T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3803.1 | virtual viewer in Colorado | COOKIE::MUNNS | | Tue Apr 11 1995 19:16 | 15 |
| I saw part of the event, via DVN broadcast - Palmer's & Ellison's
presentations. Themes that were emphasized include: 64 bits, cluster
reliability over mainframe, Oracle in-memory database, Alpha processor
speed, ease of programming, price, and Ellison's goofy high-pitched laughs.
The message was clear - target IBM's mainframe customers.
Blurb that did not compute: Ellison shows slides of Oracle 7's improved
performance on in-memory Alpha system. He states that Tandem holds the
TpmC record but KNOWS that if Oracle ran the TpmC benchmark, it would win.
Hmmm, another 35mm projection. He can't seem to break the habit.
If I was an IBM mainframe customer, I would want to see proof of a
migration solution for all my applications before I considered Digital
and Alpha systems.
|
3803.2 | eyewitness news | ASABET::SILVERBERG | My Other O/S is UNIX | Wed Apr 12 1995 08:58 | 20 |
| I attended the event in NYC...the actual announcement, the
press/analyst Q&A and the product showcase. Overall, went very
well. Major themes are speed/performance, capacity, reliability.
Our offerings are TurboLaser platforms, 64-bit UNIX operating system,
64-bit compilers, 64-bit databases, SMP and CLusters,database expertise
centers, solutions expertise centers, applications/solutions
partnerships,etc. Bob Palmer & Larry Ellison did a very good job
highlighting what this breakthrough technology can deliver in terms of
solutions to real customer problems. Pauline Nist pulled a great
recovery from the teleprompter problems and discussed the actual box and
architecture. Clear customer targets are our installed base, Oracle
installed base, mainframe downsising customers. Enrico Pesatori
spoke of the changes made in Digital, and some of the new marketing
and revenue generation programs and customer support initiatives.
Although the major message was performance, VLM/VLDB capacity, etc.,
I thought we got some major messages across.
Mark
|
3803.3 | it looked good, even on DVN | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Apr 12 1995 10:39 | 10 |
| Was Pauline Nist really wearing one black and one red shoe, or did it
just look that way on the DVN?
Anyhow, the portion I saw of the announcement looked real good, even
with the couple teleprompter snafus. The ad agency did a nice job! I
only had time to catch a portion of the announcement, but it was nice
to be able to see it after all the work engineering has put over the
years.
/Charlotte
|
3803.4 | Hal red/Half black | MAIL2::VONROSENDAHL | | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:15 | 10 |
| Pauline shoes were half black and half red so if she turned it looked
like one red and one black but facing front you saw them correctly.
BTW, Pauline did a great comeback and did a good presentation.
I thought the annoucement went quite well in NY. My customer that
attended told me afterward it was the best Digital annoucement he has
ever seen.
I thought the Oracle annoucement with us helped bill the credibility
to our annoucement. Ellison does a great job.
|
3803.5 | Investors inital reaction - BAD | KAOFS::R_DAVEY | Robin Davey CSC/CTH dtn 772-7220 | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:44 | 31 |
| It appears that investors weren't impressed initially. DEC stock
reached 42 1/2 yesterday by the annoucement time, closed at 41 1/2
and opened at 40 1/4 this morning. They have since recovered to
41 5/8 as of 11:19 this morning.
Robin
Your requested quote...courtesy of PC Quote and SpaceCom Systems
DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORP
Symbol : DEC
Exchange : New York
===[ Last Trade ]===============================
Price : 41 5/8 +
Size : 2000
Time : 11:19
===[ Daily Record ]=============================
Open : 40 1/4
High : 41 5/8
Low : 40 1/4
Volume: 799600
Quote information is believed correct but is not warranted
or guaranteed by PC Quote or SpaceCom Systems
|
3803.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Apr 12 1995 12:58 | 4 |
| I wouldn't expect the stock to go up because of the announcement,
at least not afterwards. "Buy on the rumor, sell on the news"
Steve
|
3803.7 | Not in WSJ? | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Wed Apr 12 1995 14:38 | 14 |
|
I did not see any article in today's WSJ or the SJ Merc -
of course I could have missed them too! I'll be appalled if
the annc did not even merit a line of press beyond the Globe.
BTW I heard the Globe (!!!!) gave it a positive spin. Would
anyone be kind enough to post that article here?
Thanks.
-Ashikin
|
3803.8 | Heard Announcement on Radio | SOLVIT::CARLTON | | Wed Apr 12 1995 14:51 | 10 |
| WBNW Newsradio 590 out of Boston ("Bloomburg Radio Network") gave the
announcement some good airplay yesterday afternoon and evening. They
even had a pretty good BP soundbite (about 10 seconds). It was the
first time I've heard that from a DEC Exec.! Only problem was their
statement that this was (and I'm paraphrasing here) "...one of the
fastest Oracle DB configs..." I'm no techie, but I thought this Oracle
7 on Turbolaser Alpha was supposed to be THE fastest!! Or, is that
just our hype?
|
3803.9 | 14GB of 8 ns SRAM would take off like a rocket! | HELIX::SONTAKKE | | Wed Apr 12 1995 15:20 | 25 |
| Technically I am missing something. Regular windows is 16bits;
Windows32 is 32 bits. Win32 will be faster than Win16. An application
which can take advantage of 32 bit addressing will be faster because it
(or the OS behind its back) does NOT have to do the segmenting. But
nobody has claimed that Win32 delivers twice or 10 times or heaven
forbid, 300 times performance of Win16.
So how come 64 bit Oracle is delivering 200-300 times better performance
than Oracle 32? Is it possible that the performance gains are coming
from using the flat address space on the *memory* vs having to use
flat addressing space on the *disk*? Aren't we comparing the memory
speeds vs disk speeds?
The real performance advantages are because instaling 14GB of memory
can now be done "cost-effectively". Most of the systems on this planet
today don't even have 16GB of disk space!
Technically, without having the 64bit capability there is no way to put
that much memory in a single system. This is a big hammer approach
to the performance but it does work.
The next step should be to go for 2GB of secondary cache for our next
generation SuperTurboPropFan Laser system!
- Vikas
|
3803.10 | | ASABET::EARLY | Lose anything but your sense of humor. | Wed Apr 12 1995 15:49 | 35 |
| re: .9
The performance increases discussed during the announcement in NY by
Larry Ellison were comparisons to what PREVIOUSLY was the fastest box
that ran Oracle. Previous to this, the DEC 7000 running Digital UNIX
was the Oracle record holder. Now it is the turbolaser. I don't have
the exact numbers, but they were something like this:
8400
DEC 7000 8400 Performance
Time to read a big file in: time time 3x faster
Time to do ad hoc query: time time 20x faster
Time to do a 3-way join: time time 20x faster
Time to do a 4-way join: time time 69x faster
Time to do a 5-way join: time time 278x faster
Oracle, as stated earlier in this conference, doesn't do TPC/C
benchmarks. They prefer to 'benchmark' a system doing something a 'real
customer cares about'. The above is an example of how they prefer to
handle system speed comparisons.
Another example used took a real customers application. Oracle ran it
on an 8400 with VLM capability turned off. From a 'hot start' (data
already loaded into memory), it took 1 hour 27 minutes to run the application and get
the results. Using the same machine with VLM turned on, it took only 27
minutes.
So, it depends on what you're doing with a TurboLaser how much increase
in speed you get. However, it is very clear that it is CLEARLY the
fastest thing that runs Oracle today, and it is clear that as queries
get more complex, the advantages of the TurboLaser increase (Larry
Ellison's observation, not mine.)
|
3803.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Apr 12 1995 16:02 | 11 |
| Re: .9
Yes, the comparison is the in-memory system vs. a disk system. What
makes this interesting is that on 32-bit systems you can't address
enough data to be interesting to most large database users. Digital
UNIX is the only (I think) system that can do that. Then you add the
ability to stuff the cabinet with enough RAM, and you've got the
"killer app". It solves a real problem for real customers, as
outlandish as it may seem.
Steve
|
3803.12 | Memory vs. Disk | AKOCOA::DOUGAN | | Wed Apr 12 1995 16:13 | 10 |
| .9 as stated in the few previously - the point was made by Palmer and
Ellison that this is not magic, the performance gain is simply by using
memory instaed of disk. The figure given by Palmer was that memory is
10,000 times faster than disk. So a 200x improvement in performance is
quite easily explainable.
I think a lot of people in the industry have been waiting for the day
when memory was cheap enough and the system could address enough of it
that you could stuff your whole application in memory and run it there.
That was the point of the announcement - we're there now, no magic.
|
3803.13 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:41 | 10 |
| RE: .11
Just considering how far we've come in compute power, disk space,
and memory in the past 10 years is mind-boggling.. 10 years from now,
what has been announce today won't be that outlandish. We'll
probably have that 14GB and 300Mhz in our laptops. :)
mike
|
3803.14 | Cautionary note | ALFA2::WS19::HARRIS | | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:56 | 6 |
| One thing to remember:
The biggest performance increases are for "query only," which does not require
disk access when the entire database in loaded into main memory. Transaction
processing, in which records must be updated on disk, still runs faster on the
new AlphaServers, but at a smaller multiple of two to five times.
|
3803.15 | TL is both fastest and second fastest; not 7000 | I4GET::HENNING | | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:14 | 14 |
| re: .10
Thank you for recording the numbers! They look like what I remember.
But I think you got the column headers wrong. Wasn't it TURBOLASER
using 32-bit ORACLE vs. TURBOLASER using 64-bit?
I thought Larry Ellison specifically made the point that the
comparisons were without any hardware changes, just showing off the
capabilities of 64-bit-Oracle; and that if he had also included
hardware changes (e.g. comparing to an SGI or Sun system in 32 bit mode
to Turbolaser in 64-bit) the factors would have been even bigger.
/john
|
3803.16 | The London version | GVA02::DAVIS | | Thu Apr 13 1995 05:05 | 21 |
| I attended the event yesterday in London, accompanying a customer.
While the numbers were impressive, and while it became clear why users
might want 64 bits, I have to say that the event was an embarrassment.
The tone was set by the so-called comedian they hired as MC. He did two
routines at the beginning as a warm-up for the audience that met mostly
with stunned silence. The material was offensive and irrelevant; I
wanted to hide under my chair.
Aside from Theo Wegbrans and the UK product marketing manager, we had a
marketing guy from Computer Associates (to whom the general reaction was
"so what?") and Oracle's IT director for the UK. The latter might have
been all right, had he talked about how 64-bits made it possible for him
to run his business, but he didn't: he just tried to give a
techno-marketing pitch, and it didn't come off.
The piece de resistance was a Turbolaser appearing in smoke, with lots
of spots focused on it. Unfortunately, there was so much smoke, that
you couldn't see it.
Sigh.
|
3803.17 | BOB | ASABET::SILVERBERG | My Other O/S is UNIX | Thu Apr 13 1995 07:30 | 11 |
| re: Oracle performance
32-bit Oracle pulls data off disk into memory in 2K blocks. 64-bit
Oracle pulls data off disk in 32K blocks, also known as BOB (Big
Oracle Blocks). Getting the memory & pipes filled faster helps the
performance. (ps...the 32-bit Oracle is designed to move data in
8K blocks, but for various reasons, they only were able to effectively
and safely use 2K blocks).
Msrk
|
3803.18 | | SSDEVO::PARRIS | RAID-5 vs. RAID-1: n+1 << 2n, in $$$ | Thu Apr 13 1995 10:01 | 4 |
| That's one piece I didn't understand. If Big Oracle Blocks (BOB) at 32KB are
so much better, why is it that existing users, who have the option today of
using 8KB blocks instead of the default of 2KB, on the whole choose _not_ to
use the larger blocks (as Mr. Ellison pointed out multiple times)?
|
3803.19 | Information density? | CXXC::REINIG | This too shall change | Thu Apr 13 1995 10:48 | 13 |
| Mr. Ellison pointed out that current users could use 8KB blocks but
choose the 2KB blocks instead because there aren't enough 8KB blocks to
make it worth while doing so. There must be a tradeoff between faster
transfer size and memory wastage.
Not all the data in a block is useful. Some of it is irrelevant.
4 2KB blocks probably contain more interesting data that 1 8KB block.
Enough more to make up for the slower transfer rate.
32KB probably have an even smaller density of information but there are
so many of them that it doesn't matter.
August
|
3803.20 | BOB is not for everyone | LABC::NGUYEN | benchmark man | Thu Apr 13 1995 12:29 | 8 |
| -1. is right. The BOB (Big Oracle Blocks) would possibly increase the
contention. Particularly, in the OLTP environment, several different
transactions accessing/updating different rows in the same block will
contend for the block. Random update would run slower.
Furthermore, unused data in the big block unnecessarily reduces
available I/O bandwidth.
The BOB will help the Decision Support applications or Very Large Rows
and Multimedia applications. I'm not sure it would benefit the OLTP.
|
3803.21 | Oracle Rdb has VLM too ! | BACHUS::ALLEMEERSCH | In Flanders fields ... | Thu Apr 13 1995 12:34 | 5 |
|
Note that Oracle Rdb has VLM too on Digital UNIX and does not
require a special version for that.
_Luc ( Oracle now )
|
3803.22 | This is GOODNESS | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Thu Apr 13 1995 13:02 | 24 |
| re -1 ?? what was that about Oracle Rdb on Digital UNIX?
I thought Rdb is on OpenVMS, and that it may be avail
on Unix (ours only I assume), but that was before it
was sold.
I'm curious, so would you pls elaborate?
Few back -- Obviously there is a need to explain more clearly
how Oracle is exploiting the 64-bitness via VLM and VLDB. Also
obviously there are tradeoffs to be considered, as Ngugen had
pointed out earlier. Whether VLM or VLDB works for your situation
depends quite entirely on understanding what the application does.
DSS and Datawarehousing MAY be more suitable for a VLM
implementation than a TPC-C type OLTP application.
What we Digital folks need to appreciate first and understand is that
this is probably the first time there is a coordinated and synchronized
effort to fundamentally match our hardware features & capabilities to
a software engine (a partner's that is); it so happens that Oracle is
the most ready to do this than the Sybase or Informix, but we are
working on that front even more so than before.
-Ashikin
|
3803.23 | video? | MAIL2::CUFF | | Thu Apr 13 1995 13:58 | 5 |
| Is there a video available yet, for customer presentations and such,
have tried to find in VTX but our system was changed around and I
can't find any order numbers.
Thanks.
|
3803.24 | | ASABET::EARLY | Lose anything but your sense of humor. | Thu Apr 13 1995 14:41 | 10 |
| <---- is there a video being made ??
I believe there are efforts under way to edit the announcement day
presentations down a bit and produce a customer-consumable video for
field use. I'll try to find out who the best source is for you to
contact. Feel free to contact me if you don't hear something in a few
days.
/se
|
3803.25 | Oracle Rdb does 64 bits | NOVA::ABBOTT | Robert Abbott | Thu Apr 13 1995 15:11 | 7 |
| Yes, Oracle Rdb on Digital UNIX is available today
and it supports VLM databases via 64 bit addressing.
Moreover, Oracle Rdb will support 64 bit addressing on
OpenVMS as soon as OpenVMS provides that support.
|
3803.26 | Oracle Rdb global buffers since v4.1 | BACHUS::ALLEMEERSCH | In Flanders fields ... | Fri Apr 14 1995 05:09 | 9 |
| Oracle Rdb v6.1 on Digital UNIX v3.2 is released and available.
Thru it's feature called 'global buffers' it has all the functionality
to do VLM since v4.1 . We were simply waiting for the hardware and
operating system that can handle massive memory caches to exploit this
at a maximum. No need to invent a new marketing term 'VLM' for that,
which probably says more about Digital versus Oracle marketing and
long term 'core competencies' decisions :-) .
_Luc
|
3803.27 | IBM Angry over new Digital range | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:30 | 62 |
| IBM Angry over new Digital range
--------------------------------
By Louise Kehoe in San Francisco for the Financial Times, April 15th
IBM and Digital Equipment, arch rivals in the computer industry, are
waging a war of words over conflicting claims about the performance
of products which could be critical to the companies' future.
The confrontation has been sparked by Digital's introduction,
earlier this week, of a new generation of computers based on its
latest Alpha microprocessor chips, which are widely acknowledged to
be the fastest devices of their kind.
Digital claims that the new machines are much faster and cheaper
than IBM's mainframes. IBM counters that Digital's performance
claims are "misleading and unsubstantiated".
IBM is expected to launch a campaign next week with newspaper
advertisements to rebut Digital's statements and thos of Mr. Larry
Ellison, chief executive of Oracle, the leading dtabase software
company which jointly developed software for the new Alpha
computers with Digital.
At the Digital product introduction, Mr Ellison said that Oracle
customer tests indicated that Digital's new servers are 18 times
faster than the most powerful mainframe computer, at one tenth of
the cost. He predicted that Digital would "gain tremendouss market
share" at the expense of IBM's mainframes. Digital said that it
supports Mr Ellison's statements.
Some independent market researchers agree Digital's new Alpha
servers represent a breakthrough in computer technology. "They are
64-bit chips, which can address a huge amount of memory. That
should give Digital a significant performance advantage over all its
competitors," said Mr Tom Willmott, vice-president of the Aberdeen
Group, a market research firm.
IBM executives complain that Digital has failed to use the
appropriate industry tests in its comparisons. These tests measure
the number of transactions per minute that can be handled by a
computer and are audited by the indepenndent Transaction Processing
Performance Council. IBM says that Digital has yet to submit its
new computers for testing, so the comparisons it has made are
unfair.
Mr Willmott said the TPC benchmarks were the "only legitimate
measure" of performance. He notes, however, that IBM has also
failed to submit its mainframe computers to TPC tests.
The Digital Alpha servers challenge IBM's core mainframe
businesswhich has contributed to the company's return to
profitability in 1994 after it lost $16bn in the previous three
years.
Yet the success of the new Alpha servers is also critical for
Digital. Struggling to regain its momentum after four years of
heavy losses, Digital has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on
developing chips and built new plants to produce them.
|
3803.28 | What a fantastic publicity! | GVAADG::PERINO | Il y a peril en la demeure | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:47 | 0 |
3803.29 | Slam and dunk | KOALA::HAMNQVIST | Reorg city | Wed Apr 19 1995 15:00 | 7 |
| What a nice score .. in particular, I like the following excerpt:
| Mr Willmott said the TPC benchmarks were the "only legitimate
| measure" of performance. He notes, however, that IBM has also
| failed to submit its mainframe computers to TPC tests.
>Per
|
3803.30 | | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG2-A/R05 pole AA2 | Wed Apr 19 1995 15:20 | 4 |
| It's great to be compared with IBM again! And, all that free ink!
Love it!
Steve
|
3803.31 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Wed Apr 19 1995 15:25 | 2 |
| Just spell our name right :-)
|
3803.32 | :^] | DPDMAI::EYSTER | It ain't a car without fins... | Wed Apr 19 1995 15:44 | 5 |
| "It's not true, and even if it were true, it's not fair!", says IBM's
performance VP "Stinky" Henderson. Stinky then added "Nanny, nanny,
boo, boo" and other pertinent comments before being given a "time-out".
Tex
|
3803.33 | Meow, Tex, Meow! | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Walking Incubator, Use Caution | Thu Apr 20 1995 14:02 | 10 |
| Tex, you are too funny! (Honest, too!!) If IBM had any way to compete
with the new Alpha Servers, they wouldn't be whining about tests and
comparisons. Of course, as previously noted, all this "bad press" from
IBM can't help but build even more interest in these terrific new
systems.
IMHO.
M.
|
3803.34 | VLM tutorial Oracle Rdb and Oracle7 | BACHUS::ALLEMEERSCH | In Flanders fields ... | Wed May 03 1995 05:44 | 337 |
| From conference
<<< NOMAHS::DISK$NOMAHS1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]RDB_60.NOTE;1 >>>
================================================================================
Note 9.46 Support Articles 46 of 46
NOVA::SMITHI "Don't understate or underestimate Rdb!" 326 lines 2-MAY-1995 13:18
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-< Oracle Rdb and Very Large Memory >-
Please share with any and all customers!
INTRODUCTION to ORACLE VLM
WHAT IS ORACLE VLM?
Oracle VLM (Very Large Memory provides the ability to support
system configuration with greater than four gigbytes of RAM.
Most UNIX systems are limited to at most four gigbytes or RAM,
bases on the memory addressing limitations of 32-bit architectures.
Oracle 7 and Oracle Rdb running on Digital's Alpha UNIX systems
take advantage of a pure 64-bit implementation to support memory
configurations above four gigbytes. Oracle is architected to support
RAM configurations of hundreds of gigbytes, well beyond the
hardware limitations of today's memory technology.
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OF VLM?
The primary benefit of VLM is PERFORMANCE, because many
operations can now run at memory speed instead of disk speed. With
larger amounts of data in memory, the database issues many fewer calls
to disk, thus eliminating the delay of disk I/O. Preliminary results
indicate performance improvements of greater than 100% for operations
such as multi-way joins.
VLM also provides the advantage of SCALABILITY, to support larger
numbers of users and larger amounts of data. They system does not need
to swap data in and out of memory to process all of the transaction
requests and can more effectively accommodate requests for larger
amounts of data.
WHAT NEW SOLUTION DOES VLM PROVIDE?
With VLM, Oracle can support new types of applications that simply
were not possible in the past, because of performance limitations.
VLM promises significant performance improvements for transactions
that access large amounts of data, stored in many different database
tables, with very large table sizes, supporting large numbers of users,
and with complex query types. Without VLM, any one of these
characteristics can provide significant performance bottlenecks.
VLM opens new opportunities for organizations looking to manage
ever-increasing amounts of data, particularly in industries such as health
care, financial services, insurance, government, communications,
transportation, retail, and manufacturing.
HOW DOES VLM RELATE TO ORACLE'S ENTERPRISE SOLUTION PROGRAM?
Oracle's Enterprise Solution Program (ESP) is a corporate initiative for
customers who would like to achieve the benefits of open systems for
their business applications. The Enterprise Solutions Program consists
of a number of different components, including the Oracle7 products,
technologies, consulting services, support services, and applications
such as SAS, SAP, CICS, and Oracle Applications.
For many applications that currently run on proprietary mainframe
systems, Oracle7 running on 64-bit Digital VLM configurations
provides the most viable open systems alternative. VLM provides a
key enabling technology for ESP, with a new level of scalability for
enterprise-wide applications supporting large numbers of users and large
amounts of data.
WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN VLM AND VLDB?
VLDB or Very Large Database, refers to the ability to support large amounts
of data stored on disk. While no precise definition exists to
distinguish a "very large" database, this term frequently applies to
databases in the 300 gigabyte range, extending up to multiple terabytes.
VLM differs from VLDB in that VLM refers to data stored in memory,
while VLDB refers to data stored on disk. VLM is a major technology
breakthrough for supporting very large databases. VLM allows a larger
portion of the database to reside in memory. As a result, MORE users
can access MORE data FASTER, with less time spent moving data to
and from disk. Without VLM, applications must move data back and
forth between RAM, and disk to accommodate the limitations of two
gigabytes of memory. This I/O process is very time consuming and
limits performance.
PRICING/AVAILABILITY
WHEN WILL VLM BE AVAILABLE?
Support for VLM is available now on both Oracle7 (V7.1.6) and
Oracle Rdb (Release 6.1) for Digital UNIX platforms.
ON WHAT PLATFORMS DOES ORACLE SUPPORT VLM?
Currently, Oracle7 and Oracle Rdb support VLM on Digital's 7000 and
8000 series systems running Digital UNIX (formerly Digital OSF/1).
In the future, Oracle7 and Oracle Rdb will support VLM and DEC 2100
AlphaServers, when these systems can support large memory hardware
configurations.
The Digital/Oracle solution provides the only true 64-bit solution, with
(1) a processor architected for 64-bits, (2) an operating system that was
designed for 64-bits from the ground up (without having to backward
design for an installed base running 32-bits), and (3) a database
optimized for 64-bits.
DOES ORACLE PLAN TO SUPPORT VLM ON OpenVMS?
Oracle is working to support of VLM technology in both Oracle7 and
Oracle Rdb for OpenVMS Alpha systems. Although the company is
not prepared to make a product availability announcement at this time,
Oracle expects that such support will appear first on Oracle Rdb shortly
after 64-bit support is available from Digital on OpenVMS V7.0
around the end of 1995.
ON WHAT DATABASES DOES DIGITAL SUPPORT VLM?
Digital supports VLM on Oracle7 and Oracle Rdb. Oracle is the first
database vendor to take advantage of Digital's 64-bit architecture to
support VLM database configurations.
HOW IS ORACLE VLM PRICED?
Oracle VLM is priced as an option to the database; however, as a
special promotion, Oracle is offering VLM at no charge with the
current releases of Oracle7 (7.1.6) and Oracle Rdb (6.1).
APPLICATION ENABLEMENT
WHAT ARE THE PERQUISITES FOR VLM?
VLM is best suited to systems that are architected for pure 64-bits,
including the hardware, operating system, file system, and database
system. Without a pure 64-bit architecture, systems cannot effectively
achieve the benefits of VLM technology. Many solutions will
implement a partial 64-bit operating system must often accommodate an
existing installed base running with 32-bit applications on 32-bit
hardware. These limitations can affect their ability to implement a
suitable VLM solution.
WHAT TYPES OF APPLICATIONS BENEFIT FROM VLM?
VLM can benefit both query-intensive (DSS) and read-write (OLTP)
transactions. For DSS, VLM provides particular advantage for index
builds, full table scans, and hoc queries, and multi-way joins. For
OLTP, VLM provides the ability to support very large tables, large
amounts of data, and large numbers of users.
For customers who are evaluating alternatives to improve database
performance, VLM provides a viable alternative to time consuming
optimization tasks such as redesigning physical and logical database
structures. Customers can achieve immediate performance gains by
simply adding memory beyond their existing 4GB limit.
WHAT SIZE OF DATABASE WORKS BEST WITH VLM?
VLM can benefit any size database, not just very large databases. First,
with VLM, Oracle can store ENTIRE databases in memory. For larger
databases, VLM allows larger portions of the database (those portions
most frequently accessed by users) to reside in memory.
Second, VLM also allows intermediate operations to reside in memory,
such as creating temporary tables. In essence, VLM provides a larger
workspace for any database operation. So, even with database of one
or two gigabytes, VLM can provide significant advantages for complex
transactions, such as multi-way joins, that can require several
intermediate operations.
HOW HAS ORACLE IMPLEMENTED VLM SUPPORT IN ORACLE7?
Oracle VLM uses the same base Oracle7 product, which is designed to
support 64-bit environments. As a result, Oracle VLM running on
Digital 64-bit systems offers the same functionality as the standard
Oracle7 product. Oracle has optimized performance for 64-bits with
Large System Global Area (LSGA) and Big Oracle Blocks (BOB).
Large System Global Area refers to an Oracle database buffer cache of
greater than four gigabytes. The buffer cache is the portion of memory
where the database system stores database records. A larger SGA allows
the database to store proportionately more data in RAM. LSGA takes
advantage of Oracle's 64-bit architecture, combined with the ability of
the operating system to support 64-bit memory addressing. In
conjunction with LSGA, Oracle also plans to support Large Sort Work
Areas in VLM configurations.
Big Oracle Blocks provide the ability to support larger I/O transfers
between memory and disk. BOB complements large SGA
configurations, because BOB allows the system to move data faster
between memory and disk. With VLM configurations, system performance
depends directly on the ability of the system to move
database blocks into the SGA as efficiently as possible. Without the
benefits of improved data transfer, VLM, performance can decline.
HOW HAS ORACLE IMPLEMENTED VLM SUPPORT IN ORACLE Rdb?
Rdb is engineered to support very large global buffer caches (similar to
LSGA), to fully utilize the 64-bit memory addressing and the large memory
capacity of Digital's AlphaServers. Oracle Rdb also supports
large I/O transfers between memory and disk (similar to BOB).
DOES VLM REQUIRE ANY CHANGES TO EXISTING APPLICATIONS?
VLM is transparent to all Oracle-based applications, other than
delivering marked improvements in performance.
CONFIGURATION
HOW DO I CONFIGURE ORACLE7 AND ORACLE Rdb FOR VLM?
Support for 64-bit VLM configurations is included in the standard
Oracle7 and Oracle Rdb products installed on my Digital UNIX system
supporting large memory configurations.
MEMORY IS EXPENSIVE RELATIVE TO ADDING ADDITIONAL CPU's. WHEN DO I USE
SMP VERSUS MORE MEMORY TO IMPROVE PERFORMANCE?
First, SMP and VLM are complementary. Both will provide incremental
throughput and performance. Together, they provide a
performance multiplier affect. The specific performance benefit will of
course be dependent on the application.
HOW DO I KNOW WHAT THE IDEAL MIX OF SMP AND MEMORY IS FOR MY APPLICATION?
Oracle believe that all application environments will gain cost
effective performance improvements utilizing directly addressable, large
memory configurations. Oracle Services has consultants who are
trained and available for further assistance.
RELIABLE, SCALABLE MANAGEABLE
HOW DOES VLM AFFECT, DATABASE RELIABILITY?
Oracle7 and Oracle Rdb on Digital VLM configurations provide the
same degree of high reliability and data integrity as in non-VLM
configurations. Database integrity is completely isolated from the
volatility of the RAM. The amount of data in memory has no
effect on the reliability of the system.
Oracle7 with VLM uses the standard Oracle7 redo logs to ensure that
updates and changes to the database are written to disk before a transaction
is committed. Oracle has architected the redo logs to
provide a fast and efficient way to write data to disk via single or
multiple streams of I/O.
As another example, Rdb implements an algorithm for accelerated
commitment through electron disks (ACE), making it possible to
significantly enhance journal I/O by using a very small, but fast solid
state disk.
WHAT SYSTEM MANAGEMENT TOOLS SUPPORT VLM?
Polycenter/Netview provides a full suite of tools for system and data
management across the network and the enterprise from a single
console. For instance, Oracle7 is fully integrated with
Polycenter/Netview. Oracle7 provides a SNMP-compliant subagent
used to create an Oracle map and a series of Oracle specific graphs.
HOW DO I BACKUP A DATABASE ON A VLM SYSTEM?
system administration tasks such as backup and restore are no different
for VLM systems than any other Oracle7 or Oracle Rdb configuration.
Today, DEC NSR (Legato) is fully integrated with Polycenter/Netview
and provides a complete set of back-up and restore capabilities. Later
this year Oracle will offer Oracle Parallel Backup and Restore (OPBR)
as well as planned support for Open Vision's Open V*NetBackup, for
those customers who require higher performance backups.
HOW DOES VLM RELATE TO SMP AND CLUSTERS?
With support for VLM and clusters, Oracle and Digital provide
scalability through a three-tiered approach: processors (SMP), memory
(VLM), and systems/nodes (clusters). This strategy provides the
requisite foundation for supporting enterprise-wide solutions on an open
system platform.
SMP allows customers to add compute power through additional
processors, all accessing a common memory pool. For SMP systems,
VLM provides a larger buffer cache, shared by all of the processors.
Algorithms for navigating and manipulating in-memory locks and
buffers will continue to remain efficient even as memory expands from
tens of megabytes to ten of hundred of gigabytes.
Likewise, with clusters, customers can network multiple systems to
work in parallel. The systems themselves can each support large
memory configurations, with internode communications managed by a
high speed interconnect such as Digital's upcoming Memory Channel
architecture.
DOES VLM WORK WITH ORACLE PARALLEL SERVER?
Yes. Oracle Parallel Server will support VLM configurations on
Digital AlphaServer cluster expected later this year. Digital's Memory
Channel technology will provide a high performance interconnect for
multiple AlphaServer systems each configured for VLM. The result is
a clustered system supporting tens, or even hundreds, or gigbytes of
RAM, all running Oracle7 on Digital UNIX. Oracle is currently
investigating Oracle Parallel Server and Oracle Rdb support for
OpenVMS with Memory Channel.
SERVICE AND SUPPORT
WHAT SUPPORT SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE FOR VLM?
Oracle provides the same support services for VLM as for all other
Oracle products. Customers have the choice of Bronze, Silver, or Gold
support levels, depending on their particular application requirements.
For customer who have implemented enterprise-wide applications,
Oracle Gold provides 7x24 mission Critical Support levels for the operating
system and offers Mission Critical Support levels for the operating system
and hardware, which complement Oracle Gold. Oracle and Digital are
actively working to develop joint support offerings for customers as
part of the Enterprise Solutions Program.
WHAT CONSULTING SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE FOR VLM?
Oracle has established a team of VLM experts in the company's
Advanced Technologies Group. The ATG specializes in the design,
architecture, and deployment of enterprise-wide client/server systems.
VLM represents only one of many levels of specialization within the
group. As such, Oracle has the expertise to provide you with a
complete solution for your enterprise.
For customers interested in Oracle VLM, Oracle strongly recommends
working with the experts in the ATG to realize the benefits of this
technology. These experts have already implemented solutions using
VLM and have the hands-on-experience needed to make your application
a success. The group has established best practices around
implementing VLM solutions quickly and effectively within an
enterprise.
|