[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Industrial Strength XML Serving
----- Original Message ----- From: John Robert Gardner <jrgardn@e...> To: 'xml-mailinglist' <xml-dev@i...> Cc: John Robert Gardner -Ph.D. <jrgardn@e...> Sent: Thursday, October 07, 1999 9:23 AM Subject: Industrial Strength XML Serving > > I'm venturing this question as a general call for input--and pitches--with > regard to the following project we're undertaking: > > 750,000 pages of journals, in both text form and gif images for > "canonical preservation" and cross-check > > Typed text version, in XML (using TEI largely) yielding > ~400,000,000 words (our initial estimates suggest > something in the range of 30-50 gigs of total content > including gifs), avg.'d to ~60,000,000 tag nodes, > searchable based on content of tags (word strings), > element heirarchy, and attribute values, with final form > changing infrequently (archival/institutional memory) OK, you asked for pitches, I'll give you Software AG's pitch for our just-released native XML database called Tamino. see http://www.softwareag.com/tamino While relational databases create the context to the data through tables, columns, joins etc., they work best with data that fits to this structure. As soon as the data has left the database, its meaning relies totally on the further processing applications. In complex environments this often leads to problems which are hard to fix like unexpected application behavior, lack of scalability and maintainability. XML objects are stored "natively" in Tamino. Direct storage of XML objects without further conversion to other data structures is the basis for Tamino's excellent performance. In other words, there is NO MAPPING LAYER between the XML you see and the underlying database structures. This eliminates having to do an analysis of which XML elements are to be stored in an efficiently searchable manner and which are to be stored as something like BLOBs. Finally, Software AG has been developing industrial strength database systems for something like 30 years now. Our Adabas product is widely used in environments where absolute reliability, near-infinite scalability, TRUE 24:7 availability (i.e, you can lose millions of dollars if the database is EVER offline for maintenance), etc. are requirements. Tamino is initially available on NT, and (I'm not sure of the details, commitments, etc.) will become available on a wide variety of server and mainframe platforms. > I've been asking offlist for possible consultants as our systems staff has > a strong inclination to Oracle 8i and I'm hardly fluent enough on such > software to argue based upon what I know. Based on Oracle's white paper, > it sounds viable . . . however I can say without fear of contradiction that Oracle 8i has a *great* whitepaper. I'd suggest you look closer at the actual product, its customers, and the alternatives before assuming that it's the obvious choice for XML storage. Thanks, Mike Champion Software AG xml-dev: A list for W3C XML Developers. To post, mailto:xml-dev@i... Archived as: http://www.lists.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/xml-dev/ and on CD-ROM/ISBN 981-02-3594-1 To unsubscribe, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; unsubscribe xml-dev To subscribe to the digests, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; subscribe xml-dev-digest List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (mailto:rzepa@i...)
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