What is the best way to implement caching layer on an Oracle DB for reads?





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What is the best way to implement caching layer on an Oracle DB for reads?
So that whenever the db get updated the cache gets too(consistency) and i can query the cache for reads(data),



And is Oracle SCN a good way to determine what changes have been made to the db so that it can be migrated to the cache, and



Apache KAFKA used as the connecting mechanism for data transfer?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Oracle caches always. That is built into the database. You can also write your own PL/SQL package doing the caching. But your question is a bit vague. It would be much easier if you could tell what you want to actually do. How frequent is your data changed? How big is the DB compared to the RAM available on your server etc.

    – hol
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:38











  • look into ehcache maybe

    – tbone
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:50






  • 1





    What problem are you trying to solve?

    – David Aldridge
    Jun 4 '13 at 18:50


















0















What is the best way to implement caching layer on an Oracle DB for reads?
So that whenever the db get updated the cache gets too(consistency) and i can query the cache for reads(data),



And is Oracle SCN a good way to determine what changes have been made to the db so that it can be migrated to the cache, and



Apache KAFKA used as the connecting mechanism for data transfer?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Oracle caches always. That is built into the database. You can also write your own PL/SQL package doing the caching. But your question is a bit vague. It would be much easier if you could tell what you want to actually do. How frequent is your data changed? How big is the DB compared to the RAM available on your server etc.

    – hol
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:38











  • look into ehcache maybe

    – tbone
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:50






  • 1





    What problem are you trying to solve?

    – David Aldridge
    Jun 4 '13 at 18:50














0












0








0








What is the best way to implement caching layer on an Oracle DB for reads?
So that whenever the db get updated the cache gets too(consistency) and i can query the cache for reads(data),



And is Oracle SCN a good way to determine what changes have been made to the db so that it can be migrated to the cache, and



Apache KAFKA used as the connecting mechanism for data transfer?










share|improve this question
















What is the best way to implement caching layer on an Oracle DB for reads?
So that whenever the db get updated the cache gets too(consistency) and i can query the cache for reads(data),



And is Oracle SCN a good way to determine what changes have been made to the db so that it can be migrated to the cache, and



Apache KAFKA used as the connecting mechanism for data transfer?







oracle apache-kafka






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 17 '18 at 2:43









cricket_007

84.6k1147120




84.6k1147120










asked Jun 4 '13 at 17:26









ramuramu

70111125




70111125








  • 2





    Oracle caches always. That is built into the database. You can also write your own PL/SQL package doing the caching. But your question is a bit vague. It would be much easier if you could tell what you want to actually do. How frequent is your data changed? How big is the DB compared to the RAM available on your server etc.

    – hol
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:38











  • look into ehcache maybe

    – tbone
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:50






  • 1





    What problem are you trying to solve?

    – David Aldridge
    Jun 4 '13 at 18:50














  • 2





    Oracle caches always. That is built into the database. You can also write your own PL/SQL package doing the caching. But your question is a bit vague. It would be much easier if you could tell what you want to actually do. How frequent is your data changed? How big is the DB compared to the RAM available on your server etc.

    – hol
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:38











  • look into ehcache maybe

    – tbone
    Jun 4 '13 at 17:50






  • 1





    What problem are you trying to solve?

    – David Aldridge
    Jun 4 '13 at 18:50








2




2





Oracle caches always. That is built into the database. You can also write your own PL/SQL package doing the caching. But your question is a bit vague. It would be much easier if you could tell what you want to actually do. How frequent is your data changed? How big is the DB compared to the RAM available on your server etc.

– hol
Jun 4 '13 at 17:38





Oracle caches always. That is built into the database. You can also write your own PL/SQL package doing the caching. But your question is a bit vague. It would be much easier if you could tell what you want to actually do. How frequent is your data changed? How big is the DB compared to the RAM available on your server etc.

– hol
Jun 4 '13 at 17:38













look into ehcache maybe

– tbone
Jun 4 '13 at 17:50





look into ehcache maybe

– tbone
Jun 4 '13 at 17:50




1




1





What problem are you trying to solve?

– David Aldridge
Jun 4 '13 at 18:50





What problem are you trying to solve?

– David Aldridge
Jun 4 '13 at 18:50












0






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