Sunday, January 11, 2026

SAP HANA Logging Behavior Explained: Commit, Savepoint & Crash Recovery (Real Production Guide)

⏱️ Estimated Reading Time: 12–14 minutes

SAP HANA Logging Behavior: What Really Happens During a Production Crash

It’s 2:13 AM. Your SAP application suddenly freezes. End users can’t post transactions. SAP HANA Studio shows the database restarting. Phone calls start coming in.

“Did we lose data?”

In real production environments, this question does not depend on luck. It depends entirely on how SAP HANA logging behavior works behind the scenes.

This article explains SAP HANA logging not as documentation theory, but as it behaves during real crashes, restarts, and recovery situations.

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Oracle Listener Health Check: Preventing Silent Production Outages

This guide explains how Oracle Listener failures silently impact production systems Oracle Listener Health Check – Production Monitoring Guide | Chetan Yadav

⏱️ Estimated Reading Time: 14 minutes

Oracle Listener Health Check

It’s 2 AM. Your phone lights up with alerts. Applications are down, dashboards are red, and every connection attempt fails with TNS-12541: TNS:no listener. The database is up — but the business is still dead.

In real production environments, a failed Oracle Listener can block thousands of users, cause SLA breaches, and trigger revenue loss within minutes. We’ve seen P99 login latency jump from milliseconds to total outages.

This guide shows how to implement a production-grade Oracle Listener health check using scripts, monitoring logic, and automation — before the listener becomes your single point of failure.

Monday, January 5, 2026

Oracle 9i on Solaris: A Production Case Study from the Pre-Cloud Era

Oracle 9i on Solaris Case Study – A Deep Dive Retro

⏱️ Estimated Reading Time: 12-13 minutes

Oracle 9i on Solaris Case Study (A Deep Dive Retro)

In the early 2000s, database outages were not masked by load balancers, auto-scaling groups, or managed cloud services. If an Oracle database went down on Solaris, the business felt it immediately.

There was no RAC, no ASM, no cloud snapshots. Every failure meant manual diagnosis, filesystem checks, kernel tuning, and long recovery windows. Downtime translated directly into revenue loss and SLA breaches.

This case study revisits a real-world Oracle 9i on Solaris production environment, breaking down architecture decisions, tuning practices, failures, and the lessons modern DBAs can still apply today.