Please refer to Running up.time with an Oracle database for details on the general permissions required to run up.time with an Oracle database.
As a minimum, the uptime user account requires Connect permission to the Oracle database as well as the following Oracle system privileges:
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What permissions does up.time require for ESX monitoring? | Rating | Views | |
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We recommend using the root account for ESX 3 monitoring. If the root account is not available you can add a user for up.time using the instructions below.1. SSH login to the ESX system as root2. C... By: uptime Support | Date Created: 7-7-2008 | Last Modified: 8-12-2011 | Index: 309 |
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Running up.time with an Oracle database | Rating | Views | |
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By: uptime Support | Date Created: 1-16-2006 | Last Modified: 7-22-2014 | Index: 053 |
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Understanding your Oracle Connection Settings | Rating | Views | |
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This article outlines how you can use the information in the Oracle TNS connection string to populate database-specific fields that need to be set in the uptime.conf file. By: uptime Support | Date Created: 2-27-2007 | Last Modified: 6-30-2011 | Index: 146 |
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Oracle Advanced Metrics service monitor | Rating | Views | |
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This article outlines the performance metrics that the up.time Oracle Advanced Metrics monitor collects from an Oracle database. By: uptime Support | Date Created: 1-23-2007 | Last Modified: 7-4-2011 | Index: 121 |
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How do I set user permissions? | Rating | Views | |
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To control what actions a user can take in the up.time interface you must define a User Role that sets the action permission and then assign that role to an existing User. 1. On the up.time tool... By: uptime Support | Date Created: 12-31-1969 | Last Modified: 8-25-2011 | Index: 338 |
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