Oracle9i Replication Release 1 (9.0.1) Part Number A87499-02 |
|
Oracle9i Replication describes the features and functionality of the Oracle Replication. Specifically, Oracle9i Replication contains conceptual information about Oracle Replication, as well as information about planning your replication environment and troubleshooting replication problems. Oracle9i Replication also contains an introduction to the Replication Management tool in Oracle Enterprise Manager.
This preface contains these topics:
Oracle9i Replication is intended for database administrators and application developers who develop and maintain replication environments. These administrators and application developers perform one or more of the following tasks:
To use this document, you need to be familiar with relational database concepts, distributed database administration, PL/SQL (if using procedural replication), and the operating system under which you run an Oracle Replication environment.
This document contains:
Introduces the concepts and terminology of Oracle Replication.
Describes the concepts and architecture of multimaster replication.
Describes the concepts and architecture of materialized view replication. This chapter also discusses the prerequisites of building a materialized view environment.
Describes the concepts and architecture of deployment templates. This chapter also discusses designing deployment templates.
Describes the concepts and architecture of conflict resolution. This chapter describes conflict resolution methods.
Describes planning your replication environment, including information about setting initialization parameters and preparing your environment for replication.
Introduces you to the features of Oracle Replication Manager, a Java-based tool for creating, administering, and monitoring a replication environment.
Describes diagnosing and solving common replication problems.
Contains information about replication support for column length semantics and Unicode.
For more information, see these Oracle resources:
You may find more information about a particular topic in the other documents in the Oracle9i documentation set.
Many of the examples in this book use the sample schemas of the seed database, which is installed by default when you install Oracle. Refer to Oracle9i Sample Schemas for information on how these schemas were created and how you can use them yourself.
In North America, printed documentation is available for sale in the Oracle Store at
http://oraclestore.oracle.com/
Customers in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) can purchase documentation from
http://www.oraclebookshop.com/
Other customers can contact their Oracle representative to purchase printed documentation.
To download free release notes, installation documentation, white papers, or other collateral, please visit the Oracle Technology Network (OTN). You must register online before using OTN; registration is free and can be done at
http://technet.oracle.com/membership/index.htm
If you already have a username and password for OTN, then you can go directly to the documentation section of the OTN Web site at
http://technet.oracle.com/docs/index.htm
This section describes the conventions used in the text and code examples of this documentation set. It describes:
We use various conventions in text to help you more quickly identify special terms. The following table describes those conventions and provides examples of their use.
Code examples illustrate SQL, PL/SQL, SQL*Plus, or other command-line statements. They are displayed in a monospace (fixed-width) font and separated from normal text as shown in this example:
SELECT username FROM dba_users WHERE username = 'MIGRATE';
The following table describes typographic conventions used in code examples and provides examples of their use.
Oracle's goal is to make our products, services, and supporting documentation accessible to the disabled community with good usability. To that end, our documentation includes features that make information available to users of assistive technology. This documentation is available in HTML format, and contains markup to facilitate access by the disabled community. Standards will continue to evolve over time, and Oracle is actively engaged with other market-leading technology vendors to address technical obstacles so that our documentation can be accessible to all of our customers. For additional information, visit the Oracle Accessibility Program Web site at
http://www.oracle.com/accessibility/
JAWS, a Windows screen reader, may not always correctly read the code examples in this document. The conventions for writing code require that closing braces should appear on an otherwise empty line; however, JAWS may not always read a line of text that consists solely of a bracket or brace.
|
Copyright © 1996-2001, Oracle Corporation. All Rights Reserved. |
|