On Jan 18, 2012, at 2:15 PM, Scott Marlowe wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 18, 2012 at 11:21 AM, Igor Polishchuk <igor@powerreviews.com> wrote:
>> Here is an article on a recently discovered Oracle flaw, which allows SCN to
>> reach its limit.
>> http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9223506/Fundamental_Oracle_flaw_revea
>> led?taxonomyId=18&pageNumber=1
>>
>> Please don't beat me for posting a link for an Oracle related article.
>> If you despise a very notion of mentioning Oracle, please just don't read
>> the post.
>> This article may be interesting to any RDBMS professional, no mater what db
>> flavor he/she is working with.
>> Also, this story may be a lesson for the Postgresql community on how not do
>> things. I'm not a developer, but it seems that having synchronized
>> transaction id between let say streaming-replicated databases would give
>> some advantages if done properly.
>
> Wow, interesting difference between postgresql which occasionally
> resets its smaller transaction id to prevent wrap whereas oracle just
> uses a bigger number. If my calcs are right, Oracle has about 500
> years to figure out the wrap around limit at 16ktps etc.
>
> Thanks for the link, it was a fascinating read.
By the way, this is called a Lamport clock.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamport_timestamps?banner=none
"On receiving a message, the receiver process sets its counter to be greater than the maximum of its own value and the
receivedvalue before it considers the message received."
Cheers,
M