Sometimes it makes sense to add storage as your data grows. However, it can be quite advantageous to consider the end-of-life of your data as well. This will limit your storage requirements and, planned in advance, will allow you to audit, keep records that have to be retained and purge non-functional data. This will give the added benefit of improving performance. For bespoke systems, this should form part of the design prinicples of the application, and we have recently introduced the ILM Assistant to help you take this approach together with a partitioning strategy.
For Oracle E-Business Suite, with its rich functionality, you will not be surprised to find that as well as supporting partitioning of the data we have a number of purge routines built into the application. There is a really good presentation on how partitioning and purging can help performance here:
Partitioning and Purging
One of the key system purges I would recommend is the purging of workflows and as this is probably a hot topic, here is a link to the
documentation outlining what we recommend for workflow:
Workflow documentation link
So it is a question of continually increasing storage and not worrying about archiving or planning for the end-of-life for significant data. There are arguments on both sides but hopefully these links will give you an introduction to what's available within Oracle to help you decide if partitioning and purging would work for you.
Comments (2)
Have another link for that power point? It never gets beyond initiating the download
Oh, and thanks for blogging!
Posted by jay | September 1, 2006 9:16 AM
Posted on September 1, 2006 09:16
Hi Jay, that's strange. I have had a couple of people check and it works in Firefox and IE 7beta. I think there may be an issue with clicking the link on IE6, but if you copy and paste the link: http://www.oracle.com/technology/products/applications/Events/OOW-2005/W501_Ahmed_Alomari.ppt
this seems to work as well
I have just checked it on my safari browser on my mac at home as well and it's fine there. Can you try a different browser?
If not, then go to search.oracle.com and search for W501
Posted by Robert Smyth | September 1, 2006 10:58 AM
Posted on September 1, 2006 10:58