Do you know the DBA Cockpit? It’s SAP’s tool for monitoring SAP systems on IBM Db2 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows. It comes to you for free as part of every ABAP-based SAP system. If you already know it, read on, and you’ll learn more about some of the...
Setting up secure SSL connections between an SAP application server and a Db2 database has become relatively easy with IBM Db2 10.5 FP10 or higher. But still there are some non-obvious pitfalls that can cause some frustration when you set up SSL for ...
We've noticed that many customers are not aware that there's a wealth of documentation available especially for customers running their SAP systems on IBM Db2 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows. So it's high time to review what's out there. Have a look; yo...
As you might have noticed, our SAP partner IBM has introduced indexes for column-organized tables (Db2 BLU Acceleration) with IBM Db2 11.1 M3 FP3. With IBM Db2 11.1 M3 FP3 iFix001SAP, you can use indexes in SAP Business Warehouse with Db2 BLU Acceler...
With the general availability of the pushdown of BW query execution to the database level, I would like to provide you with some basic technical information about how this works and why you should care.
BW reporting queries may contain global restri...
Hi all, I second what others have written - it's a pity that valuable content will be removed, and at a relatively short notice, too. And where can I get an overview of the blog posts and questions that I will lose? Thanks, Sabine
Hi Yasin, please note that the APIs for the DBA Cockpit are not officially released for reuse.If you use them to build your own web services, it's at your own risk.
Dear customer, there's also an official SAP Note that provides an overview of all features that are supported for SAP systems running on IBM Db2 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows. You might also want to check this: 1555903 - DB6:
Supported IBM Db2 Databas...
Hi Maria,please also consider opening a customer incident - this kind of question is tricky to answer via a community discussion. Frank (see his comment) has already suggested to have a look at the messages in the db2diag.log. The db2diag.log might a...