Oracle Spatial Point Cloud Reader/Writer
FME can read and write Point Cloud and attribute data stored using Oracle Spatial. This module communicates directly with Oracle Spatial for maximum throughput.
This section assumes familiarity with Oracle Spatial, its Point Cloud support, and its indexing mechanisms.
Oracle Spatial Relational Product and System Requirements
Format |
FME Platform |
Operating System |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reader/Writer |
FME Form |
FME Flow |
FME Flow Hosted |
Windows 64-bit |
Linux |
Mac |
Reader |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
- Linux Intel: Yes - Linux ARM: Yes |
- macOS Intel: Yes - macOS ARM: No |
Writer |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
- Linux Intel: Yes - Linux ARM: Yes |
- macOS Intel: Yes - macOS ARM: No |
Oracle Instant Client |
Instant Client can be used to run your OCI, OCCI, JDBC, and ODBC applications without installing a full Oracle Client. Instant Client supports SQL*Plus. See the FME Community for more information on how Instant Client works with FME. |
Oracle Wallet |
To use an Oracle Wallet with FME, leave the Username and Password parameters empty, and enter the name of the Oracle Wallet as the as the value of the Service Name or Easy Connect parameter. |
Reader Overview
This reader reads point cloud tables from Oracle Spatial databases.
Writer Overview
The Oracle Spatial Point Cloud writer module stores point cloud and attribute data in an Oracle Spatial database. Only uppercase table names are supported.
The Oracle Spatial Point Cloud writer provides the following capabilities:
- Transaction Support: The Oracle Spatial Point Cloud writer provides transaction support that eases the data loading process. Occasionally, a data load operation terminates prematurely due to data difficulties. The transaction support provides a mechanism for reloading corrected data without data loss or duplication.
- Table Creation: The Oracle Spatial Point Cloud writer uses the information within the FME mapping file to automatically create database tables as needed. Creation of related tables is also supported, such as the block table for Point Cloud columns. Metadata tables and triggers are also created or updated accordingly.
- Table Dropping: The Oracle Spatial Point Cloud writer has an option that allows each table to be written to be dropped if recreating, or truncated if appending. Likewise, related tables, such as block tables for point cloud columns, will be dropped when empty. Metadata tables are updated via Data Manipulation Language (DML) triggers; however, the triggers themselves are not currently dropped.
- Index Creation: The Oracle Spatial Point Cloud writer will set up and populate all needed indexes and index tables as part of the loading process.
- Bulk Loading: The Oracle Spatial Point Cloud writer uses a bulk loading technique to ensure speedy data load.