Sequences are mastered by the single SYS.SEQ$ table in each
database.  Cached or uncached, RAC or non-RAC, OPS or
non-OPS, sequence numbers generated by this mechanism are
unique across a database, not by instance.  Each instance
updates SEQ$ as individual numbers (noncached) or ranges of
numbers (cached) are "reserved", and those updates are
controlled by the same synchronization mechanisms used by
OPS/RAC for all UPDATE statements.  This is precisely the
reason that setting CACHE on sequence numbers help
performance, as the number of updates to SEQ$ are reduced,
minimizing the bottleneck.

However, because of the simplicity of this caching
mechanism, sequence numbers are not guaranteed to be in
order (i.e. sequentially ascending) across multiple
instances.

Perhaps Mr. Stephens mis-spoke, confusing uniqueness for
ordering?  Or perhaps he is confusing "distributed
databases" for "clustered databases"?


> 
> 
> I have always been comfortable with the idea that
> Sequences continue to  guarantee
> uniqueness even in OPS / RAC environments.
> 
> However, a recent Builder.Com article by Scott Stephens on
> the SYS_GUID  function has these lines :
> "Sequence generator numbers are guaranteed to be unique
> only for a single  instance, which is unsuitable for use
> as a primary key in parallel or  remote environments,
> where a sequence in each environment might generate  the
> same number and result in conflicts. An identifier created
> by SYS_GUID  is guaranteed to be unique for each
> database." 
> Huh ?!  Do the lines mean that a single sequence can have
> duplicate values  in the two instances of an RAC cluster ?
> 
> 
> Hemant K Chitale
> Oracle 9i Database Administrator Certified Professional
> My personal web site is :  http://hkchital.tripod.com
> 
> 
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>   INET: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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