Than, probably "system " granted "ALTER SESSION " privilege though role.
Grant it directly to system.
Igor Neyman, OCP DBA
ineyman@(protected)
-- --Original Message-- --
From: oracle-l-bounce@(protected)
[mailto:oracle-l-bounce@(protected)] On Behalf Of Schauss, Peter
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2004 1:40 PM
To: oracle-l@(protected)
Subject: RE: Using a trigger to turn on tracing
The owner of the trigger is system.
-- --Original Message-- --
From: Khedr, Waleed [mailto:Waleed.Khedr@(protected)]
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2004 12:59 PM
To: oracle-l@(protected)
Subject: RE: Using a trigger to turn on tracing
Grant it to the trigger owner
-- --Original Message-- --
From: Schauss, Peter [mailto:peter.schauss@(protected)]
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2004 12:41 PM
To: oracle-l@(protected)
Subject: RE: Using a trigger to turn on tracing
I granted alter session to my test user and I still get the same error
message.
Any other ideas?
Thanks,
Peter Schauss
-- --Original Message-- --
From: Bobak, Mark [mailto:Mark.Bobak@(protected)]
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2004 11:41 AM
To: oracle-l@(protected)
Subject: RE: Using a trigger to turn on tracing
ALTER SESSION.
-- --Original Message-- --
From: Schauss, Peter [mailto:peter.schauss@(protected)]
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2004 11:37 AM
To: Oracle-L (E-mail)
Subject: Using a trigger to turn on tracing
I am trying to use a trigger to turn on tracing for a specified user.
I copied the example from Cary Millsap 's _Optimizing Oracle Performance_.
The text of the trigger is:
create or replace trigger trace_user after logon on database
begin
if user = 'TEST ' then
execute immediate 'alter session set timed_statistics
=
true ';
execute immediate 'alter session set max_dump_file_size
=
unlimited ';
execute immediate
'alter session set events ' '10046 trace
name
context forever, level 8 ' ' ';
end if;
end;
/