Oracle8i Reference Release 2 (8.1.6) Part Number A76961-01 |
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This reference provides reference information about Oracle8i for all operating systems.
Oracle8i Reference contains information about the features and functionality of the Oracle8i and the Oracle8i Enterprise Edition products. Oracle8i and Oracle8i Enterprise Edition have the same basic features. However, several advanced features are available only with the Enterprise Edition, and some of these are optional.
See Also:
Getting to Know Oracle8i for information about the differences between Oracle8i and the Oracle8i Enterprise Edition and the available features and options. That book also describes all the features that are new in Oracle8i. |
This reference is intended for database administrators, system administrators, and database application developers.
This reference is not an installation or migration guide. If your primary interest is installation, refer to your operating system-specific Oracle documentation. If your primary interest is database and application migration, refer to Oracle8i Migration.
This reference describes the architecture, processes, structures, and other concepts of Oracle8i, but it does not explain how to administer an Oracle server. For that information, see the Oracle8i Administrator's Guide.
Experienced users of Oracle and advanced database application designers will find information in this reference useful. However, database application developers should also refer to the Oracle8i Application Developer's Guide - Fundamentals and to the documentation for the tool or language product they are using to develop Oracle database applications.
Readers of this reference should be familiar with relational database concepts, basic Oracle concepts, and with the operating system environment in which they are running Oracle.
The following initialization parameters are new in this release of the documentation:
The following data dictionary views are new in this release of the documentation:
The following SQL scripts are new in this release of the documentation:
This manual is organized as follows:
This chapter describes the database initialization parameters you can specify in the parameter file to start or configure an instance.
This chapter describes the Oracle data dictionary tables and views, also known as static views.
This chapter describes the dynamic performance views, also known as the V$ views.
This chapter lists the limits of values associated with database functions and objects.
This chapter describes the SQL scripts that are required for optimal operation of the Oracle server.
This appendix describes some event names, wait times, and parameters for wait events displayed by the V$SESSION_WAIT
and V$SYSTEM_EVENT
views.
This appendix lists some enqueues used by Oracle8i.
This appendix describes some statistics stored in the V$SESSION_WAIT
and V$SYSSTAT
dynamic performance table.
The following sections describe the conventions used in this manual.
The text of this manual uses the following conventions.
Uppercase text is used to call attention to command keywords, database object names, parameters, filenames, and so on.
For example, "After inserting the default value, Oracle checks the foreign key integrity constraint defined on the DEPTNO
column," or "If you create a private rollback segment, the name must be included in the ROLLBACK_SEGMENTS
initialization parameter."
Italicized words within text are book titles or emphasized words.
Commands or statements of SQL, Oracle Enterprise Manager line mode, and SQL*Plus appear in a monospaced font.
For example:
INSERT INTO emp (empno, ename) VALUES (1000, 'SMITH'); ALTER TABLESPACE users ADD DATAFILE 'users2.ora' SIZE 50K;
Example statements may include punctuation, such as commas or quotation marks. All punctuation in example statements is required. All example statements terminate with a semicolon (;). Depending on the application, a semicolon or other terminator may or may not be required to end a statement.
UPPERCASE
in Code Examples Uppercase words in example statements indicate the keywords within Oracle SQL. When you issue statements, however, keywords are not case sensitive.
lowercase
in Code Examples Lowercase words in example statements indicate words supplied only for the context of the example. For example, lowercase words may indicate the name of a table, column, or file.
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