FW: oracle ate
Hmm, no response on pgsql-general. Anyone up on
oracle's implementation?
elein
==================
Elein Mustain
elein@nextbus.com
(510)420-3120
-----Original Message-----
From: elein [mailto:elein@nextbus.com]
Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2000 6:41 PM
To: pgsql-general@hub.org
Cc: elein
Subject: oracle ate
Does anyone have a writeup or deconstruction of the
implementation of Oracle's extensibility capabilities?
I am a long time ordbms proponent (illustra, informix and
now postgresql). And I have heard mixed information
regarding Oracle's extensibility. Do they use a unified
type system? Are cartriges separate processes? Do the
separate processes (if they are) share memory with the
server process or is all the communication through pipish
things. If I don't use their standard cartridges (image,
text, video) how easy is it to write my own. Any GIS
specific pro or con info w/Oracle? Am I asking the right
questions?
I would like to put the questions to rest and get on with it.
Feel free to point me to the right audience or source if
this is not a good question for this group.
thanks
elein@nextbus.com
At 05:47 PM 10/3/00 -0700, elein wrote:
Hmm, no response on pgsql-general. Anyone up on
oracle's implementation?
You can subscribe to Oracle's Technet on the web for free (start
at www.oracle.com) and read all their manuals on-line.
AFAIK, Oracle themselves are somewhat up on Oracle's implementation
of various things, so reading their FREE on-line documentation would
seem like a good place to start.
If you can't find what you want there, FREE discussion forums not
terribly unlike this one are filled with Oracle drones eager to ask
your questions.
If you still can't get the answer you need, download a FREE Oracle
developer's copy, install it, and test yourself.
As a fervent Postgres supporter, I happen to believe in availing myself
of such FREE Oracle services as much as possible, partly because I use it
in one sphere of my professional (paid) life, but also because they are
such a fertile source of information on Oracle.
Trust me - you'll learn more about Oracle from Oracle docs, Oracle
forums, and free copies of Oracle than you'll learn here.
Just as clearly, you'll learn a lot more about Postgres here...
- Don Baccus, Portland OR <dhogaza@pacifier.com>
Nature photos, on-line guides, Pacific Northwest
Rare Bird Alert Service and other goodies at
http://donb.photo.net.