Analyze the massive (200,000) lines of Oracle Data Pump Log File Like a Hero 🙂
The inspiration of I am playing with the video is from https://x.com/dohdatabase/status/1835911021937975628 and https://www.linkedin.com/posts/dohdatabase_what-do-you-do-with-a-200000-line-data-pump-activity-7241678395346960384-7b4_/.
How to easily analyze the massive lines of Oracle Data Pump Log File?
Data Pump Logfile Analyzer (DPLA) can help you. DPLA can summarize the log file into a simple report, you can see the 4 images with special effect in my video.
DPLA is not an official Oracle tool. It is a tool created by #MarcusDoeringer (https://macsdata.com/).
Marcus works for Oracle migration team. He made it available for free on https://github.com/macsdata/data-pump-log-analyzer 👍
#Database #Oracle #Migration #AmazingTool #DataPumpLogfileAnalyzer #DPLA
Libraries fighting the good fight
Digital Public Library of America and Independent Publishers Group have announced a groundbreaking agreement: https://www.metafilter.com/205076/Its-a-Good-Start
MIT vs Elsevier: https://www.metafilter.com/205114/Overwhelmingly-positive
#digital #DigitalPublicLibrary #DPLA #ebooks #Elsevier #epub #libraries #MIT #OpenAccess publishing
COUNTER Metrics Reflections on the First COUNTER Conference Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) DPLA Outreach & Assessment Working Group Launches Assessment Workshop Series this Summer Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) New Major Version of the DOAJ API to Be Released Open Library Meet the Open Library Team, New “Team” Page Goes Live (via […]
UPDATED POST (April 3, 2024) Applications Open to Find a New Home For America’s Digital Heritage —End Update— From a Letter/Post: by John Bracken, Executive Director of the Digital Public Library America: I am writing to share with you some exciting news. As many of you know, we recently conducted a review of our hallmark […]
I am writing to share with you some exciting news. As many of you know, we recently conducted a review of our hallmark program, the aggregation and sharing of nearly 50 million images and files from over 6,000 libraries and archives across the U.S. We are taking two conclusions from that process. First, we have …
UPDATED POST (April 3, 2024) Applications Open to Find a New Home For America’s Digital Heritage —End Update— From a Letter/Post: by John Bracken, Executive Director of the Digital Public Library America: I am writing to share with you some exciting news. As many of you know, we recently conducted a review of our hallmark […]
From the Digital Public Library of America (#DPLA, @dpla):
https://dp.la/news/toward-a-digital-library-ownership-model
"In the model we are developing, #libraries would own [digital #books], just as they do with physical books. Libraries would be able to both transfer their books to other libraries and to update books as needed for #preservation or to adapt to new #formats. Rights holders would retain #copyright to their works…Lending would be restricted to one reader at a time."
Since 2017, DPLA has been helping libraries meet the growing demand from readers for ebooks and audiobooks by working with publishers to provide licensing terms that help libraries maximize access and get the most out of their dollar. While the variety of options and licensing terms we have developed have been well received by our partners, they still do not allow libraries to own digital content outright, the way they do physical books.
While this is an intriguing development, Big 5 publishers will never participate, so most libraries won't entertain it because their digital budgets prioritize patron demand.
Until libraries prioritize sustainable digital collections over bestsellers, it's a stalemate, and the Big 5 continue to have their cake (free marketing and discovery from libraries) and eat it, too (expensive, expiring licenses to maintain friction).
Since 2017, DPLA has been helping libraries meet the growing demand from readers for ebooks and audiobooks by working with publishers to provide licensing terms that help libraries maximize access and get the most out of their dollar. While the variety of options and licensing terms we have developed have been well received by our partners, they still do not allow libraries to own digital content outright, the way they do physical books.