The Hunger Site
Showing posts with label Grid Architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grid Architecture. Show all posts

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Bangkok seminars on EM12c Cloud Control


Friends,

Here are some photos on the EM12c Cloud Control Overview/New Features seminar that I recently conducted in Bangkok Thailand, for Oracle customers in the morning followed by Oracle partners in the afternoon.

We covered the EM 12c Overview, Architecture, Database Lifecycle Management pack, Test Data Management pack, Oracle Cloud Overview, and New features of 12c in all of these. The updated PDF can be downloaded from this Mediafire link.

These are the customer seminar shots in the Crowne Plaza Hotel Meeting room:




This is the partner seminar shot in the Oracle office.


Regards,

Porus.


Friday, July 29, 2011

Publisher says Outstanding Orders to be filled soon

Friends,

I have heard back from the publisher today. They have printed enough copies to fill the demand. All outstanding orders should be filled within the next two weeks. The demand was higher than expected and caught them off guard. That is actually good news that the book is selling better than expected. Moving forward there will be sufficient copies available to satisfy everyone.

Thanks for the great support from all my readers.

You can place an order for the book by clicking on the title below. An out of stock warning may appear right now, but you can safely ignore that. A description of the book is as follows.

Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control: Advanced OEM Techniques for the Real World

Oracle’s Enterprise Manager Grid Control is recognized as the IT Industry’s leading Oracle stack (application to disk) administration and management tool. It is unrivalled in its ability to monitor, manage, maintain and report on entire enterprise grids that comprise hundreds (if not thousands) of Oracle databases, middle-ware and servers following an approach that is consistent and repeatable, as well as the Oracle Applications such as Oracle E-Business Suite, PeopleSoft, Siebel, and so on.

However, Enterprise Manager Grid Control may seem daunting even to the most advanced Oracle Administrator. The problem is you know about the power of Enterprise Manager but how do you unleash that power amongst what initially appears to be a maze of GUI-based screens that feature a myriad of links to reports and management tasks that in turn lead you to even more reports and management tasks?

This book shows you how to unleash that power.

Based on the Author’s considerable and practical Oracle database and Enterprise Manager Grid Control experience you will learn through illustrated examples how to create and schedule RMAN backups, generate Data Guard Standbys, clone databases and Oracle Homes and patch databases across hundreds and thousands of databases. You will learn how you can unlock the power of the Enterprise Manager Grid Control Packs, PlugIns and Connectors to simplify your database administration across your company’s database network, as also the management and monitoring of important Service Level Agreements (SLAs), and the nuances of all important real-time change control using Enterprise Manager.

There are other books on the market that describe how to install and configure Enterprise Manager but until now they haven’t explained using a simple and illustrated approach how to get the most out of your Enterprise Manager. This book does just that.

Regards,

Porus.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

New White Paper Published "Managing Oracle Applications with EM"

Friends,

I am pleased to announce that a brand new white paper of mine has been published this month (June 2011) on the Oracle Technical Network (OTN):

White Paper: Managing Oracle Applications with Oracle Enterprise Manager 11g

This white paper delves into the four Oracle Application Management Suites for Oracle’s E-Business Suite, Siebel, PeopleSoft and JD Edwards EnterpriseOne products and examines the many management capabilities that they offer for Oracle Applications. It is geared towards Oracle application managers and application administrators, with a goal to provide a clear understanding of the immense advantages and benefits the Application Management suites have to offer. It is a fantastic introduction to these powerful Application Management Suites of Oracle Enterprise Manager. Enjoy the world of Oracle EM !

Some comments in LinkedIn groups:

"Many congrats and really appreciate the efforts for the documentation on E-Biz related features. Highly informative. Its indeed a powerful EM :-)."

"Nice improvement over previous versions of EM! "

"This white paper is very useful for our jobs!"

"Hey .. Great white paper very valuable."

"Thanks for sharing this, very useful."

Thanks people for appreciating the white paper.

Regards,

Porus.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

My New EM11g Book is in stock now

I am pleased to say my first EM11g book is in stock and is being delivered now.
Thanks to all my readers for their patience. The book is not very expensive,
only $19.95 USD (30% off if ordered now).


Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control: Advanced OEM Techniques for the Real World

Oracle’s Enterprise Manager Grid Control is recognized as the IT Industry’s leading Oracle database administration and management tool. It is unrivalled in its ability to monitor, manage, maintain and report on entire enterprise grids that comprise hundreds (if not thousands) of Oracle databases and servers following an approach that is consistent and repeatable.

However, Enterprise Manager Grid Control may seem daunting even to the most advanced Oracle Administrator. The problem is you know about the power of Enterprise Manager but how do you unleash that power amongst what initially appears to be a maze of GUI-based screens that feature a myriad of links to reports and management tasks that in turn lead you to even more reports and management tasks?

This book shows you how to unleash that power.

Based on the Author’s considerable and practical Oracle database and Enterprise Manager Grid Control experience you will learn through illustrated examples how to create and schedule RMAN backups, generate Data Guard Standbys, clone databases and Oracle Homes and patch databases across hundreds and thousands of databases. You will learn how you can unlock the power of the Enterprise Manager Grid Control Packs, PlugIns and Connectors to simplify your database administration across your company’s database network, as also the management and monitoring of important Service Level Agreements (SLAs), and the nuances of all important real-time change control using Enterprise Manager.

There are other books on the market that describe how to install and configure Enterprise Manager but until now they haven’t explained using a simple and illustrated approach how to get the most out of your Enterprise Manager. This book does just that.

Covers the NEW Enterprise Manager Grid Control 11g.

Regards,

Porus.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Latest List of my Published White Papers and Technical Articles on OTN

Many of you have asked me for a full list of all my published technical articles/white papers on the Oracle Technical Network (OTN), for easy reference. Here is the latest list as of Oct 2012. I have placed the white papers at the top, and the articles are in chronological order in the article list. The latest article on Enterprise Manager Cloud Control 12c, published in October 2012, is right at the bottom of the list. A couple of these articles were even in the most popular OTN article list in 2009.

My Published White Papers on Oracle Technology Network (OTN)

Happy Reading

Saturday, March 6, 2010

More comments on Grid Control Book

Friends, here are a few more comments that I received on my upcoming book on Grid Control:

I read the briefing on OTN hope I buy the book and will see how it can help.
Between Grid, cloud and RAC the concept is still a bit cloudy.

Congratulation for this achievement & Thanks for telling. I will wait for
this to be available in market.

Porus, Its great to know that finally some one wrote a very valuable book
for all of us. But I would strongly recommend if you could add additionally
topics related to setting Events, alerts, strategies used in practical
production environments and also customizing the reports, Dashboards and adding
additional few steps to add layer of analytical queries (using the Metadata) to
create ITIL based reporting using various Mgmt repository tables. That way not
only DBA's can use GRID but it can help the Upper Management as well.

My reply:

Thanks guys. Great to know that you appreciate the book. Yes, definitely I have some ITIL content with customization of a few reports. I am not concentrating on events and alerts, I think every other book does that - they look at the "monitoring" aspects of Grid Control and seem to forget the "management" aspects. For eg. Service level management.

Friday, January 22, 2010

My New Grid Control book

Friends,

I am pleased to announce that my new book "Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control: Advanced OEM Techniques for the Real World" is getting ready to be published soon (Fall 2010) by Rampant Techpress:



http://www.rampant-books.com/book_1001_advanced_techniques_oem_grid_control.htm


Please do recommend to all your friends and colleagues, it is a great handy book if you really want to make best use of Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control.

I have based it on a lot of practical experience and I am sure it will be useful to a lot of you.

Regards,

Porus Homi Havewala
(Oracle ACE Director).

Monday, October 26, 2009

Security and Grid Control

A Senior Infrastructure Architect wrote:

"I am coming across distinct resistance towards using OEM Grid from those concerned with security around listener ports and data content - on a colocated management infrastructure (same data centre as the given databases)."

My reponse to this was:

"Any large corporate's security team does have quesions about Grid Control, but this is mainly due to lack of information. Grid Control is fully secure.

Firstly you can have the console protected by a security certificate (https), you can also have the traffic between the agent and the management service in https instead of http, and also it has two levels of security - first, the Grid control admin security (you have to create separate admins for target groups) and then the database login itself. The sysman password should be withheld from most users of Grid control.

If the security department wants tighter security, please recommend Oracle's Advanced Security Option which allow sql net encryption of all sql traffic and data encryption in the database. Regarding listener ports, you can password protect the listeners. Firewall needs to be opened up for certain other ports of Grid control.

We were using Grid Control in a large corporate site with more than 700 databases and found no issues.

Its a great product so do try to convince your security team. The benefits to the company are immense, and it also improves the life of the DBA teams - it leaves them with more quality time to do their senior DBA stuff, like architecture etc, instead of worrying about scripts for RMAN backups and the setup of Dataguard, or applying patches on multiple databases, which are just some examples of the many things automated by Grid Control. "


Sunday, September 6, 2009

Patch a Thousand Databases, Using Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control

I am happy to announce that a brand-new article of mine has been published on the Oracle Technology Network (OTN) on 3rd Sept 2009. The article is titled :

"Patch a Thousand Databases, Using Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control".

You can read the full article with all the illustrations at the following URL:

http://www.oracle.com/technology/pub/articles/havewala-patch1000.html

The article will allow you to "Get a tour of the automated patching capabilities now available to Oracle DBAs", especially the fantastic new Deployment Procedures.

Please read and tell your friends about it. I am sure you will find it very interesting.

I have received many good comments about this article, one of them on a LINKEDIN.COM Oracle discussion group was from a DBA Team Leader:

"Great article. Very comprehensive with screenshots and covers every details
in patching thru the Grid Control. A must read for every DBA. Thanks."

Friday, April 10, 2009

Oracle's Dev2DBA Newsletter of April 2009

Oracle's Dev2DBA Newsletter of April 2009 features in this issue:
"One Console to Rule Them All" - Oracle Enterprise Manager 10g Grid Control Release 5". In this newsletter, Justin Kestelyn, Editor-in-Chief, OTN, mentions:

"From admins of the Oracle stack, Oracle Enterprise Manager 10g Grid Control Release 5 is receiving the warmest welcome. With a new slate of database- and application-lifecycle management capabilities - including new support for Oracle WebLogic Server, Oracle Coherence, and Oracle VM - Release 5 takes cost-saving IT stack management to a new level."

This newsletter also mentions my article on Grid Control:

"Tech Article: Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control Architecture for Very Large Sites
Need to guarantee high scalability for Enterprise Manager Grid Control? This architecture, described by Oracle ACE Director Porus Homi Havewala based on real-world experiences, may be for you."

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Recently Published Article on OTN

Please read "Grid Control Architecture for Very Large Sites":

http://www.oracle.com/technology/pub/articles/havewala-gridcontrol.html

This is an article of mine that was published today on OTN.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Grid Control Levels of Security

A large site told me that their engineering team is concerned that once you login to Grid Control, "you are able to observe and manage all databases in the company and that is a security risk".

We need to make these people aware that there are two levels of security in Grid Control. First you login to the Grid Console using either the "sysman" login (not recommended for large sites, the sysman schema is the owner of the Grid Control repository) or a Grid Control Administrator login (recommended), and then you must also logon to the database.

So it is not possible that a login at the console is able to manage all databases in the whole compnay, unless some has saved the password for all databases when logging on. The rule of course is, never save the database password for the Dba user - always force a logon.

The second point to note is, we are able to create Target Groups in Grid control. Each database, listener, and host is a target. So we can group together targets and then assign to Grid Control Administrators that we can create easily on the console.

The DBA then logins to Grid Control using the partitcular console administrator login that is assigned to him/her. Such an admin is not sysman, so he/she can only see and manage the targets in the target group that is assigned to that console administrator. So it is not possible that a console login can even see all targets in the company, unless of course the login is the sysman, or the login is a console admin that has been purposely assigned ALL targets.

This I have been explaining to many clients in the past 3-4 years as a consultant, and even before that to project teams and the security team in my past companies.

You have the security capability, and you should use it. Take the case of a database - you can easily have all schemas assigned the DBA role, and I have seen that done by many development outfits just as a shortcut. Or you can have proper role-level security set up at the database level. So, just because every schema has been set up by a developer as a DBA, does it mean there is no security in the database? The truth is, there is enough security, and we should know the way to use it.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Grid Control Architecture Podcast

Friends, Please listen to my first podcast on my real-life experienceswith Grid Control architecture in large sites. Let me know your feedback.

Disclaimer

Opinions expressed in this blog are entirely the opinions of the writers of this blog, and do not reflect the position of Oracle corporation. No responsiblity will be taken for any resulting effects if any of the instructions or notes in the blog are followed. It is at the reader's own risk and liability.

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