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 SOA Suite integration best practices


One of the first questions customers have when they start building an application integration architecture is: "Do I need to use a BPA or BPM tool or can I start with BPEL or OSB?". BPA and BPM tools are not required to develop a flexible, secure, scalable, performant application, system or IT integration architecture that meets the needs of the business. However, BPA and BPM tools get the business community involved early, increasing the chance of an integration architecture that is built for the present and future. These tools also increase the likelihood that you will have an SOA integration architecture that is usable across the enterprise (instead of point solutions being deployed in different departments), that has a shared metadata model, and uses a common set of artifacts such as XSLT, data types, and SOAP messages. Not using a BPM or BPA tool is like not using an Entity Relationship Diagram (ERD) when developing a database system. Instead...