Upon launching the software that comes with your dongle, ensure the following settings are intact. APN was initially set to dynamic. I have to manually change to static and under APN: I manually input "internet". If I do not do these and leave the settings as default ie. dynamic, I was able to VPN to office's network however I was unable to connect to servers via ssh or make use of its resources.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Can't connect to office servers after VPN using a mobile dongle
For those of you who are based in Singapore and sign up for a mobile broadband either with Singtel or StarHub (as I only got experienced with two of these), I am sharing how to connect to office's resources or servers after you dial your VPN.
Upon launching the software that comes with your dongle, ensure the following settings are intact. APN was initially set to dynamic. I have to manually change to static and under APN: I manually input "internet". If I do not do these and leave the settings as default ie. dynamic, I was able to VPN to office's network however I was unable to connect to servers via ssh or make use of its resources.
Upon launching the software that comes with your dongle, ensure the following settings are intact. APN was initially set to dynamic. I have to manually change to static and under APN: I manually input "internet". If I do not do these and leave the settings as default ie. dynamic, I was able to VPN to office's network however I was unable to connect to servers via ssh or make use of its resources.
Monday, August 12, 2013
Back to the basics
I was going through my monthly telco bill for mobile phone, home phone and home broadband usage. Gone are the days where lifestyle were so simple and easy going. I grew up where is a telephone at home. Those days either one of the family at home will utilize the phone for hours. Then in my high school days, I started to have 33.6 or 56K dialup Modem. US Robotics Modem is a popular and most robust equipment then. Everyone hope to have one at home to have the 'fastest' connection.
As I was looking at my telco's bill, the total cost is not cheap. It is like a person's pay for 1-day in a developed nation or a week's or a month's pay in an undeveloped nation. Nowadays we need data plan to goes with smart phone. So we can get 'smarter'. It add on cost more and more to our bills. The place I live in is getting more competitive for jobs. People from all over the world comes here. We are a globalized nation. People are free to move around. As I grow older and older, and one day if lost a job, I doubt I can sustain with all these high costs. I probably will switch to a prepaid card with no data plan and that would already be a luxury. I am paying two mobile phones, one myself and another for my wife. I doubt if she knows it is not cheap to be on data plan. If I am jobless, I will just go with the basic. Probably my next plan, would be carry a portable modem around and have minimum spending.
As I was looking at my telco's bill, the total cost is not cheap. It is like a person's pay for 1-day in a developed nation or a week's or a month's pay in an undeveloped nation. Nowadays we need data plan to goes with smart phone. So we can get 'smarter'. It add on cost more and more to our bills. The place I live in is getting more competitive for jobs. People from all over the world comes here. We are a globalized nation. People are free to move around. As I grow older and older, and one day if lost a job, I doubt I can sustain with all these high costs. I probably will switch to a prepaid card with no data plan and that would already be a luxury. I am paying two mobile phones, one myself and another for my wife. I doubt if she knows it is not cheap to be on data plan. If I am jobless, I will just go with the basic. Probably my next plan, would be carry a portable modem around and have minimum spending.
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
Oracle 12c multitenant (Part2)
One might be curious what's inside the CDB. To view information about a container in a CDB. As you can see there are four containers inside this CDB namely CDB$ROOT, PDB$SEED, PDB12c, SALESPDB.
NAME OPEN_MODE RESTRICTED OPEN_TIME
-------- ---------- ---------- ------------------------------
PDB$SEED READ ONLY NO 05-AUG-13 02.54.14.169 AM
PDB12C MOUNTED
SALESPDB READ WRITE NO 05-AUG-13 04.32.06.770 AM
Showing users in multiple PDB.
To display various datafiles
To show the tempfile
To show the services
I will write more on the cloning of PDB.
COLUMN NAME FORMAT A8 SELECT NAME, CON_ID, DBID, CON_UID, GUID FROM V$CONTAINERS ORDER BY CON_ID;
CON_ID DBID CON_UID GUID
-------- ------ ---------- ---------- --------------------------------
CDB$ROOT 1 4021232689 1 DD7C48AA5A4504A2E04325AAE80A403C
PDB$SEED 2 4065253802 4065253802 E32E698EA24E0CA2E043C83C16AC771B
PDB12C 3 474800360 474800360 E32E71077E390EC3E043C83C16AC372F
SALESPDB 4 2267593339 2267593339 E330F6DC0A04184BE043C83C16AC6564
To view the status,
COLUMN PDB_NAME FORMAT A15 SELECT PDB_ID, PDB_NAME, STATUS FROM DBA_PDBS ORDER BY PDB_ID;
PDB_ID PDB_NAME STATUS
------ --------------- -------------
2 PDB$SEED NORMAL
3 PDB12C NORMAL
4 SALESPDB NORMAL
COLUMN NAME FORMAT A15 COLUMN RESTRICTED FORMAT A10 COLUMN OPEN_TIME FORMAT A30 SELECT NAME, OPEN_MODE, RESTRICTED, OPEN_TIME FROM V$PDBS;
NAME OPEN_MODE RESTRICTED OPEN_TIME
-------- ---------- ---------- ------------------------------
PDB$SEED READ ONLY NO 05-AUG-13 02.54.14.169 AM
PDB12C MOUNTED
SALESPDB READ WRITE NO 05-AUG-13 04.32.06.770 AM
Showing users in multiple PDB.
COLUMN PDB_NAME FORMAT A15 COLUMN USERNAME FORMAT A30 SELECT p.PDB_ID, p.PDB_NAME, u.USERNAME FROM DBA_PDBS p, CDB_USERS u WHERE p.PDB_ID > 2 AND p.PDB_ID = u.CON_ID ORDER BY p.PDB_ID;
To display various datafiles
COLUMN PDB_ID FORMAT 999 COLUMN PDB_NAME FORMAT A8 COLUMN FILE_ID FORMAT 9999 COLUMN TABLESPACE_NAME FORMAT A10 COLUMN FILE_NAME FORMAT A45 SELECT p.PDB_ID, p.PDB_NAME, d.FILE_ID, d.TABLESPACE_NAME, d.FILE_NAME FROM DBA_PDBS p, CDB_DATA_FILES d WHERE p.PDB_ID = d.CON_ID ORDER BY p.PDB_ID;
To show the tempfile
COLUMN CON_ID FORMAT 999 COLUMN FILE_ID FORMAT 9999 COLUMN TABLESPACE_NAME FORMAT A15 COLUMN FILE_NAME FORMAT A45 SELECT CON_ID, FILE_ID, TABLESPACE_NAME, FILE_NAME FROM CDB_TEMP_FILES ORDER BY CON_ID;
To show the services
COLUMN NETWORK_NAME FORMAT A30 COLUMN PDB FORMAT A15 COLUMN CON_ID FORMAT 999 SELECT PDB, NETWORK_NAME, CON_ID FROM CDB_SERVICES WHERE PDB IS NOT NULL AND CON_ID > 2 ORDER BY PDB;
I will write more on the cloning of PDB.
Oracle 12c multitenant
Oracle has catch up with time. With the 12c revolutionary database release, no longer a single instance is limited to a server though many shops run multiple instances within a single server. However it prohibits the sharing of background processes. With 12c, one is able to sharing a server's resources eg: CPU, memory among different "instances".
Figure show the new 12c architecture design
Source: Oracle docs
In 12c, you create a CDB.
There's exactly one
Container: Can be a PDB, CDB
I downloaded the Oracle 12c database (12.1.0.1.0) from Oracle website for testing. There are two zip files for my Linux-x64 installation. It's about 2.4GB in size.
Extract the zip files, and perform the normal straight forward installation --> ./runInstaller
The installation was pretty quick it finished within 30mins in my environment. I used the DBCA to create a database for testing.
To verify that CDB is enabled:
show parameter enable_pluggable_database = TRUE (This is the value it should return)
In my next post, I will write about connections to the PDB and some verification commands.
Figure show the new 12c architecture design
Source: Oracle docs
In 12c, you create a CDB.
There's exactly one
- 1 CDB$ROOT (aka. the root).
- One PDB$SEED.
- Zero or more PDBs (ie. user created PDB)
Container: Can be a PDB, CDB
I downloaded the Oracle 12c database (12.1.0.1.0) from Oracle website for testing. There are two zip files for my Linux-x64 installation. It's about 2.4GB in size.
Extract the zip files, and perform the normal straight forward installation --> ./runInstaller
The installation was pretty quick it finished within 30mins in my environment. I used the DBCA to create a database for testing.
To verify that CDB is enabled:
show parameter enable_pluggable_database = TRUE (This is the value it should return)
In my next post, I will write about connections to the PDB and some verification commands.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Seagate 2TB 64MB 7200rpm
I got a Seagate 3.5" 2TB 64MB 7200rpm today to replace my old 500GB Seagate Baracuda 7200rpm. The hard disk is fitted to the Seagate Freeagent Xtreme.
http://www.seagate.com/support/external-hard-drives/desktop-hard-drives/freeagent-xtreme/
It was an upgrade as I reused the casing, just replacing the hard drive. I have it connected to a laptop via eSata interface and cable. By using CrystalDiskMark, this is the reading that I am getting. I encourage you share the reading if you have interesting findings.
vs
My internal 7200 2.5" 320GB hard disk
Not sure if these jargons make any sense, probably the first like on "Seq" means sequantial. I got an impressive 150.4Mb/s for read, 118.3Mb/s for write. Its is consider very good for a mechanical drive.
I did a test of copying a huge 10GB file into the hard drive. Previously with the old 500GB, I am getting probably around 80-90Mb/s transfer rate. With this new 2TB drive, I manage to move across 100Mb territory. It hovers around there.
Well in terms of operational, this is a silent drive. I don't even notice that it is switched on, on my desk.
I kinda of like this drive as I will use it to store and backup my files. If you pay slightly more, you might get a 128GB SSD. But that is completely a different comparison as these two products serve different purpose I would say.
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