Oracle9i Data Cartridge Developer's Guide Release 2 (9.2) Part Number A96595-01 |
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The Oracle9i Data Cartridge Developer's Guide describes how to build and use data cartridges to create custom extensions to the Oracle server's indexing and optimizing capabilities.
This preface contains these topics:
Oracle9i Data Cartridge Developer's Guide is intended for developers who want to learn how to build and use data cartridges to customize the indexing and optimizing functionality of the Oracle server to suit exotic kinds of data.
To use this document, you need to be familiar with using Oracle and should have a background in an Oracle-supported programming language such as C, C++, or Java used to write external procedures.
This document contains:
Chapter 1, "What Is a Data Cartridge?" and Chapter 2, "Roadmap to Building a Data Cartridge" provide basic information and lay the groundwork for a comprehensive example used throughout the later chapters.
Chapters 3 through 9 lay out the components that go into building a data cartridge.
Chapters 10, 11, and 12 discuss design considerations, user-defined aggregate functions, and pipelined and parallel table functions.
Chapters 13 and 14 elaborate the Power Utility example scenario developed in Chapter 3, to illustrate extensible indexing. Appendix A supplements Chapter 12 with two extended examples of how to implement a table function, in C and in Java.
Chapters 15 through 20 provide reference information on data cartridge-specific APIs.
For information on cartridge services using C, see the chapter on cartridge services in the Oracle Call Interface Programmer's Guide.
Many books in the documentation set use the sample schemas of the seed database, which is installed by default when you install Oracle. Refer to Oracle9i Sample Schemas for information on how these schemas were created and how you can use them yourself.
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This section describes the conventions used in the text and code examples of this documentation set. It describes:
We use various conventions in text to help you more quickly identify special terms. The following table describes those conventions and provides examples of their use.
Code examples illustrate SQL, PL/SQL, SQL*Plus, or other command-line statements. They are displayed in a monospace (fixed-width) font and separated from normal text as shown in this example:
SELECT username FROM dba_users WHERE username = 'MIGRATE';
The following table describes typographic conventions used in code examples and provides examples of their use.
The following table describes conventions for Windows operating systems and provides examples of their use.
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