Oracle® In-Memory Database Cache User's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2.2) Part Number E21634-05 |
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This chapter lists compatibility issues between TimesTen and Oracle. The list is not complete, but it indicates areas that require special attention. It includes the following topics:
Consider the following differences between TimesTen and Oracle:
TimesTen and Oracle database metadata are stored differently. See "API compatibility" for more information.
TimesTen and Oracle have different transaction isolation models. See "Transaction semantics" for more information.
TimesTen and Oracle have different connection and statement properties. For example, TimesTen does not support catalog names, scrollable cursors or updateable cursors.
Sequences are not cached and synchronized between the TimesTen database and the corresponding Oracle database. See "SQL expressions" for more information.
Side effects of Oracle triggers and stored procedures are not reflected in the TimesTen database until after an automatic or manual refresh operation.
TimesTen and Oracle transaction semantics differ as follows:
Oracle serializable transactions can fail at commit time because the transaction cannot be serialized. TimesTen uses locking to enforce serializability.
Oracle can provide both statement-level and transaction-level consistency by using a multiversion consistency model. TimesTen does not provide statement-level consistency. TimesTen provides transaction-level consistency by using serializable isolation.
Oracle users can lock tables explicitly through SQL. This locking feature is not supported in TimesTen.
Oracle supports savepoints while TimesTen does not.
In Oracle, a transaction can be set to be read-only or read/write. This is not supported in TimesTen.
For more information about TimesTen isolation levels and transaction semantics, see "Transaction Management and Recovery" in Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database Operations Guide.
For a complete list of the JDBC API classes and interfaces that TimesTen supports with notes on which methods have a compatibility issue, see "Key JDBC classes and interfaces" in Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database Java Developer's Guide.
For a complete list of the ODBC API functions that TimesTen supports with notes on which functions have a compatibility issue, see "TimesTen ODBC Functions and Options" in Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database C Developer's Guide.
For a complete list of the OCI functions for Oracle database, release 11.2.0.2, that TimesTen supports with notes on which functions have a compatibility issue, see "TimesTen Support for Oracle Call Interface" in Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database C Developer's Guide.
For information about TimesTen support for Pro*C/C++, see "TimesTen Support for Oracle Pro*C/C++ Precompiler" in Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database C Developer's Guide.
For information about TimesTen support for ODP.NET, see Oracle Data Provider for .NET Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database Support User's Guide.
For information about TimesTen support for PL/SQL, see Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database PL/SQL Developer's Guide.
The TimesTen C++ Interface Classes (TTClasses) library provides a high-performance interface to TimesTen that is easy to use. This C++ class library provides wrappers around the most common ODBC functionality. This API is not available for the Oracle Database. See Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database TTClasses Guide.
This section compares TimesTen's SQL implementation with Oracle's SQL. The purpose is to provide users with a list of Oracle SQL features not supported in TimesTen or supported with different semantics.
TimesTen does not recognize some of the schema objects that are supported in Oracle. TimesTen returns a syntax error when a statement manipulates or uses these objects. TimesTen passes the statement to Oracle. The unsupported objects are:
CREATE DATABASE
statementCREATE JAVA
statementTimesTen supports views and materialized views, but it cannot cache an Oracle view. TimesTen can cache an Oracle materialized view in a user managed cache group without the AUTOREFRESH
cache group attribute and PROPAGATE
cache table attribute. The cache group must be manually loaded and flushed.
TimesTen can cache Oracle partitioned tables at the table level, but individual partitions cannot be cached. The following describes how operations on partitioned tables affect cache groups:
DDL operations on a table that has partitions do not affect the cache group unless there is data loss. For example, if a partition with data is truncated, an AUTOREFRESH
operation does not delete the data from the corresponding cached table.
WHERE
clauses in any cache group operations cannot reference individual partitions or subpartitions. Any attempt to define a single partition of a table returns an error.
TimesTen does not recognize some of the schema objects that are supported in Oracle. TimesTen returns a syntax error when a statement manipulates or uses these objects. TimesTen passes the statement to Oracle. The unsupported objects are:
The Oracle table features that TimesTen does not support are:
ON DELETE SET NULL
Check constraints
Foreign keys that reference the table on which they are defined
The following Oracle data types are not supported by TimesTen:
TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE
INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH
INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND
UROWID
BFILE
The following TimesTen data types are not supported by Oracle:
TT_CHAR
TT_VARCHAR
TT_NCHAR
TT_NVARCHAR
TT_BINARY
TT_VARBINARY
TINYINT
and TT_TINYINT
TT_SMALLINT
TT_INTEGER
TT_BIGINT
TT_DECIMAL
TT_DATE
TIME
and TT_TIME
TT_TIMESTAMP
Note:
TimesTenNCHAR
and NVARCHAR2
data types are encoded as UTF-16
. Oracle NCHAR
and NVARCHAR2
data types are encoded as either UTF-16
or UTF-8
.
To cache an Oracle NCHAR
or NVARCHAR2
column, the Oracle NLS_NCHAR_CHARACTERSET
encoding must be AL16UTF16
, not AL32UTF8
.
TimesTen supports these operators and predicates that are supported by Oracle:
-
+, -, *, /
=, <, >, <=, >=, <>, !=
||
IS NULL
, IS NOT NULL
LIKE
(Oracle LIKE
operator ignores trailing spaces, but TimesTen does not)BETWEEN
IN
NOT IN
(list)AND
OR
+
(outer join)ANY
, SOME
ALL
(list)EXISTS
UNION
MINUS
INTERSECT
AND
operation of two bit vector expressions, TimesTen uses the ampersand character (&
) between the expressions while Oracle uses the BITAND
function with the expressions as arguments.TimesTen supports these clauses of a SELECT
statement that are supported by Oracle:
FOR UPDATE
ORDER BY
, including NULLS FIRST
and NULLS LAST
GROUP BY
, including ROLLUP
, GROUPING_SETS
and grouping expression lists
Table alias
Column alias
Subquery factoring clause with constructor
Oracle supports flashback queries, which are queries against a database that is in some previous state (for example, a query on a table as of yesterday). TimesTen does not support flashback queries.
TimesTen supports these subqueries that are supported by Oracle:
IN
(subquery)>,<,= ANY
(subquery)>,=,< SOME
(subquery)EXISTS
(subquery)>,=,<
(scalar subquery)WHERE
clause of DELETE
/UPDATE
FROM
clauseWITH
constructor)
Note:
A nonverifiable scalar subquery is a scalar subquery whose 'single-row-result-set' property cannot be determined until execution time. TimesTen allows at most one nonverifiable scalar subquery in the entire query and the subquery cannot be specified in anOR
expression.TimesTen supports these functions that are supported by Oracle:
ABS
ADD_MONTHS
ASCIISTR
AVG
CAST
CEIL
COALESCE
CONCAT
COUNT
CHR
DECODE
DENSE_RANK
EMPTY_BLOB
EMPTY_CLOB
EXTRACT
FIRST_VALUE
FLOOR
GREATEST
GROUP_ID
GROUPING
GROUPING_ID
INSTR
LAST_VALUE
LEAST
LENGTH
LOWER
LPAD
LTRIM
MAX
MIN
MOD
MONTHS_BETWEEN
NCHR
NLS_CHARSET
NLS_CHARSET_NAME
NLSSORT
NULLIF
NUMTOYMINTERVAL
NUMTODSINTERVAL
NVL
POWER
RANK
REPLACE
ROUND
ROW_NUMBER
RPAD
RTRIM
SIGN
SQRT
SUBSTR
SUM
SYS_CONTEXT
SYSDATE
TO_BLOB
TO_CLOB
TO_CHAR
TO_DATE
TO_LOB
TO_NCLOB
TO_NUMBER
TRIM
TRUNC
UID
UNISTR
UPPER
USER
These TimesTen functions are not supported by Oracle:
CURRENT_USER
GETDATE
ORA_SYSDATE
SESSION_USER
SYSTEM_USER
TIMESTAMPADD
TIMESTAMPDIFF
TT_HASH
TT_SYSDATE
TTGRIDNODENAME
TTGRIDMEMBERID
TTGRIDUSERASSIGNEDNAME
TimesTen and the Oracle Database interpret the literal N'\UNNNN
' differently. In TimesTen, N'\u
nnnn
'
(where nnnn
is a number) is interpreted as the national character set character with the code nnnn
. In the Oracle Database, N'\u
nnnn
'
is interpreted as 6 literal characters. The \u
is not treated as an escape. This difference causes unexpected behavior. For example, loading a cache group with a WHERE
clause that contains a literal can fail. This can also affects dynamic loading and cache grid operation. Applications should use the UNISTR
SQL function instead of literals.
TimesTen supports these expressions that are supported by Oracle:
NULL
()
CASE
expressionROWID
pseudocolumnROWNUM
pseudocolumnTimesTen and Oracle treat literals differently. See the description of HexadecimalLiteral
in "Constants" in Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database SQL Reference.
TimesTen supports these DML statements that are supported by Oracle:
INSERT INTO ... VALUES
INSERT INTO ... SELECT
UPDATE WHERE
expression (expression may contain a subquery)
DELETE WHERE
expression (expression may contain a subquery)
TimesTen does not support updating of primary key values except when the new value is the same as the old value.
This section lists TimesTen SQL statements and functions and built-in procedures that are not supported by Oracle. With PassThrough
=3, these statements are passed to Oracle for execution and an error is generated.
All TimesTen cache group DDL and DML statements, including CREATE CACHE GROUP
, DROP CACHE GROUP
, ALTER CACHE GROUP
, LOAD CACHE GROUP
, UNLOAD CACHE GROUP
, REFRESH CACHE GROUP
and FLUSH CACHE GROUP
.
All TimesTen replication management DDL statements, including CREATE REPLICATION
, DROP REPLICATION
, ALTER REPLICATION
, CREATE ACTIVE STANDBY PAIR
, ALTER ACTIVE STANDBY PAIR
and DROP ACTIVE STANDBY PAIR
.
FIRST
n
clause
ROWS
m
TO
n
clause
All TimesTen built-in procedures. See "Built-In Procedures" in Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database Reference.
TimesTen supports a subset of stored procedure constructs, functions, data types, packages and package bodies that are supported by Oracle. See Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database PL/SQL Developer's Guide for details.
When you choose data types for columns in the TimesTen cache tables, consider the data types of the columns in the Oracle tables and choose an equivalent or compatible data type for the columns in the cache tables.
Note:
TimeTen cache, including passthrough, does not support the OracleROWID
data type. However, you can cast any ROWID
data type to the CHAR
data type when provided on the SELECT
list in a SQL query.Primary and foreign key columns are distinguished from non-key columns. The data type mappings allowed for key columns in a cache table are shown in Table 13-1.
Table 13-1 Data type mappings allowed for key columns
Oracle data type | TimesTen data type |
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Table 13-2 shows the data type mappings allowed for non-key columns in a cache table.
Table 13-2 Data type mappings allowed for non-key columns
Oracle data type | TimesTen data type |
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Note: Includes |
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Note: 1<= |
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Note: 1<= |
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Note: 1<= |