The Oracle Database (commonly referred to as Oracle RDBMS ...



The Oracle Database (commonly referred to as Oracle RDBMS or simply Oracle) consists of a relational database management system (RDBMS) produced and marketed by Oracle Corporation. As of 2009[update], Oracle remains a major presence in database computing.[1]

Larry Ellison and his friends and former co-workers Bob Miner and Ed Oates started the consultancy Software Development Laboratories (SDL) in 1977. SDL developed the original version of the Oracle software. The name Oracle comes from the code-name of a CIA-funded project Ellison had worked on while previously employed by Ampex.[

[edit] Physical and logical structures

An Oracle database system — identified by an alphanumeric system identifier or SID[3] — comprises at least one instance of the application, along with data storage. An instance — identified persistently by an instantiation number (or activation id: SYS.V_$DATABASE.ACTIVATION#) — comprises a set of operating-system processes and memory-structures that interact with the storage. Typical processes include PMON (the process monitor) and SMON (the system monitor).

Users of Oracle databases refer to the server-side memory-structure as the SGA (System Global Area). The SGA typically holds cache information such as data-buffers, SQL commands, and user information. In addition to storage, the database consists of online redo logs (or logs), which hold transactional history. Processes can in turn archive the online redo logs into archive logs (offline redo logs), which provide the basis (if necessary) for data recovery and for some forms of data replication.

If the Oracle database administrator has implemented Oracle RAC (Real Application Clusters), then multiple instances, usually on different servers, attach to a central storage array. This scenario offers advantages such as better performance, scalability and redundancy. However, support becomes more complex, and many sites do not use RAC. In version 10g, grid computing introduced shared resources where an instance can use (for example) CPU resources from another node (computer) in the grid.

The Oracle DBMS can store and execute stored procedures and functions within itself. PL/SQL (Oracle Corporation's proprietary procedural extension to SQL), or the object-oriented language Java can invoke such code objects and/or provide the programming structures for writing them.

[edit] Storage

The Oracle RDBMS stores data logically in the form of tablespaces and physically in the form of data files. Tablespaces can contain various types of memory segments, such as Data Segments, Index Segments, etc. Segments in turn comprise one or more extents. Extents comprise groups of contiguous data blocks. Data blocks form the basic units of data storage.

Oracle database management tracks its computer data storage with the help of information stored in the SYSTEM tablespace. The SYSTEM tablespace contains the data dictionary — and often (by default) indexes and clusters. A data dictionary consists of a special collection of tables that contains information about all user-objects in the database. Since version 8i, the Oracle RDBMS also supports "locally managed" tablespaces which can store space management information in bitmaps in their own headers rather than in the SYSTEM tablespace (as happens with the default "dictionary-managed" tablespaces).

[edit] Disk files

| |This section requires expansion. |

[edit] Data files

At the physical level, datafiles comprise one or more data blocks, where the block size can vary between datafiles.

Datafiles can occupy pre-allocated space in the file system of a computer server, utilize raw disk directly, or exist within ASM logical volumes.[4]

[edit] Control files

One (or multiple multiplexed) control files (also known as "controlfiles") store overall system information and statuses.[5]

[edit] Database schema

Oracle database conventions refer to defined groups of object ownership (generally associated with a "username") as schemas.

Most Oracle database installations traditionally came with a default schema called SCOTT. After the installation process has set up the sample tables, the user can log into the database with the username scott and the password tiger. The name of the SCOTT schema originated with Bruce Scott, one of the first employees at Oracle (then Software Development Laboratories), who had a cat named Tiger.[6]

Oracle Corporation has de-emphasized the use of the SCOTT schema, as it uses few of the features of the more recent releases of Oracle. Most recent[update] examples supplied by Oracle Corporation reference the default HR or OE schemas.

Other default schemas[7] include:

• SYS (essential core database structures and utilities)

• SYSTEM (additional core database structures and utilities, and privileged account)

• OUTLN (utilized to store metadata for stored outlines for stable query-optimizer execution plans.[8]

• BI, IX, HR, OE, PM, and SH (expanded sample schemas[9] containing more data and structures than the older SCOTT schema).

[edit] Memory architecture

[edit] System Global Area

Main article: System Global Area

Each Oracle instance uses a System Global Area or SGA — a shared-memory area — to store its data and control-information.[10]

Each Oracle instance allocates itself an SGA when it starts and de-allocates it at shut-down time. The information in the SGA consists of the following elements, each of which has a fixed size, established at instance startup:

• the database buffer cache: this stores the most recently-used data blocks. These blocks can contain modified data not yet written to disk (sometimes known as "dirty blocks"), unmodified blocks, or blocks written to disk since modification (sometimes known as clean blocks). Because the buffer cache keeps blocks based on a most-recently-used algorithm, the most active buffers stay in memory to reduce I/O and to improve performance.

• the redo log buffer: this stores redo entries — a log of changes made to the database. The instance writes redo log buffers to the redo log as quickly and efficiently as possible. The redo log aids in instance recovery in the event of a system failure.

• the shared pool: this area of the SGA stores shared-memory structures such as shared SQL areas in the library cache and internal information in the data dictionary. An insufficient amount of memory allocated to the shared pool can cause performance degradation.

[edit] Library cache

The library cache[11] stores shared SQL, caching the parse tree and the execution plan for every unique SQL statement.

If multiple applications issue the same SQL statement, each application can access the shared SQL area. This reduces the amount of memory needed and reduces the processing-time used for parsing and execution planning.

[edit] Data dictionary cache

The data dictionary comprises a set of tables and views that map the structure of the database.

Oracle databases store information here about the logical and physical structure of the database. The data dictionary contains information such as:

• user information, such as user privileges

• integrity constraints defined for tables in the database

• names and datatypes of all columns in database tables

• information on space allocated and used for schema objects

The Oracle instance frequently accesses the data dictionary in order to parse SQL statements. The operation of Oracle depends on ready access to the data dictionary: performance bottlenecks in the data dictionary affect all Oracle users. Because of this, database administrators should make sure that the data dictionary cache[12] has sufficient capacity to cache this data. Without enough memory for the data-dictionary cache, users see a severe performance degradation. Allocating sufficient memory to the shared pool where the data dictionary cache resides precludes these particular performance problems.

[edit] Program Global Area

The Program Global Area[13][14] or PGA memory-area of an Oracle instance contains data and control-information for Oracle's server-processes.

The size and content of the PGA depends on the Oracle-server options installed. This area consists of the following components:

• stack-space: the memory that holds the session's variables, arrays, and so on.

• session-information: unless using the multithreaded server, the instance stores its session-information in the PGA. (In a multithreaded server, the session-information goes in the SGA.)

• private SQL-area: an area in the PGA which holds information such as bind-variables and runtime-buffers.

• sorting area: an area in the PGA which holds information on sorts, hash-joins, etc.

[edit] Process architectures

[edit] Oracle processes

The Oracle RDBMS typically relies on a group of processes running simultaneously in the background and interacting to monitor and expedite database operations. Typical operating groups might include some of the following individual processes — (shown along with their abbreviated nomenclature):[15]

• archiver processes (ARCn)

• checkpoint process (CKPT) *REQUIRED*

• coordinator-of-job-queues process (CJQn): dynamically spawns slave processes for job-queues

• database writer processes (DBWn) *REQUIRED*

• dispatcher processes (Dnnn): multiplex server-processes on behalf of users

• memory-manager process (MMAN): used for internal database tasks such as Automatic Shared Memory Management

• log-writer process (LGWR) *REQUIRED*

• log-write network-server (LNSn): transmits redo logs in Data Guard environments

• logical standby coordinator process (LSP0): controls Data Guard log-application

• media-recovery process (MRP): detached recovery-server process

• memory-monitor process (MMON): process for automatic problem-detection, self-tuning and statistics-gathering[16]

• memory-monitor light process (MMNL): gathers and stores Automatic Workload Repository (AWR) data

• mmon slaves (Mnnnn — M0000, M0001, etc): background slaves of the MMON process[17]

• process-monitor process (PMON) *REQUIRED*

• process-spawner (PSP0): spawns Oracle processes

• queue-monitor processes (QMNn)

• recoverer process (RECO)

• remote file-server process (RFS)

• shared server processes (Snnn): serve client-requests

• system monitor process (SMON) *REQUIRED*

[edit] User processes, connections and sessions

Oracle Database terminology distinguishes different computer-science terms in describing how end-users interact with the database:

• user processes involve the invocation of application software[18]

• a connection refers to the pathway linking a user process to an Oracle instance[19]

• sessions consist of specific connections to an Oracle instance.[20] Each session within an instance has a session identifier or "SID"[21] (distinct from the system-identifier SID).

[edit] Concurrency and locking

Oracle databases control simultaneous access to data resources with locks (alternatively documented as "enqueues"[22] ). The databases also utilize "latches" -- low-level serialization mechanisms to protect shared data structures in the System Global Area.[23]

[edit] Configuration

Database administrators control many of the tunable variations in an Oracle instance by means of values in a parameter file.[24] This file in its ASCII default form ("pfile") normally has a name of the format init.ora. The default binary equivalent server paramater file ("spfile") (dynamically reconfigurable to some extent)[25] defaults to the format spfile.ora. Within an SQL-based environment, the views V$PARAMETER[26] and V$SPPARAMETER[27] give access to reading parameter values.

[edit] Internationalization

Oracle Database software comes in 63 language-versions (including regional variations such as American English and British English). Variations between versions cover the names of days and months, abbreviations, time-symbols such as A.M. and A.D., and sorting.[28]

Oracle Corporation has translated Oracle Database error-messages into Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Thai and Turkish.[29]

Oracle Corporation provides database developers with tools and mechanisms for producing internationalized database applications: referred to internally as "Globalization".[30]

[edit] History

[edit] Corporate/technical timeline

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• 1977: Larry Ellison and friends founded Software Development Laboratories.

• 1979: SDL changed its company-name to "Relational Software, Inc." (RSI) and introduced its product Oracle V2 as an early commercially-available relational database system. The version did not support transactions, but implemented the basic SQL functionality of queries and joins. (RSI never released a version 1 - instead calling the first version version 2 as a marketing gimmick.)[31]

• 1982: RSI in its turn changed its name, becoming known as "Oracle Corporation",[32] to align itself more closely with its flagship product.

• 1983: The company released Oracle version 3, which it had re-written using the C programming language and which supported COMMIT and ROLLBACK functionality for transactions. Version 3 extended platform support from the existing Digital VAX/VMS systems to include Unix environments.[32]

• 1984: Oracle Corporation released Oracle version 4, which supported read-consistency.

• 1985: Oracle Corporation released Oracle version 5, which supported the client-server model — a sign of networks becoming more widely available in the mid-1980s.

• 1986: Oracle version 5.1 started supporting distributed queries.

• 1988: Oracle RDBMS version 6 came out with support for PL/SQL embedded within Oracle Forms v3 (version 6 could not store PL/SQL in the database proper), row-level locking and hot backups.[33]

• 1989: Oracle Corporation entered the application products market and developed its ERP product, (later to become part of the Oracle E-Business Suite), based on the Oracle relational database.

• 1990: the release of Oracle Applications release 8[32]

• 1992: Oracle version 7 appeared with support for referential integrity, stored procedures and triggers.

• 1997: Oracle Corporation released version 8, which supported object-oriented development and multimedia applications.

• 1999: The release of Oracle8i aimed to provide a database inter-operating better with the Internet (the i in the name stands for "Internet"). The Oracle 8i database incorporated a native Java virtual machine (Oracle JVM).

• 2000: Oracle E-Business Suite 11i pioneers integrated enterprise application software[32]

• 2001: Oracle9i went into release with 400 new features, including the ability to read and write XML documents. 9i also provided an option for Oracle RAC, or "Real Application Clusters", a computer-cluster database, as a replacement for the Oracle Parallel Server (OPS) option.

• 2003: Oracle Corporation released Oracle Database 10g. (The g stands for "grid"; emphasizing a marketing thrust of presenting 10g as "grid-computing ready".)

• 2005: Oracle Database 10.2.0.1 — also known as Oracle Database 10g Release 2 (10gR2) — appeared.

• 2006: Oracle Corporation announces Unbreakable Linux[32]

• 2007: Oracle Database 10g release 2 sets a new world record TPC-H 3000 GB benchmark result[34]

• 2007: Oracle Corporation released Oracle Database 11g for Linux and for Microsoft Windows.

• 2008: Oracle Corporation acquires BEA Systems.

• 2009: Oracle Corporation acquires Sun Microsystems. Note: as of October 2009[update] the acquisition awaits approval from the European Council[citation needed].

[edit] Version numbering

Oracle products have historically followed their own release-numbering and naming conventions. With the Oracle RDBMS 10g release, Oracle Corporation started standardizing all current versions of its major products using the "10g" label, although some sources continued to refer to Oracle Applications Release 11i as Oracle 11i. Major database-related products and some of their versions include:

• Oracle Application Server 10g (also known as "Oracle AS 10g"): a middleware product;

• Oracle Applications Release 11i (aka Oracle e-Business Suite, Oracle Financials or Oracle 11i): a suite of business applications;

• Oracle Developer Suite 10g (9.0.4);

• Oracle JDeveloper 10g: a Java integrated development environment;

Since version 5, Oracle's RDBMS release numbering has used the following codes:

• Oracle5

• Oracle6

• Oracle7: 7.0.16 — 7.3.4

• Oracle8 Database: 8.0.3 — 8.0.6

• Oracle8i Database Release 1: 8.1.5.0 — 8.1.5.1

• Oracle8i Database Release 2: 8.1.6.0 — 8.1.6.3

• Oracle8i Database Release 3: 8.1.7.0 — 8.1.7.4

• Oracle9i Database Release 1: 9.0.1.0 — 9.0.1.5 (patchset as of December 2003[update])

• Oracle9i Database Release 2: 9.2.0.1 — 9.2.0.8 (patchset as of April 2007[update])

• Oracle Database 10g Release 1: 10.1.0.2 — 10.1.0.5 (patchset as of February 2006[update])

• Oracle Database 10g Release 2: 10.2.0.1 — 10.2.0.4 (patchset as of April 2008[update])

• Oracle Database 11g Release 1: 11.1.0.6 — 11.1.0.7 (patchset as of September 2008[update])

• Oracle Database 11g Release 2: 11.2.0.1 (released 2009-09-01)

The version-numbering syntax within each release follows the pattern: major.maintenance.application-ponent-specific.platform-specific.

For example, "10.2.0.1 for 64-bit Solaris" means: 10th major version of Oracle, maintenance level 2, Oracle Application Server (OracleAS) 0, level 1 for Solaris 64-bit.

The Oracle Administrator's Guide offers further information on Oracle release numbers. Oracle Corporation provides a table[35] showing the latest patch-set releases by major release, operating-system, and hardware-architecture.

[edit] List of claimed firsts

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| |Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2007) |

Oracle Corporation claims to have provided:

• the first commercially-available SQL-based database (1979)[36]

• the first database to support symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) (1983)

• the first distributed database (1986)

• the first database product tested to comply with the ANSI SQL standard (1993)[36]

• the first 64-bit database (1995)

• the first database to incorporate a native JRE (1998)

• the first proprietary RDBMS to become available on Linux (1998)[37]

• the first database to support XML (1999)

[edit] Editions

Over and above the different versions of the Oracle database management software, Oracle Corporation subdivides its product into varying "editions" - apparently for marketing and license-tracking reasons. In approximate order of decreasing scale, we find:

• Enterprise Edition[38] (EE) includes more features than the 'Standard Edition', especially in the areas of performance and security. Oracle Corporation licenses this product on the basis of users or of processors, typically for servers running 4 or more CPUs. EE has no memory limits, and can utilize clustering using Oracle RAC software.

• Standard Edition[39] (SE) contains base database functionality. Oracle Corporation licenses this product on the basis of users or of processors, typically for servers running from one to four CPUs. If the number of CPUs exceeds 4 CPUs, the user must convert to an Enterprise license. SE has no memory limits, and can utilize clustering with Oracle RAC at no additional charge.

• Standard Edition One,[40] introduced with Oracle 10g, has some additional feature-restrictions. Oracle Corporation markets it for use on systems with one or two CPUs. It has no memory limitations.

• Express Edition[41] ('Oracle Database XE'), introduced in 2005, offers Oracle 10g free to distribute on Windows and Linux platforms. It has a footprint of only 150 MB and is restricted[by whom?] to the use of a single CPU, a maximum of 4 GB of user data. Although it can install on a server with any amount of memory, it uses a maximum of 1 GB.[42] Support for this version comes exclusively through on-line forums and not through Oracle support.

• Oracle Database Lite,[43] intended for running on mobile devices. The database located on the mobile device can synchronize with a server-based installation.

[edit] Host platforms

Prior to releasing Oracle9i in 2001, Oracle Corporation ported its database product to a wide variety of platforms. More recently Oracle Corporation has consolidated on a smaller range of operating-system platforms.

As of October 2006[update], Oracle Corporation supported the following operating systems and hardware platforms for Oracle Database 10g:

• Apple Mac OS X Server: PowerPC

• HP HP-UX: PA-RISC, Itanium

• HP Tru64 UNIX: Alpha

• HP OpenVMS: Alpha, Itanium

• IBM AIX5L: IBM POWER

• IBM z/OS: zSeries

• Linux: x86, x86-64, PowerPC, zSeries, Itanium

• Microsoft Windows: x86, x86-64, Itanium

• Sun Solaris: SPARC, x86, x86-64

[edit] Related software

For links to some of Oracle Corporation's software which integrates with Oracle databases, see the Oracle Corporation category and the Oracle software category pages.

[edit] Database options

Oracle Corporation refers to some extensions to the core functionality of the Oracle database as "database options".[44] As of 2008[update] such options include:

• Active Data Guard (extends Oracle Data Guard physical standby functionality in 11g)

• Advanced Security (adds data encryption methods)

• Content database (provides a centralized repository for unstructured information)

• Database Vault (enforces extra security on data access)

• Data Mining (ODM) (mines for patterns in existing data)

• In-Memory Database Cache (utilizes TimesTen technology)

• Label Security (enforces row-level security)

• Management Packs (various)

• Oracle Answers (for ad-hoc analysis and reporting)

• Oracle OLAP (adds analytical processing)

• Oracle Programmer (provides programmatic access to Oracle databases via precompilers, interfaces and bindings)[45]

• Partitioning (granularizes tables and indexes for efficiency)

• Real Application Clusters (RAC) (coordinates multiple database servers, together accessing the same database)

• Oracle Real Application Testing (new at version 11g) — including Database Replay (for testing workloads) and SQL Performance Analyzer (SPA) (for preserving SQL efficiency in changing environments)[46]

• Records database (a records management application)

• Oracle Spatial (integrates relational data with geographic information systems (GIS))

• Transparent Gateway for connecting to non-Oracle systems. Offers optimized solution, with more functionality and better performance than Oracle Generic Connectivity.

• Total Recall (optimizes long-term storage of historical data)

• Oracle Warehouse Builder (in various forms and sub-options)

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

In most cases, using these options entails extra licensing costs.[47]

[edit] Suites

In addition to its RDBMS, Oracle Corporation has released several related suites of tools and applications relating to implementations of Oracle databases. For example:

• Oracle Application Server, a J2EE-based application server, aids in developing and deploying applications which utilise Internet technologies and a browser.

• Oracle Collaboration Suite contains messaging, groupware and collaboration applications.

• Oracle Developer Suite contains software development tools, including JDeveloper.

• Oracle E-Business Suite collects together applications for enterprise resource planning (including Oracle Financials), customer relationship management and human resources management (Oracle HR).

• Oracle Enterprise Manager (OEM) used by database administrators (DBAs) to manage the DBMS, and recently[update] in version 10g, a web-based rewrite of OEM called "Oracle Enterprise Manager Database Control". Oracle Corporation has dubbed the super-Enterprise-Manager used to manage a grid of multiple DBMS and Application Servers "Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control".

• Oracle Programmer/2000, a bundling of interfaces for 3GL programming languages, marketed with Oracle7 and Oracle8.[48][49]

[edit] Database "features"

Apart from the clearly-defined database options, Oracle databases may include many semi-autonomous software sub-systems, which Oracle Corporation sometimes refers to as "features" in a sense subtly different from the normal usage of the word.[50] Such "features" may include (for example):

• Active Session History (ASH), the collection of data for immediate monitoring of very recent database activity.[51]

• Automatic Workload Repository (AWR), providing monitoring services to Oracle database installations from Oracle version 10. Prior to the release of Oracle version 10, the Statspack facility provided similar functionality.

• Clusterware

• Data Aggregation and Consolidation

• Data Guard for high availability

• Generic Connectivity for connecting to non-Oracle systems.

• Data Pump utilities, which aid in importing and exporting data and metadata between databases[52]

• Database Resource Manager (DRM), which controls the use of computing resources.[53]

• Fine-grained auditing (FGA) (in Oracle Enterprise Edition[54]) supplements standard security-auditing features[55]

• Flashback for selective data recovery and reconstruction[56]

• iSQL*Plus, a web-browser-based graphical user interface (GUI) for Oracle database data-manipulation (compare SQL*Plus)

• Oracle Data Access Components (ODAC), tools which consist of:[57]

o Oracle Data Provider for .NET ()[58]

o Oracle Developer Tools (ODT) for Visual Studio

o Oracle Providers for

o Oracle Database Extensions for .NET

o Oracle Provider for OLE DB

o Oracle Objects for OLE

o Oracle Services for Microsoft Transaction Server

• Oracle-managed files (OMF) -- a feature allowing automated naming, creation and deletion of datafiles at the operating-system level.

• Recovery Manager (rman) for database backup, restoration and recovery

• SQL*Plus, a program that allows users to interact with Oracle database(s) via SQL and PL/SQL commands on a command-line. Compare iSQL*Plus.

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

[edit] Standalone tools

Users can develop applications in Java and PL/SQL using tools such as Oracle JDeveloper, Oracle Forms, or Oracle Reports. Oracle Corporation has started[clarification needed] a drive toward 'wizard'-driven environments with a view to enabling non-programmers to produce simple data-driven applications.

Oracle SQL Developer, a free graphical tool for database development, allows developers to browse database objects, run SQL statements and SQL scripts, and edit and debug PL/SQL statements. It incorporates standard and customized reporting.

[edit] Other databases marketed by Oracle Corporation

By acquiring other technology in the database field, Oracle Corporation has taken over:

• TimesTen, a memory-resident database that can cache transactions and synchronize data with a centralized Oracle database server. It functions as a real-time infrastructure software product intended for the management of low-latency, high-volume data, of events and of transactions.

• BerkeleyDB, a simple, high-performance, embedded database

• Oracle Rdb, a legacy relational database for the OpenVMS operating system

• MySQL a relational database purchased as part of its immediate previous owner, Sun Microsystems

[edit] Using Oracle Database software

Users of Oracle databases may access the online documentation, the Oracle Technology Network site, and the comp.databases.oracle Usenet discussion group. The Oracle Technet site offers downloads of full-featured evaluation software. Users can also check the Oracle FAQ site before posting questions to forums, mailing lists, etc. They can also log on to to post questions to and get answers from Tom Kyte, a Vice-President of Oracle Corporation and the author of several Oracle books including Expert One-On-One Oracle (ISBN 1-59059-525-4).

The Oracle RDBMS has had a reputation among novice users as difficult to install on Linux systems.[citation needed] Oracle Corporation has packaged recent[update] versions for several popular Linux distributions in an attempt to minimize installation challenges beyond the level of technical expertise required to install a database server.[citation needed]

[edit] Official support

Users who have Oracle support contracts should turn to Oracle's MetaLink web site (password required). MetaLink provides users of Oracle Corporation products with a repository of reported problems, diagnostic scripts and solutions. It also integrates with the provision of support tools, patches and upgrades.

The Remote Diagnostic Agent or RDA[59] can operate as a command-line diagnostic tool executing a script. The data captured provides an overview of the Oracle Database environment intended for diagnostic and trouble-shooting. Within RDA, the HCVE (Health Check Validation Engine)[60] can verify and isolate host system environmental issues that may affect the performance of Oracle software.

[edit] Database-related guidelines

Oracle Corporation also endorses certain practices and conventions as enhancing the use of its database products. These include:

• Oracle Maximum Availability Architecture (MAA), guidelines on developing high-availability systems

• Optimal Flexible Architecture (OFA), blueprints for mapping Oracle-database objects to file-systems

[edit] Oracle Certification Program

Main article: Oracle Certification Program

The Oracle Certification Program, a professional certification program, includes the administration of Oracle Databases as one of its main certification paths. It contains three levels:

1. Oracle Certified Associate (OCA)

2. Oracle Certified Professional (OCP)

3. Oracle Certified Master (OCM)

[edit] User groups

A variety of official (Oracle-sponsored)[61] and unofficial user groups has grown up of users and developers of Oracle databases. They include:

• Oracle Technology Network

• Independent Oracle Users Group

• Geographical/regional user groups

• Product-centric user groups

• Industry-centric user groups

• The Oak Table Network

• Usenet comp.databases.oracle groups

[edit] Market position

[edit] Competition

In the market for relational databases, Oracle Database competes against commercial products such as IBM's DB2 UDB and Microsoft SQL Server. Oracle and IBM tend to battle for the mid-range database market on UNIX and Linux platforms, while Microsoft dominates the mid-range database market on Microsoft Windows platforms. However, since they share many of the same customers, Oracle and IBM tend to support each other's products in many middleware and application categories (for example: WebSphere, PeopleSoft, and Siebel Systems CRM), and IBM's hardware divisions work closely with Oracle on performance-optimizing server-technologies (for example, Linux on zSeries). The two companies have a relationship perhaps best described as "coopetition". Niche commercial competitors include Teradata (in data warehousing and business intelligence), Software AG's ADABAS, Sybase, and IBM's Informix, among many others.

Increasingly, the Oracle database products compete against open-source relational database systems, particularly PostgreSQL, Firebird, and MySQL. Oracle acquired Innobase, supplier of the InnoDB codebase to MySQL, in part to compete better in the open source market. Database products developed on the basis of the open-source model generally cost significantly less to acquire than Oracle systems.

In 2007, competition with SAP AG occasioned litigation from Oracle Corporation.[62]

[edit] Pricing

Oracle Corporation offers term licensing for all Oracle products. It bases the list price for a term-license on a specific percentage of the perpetual license price.[63]

Enterprise Edition

As of March 2006[update], the database that costs the most per machine-processor among Oracle database editions.

Standard Edition

Cheaper: it can run on up to four processors but has fewer features than Enterprise Edition—it lacks proper parallelization,[64] etc; but remains quite suitable for running medium-sized applications.

Standard ONE

Sells even more cheaply, but remains limited to two CPUs. Standard Edition ONE sells on a per-seat basis with a five-user minimum. Oracle Corporation usually sells the licenses with an extra 22% cost for support and upgrades (access to MetaLink - Oracle Corporation's support site) which customers need to renew annually.

Oracle Express Edition (Oracle XE)

An addition to the Oracle database product family (beta version released in 2005, production version released in February 2006), offers a free version of the Oracle RDBMS, but one limited to 4 GB of user data and to 1 GB of RAM (SGA+PGA). XE will use no more than one CPU and lacks an internal JVM. XE runs only released on Windows and on Linux, not on AIX, Solaris, HP-UX and the other operating systems available for other editions.

As computers running Oracle often have eight or more processors, the software price can rise into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The total cost of ownership often exceeds this, as large Oracle installations usually require experienced and trained database administrators to do the set-up properly. Because of the product's large installed base and available training courses, Oracle specialists in some areas have become a more abundant resource than those for more exotic databases. Oracle frequently provides special training offers for database-administrators.

On Linux, Oracle's certified configurations include mostly commercial Linux distributions (Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 and 4, SuSE SLES8 and 9, Asianux) which can cost in a range from a few hundred to a few thousand USD per year (depending on processor architecture and the support package purchased).

The Oracle database system can also install and run on freely-available Linux distributions such as the Red Hat-based Centos,[65] or Debian-based systems.[66]

[edit] See also

| |Wikibooks has a book on the topic of |

| |Oracle database |

• List of relational database management systems

• List of object-relational database management systems

• Comparison of relational database management systems

• Comparison of object-relational database management systems

• Oracle Rdb for OpenVMS

• List of ERP software packages

• Run Book Automation

[edit] References

1. ^ IDC: Oracle Maintains Lead in Database Market

2. ^ Welcome to Larryland

3. ^ Bhakthavatsalam, Namrata (August 2008). "Glossary". Oracle Database Client Installation Guide 11g Release 1 (11.1) for AIX Based Systems Part Number B32077-03. Oracle. . Retrieved 2008-11-17. "The SID automatically defaults to the database name portion of the global database name (sales in the example sales.us.) until you reach eight characters or enter a period. You can accept or change the default value." 

4. ^ Watkins, Bob (2007-01-30). "Look inside ASM disk groups with Oracle 10gR2's ASMCMD". . ZDNet. . Retrieved 2009-07-30. "In 10g, Oracle introduced a new kind of storage for its database product. Automatic Storage Management (ASM) is a logical volume manager that takes physical disk partitions and manages their contents [...] Until ASM, there were only two choices: file system storage and raw disk storage." 

5. ^ Nyffenegger, René. "Control files [Oracle]". René Nyffenegger's collection of things on the web. . Retrieved 2009-07-30. "The control files of a database store the status of the physical structure of the database." 

6. ^ Oracle FAQ

7. ^ Known schemas in Oracle

8. ^ Optimizer plan stability definition

9. ^ Oracle's sample schemas

10. ^ Oracle Architecture, System Global Area

11. ^ Oracle architecture, the library cache section

12. ^ Oracle Architecture, data dictionary cache

13. ^ Oracle architecture, Program Global Area section

14. ^ PGA Definition, Oracle Database Master Glossary

15. ^ Oracle Process architecture concepts

16. ^ Niemiec, Richard (2007-06-25) "1.30. New Background Processes in 10g" Oracle Database 10g Performance Tuning: Tips & TechniquesOracle Pressp. 967ISBN 978-0-0722-6305-3 . Retrieved 2009-08-12 "MMON Memory Monitor process is associated with the Automatic Workload Repository new features used for automatic problem detection and self-tuning. MMON writes out the required statistics for AWR on a scheduled basis." 

17. ^ Niemiec, Richard (2007-06-25) "1.30. New Background Processes in 10g" Oracle Database 10g Performance Tuning: Tips & TechniquesOracle Pressp. 967ISBN 978-0-0722-6305-3 . Retrieved 2009-08-12 "M000 These are MMON background slave (m000) processes." 

18. ^ Cyran, Michele; Paul Lane (2005). "Process Architecture". Oracle Database Concepts. Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2008-08-13. "When a user runs an application program (such as a Pro*C program) or an Oracle tool (such as Enterprise Manager or SQL*Plus), Oracle creates a user process to run the user's application." 

19. ^ Cyran, Michele; Paul Lane (2005). "Process Architecture". Oracle Database Concepts. Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2008-08-13. "A connection is a communication pathway between a user process and an Oracle instance." 

20. ^ Cyran, Michele; Paul Lane (2005). "Process Architecture". Oracle Database Concepts. Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2008-08-13. "A session is a specific connection of a user to an Oracle instance through a user process" 

21. ^ Morales, Tony (2008). "V$SESSION". Oracle Database Reference 11g Release 1(11.1). Oracle. . Retrieved 2008-11-17. 

22. ^ Chan, Immanuel (July 2008). "Glossary". Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide 11g Release 1 (11.1). Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-04-29. "enqueue[:] This is another term for a lock." 

23. ^ "Oracle Database Master Glossary: 11g Release 1 (11.1)". Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-04-24. "latch[:] A simple, low-level serialization mechanism to protect shared data structures in the System Global Area." 

24. ^ Strohm, Richard; et al. (October 2008). "Parameter Files". Oracle Database Concepts 11g Release 1 (11.1). Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-07-14. "Parameter files contain a list of configuration parameters for that instance and database." 

25. ^ Strohm, Richard; et al. (October 2008). "Initialization Parameter Files and Server Parameter Files". Oracle Database Concepts 11g Release 1 (11.1). Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-07-14. 

26. ^ Morales, Tony; et al. (April 2009). "V$PARAMETER". Oracle Database Reference 11g Release 1 (11.1). Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-07-14. "V$PARAMETER displays information about the initialization parameters that are currently in effect for the session." 

27. ^ Morales, Tony; et al. (April 2009). "V$SPPARAMETER". Oracle Database Reference 11g Release 1 (11.1). Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-07-14. "V$SPPARAMETER displays information about the contents of the server parameter file." 

28. ^ "Locale Languages". . Retrieved 2008-02-26. 

29. ^ "Error Message languagues". . Retrieved 2008-02-26. 

30. ^ Shea, Cathy; et al. (September 2007). "Overview of Globalization Support". Oracle Database Globalization Support Guide 11g Release 1 (11.1). Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-02-16. "In the past, Oracle referred to globalization support capabilities as National Language Support (NLS) features. NLS is actually a subset of globalization support. NLS is the ability to choose a national language and store data in a specific character set. Globalization support enables you to develop multilingual applications and software products that can be accessed and run from anywhere in the world simultaneously." 

31. ^ As Larry Ellison said in an Oracle OpenWorld keynote presentation on 2007-11-11: "Who'd buy a version 1.0 from four guys in California?"

32. ^ a b c d e

33. ^ Compare

34. ^ "Oracle Database 10g Sets New Record for TPC-H Three TB Benchmark". . Retrieved 2008-01-31. 

35. ^ Oracle Database Patch Sets

36. ^ a b Greenwald, R., Stackowiak R., & Stern, J. (2001). Oracle Essentials: Oracle9i, Oracle8i & Oracle8 (2nd edition). Cambridge, MA: O'Reilly.

37. ^ ; but compare Informix's claim to priority: , retrieved 2008-02-13 and that of Polyhedra

38. ^ Enterprise Edition

39. ^ Standard Edition

40. ^ Standard Edition One

41. ^ Express Edition

42. ^ FAQ on Express Edition

43. ^ "Oracle Database Lite 10g". . Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-06-23. "[...] for developing, deploying and managing applications for mobile and embedded environments." 

44. ^ Oracle database options

45. ^ See download.docs/cd/B28359_01/license.111/b28287/options.htm#CIHBDGAD

46. ^ ""Real Application Testing Overview"". Oracle Corporation. August 2007. . Retrieved 2008-05-19. 

47. ^ See "Term licenses" at for various markets/countries.

48. ^ "Oracle Programmer/2000" (PDF). Oracle Corporation. $FILE/Oracle%20Programmer%202000%20data%20sheet%20Feb97.pdf. Retrieved 2009-02-25. "Oracle Programmer/2000 is a suite of programmatic interfaces that allows you to access and manipulate Oracle7 data and schemas. Programmer/2000 provides a rich set of interfaces and supports many programming languages, allowing the programmer to use the programming language and the programming paradigm of choice." 

49. ^ "Other Ways of Working with Oracle". Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-02-25. "Programmer/2000[:] a set of 3GL programming language interfaces" 

50. ^ For example, Oracle Data Guard counts officially as a "feature", but the command-stack within SQL*Plus, though a usability feature, does not appear in the list of "features" in

51. ^ Alapati, Sam R. (2005) Expert Oracle database 10g administrationApressp. 845ISBN 9781590594513 . Retrieved 2009-05-25 "... ASH records very recent session activity (within the last five or ten minutes)." 

52. ^ Overview of Oracle Data Pump

53. ^ Greenwald, Rick; Robert Stackowiak, Jonathan Stern (November 2007). Oracle Essentials: Oracle Database 11g. O'Reilly. p. 184. ISBN 978-0596514549. "The Database Resource Manager (DRM) was first introduced in Oracle8i [...] to place limits on the amount of computer resources that can be used [...]" 

54. ^ "Feature Availability by Edition". Oracle Database Licensing Information 11g Release 1 (11.1) Part Number B28287-08. Oracle Corporation. May 2008. . Retrieved 2008-08-19. 

55. ^ Nanda, Arup. "Auditing Tells All". Oracle Database 10g: The Top 20 Features for DBAs. Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2008-08-19. "...the standard audit (available in all versions) and the fine-grained audit (available in Oracle9i and up ..." 

56. ^

57. ^ "Oracle Product Accessibility Status: Database Server Enterprise Edition". Oracle Corporation. 2008-06-02. . Retrieved 2009-04-14. 

58. ^ "Oracle Data Provider for .NET". Oracle Corporation. . Retrieved 2009-05-07. "The Oracle Data Provider for .NET () features optimized data access to the Oracle database." 

59. ^ page 10. Retrieved 2008-05-08.

60. ^ Rea, Stephen (2008-09-16). "Upgrading Oracle 9.2.0.6 to 10.2.0.3 on AIX 5.2". University of Arkansas. . Retrieved 2009-08-11. "Run the PreInstall checklist for Oracle 10.2.0 (Metalink Note 250262.1: RDA 4 - Health Check / Validation Engine Guide): The Health Check Validation Engine (HCVE) rule set for Oracle Database 10g R2 (10.2.0) PreInstall (AIX) is described in: " 

61. ^ See Oracle User Group

62. ^ About the case in Hungarian

63. ^ See the published price list.

64. ^ Oracle Database Licensing Information Database Editions

65. ^ Installation centos; official Oracle Wiki

66. ^ Installation on Debian-based systems; official Oracle Wiki

[edit] Bibliography

• Loney, Kevin (December 17, 2008), Oracle Database 11g The Complete Reference (1st ed.), McGraw-Hill, p. 1368, ISBN 0071598758, , retrieved 2009-09-05 

[edit] External links

• Oracle Database, a view provided by Oracle Corporation

• Oracle Database Documentation

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