Oracle® Database Vault Administrator's Guide 11g Release 1 (11.1) Part Number B31222-01 |
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This appendix includes the following sections:
You can monitor your Oracle Database Vault database instance for server and background process events by checking the database instance trace files. Trace files reveal events such as the logic that the Oracle Database Vault security enforcement engine executes, as well as internal errors, block corruption errors, deadlock errors, administrative actions that may have occurred, values of parameters that had nondefault settings when the database instance started, and other information.
Be careful about enabling trace files, however. Doing so can increase the overhead of the database instance operation, which could decrease performance. Contact Oracle Support before you decide to enable tracing.
To enable tracing, log on with any account that has the ALTER SESSION
privilege and issue the following statement:
SQL> ALTER SESSION SET EVENTS '47998 trace name context forever, level 12'
For example, suppose you have an account that is trying to use a statement that is protected by a command rule, but the statement is not working as expected. You can diagnose the enforcement logic for this account by granting it the ALTER SESSION
privilege, issuing the ALTER SESSION
statement, and then retrying the statement. Afterward, check the trace files to determine what is going on.
You can disable tracing by issuing the following statement:
SQL> ALTER SESSION SET EVENTS '47998 trace name context off'
For more information about how to manage trace files, see Oracle Database Administrator's Guide and Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide.
Follow these general tips for diagnosing problems in realms, factors, and rule sets:
For realm protections, verify that a user has the underlying system or object privileges (granted directly or through a role) that might affect the command.
If a realm authorization is not working, verify that the account roles are set correctly.
For PL/SQL expressions used in factors and rule sets, grant EXECUTE
privileges on the PL/SQL package functions used in these expressions directly to the account and determine if the results appear to be correct.
Use the auditing reports to diagnose problems in general. See "Oracle Database Vault Auditing Reports" for more information.
If you suspect problems with the configuration of realms, command rules, factors, rule sets, or secure application roles, you can run the appropriate configuration report. See the following sections for more information:
To run these reports, see "How to Run Oracle Database Vault Reports".