Oracle Database Scalability

MustansirManasawala - PeerSpot reviewer
Information Technology Manager at TK Elevator

It is a scalable solution. You can always tune the parameters and decide on how much to scale based on the memory available. You can configure your SGA along with memory, and once you outgrow it, you can always reconfigure and re-initiate it, making it a scalable tool.

Over a long period of time, my company has been dealing with a user base of various sizes. There are times when the user base can go up to 200 people.

The product is extensively used, and my company plans to increase its use in the future.

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SG
Works

The solution has great scalability solutions.

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VD
IT Manager at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

It's a scalable solution.

As known to everyone, One of the best.

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Buyer's Guide
Oracle Database
March 2024
Learn what your peers think about Oracle Database. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: March 2024.
767,995 professionals have used our research since 2012.
PS
President at Advance Consulting Enterprise

In the data warehousing database or application, we have tens of millions of rows in different tables, and we have no problems there. However, in that particular application, we're not dealing with transaction processing. So, I can't answer the scalability in terms of transaction processing. On the hardware platform that I've put together for the main database of this one customer, I am very pleased with the performance of the data warehousing aspects and being able to query data quickly and do bulk inserts and things of that nature. For data warehousing scalability, I can attest to the fact that it is great, but for transaction processing, I don't have the experience to be able to provide information.

Two of our biggest clients are quasi-governmental in the sense that their business is based on government funding. One has 60 users who use the application day in and day out, and their database is relatively small. The other application has about 20 dedicated internal users, and then there is a web interface. It has around 3,000 to 5,000 users, but typically, there are about 20 concurrent users. 

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EM
Head, Database Administrators at Ecobank Transnational Incorporated

We do a lot of scaling. When we need to scale, we need to go through the Change Application Board at the company to make sure everything is properly documented, and everyone is made aware of the changes. When you scale or make changes on the system, it doesn't lead to downtime. that's extremely important to note. We use a rank model where you do changes one node at a time.

Ultimately, the solution is very easy to scale.

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CD
Infrastructure Manager at Lactanet

There's no problem with scalability. It's quite easy for an organization to expand if they need to.

We have many users on the solution, including myself, and I have an administrator role. We have five database administrators that manage the day to day operations of the database. Then we have about 20 developers that develop different applications or make changes to the database for us. There are also internal users. We probably have, I'd say, 500 employees that have access at any given time. Our customers also have access. In total, we have about 15,000 people on the solution.

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Sumeet  Zalpuri - PeerSpot reviewer
Data engineer at ASR Nederland N.V.

The tool is scalable. We have DevOps. We have 200 users in our organization. We use it extensively.

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DN
SAM Consultant at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

Oracle Database is pretty scalable. And if you are planning to implement or leverage the containers, Oracle has recently added enterprise containers into their stack, so we can leverage that technology to enhance the scalability of the database.

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PeterKrall - PeerSpot reviewer
Freelance Software Engineer + Director of a company at Peter Krall Consulting

It is scalable. The number of users differed a lot. There were not that many who used it directly. It was mainly was used by programs written by me. There might be around 100 users who used these programs.

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GW
Senior Infrastructure Lead at a transportation company with 10,001+ employees

Oracle Database is easier to scale up. The number of users using the solution in our organization depends on different applications normally, and it may be over a million being used by users for a customer.

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CS
Group Head, Internal Controls & Compliance at Glico Group Ltd.

We face scalability issues at times due to the vendors. I rate it a seven out of ten. My company has 150 users. I don't use it often, maybe once a week. However, some people use it for about eight hours daily.

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Tushar Rahatekar - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr. Systems Analyst at a maritime company with 10,001+ employees

It's very highly scalable.

We currently have three users.

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Chinthake Ranasinghe - PeerSpot reviewer
Chief Information Officer at Cjp

It is scalable. Because we are using the cloud platform, it is very easy to scale it up. We have approximately 1,000 users.

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Lakshman Nimmakayala - PeerSpot reviewer
Enterprise Cloud Architect at UBS Financial

We don't have an issue with the solution's scalability. It's expandable. 

What we see is Mongo and Cassandra, and many other databases that are extremely scalable and distributed. With Oracle, obviously, there are other types of databases that are performing better in this area. Obviously, they could improve scalability from a scalability perspective.

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OM
Cloud Expert | DevOps | Oracle Consultant at confidential

The Performance for the database in general is good and the tools to analyze the performance in case you have some issue it's perfect and make it easier for you.

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SP
Technical Specialist at a retailer with 10,001+ employees

Scalability depends on how much money you've got. It depends on the quality of your hardware. Scalability is not an Oracle problem.

In terms of the number of users, we have maybe 5,000 people who we can log on to one system and put in expense claims. We don't have plans to increase its usage.

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PC
Independent Consultant at Unaikui

Depending on where you deploy, Oracle is also scalable. Sixteen sites with 50 users each are using this solution.

I rate the solution’s scalability a ten out of ten.

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MM
Group CEO at Mmusi Group

Oracle Database is scalable. It simply comes down to how you design the transaction screen of the database. We have more than 100 users because they use the applications.

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Eva Kimathi - PeerSpot reviewer
ERP Database Administrator at PSKENYA

The scalability of the solution is good.

We have approximately 70 users that are using the solution through the ERP.

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EF
Senior Oracle Database Administrator at a financial services firm with 51-200 employees

This solution is very scalable. 

In our organization, there are over 300 users. 

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Kevin Honde - PeerSpot reviewer
Data Solution Architect at Econet Wireless Zimbabwe

It is very scalable. You can start with a small server, and you can scale it up by just increasing your licenses.

In terms of the number of users, for our data warehouse, there is only one application user. Other users interact with the database through the application. After you log onto the application, the application logs in to the database with a single user ID.

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OK
Developer at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

Oracle is very, very scalable. If a company needs to expand the solution, it can do so.

Our organization is quite large. There are hundreds of IT personnel using Oracle.

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NP
Sr. System and Storage Administrator at a government with 51-200 employees

The scalability of the solution is very good. If a company needs to expand it, it can do so easily.

We do have plans to continue to use the product in the future.

We have about 100 users on the solution currently.

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OA
Senior Chief Engineer at ministry of electricity

The solution is scalable. If a company needs to expand it outward, it can do so.

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it_user515592 - PeerSpot reviewer
Operations Engineering Manager at a consultancy with 10,001+ employees

Oracle systems are highly scalable, Backup and Recovery strategy needs to be tweaked and is not as scalable as core database system. It needs some special attention to meet your RTO

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MuhammadFurqan - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior consaltant at System Limited

The solution’s scalability is good.

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JohnMitchell - PeerSpot reviewer
jmitchell@natbankmw.com at NBM

It is very scalable. In terms of its usage, it is used by our core banking system. So, it is used by one system. It is not used directly by people. We don't have any plans to increase its usage.

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BT
Head of Department at a transportation company with 10,001+ employees

Oracle is quite good in terms of scalability. 90% of our applications run on Oracle, so we have a lot of users.

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it_user436020 - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Oracle Database Administrator at a insurance company with 10,001+ employees

It's scaled to our needs.

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MR
General Manager (IT/MIS) at a energy/utilities company with 10,001+ employees

The scalability is very good. They are providing the structure, the architecture, and everything you need to scale. It's very easy to scale to whatever size you need. Usually, we can do scalable sites with no issue.

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PB
Enterprise Analytics at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

Scalability differs depending on the schema created in Oracle Database to access the database artifacts. For example, in a normal recessional database, which does not have much centralized or decentralized schema, scalability can be very high. However, in cases where there is a centralized schema, the scalability has to be defined by the database administrator.

Our whole engineering team currently uses this solution.

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it_user521754 - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr. Database Consultant at IGT

Obviously, the scalability factor was increased with the Oracle Real Application Clusters (RACs). You have multiple instances of Oracle, with the shared storage, so you can spawn multiple processes to do large volume data lifting. You don't want to rely on one instance alone. You don't want to load that one node alone. It can do everything. You can spread it across nodes. The RAC solution gives you that.

In terms of the data scalability itself, if you don't want a shared storage, you have solutions such as Exadata. It provides very good storage and gives you great performance.

In all respects, Oracle on all fronts is doing great, including scalability. I don't see any issues with it right now. As I’ve mentioned, the great thing about the product is that it keeps evolving and tries to improve.

I think it's great to have those features.

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Jeremy Lee - PeerSpot reviewer
Principal Consultant at SandFil International

The solution’s scalability is good. It caters to small and medium enterprises with different products and ranges.

I rate the solution’s scalability a nine out of ten.

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SM
Enterprise Architect at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

Oracle Database is scalable.

Everyone in our organization is using the solution. We have approximately 2,000 users using it directly or indirectly. We have developers, DBAs, system administrators, business analytics people, auditors, and regular users. Additionally, applications are using the database.

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BZ
Business Development Director at a tech consulting company with 201-500 employees

The scalability is good.

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Kopano  Ramaphoi - PeerSpot reviewer
Consultant at SmartCloud

Oracle Database is quite scalable.

They have a large number of options depending on the needs of the organization, allowing any organization to deploy according to their requirements. You can add or remove items as time allows, it's very scalable.

In our organization, we have more than 100, but less than 1,000 users.

Recently, I proposed the migration from on-premises to the cloud. I've noticed that alternatives are bringing a lot in the business, particularly in the cloud spectrum. Convincing customers to try to migrate to the cloud today is another task. It's more like there's something frightening there. I'm not sure what they're afraid of, but it's a matter of education and demonstration. I can download Oracle Database and experiment with it on my own, as long as I'm not using it for commercial purposes. I can do it if I try it on my own. 

I believe they should increase that even in the cloud. They have an Oracle Always Free account on the cloud, but it has a time limit, of a month. They will give you one month's free package for you to try. I have tried it many times. What I've noticed is that they should add more products to the Always Free account so that people, particularly on our continent, who are still skeptical of the cloud, are not left out.

They believe they will inquire as to where we will store our information. How do you know you're getting access to our data? As a result, there is still a lot of information that needs to be taught. I think the best thing Oracle could do is try to improve on that so that most people can keep trying and see that there's nothing to be skeptical about.

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SN
Technical Lead at a computer software company with 10,001+ employees

Oracle Database is scalable.

I would recommend Oracle Database for large enterprises because the smaller companies would not be able to afford it.

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AhmedElbadry - PeerSpot reviewer
NMS Service Automation & RPA Technical Lead at Vodafone

The solution is very scalable. Ours was managing about 5,000 servers all over Egypt. The performance and historical transaction on sites is good, and if you need more storage on your database, you can do so with relative ease.  

We have 200 users logged in at any given time.

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RM
Consultant at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

Oracle Database is scalable and can be used with various sizes of projects.

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AG
Product manager at Metrodata Electronics Tbk PT

It is scalable. Many customers of ours are using Oracle Database as their database infrastructure. Our customers are from all industries, such as communication, manufacturing, distribution, retail, etc. We plan to keep selling this solution.

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MA
Senior DBA & IT Consultant at MA Consulting

Scalability is one of the biggest features of Oracle Database. We can scale out or scale in using clusters, using the shard solutions that we have in the market today. Oracle brings a large number of methods for scaling.

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BN
IT Project Manager at Nong San Sach online

Our scalability relies heavily on our deep understanding of data relations. By leveraging this knowledge and adapting it to the Oracle Database, we can align our business processes with our requirements. My company has four users. 

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SS36 - PeerSpot reviewer
Software Architeture at Enformatik Yazılım Bilgi Teknolojileri Mühendislik Ltd.

I rate the tool’s scalability a five out of ten. We need too many servers. Our customers use the product, and we support them. Our customers have about 100 users, including developers and managers. We are planning to increase the number of users.

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AF
Oracle Applications Consultant at ASAM Conseil Inc

The solution is scalable.

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SA
Deputy General Manager at a computer software company with 10,001+ employees

We have found the product to be scalable. If a company needs to expand it, it can do so. It's not a problem. 

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RK
Consultant at a consultancy with 10,001+ employees

The RAC One feature that I mentioned is one of the highlights of Oracle. We're using that for scalability and management. If we're increasing we can easily plug the nodes into the DB and we can distribute the load. It's not a problem.

Right now we are creating these transaction logs from different DBs that we have in place so it's not directly any application or anyone in these dealings. ETL jobs are defined and in place so that we can extract and dump the logs into the Oracle DB.

We have a team of administrators working on it.

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AG
Product manager at Metrodata Electronics Tbk PT

If they need to, companies can easily add more nodes to the cluster. It's easy to use its cluster technology to scale. I would say it's rather easy to expand the solution if you need to.

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KK
Storage Solutions Expert at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

The solution’s scalability is good from a technical perspective. We are shifting to other products because of the basic cost.

Around 4,000 users are using this solution.

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DE
System/Security Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

It scales vertically. So, the more stuff you want to do, you have to get a bigger server. That's okay if you can do that, but the strategy now is that everybody is scaling horizontally because you can buy a ton of cheap servers and spread them out all over the network.

We have about 10,000 users, and they're doing inventory control. We don't plan to increase its usage. We are planning to decrease its usage and go to Postgres.

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SK
Group DWH and BI Senior Manager at Virgin Mobile Middle East and Africa

There are only certain people who use the solution. Not many users have access to much of it. We only have real access to some of the databases. I would say there are only one to five of us who can access Oracle at the moment.

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MB
Project Lead Performance Engineer & Automation at a insurance company with 10,001+ employees

The solution is scalable.

We have approximately 2,000 users using this solution.

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KG
Associate Manager at a consultancy with 501-1,000 employees

It is scalable. Currently, about 30 people are using it. We don't have any plans to increase its usage.

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AN
Senior Hyperion Systems Architect at County of Loudoun Virginia

We have had no issues scaling it for our needs.

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Edward  Onyango - PeerSpot reviewer
Database administrator at OS Labs

Oracle Database is scalable, e.g. if your company is growing well, you can easily reach the requirements of the company according to the number of users and performance when using the solution. 

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TA
Head of Data Management Section at a energy/utilities company with 5,001-10,000 employees

Oracle Database is a scalable solution.

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Muhammad Asif Ashraf - PeerSpot reviewer
Technical Development Lead at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees

The product can scale. If a company needs to expand, it can do so.

We have both internal and external users. The amount of users ranges into the thousands. 

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Eva Kimathi - PeerSpot reviewer
ERP Database Administrator at PSKENYA

We have a really lightweight set up, we have the solution configured for 400 people.

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MR
Senior Database Administrator Engineer at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

This is a scalable solution.

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MahmoudMohamed1 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Data Engineer at Tatweer Educational Technologies Company - TETCO

Many team members are using this solution.

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MS
IT Supervisor at Nebeaelhate IT

The scalability is very good.

We have about 120 users.

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AG
Deputy Director of Digital Banking at IDBank

Oracle Database is scalable, it is one of the most scalable solutions.

We have approximately 1,000 users using this solution. We plan to increase usage in the future.

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SK
Senior Architect at a computer software company with 10,001+ employees

It is scalable. Around 40 to 50 customers are using Oracle Database.

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AG
Delivery Head IT & IS at a non-tech company with 10,001+ employees

It is highly scalable. It is scalable to the best of our needs. We have around 10,000 to 12,000 users.

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KS
Database Analyst at Talbots

This solution is extremely scalable.

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it_user420015 - PeerSpot reviewer
President at Oraclewizard.com Inc

I don't think there's an issue with scalability. Most people are more concerned about performance because you have to encrypt and decrypt on the fly, but with hardware encryption modules that is really a null issue. There is very little performance impact. We've encrypted data out to 25 terabytes in one system and we had no performance issues.

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it_user419103 - PeerSpot reviewer
Co Founder & Executive Director at SatyaMoksh Inc.

We haven't scaled because of the unique constraints of our customized datacenter, but we use Linux because of Windows limitations. But we have been able to go from a mom-and-pop garage shop to where we are now.

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AB
Technical Manager - Enterprise Application at Thakral One (Pvt) Ltd

Oracle Database is scalable. I've deployed the solution at a government tax agency with more than 500 users. The core banking system was implemented at a bank with 22 branches all over Nepal and 200-plus users. Our most recent public sector project had over 100 users. 

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CK
Database Administrator at a financial services firm with 501-1,000 employees

The scalability of the Oracle Database is very good. It is easy to scale and you can have a tremendous about of users.

Our entire workforce is using this solution. For example, there is a payroll system and everybody has to access their payroll details. This is how the entire workforce will have access.

Over time we plan to increase usage of the Oracle Database. We will want to use some kind of an ERP in the future and when we do there will be many things happening on the one system.

We have a solution from Oracle and that in itself is not a complete solution. It's just a part that we have introduced. There are other parts that we will acquire over time. For example, we will keep our journal in Oracle instead of another system. We will do procurement in Oracle eventually. The solution can expand but you have to purchase the different parts.

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VV
Professor at a educational organization with 51-200 employees

The database in-memory and also the extra data that we were using, was quite scalable. It had a range of capabilities, which we could see the high throughput and low latency. Scalability was very well-defined and innovative which has allowed us to stick with the product.

We have about 200 in-house users with more than 1.3 million subscribers. This requires about four to six database specialists for maintenance.

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VM
Senior Software Engineer at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

We can quickly and easily scale Oracle Database. 

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KD
PCI DSS Program Manager at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

The scalability is there if you need it. It expands quite well.

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FA
IT Assistant at Hotel 2 Fevrier

The scalability is fine, we have about 50 people who have access to the interface - we have a front office team, managers, housekeeping team, finance, sales and others. There are lot of users eligible to connect and update information.

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it_user436032 - PeerSpot reviewer
ERP Manager at a manufacturing company with 1,001-5,000 employees

There was no issue with scalability. If you talk about database size it can store high volumes of data.

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it_user521886 - PeerSpot reviewer
Programmer Analyst Team Lead at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees

It's easy to scale; you can add more memory or more storage if you need to scale. Horizontally, you can add one more node. It's a pretty scalable product.

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it_user437655 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Principal Engineer/Architect, Oracle ACE Director at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

It's a very, very stable product. It's part of our 12C new features, I didn't see or feel a lot of issues, but I do recommend it because the data moving could serious impact to your database performance - so test it, before you move the production. So this comes to, not exactly how stable the product is, but how stable your rules are.
If you write the wrong rule, you move the active data to tier two storage, you will suffer your performance. And also, another thing is, when moving data, be careful because all DBAs know that, if you move data across the storage, potentially your index becomes invalidated. Then all your database query will go to the full table scan. Then you actually get a worse problem than ever.

So ADO, they tried their best to re-enable the indexes. But just be careful because in our experience, it's not 100 percent covered. So my advice is, check that. So after they move, use single query to check the index's status. If you found some index not valid, rebuild it (with) another single command, you can do that. That will ensure that you only get a good part of it, not the issue.

So the scalability has something to do with how much data you move around, so that's why you need actually scale. You need to have some idea about how much data (to move). You want to schedule a good time window, so that off your peak time, so you can you do data moving. The DBA is the one who knows this most, you need to plan ahead and test it ahead.

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it_user450624 - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager of Oracle Technology/DevOpsManager at a retailer with 1,001-5,000 employees

RAC can be simplified, basically like ASM. RAC DBAs need to really follow their processes because if one thing goes down, bringing up CRS would be a nightmare, even for a DBA who specializes in RAC. It's not a regular database and you need to learn the internals of it. Troubleshooting it is very different because it's tightly integrated with the ATC process of the Linux OS.

It would be much better if there certain values available. If those values aren't available, don't bother trying to integrate it with the OS. You should run your own shell, which is something I think would be better.

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it_user284961 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Product Manager at a computer software company with 10,001+ employees

You can start with the basic database, so the Oracle single instance. You can scale that pretty much to whatever size, symmetric, multi-processing processor you want to put it on. If that's not going to scale large enough for you, then you can do RAC clusters and you can build basically a little database mainframe. If you've got extra money to spend, I've got this wonderful solution called Exadata. I wish that Exadata was it, that that was the only thing Oracle had to offer. It's that far superior to the standard database, but it requires both hardware and software and there's special licensing. You can't build an Exadata at your own and just get the software. It is just standard Oracle with some hardware tricks. That's impressive, that you can make a database machine that outruns anything and it's still the standard database. They didn't have to really change it.

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KD
System Admin at First Capitol Bank

In terms of scalability, the solution is pretty easy to scale up and to add things and modifications. It is pretty clear.

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AL
Head Of Information Technology at a financial services firm with 501-1,000 employees

The product is quite scalable. You can add as many servers as you would like to. It's not a problem.

The product is not deployed for the user base. It is deployed for the backend service. The amount of actual users is only one or two people. 

We do not have plans to increase usage. The cost is too much of a factor now. I'm not sure if I will be using it anymore. 

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FN
Senior Database Administrator at ITGStore

The version of the solution being employed today is definitely scalable. 

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AS
Project Manager at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

We are not a full data center environment as of now. We develop for our customers and we have not scaled it.

We have 20 dedicated users in our company and may increase usage in the future.

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HB
Domain architect at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

We have the necessary number of people using the application.

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Alain Orlanes - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager at WSI

But definitely as of this moment, due to the COVID crisis, we are not going into the direction of expanding any software or hardware inventory. Everything was put on hold to maximize the usage of current assets.

But of course, Oracle is a scalable solution. We are hoping to go in that direction. If you have a solution that is not scalable, then you probably will be left behind. All software seems to be taking that direction in offering scalability and flexibility.

Oracle can be deployed into whatever architecture you have right now. Whether it be on-prem, on the cloud, or a mix or hybrid. Probably that is a good point for Oracle.

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RT
Head of IT Division at Industrial Property Institute

We are working with the software that moves the current update store. We don't have problems with any new features or applications or integration, so I believe it to be very scalable.

Currently, we have about 3 people using the database. There is only one developer and the rest are admins that are simply connected to the database.

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it_user521868 - PeerSpot reviewer
Oracle DBA at Roketsan Missiles Inc.

We are using a three-node RAC database; it is highly scalable. If we want to add another node, we just buy the hardware and add it to the RAC system. It is highly scalable.

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it_user521571 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Manager / Chapter Lead for DEV Content BE at a insurance company with 5,001-10,000 employees

I was never involved in scaling it because I've always been involved with the software part. However, I heard that scaling it is not that easy and that you really need a special guy to do it. It's not really out of the box as it should be. That's at least what I was told, but, again, I never really touched it.

The most situations where I used it, we didn't use clusters or anything. It was usually master-slave or only just master. In those cases, it worked well for us.

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it_user27945 - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager, Database and Security at a consumer goods company with 1,001-5,000 employees

We sized our database well for what our expected transactions were going to be. We never had to scale it up. Of course, you add space to it over time. We have done that with nothing that causes any issues.

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it_user436200 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Admin at a insurance company with 10,001+ employees

We've been using the add-node functionality. We started with a few of the clusters, the RAC cluster, with two nodes, and we have expanded them to five. We are going to what we call the super-cluster design.

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Omar_Ismail - PeerSpot reviewer
ECM, Archives and Digital Preservation Consultant at DataServe

The solution is scalable. 1,000 users are using this solution.

I rate the solution’s scalability a nine out of ten.

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Victor Hugo Morales Vivas - PeerSpot reviewer
Jefe de Infraestructura y Servicios de TI at Grupo ASD

I rate the scalability of Oracle Database a ten out of ten.

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Mudasir Shafi - PeerSpot reviewer
Testing Lead at Enstoa

We have a lot of users at the moment. We have a couple of hundred users because it is used by different teams. We are, for sure, going to increase its usage.

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SJ
Director Of Sales Marketing at a energy/utilities company with 10,001+ employees

Oracle Database is highly scalable. We have about 1,500 end-users overall.

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it_user436173 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Oracle Database Administrator at a pharma/biotech company with 5,001-10,000 employees

I would say the scalability sets it apart from others. We run a big manufacturing plant and the database is growing at a very very, high rate, but we know with the Oracle RDBMS, it can sustain growth from now and into the future.

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it_user431076 - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Database Administrator (DBA) at a energy/utilities company with 1,001-5,000 employees

There are no issues with scaling it.

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it_user417087 - PeerSpot reviewer
Data Engineer at a aerospace/defense firm with 10,001+ employees

We haven't had to do a whole lot of scaling. It's been pretty static in terms of our utilization of it. For any scaling we've had to do, it's scaled to our needs.

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TB
Managing Director at a financial services firm with 201-500 employees

Oracle Database is a scalable product.

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ID
IT Manager at ducart

The solution could be more scalable. 

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KopanoRamaphoi - PeerSpot reviewer
Consultant at Rpc Data

It's a big database. There is lots of room to scale. The solution can work well for large-scale organizations.

Depending on the number of the requirements, in terms of information, if you want to change the memory or you want to expand the storage, it has the capability to do that. So It's quite a flexible database.

Oracle has done a tremendous job of really allowing companies to scale in and out as needed.

I've worked with many clients and they've been of varying sizes. the company I am working with right now has 200 users on the solution.

We do plan to continue to use the solution and to upgrade to the new version, 19C.

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NM
Oracle Application Database Administrator at a aerospace/defense firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

The solution can really scale if you need it to. We've scaled it up a few times in the environment and we've never had any issue. From that point of view, everything seems to be good.

We have about 2,500 users on the solution.

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YW
Information Security Engineer at a security firm with 11-50 employees

It is scalable. I will continue to use it because it is required for implementing DLP.

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BH
DBA Dept. Manager at a computer software company with 501-1,000 employees

This is a scalable product. You can grow, and you can add things to do. We have approximately 10,000 users in our organization.

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DG
DBA Team Leader at Hadassah Medical Organisation (HMO)

We are already working in Iraq. We also bought Oracle Database Appliance, and we are happy with that product too.

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it_user522141 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA Lead at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

It's absolutely scalable. The 12c version is way more scalable than how it was in the 11g version. It does solve that problem.

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it_user436206 - PeerSpot reviewer
Oracle Applications DBA/UNIX SA at a agriculture with 1,001-5,000 employees

It's been scaling just fine for us. We've had no issues with adding more and more data.

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it_user419334 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Principal Production Support Engineer at Intelsat

We have not had to scale it to a great degree, but we've had no real issues with capacity and we have confidence that Oracle DB will scale as needed.

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AI
Department head of gas projects design at ENPPI

We cannot scale this solution. We have about 1,000 employees that use it.

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UF
System support engineer at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

The solution is quite scalable. It's not a problem if you need to expand. 

We have about 18 to 20 users on the product currently. We have managers, admins, and engineers on the product.

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AM
Technical Team Lead at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

The scalability potential depends on the package that a company gets. If you purchase Datadog, it will be easy to extend and have multiple nodes. The more features you purchase, however, the higher the price. Scaling comes at a cost.

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AV
Information Systems Computer System Controller at a insurance company with 11-50 employees

I think it's scalable because we're now doing an integration, and we have been providing the capacity required for that. We currently have about 2,000 users and plan to increase usage.

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AS
Deputy IT Manager at ICAPP (Americana Group)

Oracle Database is scalable. We have approximately 100 users in the organization.

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AW
Database Operation Assistant Manager at a consumer goods company with 10,001+ employees

The solution could be more scalable. We have approximately 100 users using the solution in my company and we plan on increasing the usage.

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it_user219420 - PeerSpot reviewer
Technical Project Manager at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

Because of the way the application used the database, we found that two data servers increased performance, but a third one decreased it. This was a limitation based on the way the legacy application configured and used their data and how they did their own locking, which made their lock table a hotspot for the clustering, among other issues.

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it_user419319 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Principal Consultant at BroadPoint, Inc.

It has scalability. We haven't had any issues with being unable to scale it.

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it_user419178 - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr Enterprise Database Admin at Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA)

We can scale it, and we are currently exploring cloud options.

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Christian Niembs - PeerSpot reviewer
Management Consultant at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

As an on-premise solution, scalability depends on the hardware, but I find Oracle Database scalable.

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SN
DGM Data Centre at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees

Oracle Database is a scalable solution.

It is being worked on by the development team. As a result, it's reaching our entire organization's population.

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YL
Lead - Cloud Engineering at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

The solution is very scalable. If a company needs to expand it, it can do so with relative ease.

We have about ten users on the solution currently.

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BR
Oracle DBA at a computer software company with 51-200 employees

The scalability of the solution is quite good. If a company needs to expand, it can do so relatively easily. 

When you were just with bare metal, it wouldn't be as good as it is now with virtual machines as it does not take a lot to spin up another virtual machine and put Oracle on it and have it working. In the old days, when you had a piece of metal, you had to find another piece of metal, get it installed, and then start scaling up from there. With the VM, it's a lot better.

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VZ
Divisional Manager at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

It is scalable. We have around 2,000 users, and they use it daily on a 24/7 basis.

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it_user522111 - PeerSpot reviewer
ERP Architect at a comms service provider with 1,001-5,000 employees

It's highly scalable, I would say.

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it_user522033 - PeerSpot reviewer
Oracle Exadata /Oracle 12c Multi-Tenant/Oracle Golden Gate Consultant at a computer software company with 1,001-5,000 employees

We haven’t exactly scaled it right now. Once we upgrade the remaining databases, we can go ahead with scaling it.

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it_user473751 - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager Database Administration at a financial services firm with 5,001-10,000 employees

I did not encounter any scalability issues.

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it_user412296 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Oracle DBA/Architect at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees

We don't. I know it does, but we don't. We are a pretty small shop. Our data's small, so not really.

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EO
Senior Systems Engineer at Dimension Data

The workloads of Oracle Database are scalable.

We have approximately 50 people using the solution. We do have plans to increase the number of users but not at the moment.

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ZG
Senior System Administrator at Debre Markos University

The solution is scalable.

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MF
Information Technology Manager at OrchidaSoft

The solution isn't widely used by our company. I'm the only one testing it. The people in our company don't use Oracle at all.

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OB
Operations Director at ALTERSIS Performance

We have approximately 10 customers who are using Oracele.

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it_user436002 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Admin with 501-1,000 employees

The scalability of Database is good. I do have to say, however, that SQL Server for the Database engine is better if you want to run a bunch of small databases. My gripe about 12c is that they will make you pay extra for it even if you've already licensed Enterprise Edition. Also, it's not as easy to tune the pluggables because the underlying infrastructure is non-tuneable. Whereas with SQL Server, there's a little more flexibility. I run both engines: my SQL Server databases are for my little stovepipe stuff and my Oracle Database is for my big, enterprise-level stuff.

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it_user419082 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Specialist at US Census Bureau

We've had no issues with scalability.

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ABDURRAHIM - PeerSpot reviewer
Deputy Manager - Radio Frequency Planning at X-Net Ltd.

The scalability is very good in Oracle Database.

We have approximately 17 employees that are using this solution. In the future, we will have many more.

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TE
Daire Başkanı/Head of Department at a government with 10,001+ employees

The solution is scalable.

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BC
Chief Financial Officer at a pharma/biotech company with 51-200 employees

We have approximately a hundred users in our organization. We plan to keep using this solution.

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PT
Oracle Database Administrator at a comms service provider with 1,001-5,000 employees

In terms of scalability, it's a very powerful tool.

If you are using real application clusters, now after many years, it's very easy to expand your environment.

When you compare it to scaling 10 years ago, it's much easier now to expand the environment.

I would rate the scalability an eight out of ten.

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it_user811680 - PeerSpot reviewer
System Architect at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

It is scalable. This is probably why it is so expensive!

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it_user457482 - PeerSpot reviewer
Team Leader at a tech consulting company with 501-1,000 employees
it_user521766 - PeerSpot reviewer
Program Manager (Software Asset Management) at a financial services firm with 5,001-10,000 employees

Very scalable.

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it_user521907 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Solutions Architect at a computer software company with 10,001+ employees

As far as scalability, we can go from two nodes to I don't know, maybe 256 nodes. We can scale out, scale up and so on.

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it_user521796 - PeerSpot reviewer
Associate Director at a pharma/biotech company with 10,001+ employees

It is scalable; it will meet the company’s needs going forward.

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it_user489099 - PeerSpot reviewer
DB Admin with 5,001-10,000 employees

We didn't encounter any issues with scalability. We can use MTA and RAC (Real Application Clusters) in combination, so it can also meet scalability requirements.

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it_user436152 - PeerSpot reviewer
Chief, Application Management Branch at a government with 501-1,000 employees

Some of our bigger projects that are non-E-Business Suite, like SAP implementations, go up to five terabyte databases and there no problems scaling there. We've had no issues with inability to scale.

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it_user436143 - PeerSpot reviewer
New Technologies Manager at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees

We have used it in rack environments where we use it with Oracle Clusterware and Oracle Grid, and we can scale it.

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it_user435033 - PeerSpot reviewer
Vice Director of IT Department at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

All the issues I dealt with in scaling it have been related to other applications and not the Database itself. All of the issues were fixed by programmers during the deployment and test implementation phases.

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it_user419052 - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Oracle / Peoplesoft DBA at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees

Scalability is a 5 out of 5. We've been able to scale it for our needs.

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it_user98628 - PeerSpot reviewer
Project Manager at a manufacturing company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Not in our line of business. View full review »
DK
Senior Systems Engineer at a energy/utilities company with 201-500 employees

It is scalable. We have more than 1,000 users, and we don't have any plans to increase its usage.

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RK
Business Development Manager of Storage Systems at a manufacturing company with 1,001-5,000 employees

The scalability is fine.  I can't complain.

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VA
Senior Manager -Datacenter Planning and Operations at a comms service provider with 1,001-5,000 employees

Oracle Database could be easier to scale. As Exadata is not easily scalable, Oracle Database is also not easy to scale. We have over 10,000 applications running on Oracle Database.

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VG
Regional Head Customer Experience at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

The scalability is depending on your infrastructure, if you have the hardware then you can expand it, it is all configurable. Our whole database house is running it and it has been fine.

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it_user521772 - PeerSpot reviewer
Vice President, Global Technology at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

It's easy to scale. You can add more memory, more storage. If you need to scale horizontally, you can add one more node. It's a pretty scalable product.

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it_user522093 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA at CSG

It scales well so far, no issues at all, but some of the advanced features are pretty expensive, especially on engineered systems like Exadata.

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it_user521847 - PeerSpot reviewer
Territory Manager at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

Scalability is good. I wouldn't implement some features if it weren't stable. We're interested in database in the cloud. We had good results with database on premises, so we want to test the same results in the cloud.

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it_user515451 - PeerSpot reviewer
Vice President of Global IT at a logistics company with 5,001-10,000 employees

It has excellent scalability.

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it_user75741 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Admin at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

I regularly encounter scalability issues.

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it_user486549 - PeerSpot reviewer
President & Founder at OraPub, Inc.

It rocks. You can tweak Oracle so it will use up all available computing resources. That's powerful. That way, you can use your investment and your capacity.

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it_user436107 - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr DBA at a energy/utilities company with 1,001-5,000 employees

There are ways you can scale it, but one of the limiting factor is the way Oracle licensing works. The moment you try to out scale it vertically or horizontally, you multiply the Oracle licenses, and a lot of customers are looking into that. How do we optimize those with the performance that you need?

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it_user436155 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA at a insurance company with 51-200 employees

It's a scalable solution that comes at a cost.

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it_user417105 - PeerSpot reviewer
Director of IT at a tech company with 501-1,000 employees

It's very scalable, which is the primary reason we use it.

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CC
CIO at a tech services company with 11-50 employees

Oracle Database is scalable.

We have approximately 25 to 30 customers in the banking industry who use Oracle Database.

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VC
Sr. Solution Architect at a computer software company with 5,001-10,000 employees

Oracle Database is definitely scalable. For the project we are working on, the team size is around 500 to 600 engineers. But not everyone is working on Oracle. Even if we go with the 10% or 5% count, you still end up with 20 to 50 people who are dealing with the SQL queries, day in, day out.

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JS
Data Quality Specialist at a healthcare company with 5,001-10,000 employees

We have approximately 10 to 100 users using the solution in my organization.

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SAMUELMWANGI - PeerSpot reviewer
Director at Calidad Systems Limited

Oracle Database is a very scalable product.

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SC
Data Center Operations Manager at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

The scalability is good. If you need to scale it up as a company, you can do so. I have not heard of anyone having any problems in that regard.

We have 2,000 to 3,000 users not eh solution typically.

We mostly deal with large businesses. 

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it_user1026435 - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

It's a scalable solution.

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PM
Security Specialist at a energy/utilities company with 51-200 employees

Oracle is very scalable. We have no issues with that, even though we have a large database. We currently have about a hundred users.

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it_user522009 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Architect at a healthcare company with 1,001-5,000 employees

I think it will meet our company’s needs going forward; so far, looking good. 12c has more promise and cloud is the next frontier. Being in healthcare, just being cautious, but I think there are signs they are getting ready to move to the cloud; gradually, not 100%.

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it_user521862 - PeerSpot reviewer
Oracle DBA at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

We have scaled it, but not to a very high extent.

I think as we start to get into the IT business more and more, we will see how we need it. We are now operating an Oracle RAC system, so we can scale when required.

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it_user522024 - PeerSpot reviewer
Programmer at Royal Oman Police

It is scalable; it is better.

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it_user435990 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA Architect at a aerospace/defense firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

The scalability is OK, but now that we're pushing 30GB of data per hour, there are problems with applications at the OIS level not handling the data correctly.

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YK
Group Lead at a security firm with 1-10 employees

Oracle Database is easy to scale.

We have approximately 200 people using this solution in my organization.

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CN
IT Manager at a construction company with 1-10 employees

Oracle Database is scalable. We're running it on around 250 devices.

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DM
Systems Analyst at a logistics company with 501-1,000 employees

It's scalable.

However, in terms of our usage, it's quite limited. We are using only three to four modules of this application. We're a very small scale operation. It's the reason why we are using the standard edition and not the enterprise one.

We only have about 10 to 15 users that are using these applications.

It's not used on a daily basis. It's just occasional use. 

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it_user521568 - PeerSpot reviewer
Principal Software Architect at a transportation company with 501-1,000 employees

It has scaled well to our needs. We have replication occurring at our office. We use Exadata, and we have clusters. It's replicated across production, dev and two QA instances, so it's nice.

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it_user431388 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA and Database Performance Evangelist at a tech vendor with 1,001-5,000 employees

With the Real Application Clusters, Exadata, they've just answered a lot of that. They're coming up with in 12.2 with sharding, to be able to scale it across worldwide so very, very efficient that way.

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it_user436125 - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead Product Dev at a tech company

It scales very well. With NoSQL though, there are scalability issues because it just cannot spin up. But I've found that with Hadoop and AWS, you can spin up to 2,000 new nodes and it works fine. You can't do that with Oracle, but it's legacy software nowadays.

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CM
Principal Engineer at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

Oracle Database is highly scalable.

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MB
Data Scientist at a insurance company with 11-50 employees

Oracle Database is scalable to a limit. It depends on the use case and other factors.

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AZ
Oracle Advisory Engineer at a computer software company with 1,001-5,000 employees

Oracle Database is highly scalable. It supports the cluster configuration with the hundreds of nodes, the performance is good. The data volume Oracle Database consumes is quite scalable.

I haven't seen huge installations with petabytes of data but I know the solution has good capabilities. If the solution did not have good capabilities the major institutions would not use it.

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MH
IT Architect at a tech vendor with 11-50 employees

When it comes to scalability, Oracle Database is not at the top, but it is better than some of its competitors.

We have hundreds of users in our organization.

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OK
System Specialist at a university with 501-1,000 employees

We have several thousand users in our organization. 

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YL
Manager at a tech services company with 11-50 employees

The solution can scale quite well. A company that needs to expand it, it can do so with relative ease. We haven't found any issues or shortcomings in that respect.

We have about 50 or so people in our organization that are using it at this time.

Although it hasn't been fully decided, we may increase usage in the future.

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it_user436146 - PeerSpot reviewer
President at a tech consulting company with 51-200 employees

There are no scalability issues, so long as the DBA is experienced.

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it_user521667 - PeerSpot reviewer
Software Developer at a security firm with 501-1,000 employees

For the most part, as long as you do your research and don't screw up your table structures, I don't have any scalability problems.

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it_user521589 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

It is scalable, especially with RAC. We can add more had more processors on the machine and through Oracle, I can use only part of the CPU on the server, so I don't have to pay too much.

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it_user436440 - PeerSpot reviewer
Oracle Specialist at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

It's scalable. When I need to deploy other databases or other schemas, it's very easy to do. Now with the multitenant model, it's even easier.

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it_user446727 - PeerSpot reviewer
Owner/VP of Operations at KnightWorks Consulting, Inc

We haven't needed to scale it.

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it_user421464 - PeerSpot reviewer
Advisory Software engineer at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

It is scalable. Indeed, you don’t have to worry about scalability as this is Database's strength -- it grows with your business and is an all-in-one solution.

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it_user420012 - PeerSpot reviewer
Banner Developer at a university with 1,001-5,000 employees

There are commands that you can include in your SQL to make sure you've got enough workspace to do what you need to do.

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OJ
Arquitecto Delivery at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees

Scalability is a weak point of Oracle databases because even if we use Real Application Clusters, they do not work as if they were a cluster. They work like units, and they divide the connection but don't process the data in all the clusters.

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MH
Junior Software Engineer at a computer software company with 201-500 employees

I am the only person in my organization who is using this solution.

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RC
Product Manager at a computer software company with 201-500 employees

Scalability is good. 

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RT
Technical Delivery Manager at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

It is scalable. The number of users using this solution depends upon the business. For example, a bank might have 4,000 or 5,000 community users.

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it_user809490 - PeerSpot reviewer
Software Engineer at a media company with 10,001+ employees

For our needs, scalability is okay.

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it_user522036 - PeerSpot reviewer
System Admin

In my organization we don't have the need for scalability as much because we are a fixed size. We grow very organically so scalability is not an issue for us.

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it_user516438 - PeerSpot reviewer
System Architect

I did not encounter any issues with scalability.

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AK
Founder at a tech company with 1-10 employees

We have not seen any scalability issues so far.

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it_user480213 - PeerSpot reviewer
Software Engineer at a financial services firm with 501-1,000 employees

What we do is that based on a certain understanding about the product speck, based on the maximum transaction we can assume for our businesses, we are going to decide the sizing and then we confirm the capability and we decide the threshold. Then after that we do the scale up. Based on the recent cloud environment, I cannot really say that it's easier for us to do the scale up.

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it_user486513 - PeerSpot reviewer
General Manager at Grupo luthe

We have clients that started with one user and now are running up to 200 users. It’s the same version with bigger hardware. It’s amazing the way the database can scale.

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it_user486543 - PeerSpot reviewer
Systems Engineer, Crew Escape & Life Support F35 Lightning Ii at a tech company with 10,001+ employees

It meets our scalability requirements right now.

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it_user480219 - PeerSpot reviewer
Information Control at a government

Maybe it is specific to the way we use the databases, but we introduced Database to different operations in the organization. We didn't actually introduce Database to be shared among all the different departments.

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it_user419154 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Manager at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees

It's very scalable and, in fact, scales beautifully. All we've had to do is create more than one instance, which is very easy to do.

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AG
Engineer consultant at a legal firm with 51-200 employees

Oracle does not support standard containers and this is a limitation when it comes to scalability. You can not make a partition in the database. However, there might be a separate product to enable this feature.

We have approximately 10,000 users using this solution and this does not include the internet users that use our database every day.

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it_user486519 - PeerSpot reviewer
Computer Specialist at a consultancy with 501-1,000 employees

There are many different options for scaling. You can scale to whatever size you want by adding hardware, partitioning your data, or using some of Oracle’s different technologies.

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it_user448833 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Administrator (DBA) - Oracle 11g at a tech company with 51-200 employees

It's been able to scale for our needs.

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it_user430962 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Administration Principal at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees

We have had no issues scaling it for our needs.

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LS
IT Senior Consultant at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees

The solution is scalable. 

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MW
Project Manager at Realnux

Oracle Database could be more scalable.

View full review »
KD
Senior Lead Developer at a healthcare company with 51-200 employees

It's a scalable solution. We haven't encountered any problems. We use partitioning and sharding.

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it_user436065 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Director at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

We've been able to scale it just fine for our needs.

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it_user486582 - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior ERP Developer at a university with 1,001-5,000 employees

It needs to be scaled based on how you're using the app.

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it_user436104 - PeerSpot reviewer
Data Modeler at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees

There's absolutely no problem scaling it. They give you plenty of options and a lot of best practice in order to be able to do that.

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it_user417387 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Specialist at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees

We've had no issues scaling it for our needs.

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it_user809523 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA at a comms service provider with 1,001-5,000 employees

We had some issues with the scalability but we managed to find a solution without overturning everything or having to go back to the basics.

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SY
DBA at a university

In comparison to other more simple structure databases, I consider the Oracle Database to be more scalable, as well as easiness to export from an external system.

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WG
Solutions Architect at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

Scalability is a problem for us. We need something that can handle Big Data. By Big Data, I mean more than 30 terabytes of data. Anything under that, and the solution might scale okay, however, for us, scalability is a problem because of the vast amounts of data we need to work with.

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it_user486525 - PeerSpot reviewer
Sr. Oracle Developer at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

It scales very well.

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it_user436203 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA at a consultancy with 1,001-5,000 employees

It has the best scalability of any database.

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OV
Technical Manager IT Development at a tech services company with 11-50 employees

Oracle Database is scalable.

We have 200 people using it for now with plans to increase usage.

We have two people on it for maintenance.

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it_user971502 - PeerSpot reviewer
Product Manager at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

We deployed the Oracle database on the HCI environment. We can expand and scale it easily. It just requires expanding the hardware itself.  

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YK
Lead Database Developer at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

The scalability is quite good. We have experience in many countries with distributed systems and it has really satisfied us, and our clients are satisfied as well.

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it_user522138 - PeerSpot reviewer
DBA

In terms of scaling, I haven't seen any issues. I don't really like RAC. From our experience, the single instance was better for us than the RAC. We do have RAC and the single instance, but we are actually moving our RAC machines to the single instance because the overhead by direct was not really acceptable. One of the main reasons was because now you have to use ASM, and we didn't find ASM very efficient.

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it_user521715 - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Admin

It's scalable, it will meet the needs of our company, moving forward.

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JI
System Analyst and Team Lead at a tech services company with 11-50 employees

The solution is scalable.

We have approximately 200 users using this solution.

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it_user521931 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Analyst at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

This product scales well. Exadata, which is giving it, is a powerful machine in regards to storage and so on. For a single instance, we need to have good hardware underneath; only then, it can scale. However, it's doing quite well if we have that.

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it_user426513 - PeerSpot reviewer
Consultant at a recruiting/HR firm with 501-1,000 employees

We've had no issues scaling it.

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it_user480726 - PeerSpot reviewer
Analyst at a tech services company

For us, there are not so many cases that require scalability.

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DJ
ETL Developer at a tech services company with 51-200 employees

It is scalable.

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AP
Software Engineer at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees

It's a scalable product.

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SK
AI Data Architect at a media company with 11-50 employees

We have 115 customers who are using Oracle Database. We have small to medium-sized companies and we have approximately five large-sized companies. 

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Buyer's Guide
Oracle Database
March 2024
Learn what your peers think about Oracle Database. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: March 2024.
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