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Modernizing Oracle Tuxedo Applications with Python

You're reading from   Modernizing Oracle Tuxedo Applications with Python A practical guide to using Oracle Tuxedo in the 21st century

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801070584
Length 202 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Aivars Kalvans Aivars Kalvans
Author Profile Icon Aivars Kalvans
Aivars Kalvans
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: The Basics
2. Chapter 1: Introduction and Installing Tuxedo FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Building Your First Tuxedo Application 4. Chapter 3: Tuxedo in Detail 5. Chapter 4: Understanding Typed Buffers 6. Section 2: The Good Bits
7. Chapter 5: Developing Servers and Clients 8. Chapter 6: Administering the Application Using MIBs 9. Chapter 7: Distributed Transactions 10. Chapter 8: Using Tuxedo Message Queue 11. Chapter 9: Working with Oracle Database 12. Section 3: Integrations
13. Chapter 10: Accessing the Tuxedo Application 14. Chapter 11: Consuming External Services in Tuxedo 15. Chapter 12: Modernizing the Tuxedo Applications 16. Assessments 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding timeouts

What is the point of using transactions in this chapter if we are not using any databases? Besides making the Tuxedo transaction API easier to explain, its most useful feature is timeouts. Timeouts allow enforcing time constraints for computation.

There are two kinds of timeouts in Tuxedo, and while they are different, their implementation and behavior are similar. You already know about transaction timeouts. The second kind is called blocking timeouts. The name comes from Unix jargon, where blocking describes a system call that may wait indefinitely until it completes or fails with an error; this is as opposed to the non-blocking mode, where the system call completes or fails immediately.

The main thing to remember about timeouts in Tuxedo is that they apply to the clients, not the servers. The client will receive the timeout error but the server will continue working for hours with no clue that timeout occurred. The only way for the server to know that...

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