Oracle® Transparent Gateway for Teradata Administrator's Guide 10g Release 2 (10.2) for Solaris Operating System (SPARC) Part Number B14280-01 |
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After the gateway is installed and configured, you can use the gateway to access Teradata data, pass Teradata commands from applications to the Teradata database, perform distributed queries, and copy data.
This chapter contains the following sections:
The gateway can pass Teradata commands or statements from the application to the Teradata database using the DBMS_HS_PASSTHROUGH package.
Use the DBMS_HS_PASSTHROUGH package in a PL/SQL block to specify the statement to be passed to the Teradata database, as follows:
DECLARE
num_rows INTEGER;
BEGIN
num_rows := DBMS_HS_PASSTHROUGH.EXECUTE_IMMEDIATE@TERA('command');
END;
/
Where command cannot be one of the following:
BEGIN TRANSACTION
BT
COMMIT
END TRANSACTION
ET
ROLLBACK
The DBMS_HS_PASSTHROUGH package supports passing bind values and executing SELECT statements.
See Also:
PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference and Chapter 3 of Oracle Heterogeneous Connectivity Administrator's Guide for more information about the DBMS_HS_PASSTHROUGH package.Teradata and Oracle databases function differently in some areas, causing compatibility problems. The following compatibility issues are described in this section:
The Oracle concept of a schema does not exist in Teradata. An owner included in a query is recognized by Teradata as a database name.
When querying data dictionary tables, the following results are returned:
ALL_* data dictionary tables, data for every Teradata database is returned. The Teradata database name is returned in the owner column.
ALL_USERS data dictionary table, the name of every Teradata database is returned.
USER_* data dictionary tables, data for the default Teradata database is returned. If a default Teradata database is not defined, the DBC Teradata system database is used.
Note:
You can specify a default database in Teradata in the DSN. For details refer to Teradata documentation.Naming rule issues include the following:
Oracle and Teradata use different database object naming rules. For example, the maximum number of characters allowed for each object name can be different. Also, the use of single and double quotation marks, case sensitivity, and the use of alphanumeric characters can all be different.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference and Teradata documentation.The Oracle database server defaults to uppercase unless you surround identifiers with double quote characters. For example, to refer to the Teradata table called emp, enter the name with double quote characters, as follows:
SQL> SELECT * FROM "emp"@TERA;
However, to refer to the Teradata table called emp owned by Scott from an Oracle application, enter the following:
SQL> SELECT * FROM "Scott"."emp"@TERA;
If the Teradata table called emp is owned by SCOTT, a table owner name in uppercase letters, you can enter the owner name without double quote characters, as follows:
SQL> SELECT * FROM SCOTT."emp"@TERA;
or
SQL> SELECT * FROM scott."emp"@TERA;
Oracle Corporation recommends that you surround all Teradata object names with double quote characters and use the exact letter case for the object names as they appear in the Teradata data dictionary. This convention is not required when referring to the supported Oracle data dictionary tables or views listed in Appendix C, "Data Dictionary".
If existing applications cannot be changed according to these conventions, create views in Oracle to associate Teradata names to the correct letter case. For example, to refer to the Teradata table emp from an existing Oracle application by using only uppercase names, define the following view:
SQL> CREATE VIEW EMP (EMPNO, ENAME, SAL, HIREDATE) AS SELECT "empno", "ename", "sal", "hiredate" FROM "emp"@TERA;
With this view, the application can issue statements such as the following:
SQL> SELECT EMPNO, ENAME FROM EMP;
Using views is a workaround solution that duplicates data dictionary information originating in the Teradata data dictionary. You must be prepared to update the Oracle view definitions whenever the data definitions for the corresponding tables are changed in the Teradata database.
Data type issues include the following:
Oracle SQL uses hexadecimal digits surrounded by single quotes to express literal values being compared or inserted into columns defined as data type RAW.
This notation is not converted to syntax compatible with the Teradata VARBINARY and BINARY data types (a ff surrounded by single quotes followed by hexadecimal digits).
For example, the following statement is not supported:
SQL> INSERT INTO BINARY_TAB@TERA VALUES ('ff'xb)
Where BINARY_TAB contains a column of data type VARBINARY or BINARY. Use bind variables when inserting into or updating VARBINARY and BINARY data types.
In order for Teradata date formats (DATE, TIME and TIMESTAMP) to be treated as dates and not strings, in the ODBC DSN set up make sure that the DateTimeFormat parameter is set to AAA.
Teradata does not support implicit date conversions. Such conversions must be explicit.
For example, the gateway issues an error for the following SELECT statement:
SELECT DATE_COL FROM TEST@TERA WHERE DATE_COL = "1-JAN-2001";
To avoid problems with implicit conversions, add explicit conversions, as in the following:
SELECT DATE_COL FROM TEST@TERA WHERE DATE_COL = TO_DATE("1-JAN-2001")
See Also:
Appendix A, "Data Type Conversion" for more information about restrictions on data types.Query issues include the following:
Teradata evaluates a query condition for all selected rows before returning any of the rows. If there is an error in the evaluation process for one or more rows, no rows are returned even though the remaining rows satisfy the condition.
Oracle evaluates the query condition row-by-row and returns a row when the evaluation is successful. Rows are returned until a row fails the evaluation.
The locking model for an Teradata database differs significantly from the Oracle model. The gateway depends on the underlying Teradata behavior, so Oracle applications that access Teradata through the gateway can be affected by the following possible scenarios:
Read access might block write access.
Write access might block read access.
Statement-level read consistency is not guaranteed.
See Also:
Teradata documentation for information about the Teradata locking model.If you encounter incompatibility problems not listed in this section or in "Known Problems", please contact Oracle Support Services. The following section describes the known restrictions and includes suggestions for dealing with them when possible:
COMMIT or ROLLBACK in PL/SQL Cursor Loops Closes Open Cursors
Note:
If you have any questions or concerns about the restrictions, contact Oracle Support Services.The gateway cannot guarantee transactional integrity in the following cases:
When a statement that is processed by the gateway causes an implicit commit in the target database
When the target database is configured to work in autocommit mode
Note:
Oracle corporation strongly recommends the following:If you know that executing a particular statement causes an implicit commit in the target database, then ensure that this statement is executed in its own transaction.
Do not configure the target database to work in autocommit mode.
The gateway does not support savepoints. If a distributed update transaction is under way involving the gateway and a user attempts to create a savepoint, the following error occurs:
ORA-02070: database dblink does not support savepoint in this context
By default, the gateway is configured as COMMIT_CONFIRM and it is always the commit point site when the Teradata database is updated by the transaction.
Any COMMIT or ROLLBACK issued in a PL/SQL cursor loop closes all open cursors, which can result in the following error:
ORA-1002: fetch out of sequence
To prevent this error, move the COMMIT or ROLLBACK statement outside the cursor loop.
Oracle Corporation recommends that you place a DDL statement in its own transaction when executing such a statement with the pass-through feature. An explicit COMMIT must be issued after the DDL statement.
If the SQL statements being passed through the gateway result in an implicit commit at the Teradata database, the Oracle transaction manager is unaware of the commit and an Oracle ROLLBACK command cannot be used to roll back the transaction.
Due to limitations in NCR's ODBC driver for Teradata, you cannot compare columns of data type TIME or TIMESTAMP to a bind variable.
The following SQL statement causes an error message:
SQL> select time_column from time_table@tg4tera where time_column = :a;
The following error is issued:
ORA-28500: connection from ORACLE to a non-Oracle system returned this message: [Transparent gateway for TERA]DRV_Execute: [NCR][ODBC Teradata][Teradata RDBMS] Invalid operation on an ANSI Datetime or Interval value. (SQL State: 22005;SQL Code: -5407) ORA-02063: preceding 2 lines from TERA
This section lists restrictions on the following SQL syntax:
See Also:
Appendix B, "Supported SQL Syntax and Functions" for more information about restrictions on SQL syntax.UPDATE and DELETE statements with the WHERE CURRENT OF clause are not supported by the gateway because they rely on the Oracle ROWID implementation. To update or delete a specific row through the gateway, a condition style WHERE clause must be used.
You need to use double quotes to wrap around lower case table names.
For example:
copy from tkhouser/tkhouser@inst1 insert loc_tkhodept using select * from "tkhodept"@holink2;
The gateway is not a shared server process and cannot support shared database links. Each gateway session spawns a separate gateway process and connections cannot be shared.
This section describes known problems and includes suggestions for correcting them when possible. If you have any questions or concerns about the problems, contact Oracle Support Services. A current list of problems is available online. Contact your local Oracle Corporation office for information about accessing the list.
The following known problems are described in this section:
The Oracle database server no longer supports the initialization parameter DBLINK_ENCRYPT_LOGIN. Up to version 7.3, this parameter's default TRUE value prevented the password for the login user ID from being sent over the network (in the clear). Later versions automatically encrypt the password.
If this parameter is set to TRUE in the initialization parameter file used by the Oracle9i database server, you must change the setting to FALSE, the default setting, to allow Oracle9i to communicate with the gateway.
In the current release, Oracle Database 10g, Release 10.2, the DBLINK_ENCRYPT_LOGIN initialization parameter is obsolete, so you need not check it.
The following restrictions apply when using LONG VARCHAR data types:
An unsupported SQL function cannot be used in a SQL statement that accesses a column defined as Teradata data type LONG VARCHAR.
You cannot use SQL*Plus to select data from a column defined as Teradata data type LONG VARCHAR when the data is greater than 80 characters in length. Oracle Corporation recommends using Pro*C or Oracle Call Interface to access such data in a Teradata database.
LONG VARCHAR data types must be NULLABLE for INSERT or UPDATE to work.
A table including a LONG VARCHAR column must have a unique index defined on the table or the table must have a separate column that serves as a primary key.
LONG VARCHAR data cannot be read through pass-through queries.
The gateway does not support the PL/SQL function COLUMN_VALUE_LONG of the DBMS_SQL package.
See Also:
Appendix B, "Supported SQL Syntax and Functions" for more information about restrictions on SQL syntax.If you do not prefix a Teradata database object with its schema name in a SQL statement within a PL/SQL block, the following error message occurs:
ORA-6550 PLS-201 Identifier table_name must be declared.
Change the SQL statement to include the schema name of the object.