About Oracle Database
Oracle Database is a relational database with object and Extensible Markup Language
(XML) capabilities. In a relational database, all data is stored in tables that are
composed of rows and columns. Oracle Database enables you to store data, update it,
and efficiently retrieve it, with a high degree of performance, reliability, and
scalability.
Oracle Database is composed of the following elements:
■ The Oracle software that you install on your host computer
■ The database, which is a collection of physical files on one or more disks
The database contains user data, metadata, and control structures. Metadata, or
data about the data, is the collection of information on disk that permits Oracle
software to manage user data. An example of metadata is the data dictionary.
Control structures (such as the control file and online redo log files) ensure the
integrity, availability, and recoverability of user data.
■ The Oracle instance, which is composed of the following:
- The background processes, which are the operating system processes or
threads that perform the work of accessing, storing, monitoring, and
recovering user data, metadata, and control files associated with the database
- The shared memory areas used by the background processes
■ Server processes that perform work on behalf of connected users and
applications, and the memory and temporary storage used by these processes
Server processes parse and execute SQL statements, and retrieve and return
results to the user or application.
■ Oracle Net, which is a software layer that enables client applications and Oracle
Database to communicate over a network, and the Oracle Net listener, which is a
process that listens for connection requests from the network.
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