The Correct Space Between You And Your Monitors
Something that always crossed my mind was the space between your monitors and where you are seated. How far exactly are you supposed to be positioned from your speakers in order to read and hear correctly. Most producers would comment that people produce in all types of environments, headphone close rang monitors, far range monitors. But what exactly is the ideal space between you and your speakers? To look into this issued even more closely each speaker is designed differently, there for you cannot look at them all equal as far as performance is concerned.
How far are you away from your speakers?
dude it depends what you want
I got mine at about 1-meter to 1.5-meters at my home studio
at the big studio i've got two pairs of monitors in there and they both 1.5 meters
other people will go as far as 3-meters, in your case get abit closer as you said before that your room is not acoustically treated there for sitting too far away will give you a mix of 50% of the speakers and 50% of the room
but you need 80% of the speakers and 20% of the room
ps: don't just leave this topic alone and start another one, because its annoying when people don't if you've been help or not and they keep trying to help you
and people also don't know if you are reading your post or your just using it as an amusement forum just for fun on your lunch breaks
so please reply back and let people know if they've helped
stash
Similar Messages
-
How do you change the setting in iTunes for the time-space between songs in your playlist?
I need help changing my setting in iTunes, the time-space between songs. In setting up iTunes I selected the "three-second" and now wish I'd selected "five-seconds". Any help will be appreciated. Thanks.
Thank you Chris.
This was not the exact solution for my problem but by misreading your instructions I accidentally found the answer. Just as simple as you suggest. I had already ensured the Crossfade was unchecked in iTunes. What had actually changed with the last software update was the settings on my ipod. I can't believe I never checked this before.
The solution:
ipod settings > Playback
Audio Crossfade = "Off" -
How do I clear the blank space between content and footer?
In the process of revising a Muse website, I deleted some content from one of the pages and revised the content that remained on the page. Now I have a blank area between the bottom of the revised content and the top of the footer, and I can't seem to get rid of the blank space. It doesn't appear that there are any text blocks or other images in that area, so I can't find any objects to delete. Help?
The website is currently published in a draft mode for client review. You can examine it at: http://page7creative.com/clients/coremove_jun2012draft/retreats.html. The page in question is the Retreats page. Restarting Muse made no difference. I work on the Mac platform.
Before I sent this post, I decided to try creating a new page, then copy/paste the content onto the new page, and save the Muse site under a different name. Lo and behold, the page (and the site) works like it should...without any extra space above the footer on that page. It would appear that something went astray when I deleted content on that page. I can use the new page to get the site working properly, but decided to go ahead and send this post so that you can look at the page code and perhaps see what is wrong that is causing the blank space...in case I ever run into this again.
Thank you.
pyxis83Thanks for sending your file.
There is a graphic at the bottom of the content area of the Retreats page that's been cropped to a size of zero width and 2 pixels in width.
Unfortunately, there's a bug with pointer tool drag selection (aka marque selection) that prevents it from selecting an item that has zero width or zero height. Therefore the easiest way to select this item to delete it is to select any other item on the page, then hit the tab key repeatedly to cycle through every item on the page. When you get to this item you should see a little pile of selection handles at the left edge of the third column and right at the bottom of the content area. The width and height will display as zero and 2. Delete this item and the page will resize to fit the remaining content. -
Is there a way to store a wi-fi password on an ipad and then copy and paste it into the proper space when you want to connect to your password proctected newwor? (the password is 31 random characters)
Yes, if both the Mac and iPad are setup using the same iCloud account, then any notes you enter on the Mac will be synced across to the iPad almost instantly.
Same occurs with the 1Password app I mentioned. If you have both the Mac and iPad versions of it, and setup either iCloud or Dropbox syncing, any passwords entered on the Mac will be synced to the app running on the iPad ready for copying and pasting. This would be the most secure method, but not the cheapest. -
ive recently purchased an i phone. i have an ipod with and account. while trying to access i tunes or apps for purchase, i am able to log in, but then it asks me to validate my info. so i do. same credit card, card number, sec code. billing address, everything that is used on my ipod. then i try to verify and it says....we couldn't verify your address. make sure you've entered the correct street, city state, and postal code. please help.
I'm suddenly having this same problem. I've had the other problem for a month or two where I had to reverify my payment info every day, and now when I do that I can't because it says the address that's been in there for 5 years is now unable to be verified. Anyone else? Any suggestions?
-
What is the best way to create the correct space for baseball jersey names and numbers? along with making sure they are the right size for large printing.
Buying more hard drive space is a very valid option, here. Editing takes up lots of room, you should never discount the idea of adding more when you need it.
Another possibility is exporting to MXF OP1a using the AVC-I codec. It's not lossless, but it is Master quality. Plus the file size is a LOT smaller, so it may suit your needs. -
If you enter your password on the ipad too many times and your sim card locks, is there a way of recovery without replacing the sim card?
That doesn't lock the SIM card, it just locks you out of the device.
If you forgot (or don't know) your passcode, restore the device from backup on the last computer it was synced with when the passcode was turned on... this will remove the passcode. If you do not have access to the last computer it was synced with, you will have to force it into recovery mode & restore as a new device.
See this for more info... http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1212 -
Need to remove the space between Menu and the Inner screen
Hi
I am using forms 10G.
In my screen there is some space is coming in between menu and the inner screen and also same in the left side as well .
So can any one tell me which parameter I need to change so that the inner screen should display just below to the menu and same for the left side as well ?Hi
Yes , If I change that then it is woring fine .
But my question is :- I have 10 forms in server , and in 2 forms I have changed some functionalty then I have FTP it to server .
Now all the forms are coming with some spaces between menu and inner screen . This is what I am little confused . -
Hi,when click on a file, immediately a box appears around the file and the title of the file is read !so how is it possible to escape from the voice?Thank you for your advice
Turn off Voiceover!
System Preferences/Universal Access -
How to set the correct shared pool size and db_buffer_cache using awr
Hi All,
I want to how to set the correct size for shared_pool_size and db_cache_size using shared pool advisory and buffer pool advisory of awr report. I have paste the shared and buffer pool advisory of awr report.
Shared Pool Advisory
* SP: Shared Pool Est LC: Estimated Library Cache Factr: Factor
* Note there is often a 1:Many correlation between a single logical object in the Library Cache, and the physical number of memory objects associated with it. Therefore comparing the number of Lib Cache objects (e.g. in v$librarycache), with the number of Lib Cache Memory Objects is invalid.
Shared Pool Size(M) SP Size Factr Est LC Size (M) Est LC Mem Obj Est LC Time Saved (s) Est LC Time Saved Factr Est LC Load Time (s) Est LC Load Time Factr Est LC Mem Obj Hits (K)
4,096 1.00 471 25,153 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,069
4,736 1.16 511 27,328 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
5,248 1.28 511 27,346 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
5,760 1.41 511 27,346 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
6,272 1.53 511 27,346 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
6,784 1.66 511 27,346 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
7,296 1.78 511 27,346 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
7,808 1.91 511 27,346 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
8,320 2.03 511 27,346 184,206 1.00 149 1.00 9,766
Buffer Pool Advisory
* Only rows with estimated physical reads >0 are displayed
* ordered by Block Size, Buffers For Estimate
P Size for Est (M) Size Factor Buffers (thousands) Est Phys Read Factor Estimated Phys Reads (thousands) Est Phys Read Time Est %DBtime for Rds
D 4,096 0.10 485 1.02 1,002 1 0.00
D 8,192 0.20 970 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 12,288 0.30 1,454 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 16,384 0.40 1,939 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 20,480 0.50 2,424 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 24,576 0.60 2,909 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 28,672 0.70 3,394 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 32,768 0.80 3,878 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 36,864 0.90 4,363 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 40,960 1.00 4,848 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 45,056 1.10 5,333 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 49,152 1.20 5,818 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 53,248 1.30 6,302 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 57,344 1.40 6,787 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 61,440 1.50 7,272 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 65,536 1.60 7,757 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 69,632 1.70 8,242 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 73,728 1.80 8,726 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 77,824 1.90 9,211 1.00 987 1 0.00
D 81,920 2.00 9,696 1.00 987 1 0.00
My shared pool size is 4gb and db_cache_size is 40Gb.
Please help me in configuring the correct size for this.
Thanks and Regards,Hi ,
Actually batch load is taking too much time.
Please find below the 1 hr awr report
Snap Id Snap Time Sessions Cursors/Session
Begin Snap: 6557 27-Nov-11 16:00:06 126 1.3
End Snap: 6558 27-Nov-11 17:00:17 130 1.6
Elapsed: 60.17 (mins)
DB Time: 34.00 (mins)
Report Summary
Cache Sizes
Begin End
Buffer Cache: 40,960M 40,960M Std Block Size: 8K
Shared Pool Size: 4,096M 4,096M Log Buffer: 25,908K
Load Profile
Per Second Per Transaction Per Exec Per Call
DB Time(s): 0.6 1.4 0.00 0.07
DB CPU(s): 0.5 1.2 0.00 0.06
Redo size: 281,296.9 698,483.4
Logical reads: 20,545.6 51,016.4
Block changes: 1,879.5 4,667.0
Physical reads: 123.7 307.2
Physical writes: 66.4 164.8
User calls: 8.2 20.4
Parses: 309.4 768.4
Hard parses: 8.5 21.2
W/A MB processed: 1.7 4.3
Logons: 0.7 1.6
Executes: 1,235.9 3,068.7
Rollbacks: 0.0 0.0
Transactions: 0.4
Instance Efficiency Percentages (Target 100%)
Buffer Nowait %: 100.00 Redo NoWait %: 100.00
Buffer Hit %: 99.66 In-memory Sort %: 100.00
Library Hit %: 99.19 Soft Parse %: 97.25
Execute to Parse %: 74.96 Latch Hit %: 99.97
Parse CPU to Parse Elapsd %: 92.41 % Non-Parse CPU: 98.65
Shared Pool Statistics
Begin End
Memory Usage %: 80.33 82.01
% SQL with executions>1: 90.90 86.48
% Memory for SQL w/exec>1: 90.10 86.89
Top 5 Timed Foreground Events
Event Waits Time(s) Avg wait (ms) % DB time Wait Class
DB CPU 1,789 87.72
db file sequential read 27,531 50 2 2.45 User I/O
db file scattered read 26,322 30 1 1.47 User I/O
row cache lock 1,798 20 11 0.96 Concurrency
OJVM: Generic 36 15 421 0.74 Other
Host CPU (CPUs: 24 Cores: 12 Sockets: )
Load Average Begin Load Average End %User %System %WIO %Idle
0.58 1.50 2.8 0.7 0.1 96.6
Instance CPU
%Total CPU %Busy CPU %DB time waiting for CPU (Resource Manager)
2.2 63.6 0.0
Memory Statistics
Begin End
Host Mem (MB): 131,072.0 131,072.0
SGA use (MB): 50,971.4 50,971.4
PGA use (MB): 545.5 1,066.3
% Host Mem used for SGA+PGA: 39.30 39.70
RAC Statistics
Begin End
Number of Instances: 2 2
Global Cache Load Profile
Per Second Per Transaction
Global Cache blocks received: 3.09 7.68
Global Cache blocks served: 1.86 4.62
GCS/GES messages received: 78.64 195.27
GCS/GES messages sent: 53.82 133.65
DBWR Fusion writes: 0.52 1.30
Estd Interconnect traffic (KB) 65.50
Global Cache Efficiency Percentages (Target local+remote 100%)
Buffer access - local cache %: 99.65
Buffer access - remote cache %: 0.02
Buffer access - disk %: 0.34
Global Cache and Enqueue Services - Workload Characteristics
Avg global enqueue get time (ms): 0.0
Avg global cache cr block receive time (ms): 1.7
Avg global cache current block receive time (ms): 1.0
Avg global cache cr block build time (ms): 0.0
Avg global cache cr block send time (ms): 0.0
Global cache log flushes for cr blocks served %: 1.4
Avg global cache cr block flush time (ms): 0.9
Avg global cache current block pin time (ms): 0.0
Avg global cache current block send time (ms): 0.0
Global cache log flushes for current blocks served %: 0.1
Avg global cache current block flush time (ms): 0.0
Global Cache and Enqueue Services - Messaging Statistics
Avg message sent queue time (ms): 0.0
Avg message sent queue time on ksxp (ms): 0.4
Avg message received queue time (ms): 0.5
Avg GCS message process time (ms): 0.0
Avg GES message process time (ms): 0.0
% of direct sent messages: 79.13
% of indirect sent messages: 17.10
% of flow controlled messages: 3.77
Cluster Interconnect
Begin End
Interface IP Address Pub Source IP Pub Src
en9 10.51.10.61 N Oracle Cluster Repository
Main Report
* Report Summary
* Wait Events Statistics
* SQL Statistics
* Instance Activity Statistics
* IO Stats
* Buffer Pool Statistics
* Advisory Statistics
* Wait Statistics
* Undo Statistics
* Latch Statistics
* Segment Statistics
* Dictionary Cache Statistics
* Library Cache Statistics
* Memory Statistics
* Streams Statistics
* Resource Limit Statistics
* Shared Server Statistics
* init.ora Parameters
More RAC Statistics
* RAC Report Summary
* Global Messaging Statistics
* Global CR Served Stats
* Global CURRENT Served Stats
* Global Cache Transfer Stats
* Interconnect Stats
* Dynamic Remastering Statistics
Back to Top
Statistic Name Time (s) % of DB Time
sql execute elapsed time 1,925.20 94.38
DB CPU 1,789.38 87.72
connection management call elapsed time 99.65 4.89
PL/SQL execution elapsed time 89.81 4.40
parse time elapsed 46.32 2.27
hard parse elapsed time 25.01 1.23
Java execution elapsed time 21.24 1.04
PL/SQL compilation elapsed time 11.92 0.58
failed parse elapsed time 9.37 0.46
hard parse (sharing criteria) elapsed time 8.71 0.43
sequence load elapsed time 0.06 0.00
repeated bind elapsed time 0.02 0.00
hard parse (bind mismatch) elapsed time 0.01 0.00
DB time 2,039.77
background elapsed time 122.00
background cpu time 113.42
Statistic Value End Value
NUM_LCPUS 0
NUM_VCPUS 0
AVG_BUSY_TIME 12,339
AVG_IDLE_TIME 348,838
AVG_IOWAIT_TIME 221
AVG_SYS_TIME 2,274
AVG_USER_TIME 9,944
BUSY_TIME 299,090
IDLE_TIME 8,375,051
IOWAIT_TIME 6,820
SYS_TIME 57,512
USER_TIME 241,578
LOAD 1 2
OS_CPU_WAIT_TIME 312,200
PHYSICAL_MEMORY_BYTES 137,438,953,472
NUM_CPUS 24
NUM_CPU_CORES 12
GLOBAL_RECEIVE_SIZE_MAX 1,310,720
GLOBAL_SEND_SIZE_MAX 1,310,720
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_DEFAULT 16,384
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_MAX 9,223,372,036,854,775,807
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_MIN 4,096
TCP_SEND_SIZE_DEFAULT 16,384
TCP_SEND_SIZE_MAX 9,223,372,036,854,775,807
TCP_SEND_SIZE_MIN 4,096
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Operating System Statistics - Detail
Snap Time Load %busy %user %sys %idle %iowait
27-Nov 16:00:06 0.58
27-Nov 17:00:17 1.50 3.45 2.79 0.66 96.55 0.08
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Foreground Wait Class
* s - second, ms - millisecond - 1000th of a second
* ordered by wait time desc, waits desc
* %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
* Captured Time accounts for 95.7% of Total DB time 2,039.77 (s)
* Total FG Wait Time: 163.14 (s) DB CPU time: 1,789.38 (s)
Wait Class Waits %Time -outs Total Wait Time (s) Avg wait (ms) %DB time
DB CPU 1,789 87.72
User I/O 61,229 0 92 1 4.49
Other 102,743 40 31 0 1.50
Concurrency 3,169 10 24 7 1.16
Cluster 58,920 0 11 0 0.52
System I/O 45,407 0 6 0 0.29
Configuration 107 7 1 5 0.03
Commit 383 0 0 1 0.01
Network 15,275 0 0 0 0.00
Application 52 8 0 0 0.00
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Foreground Wait Events
* s - second, ms - millisecond - 1000th of a second
* Only events with Total Wait Time (s) >= .001 are shown
* ordered by wait time desc, waits desc (idle events last)
* %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
Event Waits %Time -outs Total Wait Time (s) Avg wait (ms) Waits /txn % DB time
db file sequential read 27,531 0 50 2 18.93 2.45
db file scattered read 26,322 0 30 1 18.10 1.47
row cache lock 1,798 0 20 11 1.24 0.96
OJVM: Generic 36 42 15 421 0.02 0.74
db file parallel read 394 0 7 19 0.27 0.36
control file sequential read 22,248 0 6 0 15.30 0.28
reliable message 4,439 0 4 1 3.05 0.18
gc current grant busy 7,597 0 3 0 5.22 0.16
PX Deq: Slave Session Stats 2,661 0 3 1 1.83 0.16
DFS lock handle 3,208 0 3 1 2.21 0.16
direct path write temp 4,842 0 3 1 3.33 0.15
library cache load lock 39 0 3 72 0.03 0.14
gc cr multi block request 37,008 0 3 0 25.45 0.14
IPC send completion sync 5,451 0 2 0 3.75 0.10
gc cr block 2-way 4,669 0 2 0 3.21 0.09
enq: PS - contention 3,183 33 1 0 2.19 0.06
gc cr grant 2-way 5,151 0 1 0 3.54 0.06
direct path read temp 1,722 0 1 1 1.18 0.05
gc current block 2-way 1,807 0 1 0 1.24 0.03
os thread startup 6 0 1 108 0.00 0.03
name-service call wait 12 0 1 47 0.01 0.03
PX Deq: Signal ACK RSG 2,046 50 0 0 1.41 0.02
log file switch completion 3 0 0 149 0.00 0.02
rdbms ipc reply 3,610 0 0 0 2.48 0.02
gc current grant 2-way 1,432 0 0 0 0.98 0.02
library cache pin 903 32 0 0 0.62 0.02
PX Deq: reap credit 35,815 100 0 0 24.63 0.01
log file sync 383 0 0 1 0.26 0.01
Disk file operations I/O 405 0 0 0 0.28 0.01
library cache lock 418 3 0 0 0.29 0.01
kfk: async disk IO 23,159 0 0 0 15.93 0.01
gc current block busy 4 0 0 35 0.00 0.01
gc current multi block request 1,206 0 0 0 0.83 0.01
ges message buffer allocation 38,526 0 0 0 26.50 0.00
enq: FB - contention 131 0 0 0 0.09 0.00
undo segment extension 8 100 0 6 0.01 0.00
CSS initialization 8 0 0 6 0.01 0.00
SQL*Net message to client 14,600 0 0 0 10.04 0.00
enq: HW - contention 96 0 0 0 0.07 0.00
CSS operation: action 8 0 0 4 0.01 0.00
gc cr block busy 33 0 0 1 0.02 0.00
latch free 30 0 0 1 0.02 0.00
enq: TM - contention 49 6 0 0 0.03 0.00
enq: JQ - contention 19 100 0 1 0.01 0.00
SQL*Net more data to client 666 0 0 0 0.46 0.00
asynch descriptor resize 3,179 100 0 0 2.19 0.00
latch: shared pool 3 0 0 3 0.00 0.00
CSS operation: query 24 0 0 0 0.02 0.00
PX Deq: Signal ACK EXT 72 0 0 0 0.05 0.00
KJC: Wait for msg sends to complete 269 0 0 0 0.19 0.00
latch: object queue header operation 4 0 0 1 0.00 0.00
gc cr block congested 5 0 0 0 0.00 0.00
utl_file I/O 11 0 0 0 0.01 0.00
enq: TO - contention 3 33 0 0 0.00 0.00
SQL*Net message from client 14,600 0 219,478 15033 10.04
jobq slave wait 7,726 100 3,856 499 5.31
PX Deq: Execution Msg 10,556 19 50 5 7.26
PX Deq: Execute Reply 2,946 31 27 9 2.03
PX Deq: Parse Reply 3,157 35 3 1 2.17
PX Deq: Join ACK 2,976 28 2 1 2.05
PX Deq Credit: send blkd 7 14 0 4 0.00
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Background Wait Events
* ordered by wait time desc, waits desc (idle events last)
* Only events with Total Wait Time (s) >= .001 are shown
* %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
Event Waits %Time -outs Total Wait Time (s) Avg wait (ms) Waits /txn % bg time
os thread startup 140 0 13 90 0.10 10.35
db file parallel write 8,233 0 6 1 5.66 5.08
log file parallel write 3,906 0 6 1 2.69 4.62
log file sequential read 350 0 5 16 0.24 4.49
control file sequential read 13,737 0 5 0 9.45 3.72
DFS lock handle 2,990 27 2 1 2.06 1.43
db file sequential read 921 0 2 2 0.63 1.39
SQL*Net break/reset to client 18 0 1 81 0.01 1.19
control file parallel write 2,455 0 1 1 1.69 1.12
ges lms sync during dynamic remastering and reconfig 24 100 1 50 0.02 0.98
library cache load lock 35 0 1 24 0.02 0.68
ASM file metadata operation 3,483 0 1 0 2.40 0.65
enq: CO - master slave det 1,203 100 1 0 0.83 0.46
kjbdrmcvtq lmon drm quiesce: ping completion 9 0 1 62 0.01 0.46
enq: WF - contention 11 0 0 35 0.01 0.31
CGS wait for IPC msg 32,702 100 0 0 22.49 0.19
gc object scan 28,788 100 0 0 19.80 0.15
row cache lock 535 0 0 0 0.37 0.14
library cache pin 370 55 0 0 0.25 0.12
ksxr poll remote instances 19,119 100 0 0 13.15 0.11
name-service call wait 6 0 0 19 0.00 0.10
gc current block 2-way 304 0 0 0 0.21 0.09
gc cr block 2-way 267 0 0 0 0.18 0.08
gc cr grant 2-way 355 0 0 0 0.24 0.08
ges LMON to get to FTDONE 3 100 0 24 0.00 0.06
enq: CF - contention 145 76 0 0 0.10 0.05
PX Deq: reap credit 8,842 100 0 0 6.08 0.05
reliable message 126 0 0 0 0.09 0.05
db file scattered read 19 0 0 3 0.01 0.05
library cache lock 162 1 0 0 0.11 0.04
latch: shared pool 2 0 0 27 0.00 0.04
Disk file operations I/O 504 0 0 0 0.35 0.04
gc current grant busy 148 0 0 0 0.10 0.04
gcs log flush sync 84 0 0 1 0.06 0.04
ges message buffer allocation 24,934 0 0 0 17.15 0.02
enq: CR - block range reuse ckpt 83 0 0 0 0.06 0.02
latch free 22 0 0 1 0.02 0.02
CSS operation: action 13 0 0 2 0.01 0.02
CSS initialization 4 0 0 6 0.00 0.02
direct path read 1 0 0 21 0.00 0.02
rdbms ipc reply 153 0 0 0 0.11 0.01
db file parallel read 2 0 0 8 0.00 0.01
direct path write 5 0 0 3 0.00 0.01
gc current multi block request 49 0 0 0 0.03 0.01
gc current block busy 5 0 0 2 0.00 0.01
enq: PS - contention 24 50 0 0 0.02 0.01
gc cr multi block request 54 0 0 0 0.04 0.01
ges generic event 1 100 0 10 0.00 0.01
gc current grant 2-way 35 0 0 0 0.02 0.01
kfk: async disk IO 183 0 0 0 0.13 0.01
Log archive I/O 3 0 0 2 0.00 0.01
gc buffer busy acquire 2 0 0 3 0.00 0.00
LGWR wait for redo copy 123 0 0 0 0.08 0.00
IPC send completion sync 18 0 0 0 0.01 0.00
enq: TA - contention 11 0 0 0 0.01 0.00
read by other session 2 0 0 2 0.00 0.00
enq: TM - contention 9 89 0 0 0.01 0.00
latch: ges resource hash list 135 0 0 0 0.09 0.00
PX Deq: Slave Session Stats 12 0 0 0 0.01 0.00
KJC: Wait for msg sends to complete 89 0 0 0 0.06 0.00
enq: TD - KTF dump entries 8 0 0 0 0.01 0.00
enq: US - contention 7 0 0 0 0.00 0.00
CSS operation: query 12 0 0 0 0.01 0.00
enq: TK - Auto Task Serialization 6 100 0 0 0.00 0.00
PX Deq: Signal ACK RSG 24 50 0 0 0.02 0.00
log file single write 6 0 0 0 0.00 0.00
enq: WL - contention 2 100 0 1 0.00 0.00
ADR block file read 13 0 0 0 0.01 0.00
ADR block file write 5 0 0 0 0.00 0.00
latch: object queue header operation 1 0 0 1 0.00 0.00
gc cr block busy 1 0 0 1 0.00 0.00
rdbms ipc message 103,276 67 126,259 1223 71.03
PX Idle Wait 6,467 67 12,719 1967 4.45
wait for unread message on broadcast channel 7,240 100 7,221 997 4.98
gcs remote message 218,809 84 7,213 33 150.49
DIAG idle wait 203,228 95 7,185 35 139.77
shared server idle wait 121 100 3,630 30000 0.08
ASM background timer 3,343 0 3,611 1080 2.30
Space Manager: slave idle wait 723 100 3,610 4993 0.50
heartbeat monitor sleep 722 100 3,610 5000 0.50
ges remote message 73,089 52 3,609 49 50.27
dispatcher timer 66 88 3,608 54660 0.05
pmon timer 1,474 82 3,607 2447 1.01
PING 1,487 19 3,607 2426 1.02
Streams AQ: qmn slave idle wait 125 0 3,594 28754 0.09
Streams AQ: qmn coordinator idle wait 250 50 3,594 14377 0.17
smon timer 18 50 3,505 194740 0.01
JOX Jit Process Sleep 73 100 976 13370 0.05
class slave wait 56 0 605 10806 0.04
KSV master wait 2,215 98 1 0 1.52
SQL*Net message from client 109 0 0 2 0.07
PX Deq: Parse Reply 27 44 0 1 0.02
PX Deq: Join ACK 30 40 0 1 0.02
PX Deq: Execute Reply 20 30 0 0 0.01
Streams AQ: RAC qmn coordinator idle wait 259 100 0 0 0.18
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Wait Event Histogram
* Units for Total Waits column: K is 1000, M is 1000000, G is 1000000000
* % of Waits: value of .0 indicates value was <.05%; value of null is truly 0
* % of Waits: column heading of <=1s is truly <1024ms, >1s is truly >=1024ms
* Ordered by Event (idle events last)
% of Waits
Event Total Waits <1ms <2ms <4ms <8ms <16ms <32ms <=1s >1s
ADR block file read 13 100.0
ADR block file write 5 100.0
ADR file lock 6 100.0
ARCH wait for archivelog lock 3 100.0
ASM file metadata operation 3483 99.6 .1 .1 .2
CGS wait for IPC msg 32.7K 100.0
CSS initialization 12 50.0 50.0
CSS operation: action 21 28.6 9.5 61.9
CSS operation: query 36 86.1 5.6 8.3
DFS lock handle 6198 98.6 1.2 .1 .1
Disk file operations I/O 909 95.7 3.6 .7
IPC send completion sync 5469 99.9 .1 .0 .0
KJC: Wait for msg sends to complete 313 100.0
LGWR wait for redo copy 122 100.0
Log archive I/O 3 66.7 33.3
OJVM: Generic 36 55.6 44.4
PX Deq: Signal ACK EXT 72 98.6 1.4
PX Deq: Signal ACK RSG 2070 99.7 .0 .1 .0 .1
PX Deq: Slave Session Stats 2673 99.7 .2 .1 .0
PX Deq: reap credit 44.7K 100.0
SQL*Net break/reset to client 20 95.0 5.0
SQL*Net message to client 14.7K 100.0
SQL*Net more data from client 32 100.0
SQL*Net more data to client 689 100.0
asynch descriptor resize 3387 100.0
buffer busy waits 2 100.0
control file parallel write 2455 96.6 2.2 .6 .6 .1
control file sequential read 36K 99.4 .3 .1 .1 .1 .1 .0
db file parallel read 397 8.8 .8 5.5 12.6 17.4 46.3 8.6
db file parallel write 8233 85.4 10.3 2.3 1.4 .4 .1
db file scattered read 26.3K 79.2 1.5 8.2 10.5 .6 .1 .0
db file sequential read 28.4K 60.2 3.3 18.0 18.1 .3 .1 .0
db file single write 2 100.0
direct path read 2 50.0 50.0
direct path read temp 1722 95.8 2.8 .1 .5 .8 .1
direct path write 6 83.3 16.7
direct path write temp 4842 96.3 2.7 .5 .2 .0 .0 .2
enq: AF - task serialization 1 100.0
enq: CF - contention 145 99.3 .7
enq: CO - master slave det 1203 98.9 .8 .2
enq: CR - block range reuse ckpt 83 100.0
enq: DR - contention 2 100.0
enq: FB - contention 131 100.0
enq: HW - contention 97 100.0
enq: JQ - contention 19 89.5 10.5
enq: JS - job run lock - synchronize 3 100.0
enq: MD - contention 1 100.0
enq: MW - contention 2 100.0
enq: PS - contention 3207 99.5 .4 .1
enq: TA - contention 11 100.0
enq: TD - KTF dump entries 8 100.0
enq: TK - Auto Task Serialization 6 100.0
enq: TM - contention 58 100.0
enq: TO - contention 3 100.0
enq: TQ - DDL contention 1 100.0
enq: TS - contention 1 100.0
enq: UL - contention 1 100.0
enq: US - contention 7 100.0
enq: WF - contention 11 81.8 18.2
enq: WL - contention 2 50.0 50.0
gc buffer busy acquire 2 50.0 50.0
gc cr block 2-way 4934 99.9 .1 .0 .0
gc cr block busy 35 68.6 31.4
gc cr block congested 6 100.0
gc cr disk read 2 100.0
gc cr grant 2-way 4824 100.0 .0
gc cr grant congested 2 100.0
gc cr multi block request 37.1K 99.8 .2 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0
gc current block 2-way 2134 99.9 .0 .0
gc current block busy 7 14.3 14.3 14.3 28.6 28.6
gc current block congested 2 100.0
gc current grant 2-way 1337 99.9 .1
gc current grant busy 7123 99.2 .2 .2 .0 .0 .3 .1
gc current grant congested 2 100.0
gc current multi block request 1260 99.8 .2
gc object scan 28.8K 100.0
gcs log flush sync 65 95.4 3.1 1.5
ges LMON to get to FTDONE 3 100.0
ges generic event 1 100.0
ges inquiry response 2 100.0
ges lms sync during dynamic remastering and reconfig 24 16.7 29.2 54.2
ges message buffer allocation 63.1K 100.0
kfk: async disk IO 23.3K 100.0 .0 .0
kjbdrmcvtq lmon drm quiesce: ping completion 9 11.1 88.9
ksxr poll remote instances 19.1K 100.0
latch free 52 59.6 40.4
latch: call allocation 2 100.0
latch: gc element 1 100.0
latch: gcs resource hash 1 100.0
latch: ges resource hash list 135 100.0
latch: object queue header operation 5 40.0 40.0 20.0
latch: shared pool 5 40.0 20.0 20.0 20.0
library cache load lock 74 9.5 5.4 8.1 17.6 10.8 13.5 35.1
library cache lock 493 99.2 .4 .4
library cache pin 1186 98.4 .3 1.2 .1
library cache: mutex X 6 100.0
log file parallel write 3897 72.9 1.5 17.1 7.5 .6 .3 .1
log file sequential read 350 4.6 3.1 59.4 30.0 2.9
log file single write 6 100.0
log file switch completion 3 33.3 66.7
log file sync 385 90.4 3.6 4.7 .8 .5
name-service call wait 18 5.6 5.6 5.6 16.7 44.4 22.2
os thread startup 146 100.0
rdbms ipc reply 3763 99.7 .3
read by other session 2 50.0 50.0
reliable message 4565 99.7 .2 .0 .0 .1
row cache lock 2334 99.3 .2 .1 .1 .3
undo segment extension 8 50.0 37.5 12.5
utl_file I/O 11 100.0
ASM background timer 3343 57.0 .3 .1 .1 .1 21.1 21.4
DIAG idle wait 203.2K 3.4 .2 .4 18.0 41.4 14.8 21.8
JOX Jit Process Sleep 73 2.7 97.3
KSV master wait 2213 99.4 .1 .2 .3
PING 1487 81.0 19.0
PX Deq Credit: send blkd 7 57.1 14.3 14.3 14.3
PX Deq: Execute Reply 2966 59.8 .8 9.5 5.6 10.2 2.6 11.4
PX Deq: Execution Msg 10.6K 72.4 12.1 2.6 2.5 .1 5.6 4.6 .0
PX Deq: Join ACK 3006 77.9 22.1 .1
PX Deq: Parse Reply 3184 67.1 31.1 1.6 .2
PX Idle Wait 6466 .2 8.7 4.3 4.8 .3 .1 5.0 76.6
SQL*Net message from client 14.7K 72.4 2.8 .8 .5 .9 .4 2.8 19.3
Space Manager: slave idle wait 722 100.0
Streams AQ: RAC qmn coordinator idle wait 259 100.0
Streams AQ: qmn coordinator idle wait 250 50.0 50.0
Streams AQ: qmn slave idle wait 125 100.0
class slave wait 55 67.3 7.3 1.8 5.5 1.8 7.3 9.1
dispatcher timer 66 6.1 93.9
gcs remote message 218.6K 7.7 1.8 1.2 1.6 1.7 15.7 70.3
ges remote message 72.9K 29.7 5.1 2.7 2.2 1.5 4.0 54.7
heartbeat monitor sleep 722 100.0
jobq slave wait 7725 .1 .0 99.9
pmon timer 1474 18.4 81.6
rdbms ipc message 103.3K 20.7 2.7 1.5 1.3 .9 .7 40.7 31.6
shared server idle wait 121 100.0
smon timer 18 100.0
wait for unread message on broadcast channel 7238 .3 99.7
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Wait Event Histogram Detail (64 msec to 2 sec)
* Units for Total Waits column: K is 1000, M is 1000000, G is 1000000000
* Units for % of Total Waits: ms is milliseconds s is 1024 milliseconds (approximately 1 second)
* % of Total Waits: total waits for all wait classes, including Idle
* % of Total Waits: value of .0 indicates value was <.05%; value of null is truly 0
* Ordered by Event (only non-idle events are displayed)
% of Total Waits
Event Waits 64ms to 2s <32ms <64ms <1/8s <1/4s <1/2s <1s <2s >=2s
ASM file metadata operation 6 99.8 .1 .1
DFS lock handle 6 99.9 .1 .0
OJVM: Generic 16 55.6 2.8 41.7
PX Deq: Signal ACK RSG 3 99.9 .0 .1
PX Deq: Slave Session Stats 3 99.9 .0 .0 .0
SQL*Net break/reset to client 1 95.0 5.0
control file sequential read 1 100.0 .0
db file parallel read 34 91.4 8.6
db file scattered read 4 100.0 .0 .0
db file sequential read 6 100.0 .0 .0 .0
direct path write temp 11 99.8 .1 .1 .0
enq: WF - contention 2 81.8 18.2
gc cr block 2-way 1 100.0 .0
gc cr multi block request 1 100.0 .0
gc current block 2-way 1 100.0 .0
gc current block busy 2 71.4 28.6
gc current grant busy 8 99.9 .0 .1
ges lms sync during dynamic remastering and reconfig 13 45.8 20.8 33.3
kjbdrmcvtq lmon drm quiesce: ping completion 8 11.1 11.1 77.8
latch: shared pool 1 80.0 20.0
library cache load lock 26 64.9 14.9 12.2 4.1 4.1
log file parallel write 2 99.9 .0 .0
log file sequential read 10 97.1 2.0 .6 .3
log file switch completion 2 33.3 66.7
name-service call wait 4 77.8 22.2
os thread startup 146 100.0
reliable message 4 99.9 .0 .1
row cache lock 2 99.7 .0 .0 .3
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Wait Event Histogram Detail (4 sec to 2 min)
* Units for Total Waits column: K is 1000, M is 1000000, G is 1000000000
* Units for % of Total Waits: s is 1024 milliseconds (approximately 1 second) m is 64*1024 milliseconds (approximately 67 seconds or 1.1 minutes)
* % of Total Waits: total waits for all wait classes, including Idle
* % of Total Waits: value of .0 indicates value was <.05%; value of null is truly 0
* Ordered by Event (only non-idle events are displayed)
% of Total Waits
Event Waits 4s to 2m <2s <4s <8s <16s <32s < 1m < 2m >=2m
row cache lock 6 99.7 .3
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Wait Event Histogram Detail (4 min to 1 hr)
No data exists for this section of the report.
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Service Statistics
* ordered by DB Time
Service Name DB Time (s) DB CPU (s) Physical Reads (K) Logical Reads (K)
ubshost 1,934 1,744 445 73,633
SYS$USERS 105 45 1 404
SYS$BACKGROUND 0 0 1 128
ubshostXDB 0 0 0 0
Back to Wait Events Statistics
Back to Top
Service Wait Class Stats
* Wait Class info for services in the Service Statistics section.
* Total Waits and Time Waited displayed for the following wait classes: User I/O, Concurrency, Administrative, Network
* Time Waited (Wt Time) in seconds
Service Name User I/O Total Wts User I/O Wt Time Concurcy Total Wts Concurcy Wt Time Admin Total Wts Admin Wt Time Network Total Wts Network Wt Time
ubshost 60232 90 2644 4 0 0 13302 0
SYS$USERS 997 2 525 19 0 0 1973 0
SYS$BACKGROUND 1456 2 1258 14 0 0 0 0
I am not able to paste the whole awr report. I have paste some of the sections of awr report.
Please help.
Thanks and Regards, -
Space between content and logo
Playing with fluid layouts and getting a space between logo and content DIV's
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<title>Playing with Liquid Layouts</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style.css" />
</head>
<body>
<div id="container">
<div id="logo">
<h1>Welcome to Liquid Layouts</h1>
<h2 class="logo">Place your slogan here...</h2>
</div>
<div id="navigation">
<ul>
<li>Home</li>
<li>Page 1</li>
<li>Page 2</li>
<li>Page 3</li>
<li>Page 4</li>
<li>Page 5</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div id="content">
<h1>Adding this element creates a space between logo and content...</h1>
</div>
<div id="footer">
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
@charset "utf-8";
/* CSS Document */
body
text-align: center;
div#container
margin-left: auto;
margin-right: auto;
min-width: 600px;
max-width: 2000px;
text-align: left;
width: 85%;
div#logo h1, h3
padding-left: 20px;
margin-bottom: 0;
div#logo h2
padding-left: 35px;
margin-top: 0;
font-size: 125%;
div#logo
background-color: #F00;
width: 100%;
height: 300px;
div#navigation
background-color: #0F0;
width: 25%;
height: 600px;
float: left;
div#navigation ul
padding-left: 25%;
font-size: 150%;
list-style-type: square;
div#content
background-color: #C93;
width: 100%;
height: 600px;
margin-top: 0px;
div#footer
background-color: #69F;
height: 30px;;
.footerP
margin-top: 0px;
padding-left: 2%;
line-height: 35px;;
PICTURE:
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/1nGUG.jpg[/IMG]The space is caused by the default margin in your H1 tag. As such, you need to define a style for H1:
h1{
margin-top:0;
padding: ??;
You can add padding to move the H1 away from the edges of the surrounding DIV.
EDIT:// An after thought. If you are "Playing with fluid layouts", you might want to consider not using heights and/or set the heights/widths in % values. -
What is the fundamental difference between classful and classless routing?
Hello to all,
After reading several RFCs, guides and HOWTOs I am confused by an apparently trivial question - what is the basic, fundamental difference between classful and classless routing?
I am well aware that - said in a very primitive way - the classful routing does not make use of netmasks and instead uses the address classes while the classless routing utilizes the netmasks and does not evaluate the address classes.
However, already in 1985 the RFC 950 (Internet Standard Subnetting Procedure) stated that the networks can be further subnetted using the network mask. Since then the routers are expected to use network masks in the routing decision process in the precise way they use it nowadays. However, if the routers use network masks they are doing the classless routing, aren't they? Where is then the difference if we used to describe the 80's way of routing as a classful routing? Or was it already the classless routing? The RFCs about CIDR came gradually only in 1992 and 1993.
If somebody could give me an insight into the key difference between classful and classless routing (and perhaps into the Internet history, how was the real routing done then) I would be most grateful.
Thank you a lot!
Regards,
PeterHello Mohammed,
I am afraid we still have not understood each other ;) I am not looking for the algorithms used to select the best path. I am well aware of them, both Ford-Bellman and Dijkstra, and about their internals. By the way, these algorithms do not have any influence whether the routing is classful or classless because they deal with metrics, not with masks. For example, a classless EIGRP internally uses a distance-vector algorithm, not a SPF algorithm.
I will try to explain once more what is my problem... There are two terms commonly used but badly defined: the classless routing and classful routing. Originally, I have thought that the classful routing works as follows:
- The routing table consists only of classful destination networks (major nets), metrics and respective gateways. No network masks are stored in the table because we are classful, that is, we use exclusively the route classes and all entries in the routing table are already classful.
- When routing a packet, the router looks at its destination IP address and determines the major net of this IP address (that is, the classful network that this IP address belongs to). Then it looks up the corresponding entry in the routing table and sends the packet to the respective gateway.
I thought that the classful routing works in this way. I won't describe the classless routing - both of us know how do the today's routers select the next hop.
However, in the RFCs 917 and 950 which were published in 1985, long ago before the term 'classless routing' was coined, the network mask was already defined and it was stated how the routers should work with it.
Now I am confused. The terms classless addresses and classless routing were defined sometime in 1990's, therefore I assume that the routing before the invention of classless IP assignment can be in fact described as classful. In other words, I thought that the routing that was commonly used in 1980's did not use netmasks and can be described as classful because the notion of classlessness came first in 1990's. But now I see that netmasks were defined in 1985.
Now where am I wrong? Do I understand the classful routing properly as I described it? Is it correct to talk about routing in that era as classful although the netmasks were already in use? Or was it already the classless routing?
Basically I am trying to understand what was called the classful routing if the classless routing is said to be something different.
Mohammed, I am most grateful to you for your patience and suggestions! Thank you indeed.
Regards,
Peter -
What is the correct procedure to connect and collect events from IPS through SDEE
What is the correct procedure to connect and collect events from IPS through SDEE?
We are a 3rd party application, that needs to collect and analyze the IPS events for a client.
Currently the approach we are following is
1) get a SubscriptionId using the URL below
https://IP_Of_IPS/cgi-bin/sdee-server?action=open&events=evIdsAlert&force=yes
This gets us a subscriptionId which is used in step 2
2) Collect events from the url below
https://IP_Of_IPS/cgi-bin/sdee-server?confirm=yes&action=get&subscriptionId=sub-sample&startTime=1362699903575432000
a few more notes here are
- starttime is current time in nanoseconds
the peculiar problem here is that, even though we specify todays date, SDEE returns us the events from mid Feb (today is march 7)
we did try a few combinations, but are out of ideas.
any help or direction would be appreciatedThis is more an application issue than an IPS issue.
Have you compared your app against other apps [IME]? -
Revision: 3580
Author: [email protected]
Date: 2008-10-10 16:24:50 -0700 (Fri, 10 Oct 2008)
Log Message:
MXMLG-243 - Path does not draw in the correct location when width and height are set
Fixed MatrixUtil.transformBounds to offset the four bound points by the origin
Bug: MXMLG-243
QA: Yes
Doc: No
Review: Evtim
Ticket Links:
http://bugs.adobe.com/jira/browse/MXMLG-243
http://bugs.adobe.com/jira/browse/MXMLG-243
Modified Paths:
flex/sdk/trunk/frameworks/projects/flex4/src/mx/utils/MatrixUtil.asHi,
For web application problem, please post your thread in
ASP.NET forum.
Best Wishes!
We are trying to better understand customer views on social support experience, so your participation in this interview project would be greatly appreciated if you have time. Thanks for helping make community forums a great place.
Click
HERE to participate the survey. Thanks<br/> MSDN Community Support<br/> <br/> Please remember to "Mark as Answer" the responses that resolved your issue. It is a common way to recognize those who have helped you, and
makes it easier for other visitors to find the resolution later. -
How to maintain space between value and base unit of measure in sapscript
Hi Guys,
I am working on an upgradtion project, i have problem like while upgrading from 4.6b to 5.0. i need to main a space between value and base unit of measure. can anyone letme know how to maintain in the form. I mean in sapscript.
Thanks,
YogeshThere are a couple of ways to handle this, if you need a bigger space between, you can use tabs in the paragraph format. Or you can just write the space in between the fields like so.
ZA &MSEG-MENGE& &MSEG-MEINS&
Regards,
RIch Heilman
Maybe you are looking for
-
Display sales orders due list in a week
hi , i want to display sales orders due list in a week what are the tables need to be referred? Rgds Umakanth Edited by: Alvaro Tejada Galindo on Feb 21, 2008 5:06 PM
-
Can i change the volume level for just a part of a track?
i am trying to raise the volume level for just a little section of a track without raising the volume for the whole track, just a one little section. can i do that on garage band? how would it do that?
-
How to Prevent SharePoint Farm Password from Changing
I have been trying to stop the SP farm account, spfarm, from password changing. SharePoint Central Administration is used and I go to Central Security -> Configure managed accounts. I set spfarm not to change but it makes no difference. It still c
-
I added fairy wings to a photo and wanted to erase areas that I didn't want. Everytime I grab the eraser tool the fairy wings come back up. It stays on the brush tool...What did I do wrong?
-
KeyEvent.consume() not consumed...
Hi, If I attach a KeyEventListener to a TextField and that I consume the KeyEvents in the keyPressed() and keyReleased() methods, should the keys typed appear in the field or not? TextField f = new TextField(); f.addKeyEventListener(this); public voi