CARVIEW |
Select Language
HTTP/2 301
date: Sun, 27 Jul 2025 00:41:22 GMT
location: https://www.pythian.com/blog/technical-track/oracles-database-security-assessment-tool-dbsat-version-2-2-0-1
cf-ray: 965817319de36f7a-BLR
cf-cache-status: EXPIRED
cache-control: no-transform, max-age=120
expires: Sun, 27 Jul 2025 00:43:22 GMT
strict-transport-security: max-age=31536000
vary: origin, Accept-Encoding
access-control-allow-credentials: false
content-security-policy: upgrade-insecure-requests
x-content-type-options: nosniff
x-hs-mapping-id: 132418261129
x-hs-mapping-only-after-not-found: yes
x-hs-route-prefix: https://blog.pythian.com/*rest-of-URL
x-hubspot-correlation-id: 4871a901-497c-417d-8d5c-9af5017328cc
set-cookie: __cf_bm=fJkamFeOhF93tQQLDYdgBiN1QxJy9gZr3oIbKm19p3Y-1753576882-1.0.1.1-0ZRwmOHrnMDGyVJ5i6NIPN1ERtT7Wx.4Cxqfnmre5kuGGBI8ZuHbiP3hZO06oGYLGcZld_9XNNZGom8h5QQ0Nksd_clHAlikLvyt98iGulw; path=/; expires=Sun, 27-Jul-25 01:11:22 GMT; domain=.blog.pythian.com; HttpOnly; Secure; SameSite=None
report-to: {"endpoints":[{"url":"https:\/\/a.nel.cloudflare.com\/report\/v4?s=N1jdUBPftawjq1cx6EyoCzb3u11nJrRP15t6GOFzKURqlSqUWlMW6igfrCffnGzYREgReNWfm%2FbSD13tOwvHwaPJTwgHAHCrInXOIkUmAYytwbI8PXYTyWj1N5tn9h%2FtEa0%3D"}],"group":"cf-nel","max_age":604800}
nel: {"success_fraction":0.01,"report_to":"cf-nel","max_age":604800}
set-cookie: _cfuvid=NHlQVQjyTZkcVpi1qPGEqbiguv3ir.J5JOd6Y0ytymY-1753576882343-0.0.1.1-604800000; path=/; domain=.blog.pythian.com; HttpOnly; Secure; SameSite=None
server: cloudflare
alt-svc: h3=":443"; ma=86400
HTTP/2 200
date: Sun, 27 Jul 2025 00:41:24 GMT
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
content-encoding: gzip
cache-control: s-maxage=36000, max-age=5
last-modified: Thu, 24 Jul 2025 05:57:10 GMT
link: ; rel=preload; as=style,; rel=preload; as=style,; rel=preload; as=style,; rel=preload; as=style,; rel=preload; as=style,; rel=preload; as=style
strict-transport-security: max-age=31536000
content-security-policy: upgrade-insecure-requests
edge-cache-tag: CT-131537478984,CG-3298168043,P-691534,CW-187104649349,CW-187104649527,CW-187105507506,CW-189729484136,CW-190415809340,CW-191913064573,CW-191913064712,CW-191913080068,CW-191913080408,CW-191913080670,CW-191914485575,CW-191914485848,E-142751494144,E-142762480291,E-142762558863,E-143617032215,E-168591795996,E-182000650417,E-182007043681,E-182007308374,E-187267399945,E-187268190600,E-191724244992,E-191748641714,E-191757015191,E-191757745199,E-191757745212,E-191757922448,E-191757922456,E-191757922459,E-191795252125,E-191913064739,E-191913064788,E-191913064825,E-191913065836,E-191914486142,E-191914486457,E-191914488151,E-191914503720,E-191916206874,E-191916207449,E-191916207620,E-191917277727,E-191917277783,E-191917277866,E-191917560667,E-191917560701,MENU-154931019020,MENU-168587867317,PGS-ALL,SW-3,GC-143174116914,GC-165023483770,GC-187118171939,TS-142763766447
permissions-policy: true
referrer-policy: no-referrer-when-downgrade
x-content-type-options: nosniff
x-frame-options: SAMEORIGIN
x-hs-cache-config: BrowserCache-5s-EdgeCache-180s
x-hs-cache-control: s-maxage=36000, max-age=0
x-hs-cf-cache-status: HIT
x-hs-cfworker-meta: {"contentType":"BLOG_POST"}
x-hs-content-id: 131537478984
x-hs-hub-id: 691534
x-hs-prerendered: Thu, 24 Jul 2025 05:57:10 GMT
set-cookie: __cf_bm=Gt31YaK.EGRki7tZbeKlqpLVMW92pyXXczaLuZoakFE-1753576884-1.0.1.1-Bc4ovuYgitbChkeYc.sFsZGCybkQfvddVwZPGfpss7XYkan9JOyX29dZuXnPz4U7TMixnVYP6vH6HYE1B2.hgEZFkMlsZ8fe6wlDMmvgmns; path=/; expires=Sun, 27-Jul-25 01:11:24 GMT; domain=.www.pythian.com; HttpOnly; Secure; SameSite=None
set-cookie: _cfuvid=ZfMZ3i6_Sc.3Wv.n6Uy3KA4oyGragE_jVDsfO2d7h6U-1753576884150-0.0.1.1-604800000; path=/; domain=.www.pythian.com; HttpOnly; Secure; SameSite=None
report-to: {"endpoints":[{"url":"https:\/\/a.nel.cloudflare.com\/report\/v4?s=Z4pe9nBWvkKYm%2BfFKQSciBysaAwTg%2BqfEyuqmS2sx4NXAKSqUV8SGcg8Mq59CMflGXgCFGNfET8HblinI6DCAtGkaKYNrYeZTr%2Bi%2FhvtiQadMXO3Q5sRgTaUf%2BB9bGEzVA%3D%3D"}],"group":"cf-nel","max_age":604800}
nel: {"success_fraction":0.01,"report_to":"cf-nel","max_age":604800}
vary: Accept-Encoding
server: cloudflare
cf-ray: 9658173ace92f473-BLR
alt-svc: h3=":443"; ma=86400
Oracle’s Database Security Assessment Tool (DBSAT) Version 2 (2.0.1)
Share this
Oracle’s Database Security Assessment Tool (DBSAT) Version 2 (2.0.1)
by Simon Pane on Jan 31, 2018 12:00:00 AM
Background
Oracle recently released a new version of their Database Security Assessment Tool (DBSAT) - version 2.0.1. This is a welcome update as it’s been a while since the initial release in 2016. In fact, the tool hasn't been enhanced or updated in over a year. Overall DBSAT is quite a valuable tool and personally I would recommend Oracle database administrators use it.Advantages of Version 2 over Version 1
Version 2.0.1 seems to offer a number of advantages and general changes. Some of the things I’ve noticed include:- Change in terminology from “Opportunity”, “Some Risk”, “Significant Risk”, and “Severe Risk” to the more conventional terms “Advisory”, “Low Risk”, “Medium Risk”, and “High Risk”.
- A more comprehensive analysis. Running both versions against the same database, version 2 found more “issues”. Even within the same check, the new version sometimes identified more results.
- A new “References” section at the bottom of each check. From the DBSAT documentation: “Provides information on whether the finding is related to a CIS Oracle Database Benchmark 12c v2.0.0 recommendation or related to a GDPR Article/Recital”.
- A whole new Discoverer component designed to search for data based on customizable criteria and then generate a “Database Sensitive Data Assessment Report”. This report can be generated offline on a secondary system (only the source data collection runs on the database server).
- A new output format: JSON for ingestion into other tools or utilities (i.e. via a custom loader). Previously output was provided in HTML for easy manual navigation, Excel where additional columns can be added (i.e. making it more like a check-list), and text for easy cut & paste.
New Feature: “Discoverer”
The Discoverer component is a brand new feature for the purpose of searching for and reporting on “sensitive data”. What that really means is looking for sensitive data by column names (i.e. columns named “SALARY” or “SAL”, etc.) and producing a report on the findings. Reports are only in HTML and CSV formats as of DBSAT version 2.0.1. There’s a list of proposed “sensitive column names” included to get started with, but the list is fully customizable and extensible. In fact, this is the only part of DBSAT that is extensible. But for that reason I think this is a really promising and helpful new feature and can add value for anyone who does need to look for and track sensitive data. It saves them from writing their own similar tool or utility. The biggest downside is of course that the accuracy of the results is only as good as the search criteria and column names. For organizations with strong data modelling rules and policies, this shouldn’t be a problem. But if column names are completely arbitrary and obscure, then the effectiveness of the findings will be diminished.Comparison to ORAchk
For those familiar with Oracle’s more general health check tool ORAchk (or ExaChk), you’ll find the concept and operation reasonably familiar. But while it’s similar, there are still a number of differences. Comparing DBSAT to ORAchk some of the key differences would include:- DBSAT is a two-step operation: fist your collect data, then report on it. The later can be performed on a secondary machine.
- DBSAT gives the option to encrypt the raw data it gathers during the collection phase (more on this later).
- DBSAT has fewer command line switches and is simpler to run and use. Though the basic usage of ORAchk is pretty simple also.
- The HTML reports generated are a little similar in look and feel but also differ in many ways.
- Unlike ORAchk, DBSAT is not extensible meaning you cannot add your own custom audit checks.
- Unlike ORAchk, DBSAT does not offer automated runs or repository storage for comparative analysis and overall estate dashboard (ORAchk offers the “Collection Manager” repository database and APEX application).
- There’s no catalog of checks like ORAchk provides in HTML format.
Integration
Since ORAchk version 12.2.0.1.1_20160916, ORAchk has automatically included the output of the DBSAT utility as a single check within the ORAchk report. In fact all of the old database security related ORAchk checks seem to have been removed from ORAchk and replaced with this single check showing the DBSAT output. Personally I do not think this integration is a good thing for several reasons including:- There’s no guarantee that the version of DBSAT bundled with the version of ORAchk being used is the most recent. Since DBSAT doesn’t seem to be updated nearly as frequently it’s likely not a problem except for a period of time shortly after a DBSAT release.
- The included DBSAT output within an ORAchk report is only in text format and is encapsulated as a single audit check by ORAchk. In the ORAchk output, there’s no included DBSAT HTML, XLS, or JSON data for an easier review or integration into other tools.
- Most significantly, the scope of visibility may be different between an ORAchk report and a DBSAT report. An ORAchk findings report may be treated as low risk from a security and confidentiality perspective and therefore may be shared with a wider audience or handled less securely within an organization. Conversely, DBSAT reports may show current exposures and sensitive information that could be easily exploited if it fell into the wrong hands. Consequently DBSAT findings are often handled and secured with additional scrutiny.
./orachk -excludecheck 39128FBB540C098AE0530D98EB0AFB1A
Or alternatively, the security profile (which currently only includes the DBSAT report) can be skipped:
./orachk -excludeprofile security
Personally I’d suggest manually excluding only the check by the CheckID to not inadvertently exclude other security related checks which may be added to ORAchk in the future. For example, ORAchk’s scope can be quite broad while DBSAT is focused on the Database (and related OS configuration). So possibly the ORAchk “Security” profile could include security checks for other products.
Limitations and Concerns
DBSAT seems to have two main limitations or areas of concern. The first is spelled out pretty clearly in the documentation/user guide : it doesn’t collect OS data for the Windows platform. For Windows only SQL queries are run and hence only a subset of the analysis is performed. The second issue is with DBSAT’s encryption. The collector will (unless overridden with the -n command line argument which Oracle does not recommend), encrypt the raw data it collects for security. However, it only uses simple ZIP encryption to accomplish this. Standard ZIP encryption is not very strong and is breakable (exactly how is out of scope for this discussion). Consequently if you need to transfer the raw data collected by the DBSAT collector to a secondary system for processing by the DBSAT reporter in a secure manner then I would suggest instead manually encrypting/decrypting using a more powerful zip utility such as 7-zip and using AES-256 or similar.Conclusion
DBSAT is a pretty valuable utility and it’s nice to see Oracle evolving it with a major upgrade. The new Discoverer component also seems promising. And while it’s similar to ORAchk in usage and purpose, it’s also quite different. The ideal would be for Oracle to merge the functionality of both to provide the best of both tools to each.References:
https://go.oracle.com/lp=38340 Oracle Database Security Assessment Tool (DBSAT) (Doc ID 2138254.1) ORAchk - Health Checks for the Oracle Stack (Doc ID 1268927.2)Share this
- Technical Track (967)
- Oracle (413)
- MySQL (141)
- Cloud (128)
- Microsoft SQL Server (117)
- Open Source (90)
- Google Cloud (81)
- Microsoft Azure (63)
- Amazon Web Services (AWS) (58)
- Big Data (52)
- Google Cloud Platform (46)
- Cassandra (44)
- DevOps (41)
- Pythian (33)
- Linux (30)
- Database (26)
- Performance (25)
- Podcasts (25)
- Site Reliability Engineering (25)
- PostgreSQL (24)
- Oracle E-Business Suite (23)
- Oracle Database (22)
- Docker (21)
- DBA (20)
- Security (20)
- Exadata (18)
- MongoDB (18)
- Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) (18)
- Oracle Exadata (18)
- Automation (17)
- Hadoop (16)
- Oracleebs (16)
- Amazon RDS (15)
- Ansible (15)
- Snowflake (15)
- ASM (13)
- Artificial Intelligence (AI) (13)
- BigQuery (13)
- Replication (13)
- Advanced Analytics (12)
- Data (12)
- GenAI (12)
- Kubernetes (12)
- LLM (12)
- Authentication, SSO and MFA (11)
- Cloud Migration (11)
- Machine Learning (11)
- Rman (11)
- Datascape Podcast (10)
- Monitoring (10)
- Oracle Applications (10)
- Apache Cassandra (9)
- ChatGPT (9)
- Data Guard (9)
- Infrastructure (9)
- Python (9)
- Series (9)
- AWR (8)
- High Availability (8)
- Oracle EBS (8)
- Oracle Enterprise Manager (OEM) (8)
- Percona (8)
- Apache Beam (7)
- Data Governance (7)
- Innodb (7)
- Microsoft Azure SQL Database (7)
- Migration (7)
- Myrocks (7)
- Performance Tuning (7)
- Data Enablement (6)
- Data Visualization (6)
- Database Performance (6)
- Oracle Enterprise Manager (6)
- Orchestrator (6)
- RocksDB (6)
- Serverless (6)
- Azure Data Factory (5)
- Azure Synapse Analytics (5)
- Covid-19 (5)
- Disaster Recovery (5)
- Generative AI (5)
- Google BigQuery (5)
- Mariadb (5)
- Microsoft (5)
- Scala (5)
- Windows (5)
- Xtrabackup (5)
- Airflow (4)
- Analytics (4)
- Apex (4)
- Cloud Security (4)
- Cloud Spanner (4)
- CockroachDB (4)
- Data Management (4)
- Data Pipeline (4)
- Data Security (4)
- Data Strategy (4)
- Database Administrator (4)
- Database Management (4)
- Database Migration (4)
- Dataflow (4)
- Fusion Middleware (4)
- Google (4)
- Oracle Autonomous Database (Adb) (4)
- Oracle Cloud (4)
- Prometheus (4)
- Redhat (4)
- Slob (4)
- Ssl (4)
- Terraform (4)
- Amazon Relational Database Service (Rds) (3)
- Apache Kafka (3)
- Apexexport (3)
- Aurora (3)
- Business Intelligence (3)
- Cloud Armor (3)
- Cloud Database (3)
- Cloud FinOps (3)
- Cosmos Db (3)
- Data Analytics (3)
- Data Integration (3)
- Database Monitoring (3)
- Database Troubleshooting (3)
- Database Upgrade (3)
- Databases (3)
- Dataops (3)
- Digital Transformation (3)
- ERP (3)
- Google Chrome (3)
- Google Cloud Sql (3)
- Google Workspace (3)
- Graphite (3)
- Heterogeneous Database Migration (3)
- Liquibase (3)
- Oracle Data Guard (3)
- Oracle Live Sql (3)
- Oracle Rac (3)
- Perl (3)
- Rdbms (3)
- Remote Teams (3)
- S3 (3)
- SAP (3)
- Tensorflow (3)
- Adf (2)
- Adop (2)
- Amazon Data Migration Service (2)
- Amazon Ec2 (2)
- Amazon S3 (2)
- Apache Flink (2)
- Ashdump (2)
- Atp (2)
- Autonomous (2)
- Awr Data Mining (2)
- Cloud Cost Optimization (2)
- Cloud Data Fusion (2)
- Cloud Hosting (2)
- Cloud Infrastructure (2)
- Cloud Shell (2)
- Cloud Sql (2)
- Conferences (2)
- Cosmosdb (2)
- Cost Management (2)
- Cyber Security (2)
- Data Analysis (2)
- Data Discovery (2)
- Data Engineering (2)
- Data Migration (2)
- Data Modeling (2)
- Data Quality (2)
- Data Streaming (2)
- Data Warehouse (2)
- Database Consulting (2)
- Database Migrations (2)
- Dataguard (2)
- Docker-Composer (2)
- Enterprise Data Platform (EDP) (2)
- Etl (2)
- Events (2)
- Gemini (2)
- Health Check (2)
- Infrastructure As Code (2)
- Innodb Cluster (2)
- Innodb File Structure (2)
- Innodb Group Replication (2)
- NLP (2)
- Neo4J (2)
- Nosql (2)
- Open Source Database (2)
- Oracle Datase (2)
- Oracle Extended Manager (Oem) (2)
- Oracle Flashback (2)
- Oracle Forms (2)
- Oracle Installation (2)
- Oracle Io Testing (2)
- Podcast (2)
- Power Bi (2)
- Redshift (2)
- Remote DBA (2)
- Remote Sre (2)
- SAP HANA Cloud (2)
- Single Sign-On (2)
- Webinars (2)
- X5 (2)
- Actifio (1)
- Adf Custom Email (1)
- Adrci (1)
- Advanced Data Services (1)
- Afd (1)
- Ahf (1)
- Alloydb (1)
- Amazon (1)
- Amazon Athena (1)
- Amazon Aurora Backtrack (1)
- Amazon Efs (1)
- Amazon Redshift (1)
- Amazon Sagemaker (1)
- Amazon Vpc Flow Logs (1)
- Analysis (1)
- Analytical Models (1)
- Anisble (1)
- Anthos (1)
- Apache (1)
- Apache Nifi (1)
- Apache Spark (1)
- Application Migration (1)
- Ash (1)
- Asmlib (1)
- Atlas CLI (1)
- Awr Mining (1)
- Aws Lake Formation (1)
- Azure Data Lake (1)
- Azure Data Lake Analytics (1)
- Azure Data Lake Store (1)
- Azure Data Migration Service (1)
- Azure OpenAI (1)
- Azure Sql Data Warehouse (1)
- Batches In Cassandra (1)
- Business Insights (1)
- Chown (1)
- Chrome Security (1)
- Cloud Browser (1)
- Cloud Build (1)
- Cloud Consulting (1)
- Cloud Data Warehouse (1)
- Cloud Database Management (1)
- Cloud Dataproc (1)
- Cloud Foundry (1)
- Cloud Manager (1)
- Cloud Networking (1)
- Cloud SQL Replica (1)
- Cloud Scheduler (1)
- Cloud Services (1)
- Cloud Strategies (1)
- Compliance (1)
- Conversational AI (1)
- DAX (1)
- Data Analytics Platform (1)
- Data Box (1)
- Data Classification (1)
- Data Cleansing (1)
- Data Encryption (1)
- Data Estate (1)
- Data Flow Management (1)
- Data Insights (1)
- Data Integrity (1)
- Data Lake (1)
- Data Leader (1)
- Data Lifecycle Management (1)
- Data Lineage (1)
- Data Masking (1)
- Data Mesh (1)
- Data Migration Assistant (1)
- Data Migration Service (1)
- Data Mining (1)
- Data Monetization (1)
- Data Policy (1)
- Data Profiling (1)
- Data Protection (1)
- Data Retention (1)
- Data Safe (1)
- Data Sheets (1)
- Data Summit (1)
- Data Vault (1)
- Data Warehouse Modernization (1)
- Database Auditing (1)
- Database Consultant (1)
- Database Link (1)
- Database Modernization (1)
- Database Provisioning (1)
- Database Provisioning Failed (1)
- Database Replication (1)
- Database Scaling (1)
- Database Schemas (1)
- Database Security (1)
- Databricks (1)
- Datascape 59 (1)
- DeepSeek (1)
- Duet AI (1)
- Edp (1)
- Gcp Compute (1)
- Gcp-Spanner (1)
- Global Analytics (1)
- Google Analytics (1)
- Google Cloud Architecture Framework (1)
- Google Cloud Data Services (1)
- Google Cloud Partner (1)
- Google Cloud Spanner (1)
- Google Cloud VMware Engine (1)
- Google Compute Engine (1)
- Google Dataflow (1)
- Google Datalab (1)
- Google Grab And Go (1)
- Graph Algorithms (1)
- Graph Databases (1)
- Graph Inferences (1)
- Graph Theory (1)
- GraphQL (1)
- Healthcheck (1)
- Information (1)
- Infrastructure As A Code (1)
- Innobackupex (1)
- Innodb Concurrency (1)
- Innodb Flush Method (1)
- It Industry (1)
- Kubeflow (1)
- LMSYS Chatbot Arena (1)
- Linux Host Monitoring (1)
- Linux Storage Appliance (1)
- Looker (1)
- MMLU (1)
- Managed Services (1)
- Migrate (1)
- Migrating Ssis Catalog (1)
- Migration Checklist (1)
- MongoDB Atlas (1)
- MongoDB Compass (1)
- Newsroom (1)
- Nifi (1)
- OPEX (1)
- ORAPKI (1)
- Odbcs (1)
- Odbs (1)
- On-Premises (1)
- Ora-01852 (1)
- Ora-7445 (1)
- Oracle Cursor (1)
- Oracle Database Appliance (1)
- Oracle Database Se2 (1)
- Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 (1)
- Oracle Database Upgrade (1)
- Oracle Database@Google Cloud (1)
- Oracle Exadata Smart Scan (1)
- Oracle Licensing (1)
- Oracle Linux Virtualization Manager (1)
- Oracle Oda (1)
- Oracle Openworld (1)
- Oracle Parallelism (1)
- Oracle RMAN (1)
- Oracle Rdbms (1)
- Oracle Real Application Clusters (1)
- Oracle Reports (1)
- Oracle Security (1)
- Oracle Wallet (1)
- PDB (1)
- Perfomrance (1)
- Performance Schema (1)
- Policy (1)
- Prompt Engineering (1)
- Public Cloud (1)
- Pythian News (1)
- Rdb (1)
- Replication Compatibility (1)
- Replication Error (1)
- Retail (1)
- Scaling Ir (1)
- Securing Sql Server (1)
- Security Compliance (1)
- Serverless Computing (1)
- Sso (1)
- Tenserflow (1)
- Teradata (1)
- Vertex AI (1)
- Vertica (1)
- Videos (1)
- Workspace Security (1)
- Xbstream (1)
- July 2025 (3)
- June 2025 (1)
- May 2025 (3)
- March 2025 (2)
- February 2025 (1)
- January 2025 (2)
- December 2024 (1)
- October 2024 (2)
- September 2024 (7)
- August 2024 (4)
- July 2024 (2)
- June 2024 (6)
- May 2024 (3)
- April 2024 (2)
- February 2024 (1)
- January 2024 (11)
- December 2023 (10)
- November 2023 (11)
- October 2023 (10)
- September 2023 (8)
- August 2023 (6)
- July 2023 (2)
- June 2023 (13)
- May 2023 (4)
- April 2023 (6)
- March 2023 (10)
- February 2023 (6)
- January 2023 (5)
- December 2022 (10)
- November 2022 (10)
- October 2022 (10)
- September 2022 (13)
- August 2022 (16)
- July 2022 (12)
- June 2022 (13)
- May 2022 (11)
- April 2022 (4)
- March 2022 (5)
- February 2022 (4)
- January 2022 (14)
- December 2021 (16)
- November 2021 (11)
- October 2021 (6)
- September 2021 (11)
- August 2021 (6)
- July 2021 (9)
- June 2021 (4)
- May 2021 (8)
- April 2021 (16)
- March 2021 (16)
- February 2021 (6)
- January 2021 (12)
- December 2020 (12)
- November 2020 (17)
- October 2020 (11)
- September 2020 (10)
- August 2020 (11)
- July 2020 (13)
- June 2020 (6)
- May 2020 (9)
- April 2020 (18)
- March 2020 (21)
- February 2020 (13)
- January 2020 (15)
- December 2019 (10)
- November 2019 (11)
- October 2019 (12)
- September 2019 (16)
- August 2019 (15)
- July 2019 (10)
- June 2019 (16)
- May 2019 (20)
- April 2019 (21)
- March 2019 (14)
- February 2019 (18)
- January 2019 (18)
- December 2018 (5)
- November 2018 (16)
- October 2018 (12)
- September 2018 (20)
- August 2018 (27)
- July 2018 (31)
- June 2018 (34)
- May 2018 (28)
- April 2018 (27)
- March 2018 (17)
- February 2018 (8)
- January 2018 (20)
- December 2017 (14)
- November 2017 (4)
- October 2017 (1)
- September 2017 (3)
- August 2017 (5)
- July 2017 (4)
- June 2017 (2)
- May 2017 (7)
- April 2017 (7)
- March 2017 (8)
- February 2017 (8)
- January 2017 (5)
- December 2016 (3)
- November 2016 (4)
- October 2016 (8)
- September 2016 (9)
- August 2016 (10)
- July 2016 (9)
- June 2016 (8)
- May 2016 (13)
- April 2016 (16)
- March 2016 (13)
- February 2016 (11)
- January 2016 (6)
- December 2015 (11)
- November 2015 (11)
- October 2015 (5)
- September 2015 (16)
- August 2015 (4)
- July 2015 (1)
- June 2015 (3)
- May 2015 (6)
- April 2015 (5)
- March 2015 (5)
- February 2015 (4)
- January 2015 (3)
- December 2014 (7)
- October 2014 (4)
- September 2014 (6)
- August 2014 (6)
- July 2014 (16)
- June 2014 (7)
- May 2014 (6)
- April 2014 (5)
- March 2014 (4)
- February 2014 (10)
- January 2014 (6)
- December 2013 (8)
- November 2013 (12)
- October 2013 (9)
- September 2013 (6)
- August 2013 (7)
- July 2013 (9)
- June 2013 (7)
- May 2013 (7)
- April 2013 (4)
- March 2013 (7)
- February 2013 (4)
- January 2013 (4)
- December 2012 (6)
- November 2012 (8)
- October 2012 (9)
- September 2012 (3)
- August 2012 (5)
- July 2012 (5)
- June 2012 (7)
- May 2012 (11)
- April 2012 (1)
- March 2012 (8)
- February 2012 (1)
- January 2012 (6)
- December 2011 (8)
- November 2011 (5)
- October 2011 (9)
- September 2011 (6)
- August 2011 (4)
- July 2011 (1)
- June 2011 (1)
- May 2011 (5)
- April 2011 (2)
- February 2011 (2)
- January 2011 (2)
- December 2010 (1)
- November 2010 (7)
- October 2010 (3)
- September 2010 (8)
- August 2010 (2)
- July 2010 (4)
- June 2010 (7)
- May 2010 (2)
- April 2010 (1)
- March 2010 (3)
- February 2010 (3)
- January 2010 (2)
- November 2009 (6)
- October 2009 (6)
- August 2009 (3)
- July 2009 (3)
- June 2009 (3)
- May 2009 (2)
- April 2009 (8)
- March 2009 (6)
- February 2009 (4)
- January 2009 (3)
- November 2008 (3)
- October 2008 (7)
- September 2008 (6)
- August 2008 (9)
- July 2008 (9)
- June 2008 (9)
- May 2008 (9)
- April 2008 (8)
- March 2008 (4)
- February 2008 (3)
- January 2008 (3)
- December 2007 (2)
- November 2007 (7)
- October 2007 (1)
- August 2007 (4)
- July 2007 (3)
- June 2007 (8)
- May 2007 (4)
- April 2007 (2)
- March 2007 (2)
- February 2007 (5)
- January 2007 (8)
- December 2006 (1)
- November 2006 (3)
- October 2006 (4)
- September 2006 (3)
- July 2006 (1)
- May 2006 (2)
- April 2006 (1)
- July 2005 (1)
No Comments Yet
Let us know what you think