• Jump to Left Menu
  • Jump to Right Menu
  • Jump to Main Content
  • Jump to Footer
  • Accessibility Page
IT-Director.com Logo

 

Main navigation - go to a section of this website:

  • ARCHIVE
  • PAPERS
  • EVENTS
  • NEWSWIRE
  • BLOGS

  

Register | Login to Member's Area

 
 
DOMAINS
  • Enterprise
  • SME
  • Business Issues
  • Technology
  • Services
  • Channels
FEATURED EVENTS
  • Information Process Quality Improvement
    19th March - 21st March
    London, United Kingdom
  • Convergence Summit North 2012
    17th April - 18th April
    Manchester, United Kingdom
POPULAR PAPERS
  • Best practices for cloud security by Bloor Research
USEFUL LINKS
  • Last 7 Days
  • Archives
  • Top Articles
SHARE THIS PAGE
  • Delicious Icon Delicious
  • Digg Icon Digg
  • reddit Icon reddit
  • Facebook Icon Facebook
  • StumbleUpon Icon StumbleUpon
CONTENT FEED

Sitewide
RSS Feed:

RSS Icon

What is RSS?

RANDOM QUOTE
Famous Slights - "I like long walks, especially when they are taken by people who annoy me." - Fred Allen

PAGE TOOLS
  • Request Reprints
  • Tell A Friend
  • Contact Author
RECENT POSTS
  • Cassandra and Hadoop
  • Another choice for Hadoop
  • Informatica Data Replication
  • Hive, DataRush and Hadoop
  • Challenging Cloudera
  • The EDW is dead
ADVERTISEMENT
BLOG ARCHIVE
  • January, 2012
  • October, 2011
  • August, 2011
  • June, 2011
  • April, 2011
  • March, 2011
  • February, 2011
  • January, 2011
  • November, 2010
  • October, 2010
  • August, 2010
  • July, 2010
Blogs > Bloor IM Blog

Dual Loading for Teradata

Philip Howard By: Philip Howard, Research Director - Data Management, Bloor Research
Published: 9th September 2010
Copyright Bloor Research © 2010
Logo for Bloor Research

As you may know, Teradata offers an Active-Active solution. What this means is that you can have dual Teradata systems that not only act as back-up for one another in the case of either planned or unplanned downtime but that also concurrently support your query load. This differs from a conventional Active-Passive environment whereby the second system is only kept for standby purposes. The advantage that the Active-Active arrangement has is that you need less powerful systems for each processor because both are being used to serve user queries, with load balancing across the two systems to ensure optimal performance. Or, of course, you can have more powerful systems but superior performance.

Hitherto there has been something of an issue with such approaches because both Active-Active and Active-Passive configurations require the data to be updated within the data warehouse systems in parallel and you need to ensure synchronisation across the two systems. Traditionally, Teradata has provided its Table Load facility, which is essentially a batch loading capability, but that is only fine where batch updates are suitable. But, increasingly, as the world becomes more and more real-time, they are not sufficient. So, the traditional approach has been to use replication in order to update systems in real-time. And this is fine when volumes are relatively small but, again, data volumes are growing all the time. This means that there is loading gap: there is high speed, high volume batch loading and there is low volume real-time replication but there is an increasing demand for high volume real-time loading. This is where Informatica has stepped into the breach.

Working in conjunction with Teradata, Informatica has introduced a Dual Load solution for Teradata that offers high speed real-time loading across Teradata Active-Active and Active-Passive configurations with synchronisation across the Teradata systems. Of course, this is available to new customers but the focus will be on existing joint clients that are already using PowerCenter in conjunction with Teradata Dual Active, in which case they will simply need to extend their current Informatica environment through the addition of the Informatica Dual Load Option for Teradata.

Needless to say the Informatica software is highly parallel in its own right. Perhaps strangely, high availability is only an option for the Informatica solution rather than mandatory but, in any case, it is highly recommended. Alternatively, if you want the equivalent of an Active-Active environment from Informatica then you can select their Enterprise Grid option.

Informatica does not see its Dual Load solution as competitive with either Table Load or replication but as filling an increasingly important gap that is not met by either of these technologies. It therefore sees the Dual Load option as complementary to both of these approaches and it expects them to coexist.

Of course, the number of companies that will require this level of performance is relatively small (perhaps a few hundred) but they are typically very large organisations with massive data handling issues. Combine the ability to support such volumes along with the real-time capabilities that are increasingly required and I think Informatica should be on to a winner.

Moreover, this sort of technology has the potential to be used elsewhere. For example, in zero-downtime migrations you require Active-Active or Active-Passive systems where both systems are updated in parallel, and kept synchronised, in exactly the same way that this Dual Load feature will be used in Teradata environments. Of course, this would mean generalising the software but it would be a sensible move going forward: I will be interested to see if this is the direction in which Informatica goes. In the meantime this makes a very sensible start.

Reader Comments

The messages above were all contributed by IT-Director.com readers. Whilst we take care to remove any posts deemed inappropriate, we can take no responsibility for these comments. If you would like a comment removed please contact our editorial team.

We automatically stop accepting comments 180 days after a post is published. If you would like to know more about this subject, please contact us and we'll try to help.



  • Report errors / Make Suggestions
  • | Site Map
  • | Terms of Use
  • | Privacy

Published by: IT Analysis Communications Ltd.
T: +44 (0)190 888 0760 | F: +44 (0)190 888 0761