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Mastering Oracle Scheduler in Oracle 11g Databases

You're reading from   Mastering Oracle Scheduler in Oracle 11g Databases Schedule, manage, and execute jobs in Oracle 11g Databases that automate your business processes using Oracle Scheduler with this book and eBook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2009
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781847195982
Length 240 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Ronald Rood Ronald Rood
Author Profile Icon Ronald Rood
Ronald Rood
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Mastering Oracle Scheduler in Oracle 11g Databases
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
1. Preface
1. Simple Jobs FREE CHAPTER 2. Simple Chain 3. Control the Scheduler 4. Managing Resources 5. Getting Out of the Database 6. Events 7. Debugging the Scheduler 8. The Scheduler in Real Life 9. Other Configurations 10. Scheduler GUI Tools

Chapter 6. Events

So far, we have mostly used jobs that ran immediately upon being enabled, or when we called the run_job procedure of the dbms_scheduler package. Many jobs are time-based; they are controlled by a schedule based on some kind of calendar.

However, not everything in real life can be controlled by a calendar. Many things need an action on an ad hoc basis, depending on the occurrence of some other thing. This is called event-based scheduling. Events also exist as the outcome of a job. We can define a job to raise an event in several ways—when it ends, or when it ends in an error, or when it does not end within the expected runtime. Let's start with creating job events in order to make job monitoring a lot easier for you.

In this chapter, we will see how events that are generated by a job or a chain step can be intercepted to enable the monitoring of jobs. After that, we will see how we can use events to start a job that is waiting for an event.

Monitoring job events

Most of the...

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