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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

Summary

In this chapter, we used the Oracle Database both from local and global transactions. You also experienced that mixing services using both local and global transactions does not work as you might imagine at first. Global transactions worked without any effort in application code and you might wonder why you would ever need to use local transactions. That feeling is shared by many users of Tuxedo. The most common reason for not using global transactions is squeezing out the last bits of performance. The performance overhead of transactions is small but they are not free. But even in those cases, it pays to have two implementations of the service as we did with the COUNT and COUNTXA services, one for each transaction type. After all, the code is the same and the only difference is in the server initialization.

Now you know how to develop servers for global and local transactions and how to configure the Tuxedo application in each case. You also know how to access the database...

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