04917nam 2200613Ia 450 991077940430332120200520144314.01-299-44103-31-84968-455-3(CKB)2550000001018308(EBL)1132465(OCoLC)836406419(SSID)ssj0000907178(PQKBManifestationID)11566480(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000907178(PQKBWorkID)10883818(PQKB)10686348(MiAaPQ)EBC1132465(Au-PeEL)EBL1132465(CaPaEBR)ebr10682489(CaONFJC)MIL475353(PPN)22804149X(EXLCZ)99255000000101830820111102d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrGetting started with Oracle event processing 11g[electronic resource] /Alexandre Alves, Robin J. Smith, Lloyd WilliamsBirmingham Packt Publishing20131 online resource (340 p.)Includes index.1-84968-454-5 Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Authors; About the Reviewers; www.PacktPub.com; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: An Overview of Complex Event Processing; What is event processing?; Relating this to a business in computing terms; Use case: A solution for customer problems; Key elements of event stream processing; An event; An event stream; An event type; Event Processing Network; Event processing languages and extensibility; Processor event node methodologies; Processor extensibility; Event processor ""Intelligence Injection""Holistic Event-Driven and Service Orientated ArchitecturesPredicting an event; Summary; Chapter 2: An Overview of Oracle Event Processing; Understanding the heritage of Oracle Event Processing; The Java Event-Driven Server, the bits and bytes of the architecture; The adopted event language; CQL concepts; The philosophy and fundamentals of developing; Creating an Oracle Event Processing application; Some hints and tips; Controlling from the command line; Watching things happen and changing what happens; Summary; Chapter 3: Adapting Events for OEP; Creating and converting eventsEvent type systemPlatform adapters; The JMS adapter; The CSV adapter; HTTP pub-sub adapter; Configuring your own custom adapter; Leveraging OSGi services to create an adapter; Packaging custom adapters; Summary; Chapter 4: Assembling and Configuring OEP Applications; Implementing the component model; Exploring the EPN extensions; Defining a simple Spring bean; Creating the event type repository; Setting up the adapters; Configuring channels; Implementing event-beans; Enabling the power of CQL processors; Defining a database table; Using caching; Understanding the application configurationAdapter configurationChannel configuration; Cache configuration; Defining resources in the server configuration; Extending the component type infrastructure; Summary; Chapter 5: Coding with CQL; Introducing CQL; Understanding CQL fundamentals; Establishing your sources and destinations; Processing models; The structure and semantics of event processing; Restricting streams with Windows; Tuple-based windows; Partitioned windows; Output; Controlling output with slides; The unbounded window; The constant value range window; The NOW window and the Last Event window; SQL as a foundation; JoinsExternal sourcesAggregations; Ordering; Views; Set operations; Typing and expressions; Timing models; Summary; Chapter 6: Managing and Monitoring Applications; Configuring the logging service; Provisioning applications; Changing application configuration; Managing server-wide configuration; Controlling concurrency with work managers; Accessing contextual data with data sources; Browsing metadata with the event type repository; Monitoring progress; Summary; Chapter 7: Using Tables and Caches for Contextual Data; Setting up JDBC data sources; Enriching events using a database tableSetting up caching systemsThis book is a practical guide with examples and clear steps to explain terrain modeling with Grome.If you're a developer or artist looking for a guide to walk you through GROME 3.1, then this book is for you. This book will help you from the first step to exporting a terrain as a workable art asset in a game engine.Database managementDatabase management.004.6/54Alves Alexandre1567463Smith Robin J1567464Williams Lloyd1567465MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910779404303321Getting started with Oracle event processing 11g3838896UNINA