I have not tried to SSO into INB, but I have done so into SSB. I mimicked how the Banner Channels were doing it. I responded to the Banner Channels forum from Chris tittle with a more detailed message explaining this. If you have questions after reading that message, please don't hesitate to re-post to this forum for more information. I do not know what you are referring to when you mention RAC, though (Rapid Application... ??... am I close?).
RAC stands for Real Application Clusters. Here is a snippet about RAC:
Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) provides a highly available, scalable and manageable solution by sharing complete access to a single database among nodes in a cluster. This shared access removes any single point of failure from the database solution. Even during a system fault in one of the nodes, data can continue to be accessed from any of the remaining nodes. Committed work on the failed node is recovered automatically without administrator intervention and without data loss. RAC is an Oracle Corporation exclusive technology that enables building large systems from commodity components and is the foundation for Enterprise GRID computing.
SSO to SSB
I have not tried to SSO into INB, but I have done so into SSB. I mimicked how the Banner Channels were doing it. I responded to the Banner Channels forum from Chris tittle with a more detailed message explaining this. If you have questions after reading that message, please don't hesitate to re-post to this forum for more information. I do not know what you are referring to when you mention RAC, though (Rapid Application... ??... am I close?).
RAC
RAC stands for Real Application Clusters. Here is a snippet about RAC:
Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) provides a highly available, scalable and manageable solution by sharing complete access to a single database among nodes in a cluster. This shared access removes any single point of failure from the database solution. Even during a system fault in one of the nodes, data can continue to be accessed from any of the remaining nodes. Committed work on the failed node is recovered automatically without administrator intervention and without data loss. RAC is an Oracle Corporation exclusive technology that enables building large systems from commodity components and is the foundation for Enterprise GRID computing.
Thanks - Brian
Product Enhancement
It looks like the Univ of Arkansas are the only ones with a working RAC config.
PP