Book Image

Oracle Information Integration, Migration, and Consolidation

Book Image

Oracle Information Integration, Migration, and Consolidation

Overview of this book

The book covers data migration, data consolidation, and data integration, the three scenarios that are typically part of the information integration life cycle. Organizations typically find themselves migrating data to Oracle and either later, or at the same time, consolidating multiple database instances into a single global instance for a department, or even an entire company. The business savings and technical benefits of data consolidation cannot be overlooked, and this book will help you to use Oracle's technology to achieve these goals. This highly practical and business-applicable book will teach you to be successful with the latest Oracle data and application integration, migration, information life-cycle management, and consolidation products and technologies.In this book, you will gain hands-on advice about data consolidation, integration, and migration using tools and best practices. Along the way you will leverage products like Oracle Data Integrator, Oracle GoldenGate, and SQL Developer, as well as Data Hubs and 11gR2 Database. The book covers everything from the early background of information integration and the impact of SOA, to products like Oracle GoldenGate and Oracle Data Integrator. By the end you'll have a clear idea of where information and application integration is headed and how to plan your own projects.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Oracle Information Integration, Migration, and Consolidation
Credits
About The Author
About the Contributing Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Oracle success stories


These success stories are two examples from Estuate Inc. which describe the customer situation, the solution, the Oracle products used, and the benefits the customer received. The success stores will not only show what companies have done, but also give you ideas on how the Oracle application and process integration software stack can be used in your company. These examples are not large, sophisticated integration solutions. The reason for showing less complex solutions is to emphasize that most companies have success when the strategy is not to spend years attempting to implement an enterprise-wide integration architecture. The most successful projects are those that can be completed in less than six months and require a staff of six IT developers, an architect, and a project manager. These quick wins keep the momentum, show progress to the business community, and eventually lead to a corporate-wide, completely SOA-based application and process integration architecture...