NonStop Systems Introduction for H-Series RVUs

Requirements of Real-Time Solutions
NonStop Systems Introduction for H-Series RVUs540083-001
2-5
Consolidated View of All Data
throughout the enterprise. The data store provides a single, 360-degree view of the
customer base and a single view of all operational data. Figure 2-1 shows how the
real-time data store provides a unified view of data for all applications in an enterprise.
Data caching dramatically reduces the workload on the business systems, thereby
increasing the speed (reducing the latency) with which the data can be delivered where
it is needed. For example, if application A needs to get information from application B,
it might not have to access application B directly if the needed items from application
B’s database are cached in the data store. The business applications can go about
their daily operations without the added burden of keeping other applications’
databases up-to-date.
As an example of how a centralized data store can help business, consider a private
medical firm that has set up regional data centers, each with its own computer and
database. Each regional database holds the records for patients registered at any
hospital in the region. Identical copies of the patient-admitting application runs in each
region’s computer and processes records in that region’s database.
But what happens if an admitting clerk at a hospital in region A has to admit a patient
who has previously stayed at a hospital in region B? The application running in region
A’s computer has to access the database at region B’s data center to retrieve an
existing patient record. If the patient has a critical need, an immediate response could
be essential to a favorable outcome. But latency in the system could delay the
response from region B. In a real-time environment, with patient records cached in a
central repository, maintained in real time, and available instantaneously, the patient’s
current record is available whenever and wherever it is needed.
For another example, a business system running a home shopping service for a
retailer needs to process each transaction as it occurs, but it might also need to pass
the transaction data to an application running on an IBM system. The data would be
Figure 2-1. Consolidated View of Enterprise Data
Local
data
Local
data
Local
data
Data store
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Application
Application
Application