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Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition 12c - Second Edition

You're reading from  Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition 12c - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786464712
Pages 578 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Authors (3):
Adrian Ward Adrian Ward
Profile icon Adrian Ward
Christian Screen Christian Screen
Profile icon Christian Screen
Haroun Khan Haroun Khan
Profile icon Haroun Khan
View More author details

Table of Contents (24) Chapters

Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition 12c - second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. Oracle BI 12c Architecture 2. Installing the Prerequisite Software 3. Installing on Windows Server 2012 4. Reviewing the Features of the Reporting Repository 5. Installing and Configuring Client Tools 6. Understanding the Systems Management Tools 7. Developing the BI Server Repository 8. Creating Dashboards and Analyses 9. Agents and Action Framework 10. Developing Reports Using BI Publisher 11. Usage Tracking 12. Improving Performance 13. Using the BI Admin Change Management Utilities 14. Ancillary Installation Options 15. Reporting Databases 16. Customizing the Style of Dashboards 17. Upgrading to 12c

Repository architecture


Before we embark on developing a new repository, let's have a look at how the RPD is structured. The fundamental structure of an RPD is made up of three layers for modeling data:

  • Physical layer: This contains the information, for example table/column names and keys, for your data sources, as they exist in their database along with their connectivity details. No data is actually stored in the RPD, just references to your data sources, that is, it is metadata that is stored in it.

    If needed, we can also connect to other data sources, for example, Flat files and Excel spreadsheets.

  • Business layer: The main purpose of this layer is to create an abstract and simplified model of the physical layer objects. This is especially valuable if we need to combine data from varying data sources. The business layer allows us to integrate these different sources and then present them to an end user as a coherent and unified whole.

    OBIEE supports federated querying, so we can query and...

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