Mailing List
Home
Forum Home
Oracle List - by freelists.org
Oracle on SUSE Linux - Runing Oracle on SUSE Linux
Oracle database error code ...
www.freelists.org
Subjects
ORA 12540: TNS:internal limit restriction exceeded
ORA 12838 please : Is possible to append two times to the same table befo
ORA 12838 please : Is possible to append two times to the same table before
ora 04031
ora 12500 on windows
ORA 32004: obsolete and/or deprecated parameter(s) specified
ORA 01925: maximum of 30 enabled roles exceeded
ORA 01925: maximum of 30 enabled roles exceeded
ora 12500 on windows
ORA 01650, one idea
ORA 01650
ORA 4030
ORA 12838 please : Is possible to append two times to thesametable before do
ORA 12838 please : Is possible to append two times to thesame table before d
ORA 01536
ORA 03113 end of file on communication channel
ORA 32004: obsolete and/or deprecated parameter(s) specified
ORA 00600:
ORA 00020: maximum number of processes (%s) exceeded
ORA 01925: maximum of 30 enabled roles exceeded
ORA 3113 while creating a cluster database 9201 RAC on Linux with OCFS
ora 12500 on windows
ora 12500 on windows
ora 12500 on windows
ORA 01650, one idea
ora 12500 on windows
ora 12500 on windows
ora 12500 on windows
ORA 2000 Error Using DBMS STATS GATHER SCHEMA STATS
ORA 01650, one idea
ORA 01650, one idea
ORA 01650, one idea
ORA 01650
ORA 01650
Subject: ora 01031
ORA 4030
ORA 4030
ORA 06502: PL/SQL: numeric or value error: Bulk Bind: Truncated Bind
Subject: Re: ORA 01722 invalid number
 
who 's got the biggest and the fastest?

who 's got the biggest and the fastest?

2007-11-05       - By Greg Rahn

 Back
Reply:     1     2     3     4     5  

Sounds like you've been getting the marketing pitch...be careful and
don't get caught up in it.  Stick to the technicals.

Just to clarify, Oracle isn't OLAP based, unless you are using the
OLAP feature and functionality.

Just curious, what "very big" and "very fast" to you?  These words are
a bit subjective and mean different things to different people.

Oracle is a significant player in the DW/DSS space and has been for a
number of years.  Check out the Winter Corp VLDB reports.  In 2005,
Yahoo had a 100 TB db on Oracle.  I'm sure its grown since then.

An Oracle system can be architected to do whatever you want.  You just
have to define what *it* is.  Start with good db design and smartly
apply features where it can help.  Probably the most important thing
in choosing hardware for an Oacle DW/DSS system is to have a balanced
system.  This means that the CPU and I/O bandwidth are in a optimal
ratio to each other.  Optimal meaning that for your workload, both
resources are exhausted at approximately the same time.

Don't be fooled that brute force table scans are the way either.
There are certainly times when they are required, but remember the
phrase "work smarter, not harder"?  It applies here too.  The fastest
I/O is the one that never happens.  Partitioning is your friend.

Hope that helps...

On 11/5/07, Robyn <robyn.sands@(protected)> wrote:
> morning everyone,
>
> Anyone out there familiar with setting up very big and very fast Oracle?  If
> you could start from scratch, how would you architect your system?  What are
> some of the options that should be considered?
>
> Can a well designed Oracle system beat the proprietary data warehouse type
> specialists who claim that Oracle is OLAP based and therefore unable to
> match their speed with big data?
>
> Thoughts, comments and war stories appreciated ...
>
> Robyn


--
Regards,

Greg Rahn
http://structureddata.org
--
http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-l