I verified this today actually.  I had a conference call with Quest 
regarding SharePlex, and asked specifically about the chained rows.  They 
said there is a "reorganization" step on the target database, so chained 
rows are not a problem.

Jim

Jim Hawkins
Lead SAPR/3 Oracle Database Administrator
MEMC Electronic Materials, Inc.
600 Pearl Drive
St. Louis, MO  633376
9636) 474-7832
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (home)


> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: MacGregor, Ian A. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > 
> > We are looking into the product as well, but have yet to even 
> > toy with the product.  There is a "no chained rows" 
> > restriction.
> 
> I'm not sure what that statement means. Shareplex will replicate a table
> that has chained rows.
> 
> > Shareplex does not replicate transactions on 
> > sys objects.  A table dropped  on one side will not be 
> > dropped on the other.  It apparently will replicate truncates 
> > however.  It's one thing to read the logs and to find the 
> > time when a truncate caused writes to the data dictionary, 
> > but quite another to reconstruct the statement.
> 
> Statement from a developer of Shareplex:
> <<Interesting statement as this is how we replicate DML.  Providing
> functionality for DDL is not at all impossible for us.  It is just one of
> the things on the list of enhancements that we plan for SharePlex, the
> priority of which is dependent on the market.>>
> 
> 
> Let me relate my personal experience working with Shareplex (BEFORE I was 
an
> employee with Quest Software). At a previous company we were looking for a
> replication tool at a company that did payroll taxes. There were large 
batch
> loads (bank records) every night, but especially at the end of each 
quarter
> and at the end of the year. We wanted to ensure that the replication tool 
we
> chose would be fast enough to keep up with the large data loads. When we
> tested Oracle Replication and Quest Shareplex, we found that Shareplex was
> significantly faster. I personally argued against it initially for some of
> the reasons posters here have mentioned (e.g. it uses "unsupported" means 
to
> accomplish its goal) but eventually we implemented Shareplex and were
> satisfied with the result. There can be some manual effort involved in
> reconciliation of discrepancies but we found that effort to be minor.
> Another factor that influenced our decision is that we were intending to 
use
> Shareplex for Oracle in conjunction with Shareplex FS to replicate 
datafiles
> created on the HP-UX server.
> 
> ------
> Jacques R. Kilchoer
> (949) 754-8816
> Quest Software, Inc.
> 8001 Irvine Center Drive
> Irvine, California 92618
> U.S.A.
> http://www.quest.com
> 


-- 
Jim Hawkins
Lead SAPR/3 Oracle Database Administrator
MEMC Electronic Materials, Inc.
600 Pearl Drive
St. Louis, MO  633376
9636) 474-7832
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (home)

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