Book Image

Managing Multimedia and Unstructured Data in the Oracle Database

By : MARCEL KRATOCHVIL
Book Image

Managing Multimedia and Unstructured Data in the Oracle Database

By: MARCEL KRATOCHVIL

Overview of this book

Multimedia is the new digital frontier. Managers, software architects, administrators and developers need to fully comprehend this exciting new technology as its widespread use and acceptance cannot be ignored any longer."Managing Multimedia and Unstructured Data in the Oracle Database" will give you a complete understanding of how to manage all data, especially multimedia. You will learn all the latest terminology, how to set up a database, load digital objects, search on them and even how to sell them. Whether you are a manager or database administrator, this book will give you the knowledge you need to take control of this rapidly growing and industry- changing technology. Technology which is transforming our lives.Starting with the basic principles of unstructured data and detailing the concepts behind multimedia warehouses and digital asset management systems, this book will describe how to load this data, search against it, display it intelligently, and deliver it to customers and users. Learn how all these concepts work within the Oracle 11g R2 database environment and how to tune the database effectively to manage it.Begin to learn about this new and exciting field and use it to give your business a competitive edge or give yourself the ability to take a leadership role in this exciting new computing genre.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Managing Multimedia and Unstructured Data in the Oracle Database
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

HTTPD.CONF file


The master parameter configuration file for Apache is called httpd.conf. It's found in the directory (if the install shown previously is used):

C:\oracle\apache2\instances\instance1\config\OHS\ohs1

There are a lot of parameters in the file and it is self documenting, but for an administrator who just wants to modify the basic values, the following are some of the core parameters in the file based on an Apache install on Windows (keep in mind for Unix, root needs to start the Apache Server if it's going to listen on any port less than 1024). Windows was chosen as all documentation one finds on Apache configuration always covers Unix.

  • ServerName: This is the DNS name of the server. On installation the identified name of the server is used. Multiple DNS can use the one HTTP file using the concept of a virtual server.

    ServerName: www.site1.com

  • ServerRoot: This is the top level directory, where all the HTTP server configuration and log files are kept.

    ServerRoot: C:\config

  • DocumentRoot...