2011 08:19:22 -0500
Message-ID: <4E60D7DA.5000703_at_ardentperf.com>
Sure... it would be easy if the oracle user could just access and backup everything - web servers, NFS shares, filesys config, etc... Clusterware is really a completely separate product, which manages many applications - of which the database is only one. Really backups should be managed under root, and the oracle-specific parts could be passed off to processes running as the oracle user. (The clusterware is not an oracle-specific part.) FWIW, I don't know of any other clusterware product on the market which can be backed up by a non-root user account. -J
On 9/2/2011 8:04 AM, TESTAJ3_at_nationwide.com wrote:
>
> I agree but you'd think oracle user would be able to have access to
> them. Its easier to back things up as oracle then to go thru the
> hassle of trying to do it as root.
>
> joe
-- http://www.ardentperf.com +1 312-725-9249 Jeremy Schneider Chicago -- http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-lReceived on Fri Sep 02 2011 - 08:19:22 CDT