Book Image

Oracle Data Integrator 11g Cookbook

Book Image

Oracle Data Integrator 11g Cookbook

Overview of this book

Oracle Data Integrator (ODI) is Oracle's strategic data integration platform for high-speed data transformation and movement between different systems. From high-volume batches, to SOA-enabled data services, to trickle operations, ODI is a cutting-edge platform that offers heterogeneous connectivity, enterprise-level deployment, and strong administrative, diagnostic, and management capabilities."Oracle Data Integrator 11g Cookbook" will take you on a journey past your first steps with ODI to a new level of proficiency, lifting the cover on many of the internals of the product to help you better leverage the most advanced features.The first part of this book will focus on the administrative tasks required for a successful deployment, moving on to showing you how to best leverage Knowledge Modules with explanations of their internals and focus on specific examples. Next we will look into some advanced coding techniques for interfaces, packages, models, and a focus on XML. Finally the book will lift the cover on web services as well as the ODI SDK, along with additional advanced techniques that may be unknown to many users.Throughout "Oracle Data Integrator 11g Cookbook", the authors convey real-world advice and best practices learned from their extensive hands-on experience.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Oracle Data Integrator 11g Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Introduction


XML and web services are becoming common place in enterprise data integration, and ODI provides many features that allow organizations to take full advantage of their service oriented architectures (SOA). These features allow ETL developers to incorporate XML and their SOA infrastructure into their ETL processing. ODI and SOA directly complement one another; both can read, write, and transform flat files, XML, relational data, and so on, and both directly integrate with web services, however both technologies have their strengths. SOA is great at message-based integration, while ODI is great at performing bulk integrations and heavy transformations of data.

ODI is SOA native, and this allows ODI to take full advantage of existing SOA services. The SOA services do not need to be recreated in ODI since ODI can directly invoke web services; the opposite is also true. If there is a bulk transformation that already exists in ODI, this can easily be invoked from the SOA environment...