Preface

The Oracle Database Gateway for DRDA provides users with transparent access to DB2.

Intended Audience

This guide is intended for anyone responsible for installing, configuring, and administering the gateway, and also for application developers.

Read this guide if you are responsible for writing applications that access DRDA databases through the gateway.

You must understand the fundamentals of Oracle Database Gateway and the operating system you are working on before using this guide to install or administer the gateway.

Documentation Accessibility

For information about Oracle's commitment to accessibility, visit the Oracle Accessibility Program website at http://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=acc&id=docacc.

Access to Oracle Support

Oracle customers that have purchased support have access to electronic support through My Oracle Support. For information, visit http://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=acc&id=info or visit http://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=acc&id=trs if you are hearing impaired.

Typographic Conventions

The following typographic conventions are used in this guide:

Convention Description

monospace

Monospace type indicates commands, directory names, user names, path names, and file names.

italics

Italic type indicates variables, including variable portions of file names. It is also used for emphasis and for book titles.

UPPERCASE

Uppercase letters indicate Structured Query Language (SQL) reserved words, initialization parameters, and environment variables.

Bold

Bold type indicates screen names and fields.

SQL*Plus prompts

The SQL*Plus prompt, SQL>, appears in SQL statement and SQL*Plus command examples. Enter your response at the prompt. Do not enter the text of the prompt, "SQL>", in your response.

SQL*Plus Prompts

The SQL*Plus prompt, SQL>, appears in SQL statements and SQL*Plus command examples. Enter your response at the prompt. Do not enter the text of the prompt, "SQL>", in your response.

Storage Measurements

Storage measurements use the following abbreviations:

  • KB, for kilobyte, which equals 1,024 bytes

  • MB, for megabyte, which equals 1,048,576 bytes

  • GB, for gigabyte, which equals 1,073,741,824 bytes