Oracle Database 11g on Linux released

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS

Oracle has announced the availability of its Oracle Database 11g on the Linux platform and, at the same time, released new capabilities for its existing 11g Enterprise Edition offering.

Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition, Standard Edition and Standard Edition One are now generally available for Linux x86-based systems. 

"Oracle Database 11g continues the focus on grid computing by enabling grids of low-cost servers and storage to deliver fast, scalable and reliable data processing," said Andy Mendelsohn, senior vice president of database server technologies at Oracle. 

With 11g support for Linux, the building of such grids should be cheaper for organisations using Linux-based hardware and applications. 

The worldwide relational database management systems (RDBMS) market totalled £8bn in 2006, a 14.2% increase on 2005, according to analyst group Gartner.

The overall RDBMS market continues to be dominated by the three largest suppliers — Oracle, IBM, and Microsoft — accounting for 85.6% of worldwide revenues last year.

While Linux as an RDBMS operating system was still well behind Unix and Windows, with a 15.5% market share, it continued to dominate in terms of OS growth, with a two-thirds rise during 2005, according to Gartner.

Colleen Graham, a Gartner analyst, said: "Organisations are looking to gain insight into the business to make better decisions and identify new opportunities. This is forcing them to invest in their data assets, purchasing new technology and tools that increase operational efficiency, and enable better use of data-management resources."

This need for improved usage of data-management resources is what Oracle is trying to address with its new Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition platform tools. These include Oracle Real Application Testing, Oracle Advanced Compression, Oracle Total Recall and Oracle Active Data Guard.

Oracle Real Application Testing helps customers reduce the time, risk and cost of testing database and operating-system upgrades in a controlled and cost-effective manner, said Oracle.

Competition

Sysadmin Day competition
How messy is your server room?

We're launching a contest to find the quintessential messy server room, with a fantastic prize up for grabs. So come on, show us how chaotic a server room can get!

Read more +

Oracle said new compression capabilities for all types of data mean that compression ratios of 2 to 3 times or more can now be achieved using the new Oracle Advanced Compression technology. Coupled with new partitioning capabilities, Oracle Advanced Compression can also be used to deploy information lifecycle management strategies in the database without application changes, further reducing overall storage requirements.

Oracle Total Recall enables administrators to easily maintain historical archives of changed data for the purposes of compliance or business intelligence, for example.

And Oracle Active Data Guard can be used to enhance the performance of production databases by offloading resource-intensive operations such as queries and backups to a single physical standby database. 

Oracle Real Application Testing costs £5,000 per processor or £100 per named user, as does Oracle Advanced Compression.

Oracle Total Recall costs £2,500 per processor or £50 per named user. Oracle Active Data Guard costs the same.

A free evaluation version of Oracle Database 11g on Linux x86 is available for download on Oracle's site.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

Carl White

Once they realise symantec are willing to pay real money, they will simply keep extorting, unless of course symantec/authorities can use the...

36 minutes ago by Carl White via Facebook on Symantec offered hackers $50,000 in source code sting
Jonathan Hassell

You can find more information on BS 8878 by Jonathan Hassell its lead-author at http://www.hassellinclusion.com/bs8878/ The page includes a...

11 hours ago by Jonathan Hassell on BSI publishes first British web accessibility standard
servermanagement

Thanks for this list. Now I know, what to include on my system to make it more functional.

11 hours ago by servermanagement on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
1000092626

What if it's a 4 car household? The point is, more bandwidth = more things you can do simultaneously, like streaming HD video in one room of the...

12 hours ago by 1000092626 on Virgin Media beats 100Mbps schedule, hikes prices
Gary Burton

No point whatsoever increasing broadband download speed. unless ever server on the net has access to massively up rated throughput. The worlds...

12 hours ago by Gary Burton via Facebook on Virgin Media beats 100Mbps schedule, hikes prices
Random_Error

They're also increasing their TV package prices, whether to help fund this or not.

14 hours ago by Random_Error on Virgin Media beats 100Mbps schedule, hikes prices
Techs UK

How can you set it up wrong to intermittently connect? Should I be asking for more pay? Outlook/Exchange is a breeze.

17 hours ago by Techs UK on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
JamesCheese

And how much did Microsoft pay you for that article?

17 hours ago by JamesCheese on Time for an evil umpire: Google, Microsoft & privacy
JamesCheese

"But how many times have you seen someone make a video call from a tablet?" I do myself a lot. "How often have you seen someone hook up a tablet...

17 hours ago by JamesCheese on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
k0tcs3

I have to disagree with this article. Maybe there is a cultural difference between the US and UK, or maybe your network of friends is less...

18 hours ago by k0tcs3 on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
filthylooker

My thoughts are that there's some space for change in the business world for tablets as destop replacements. I'd contend that the tablet has a...

21 hours ago by filthylooker on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
emrahatilkan

Adobe did not dropped AIR development. It was Flex.

21 hours ago by emrahatilkan on Flash 11 and AIR 3 get a release date
dd2

Company called Synergix ( www.synergix.com ) has a fix for the offline folders issue experienced by Win 7 users. And you can check out...

22 hours ago by dd2 on VPNs, offline files and the simple Windows 7 fix; sometimes
Neil Lawther

I think all your above points are increasingly more invalid. The android ecosystem is open and evolving and maturing day by day. developers are...

23 hours ago by Neil Lawther via Facebook on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
David Meyer

That really is what the European Commission is telling me. To give a precise quote: if a member state turns down the agreement, "ACTA will stay a...

1 day ago by David Meyer on ACTA's EU future in doubt after Polish pause
MyProffs Proffs

Apple devices are back online in German, take the down, no put them back...

1 day ago by MyProffs Proffs via Facebook on German iPhone, iPad sales temporarily banned
Fat Matt

AAAAAAAAWWWWW MAAAAAAANNN, I spent nearly a grand on my pc now it's gonna be completely outdated.

1 day ago by Fat Matt on Clever on-off switch for graphene. Transistors next?
Vanessa Deagan

I completely disagree with this article. I believe the reason why Google are not successful in the tablet space is because of two reasons: 1....

1 day ago by Vanessa Deagan via Facebook on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
servermanagement

Bravo Infiniserv! Virtual Private Server looks promising and very useful for companies who can't really afford a expensive cloud computing software.

1 day ago by servermanagement on Infiniserv launches Linux-based UK cloud
oneoffreader

Agree with Thinklog, Voice and video talk has been a key feature between all my friends who also use tablets.

2 days ago by oneoffreader on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it