Rodrigo E. De León Plicet wrote on 26.01.2012 22:52:
Oracle claims it for releases going back to 7

Not true.

Quote from the Oracle concepts manual:

"Multiple-process Oracle (also called multiuser Oracle) uses several processes to 
run different parts of the Oracle Database code and additional processes for the 
users—either one process for each connected user or one or more processes shared by 
multiple users. Most databases are multiuser because a primary advantages of a database 
is managing data needed by multiple users simultaneously."

[...]

"For each user connection, the application is run by a client process that is 
different from the dedicated server process that runs the database code. Each client 
process is associated with its own server process"

Taken from: 
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E11882_01/server.112/e25789/process.htm#i16977

So the Oracle architecture is very similar to the one that PostgreSQL uses - at 
least on Linux/Unix. On Windows this is done using threads (I think this is 
because Windows is not as efficient in running multiple processes as 
Linux/Unix).








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