authlevel
Use the authlevel command to determine your authorization level for issuing SharePlex commands on a system.
The following is an example of the display:
User is a viewer (level=3)
Usage
Supported sources: |
Oracle |
Supported targets: |
All |
Authorization level: |
Viewer (3) |
Issued for: |
source or target system |
Related commands: |
none |
Syntax
authlevel |
[ on host |
on host:portnumber |
on login/password@host |
on login/password@host:portnumber ] |
Remote options
These options enable you to issue the command on a remote machine and to script commands that include a login name, password, port number, or combination of those items.
on host |
Execute the command on a remote system (one other than the one where the current sp_ctrl session is running). You are prompted for login credentials for the remote system. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA |
on host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA:8304 |
on login/password@host |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, and host name must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA |
on login/password@host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, host name, and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA:8304 |
cancel
Use the cancel command to cancel a running compare, repair, copy or append command job.
To cancel a job, you must supply its job ID. The job ID is reported back from the compare, repair, copy or append job when you issue the command that starts it:
sp_ctrl> repair using 1elliot
repairing 7 of 7 objects
repair started; job id 408
Alternatively, you can get the job ID of the most recently streamed job by issuing the job status command:
sp_ctrl> job status
Job ID: 408
PID: 11527
Host: prodsys
Started: 22-FEB-15 18:08:09
Job Type: Repair
Status: Processing - 0 objects completed
Usage
Supported sources: |
Oracle |
Supported targets: |
Oracle |
Authorization level: |
Operator (2) |
Issues on: |
source system |
Related commands: |
compare, repair, copy, append |
Syntax
cancel job_id |
[ on host |
on host:portnumber |
on login/password@host |
on login/password@host:portnumber ] |
Syntax description
jobID |
The ID of the job to be canceled.
Example:
sp_ctrl>cancel 407 |
Remote options
These options enable you to issue the command on a remote machine and to script commands that include a login name, password, port number, or combination of those items.
on host |
Execute the command on a remote system (one other than the one where the current sp_ctrl session is running). You are prompted for login credentials for the remote system. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA |
on host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA:8304 |
on login/password@host |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, and host name must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA |
on login/password@host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, host name, and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA:8304 |
clear history
Use the clean history command to remove the information and logs from old compare, repair, copy, and append command jobs.
These jobs generate log files on the source and target systems. By default, the job information and log files are cleaned when the job is older than the value set with the SP_SYS_JOB_HISTORY_RETENTION parameter. The clear history command can be used to clear the job information and logs on demand for a specific job or table, or for all jobs that are of a specific age.
Usage
Supported sources: |
Oracle |
Supported targets: |
Oracle |
Authorization level: |
Operator (2) |
Issues on: |
source system |
Related commands: |
compare, repair, copy, append |
Syntax
clear history
{ all |
source_owner.source_table |
age days |
jobID } |
[for o.source_sid] |
[ on host |
on host:portnumber |
on login/password@host |
on login/password@host:portnumber ] |
Syntax description
all |
Causes all job to be removed.
Example:
sp_ctrl(sysA)> clear history all |
source_owner.source_table |
Causes history for a particular table to be removed.
Example:
sp_ctrl(sysA)> clear history clear history user2.employee |
age days |
Causes the job history older than the specified number of days to be removed.
Example:
sp_ctrl(sysA)> clear history age 10 |
jobID |
Causes the history for the specified job id (obtained using the job status command) to be removed. |
for o.source_sid |
Optional. Can be used to employ the clear history command when there is no active configuration, or if there are more than one active configurations. In either case, the source SID must be specified using the for option.
Example:
sp_ctrl(sysA)>clear history all for o.source_sid1 |
Remote options
These options enable you to issue the command on a remote machine and to script commands that include a login name, password, port number, or combination of those items.
on host |
Execute the command on a remote system (one other than the one where the current sp_ctrl session is running). You are prompted for login credentials for the remote system. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA |
on host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA:8304 |
on login/password@host |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, and host name must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA |
on login/password@host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, host name, and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA:8304 |
clear status
Use the clear status command to remove old warning messages from the Status Database. To use this command:
- Issue the show statusdb detail command to find out which messages can be cleared. Clearable messages have a Yes in the Clear column.
- If you don’t want to clear all messages, make a note of the status ID of each one that you want to clear.
- Issue the clear status command for each status ID, or use the all argument to remove all clearable messages at once.
SharePlex puts a message in the Event Log identifying the messages that were cleared.
This command clears messages from the Status Database for the default system. To clear messages from a Status Database on a different system, use the [on host] option.
Note: Some messages cannot be cleared.
Usage
Supported sources: |
Oracle |
Supported targets: |
All |
Authorization level: |
Operator (2) |
Issued for: |
source or target system |
Related commands: |
show statusdb |
Syntax
clear status {statusID| all} |
[ on host |
on host:portnumber |
on login/password@host |
on login/password@host:portnumber ] |
Syntax description
statusID |
The SharePlex-assigned ID of an individual message (obtained using the show statusdb command) that you want to remove.
Example:
sp_ctrl(sysA)>clear status 20 |
all |
This argument removes all clearable messages.
Example:
sp_ctrl(sysA)>clear status all |
Remote options
These options enable you to issue the command on a remote machine and to script commands that include a login name, password, port number, or combination of those items.
on host |
Execute the command on a remote system (one other than the one where the current sp_ctrl session is running). You are prompted for login credentials for the remote system. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA |
on host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on SysA:8304 |
on login/password@host |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, and host name must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA |
on login/password@host:portnumber |
Execute the command on a remote system when a remote login, password, host name, and port number must be provided. If used, must be the last component of the command syntax.
Example: sp_ctrl(sysB)>status on john/spot5489@SysA:8304 |