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Full Discussion: [ask]oracle in freebsd
Operating Systems BSD [ask]oracle in freebsd Post 302652629 by angryfirelord on Thursday 7th of June 2012 11:46:29 AM
Old 06-07-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by zvtral
are you sure oracle in emulated linux freebsd not efficient ???so any ide for freebsd using database
It's not that the Linux emulation isn't efficient, it's just that it isn't supported. Unless this is just Oracle XE, I certainly wouldn't recommend spending thousands of dollars for a high end database and then run it on an untested platform. Not to mention that you're probably going to need Java too, which also doesn't have an official binary for FreeBSD. If you call Oracle for help, I'll guarantee you that they'll tell you to run it on a different operating system. If you need a database that runs on FreeBSD, the ports system has a category just for databases.

Personally, I would recommend PostgreSQL as it pretty much runs on Windows and most *nix systems. Unless you need something specific (such as heterogeneous services in Oracle), it seems to get good marks all around. Otherwise, your best bet is using RHEL, OEL, or a clone.
 

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capture-schema(1m)					    Application Server Utility						capture-schema(1m)

NAME
capture-schema - stores the database metadata (schema) in a file for use in mapping and execution SYNOPSIS
capture-schema-dburl url-username name- password password-driver a_jdbc_driver [-schemaname name] [-table tablename]* [-out filename] Stores the database metadata (schema) in a file. You can also use the Sun Java System Studio IDE to capture the database schema. Run cap- ture-schema as the same database user that owns the tables, so that the -username and -schemaname options are given the same username. Additionally, you can grant the database user running the capture-schema command the ANALYZE ANY TABLE privilege. OPTIONS
-dburl JDBC URL expected by the driver for accessing a database. -username user name for authenticating access to a database. -password password for accessing the selected database. -driver JDBC driver classname in your CLASSPATH. -schemaname name of the user schema being captured. If not specified, the default will capture metadata for all tables from all the schemas accessible to this user. Specifying this parameter is highly recommended. If more than one schema is accessible to this user, more than one table with the same name may be captured which will cause problems. -table name of the table; multiple table names can be specified. -out output target; defaults to stdout. This parameter corresponds to the schema sub-element of the sun-cmp-mapping ele- ment in the sun-cmp-mapping_1_1.dtd file. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Using capture-schema capture-schema -dburl jdbc:oracle:thin:@sadbuttrue:1521:ora817 -schemaname cantiflas -username CANTIFLAS -password enigma -driver oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver asadmin(1M) Sun Java System Application Server March 2004 capture-schema(1m)
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