Oracle Data Service Integrator vs. Red Hat JBoss Data Virtualization

Overview
ProductRatingMost Used ByProduct SummaryStarting Price
Oracle Data Service Integrator
Score 6.4 out of 10
N/A
Oracle Data Service Integrator provides companies the ability to develop and manage federated data services for accessing single views of disparate information. Oracle Data Service Integrator is standards based, declarative, and enables re-usability of data services.N/A
JBoss Data Virtualization
Score 6.0 out of 10
N/A
JBoss Data Virtualization is a data integration solution that sits in front of multiple data sources and allows them to be treated as a single source, to deliver the right data, in the required form, at the right time to any application and/or user. Also presented as a lean, virtual data integration solution that unlocks trapped data and delivers it as easily consumable, unified, and actionable information. Red Hat JBoss Data Virtualization makes data spread across physically diverse…N/A
Pricing
Oracle Data Service IntegratorRed Hat JBoss Data Virtualization
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Oracle Data Service IntegratorJBoss Data Virtualization
Free Trial
NoNo
Free/Freemium Version
NoNo
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
NoNo
Entry-level Setup FeeNo setup feeNo setup fee
Additional Details
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Oracle Data Service IntegratorRed Hat JBoss Data Virtualization
User Ratings
Oracle Data Service IntegratorRed Hat JBoss Data Virtualization
Likelihood to Recommend
6.5
(0 ratings)
6.0
(0 ratings)
Support Rating
-
(0 ratings)
8.0
(0 ratings)
User Testimonials
Oracle Data Service IntegratorRed Hat JBoss Data Virtualization
Likelihood to Recommend
Since adopting Oracle Data Service Integrator (ODSI) over a year ago, we have been able to integrate multiple sources of data from multiple sources into a very robust process. This has really helped our developers and data scientists research and improve our user data. They are able to use the ODSI built-in architecture to create tools and processes that make their quality of life much better.
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I think it would work well in a Java/Linux environment. It is not as suited to Windows/.Net.
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Pros
  • Very easy to use. Very easy to just grab data when needed.
  • Very robust and has so many features to move and transform data.
  • Functionality is very easy to implement with other Oracle data products.
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  • Data source compatibility: since it is Java, it can connect to anything with a JDBC driver.
  • Flexibility: you can configure it however you want, we have it configured to use LDAPS for authentication and have all interfaces encrypted, and setting that up was pretty straight forward.
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Cons
  • If not bundled with other products, the price can be prohibitively expensive
  • SAP connectors tend to be a little expensive and slightly difficult to use
  • The audit module had some difficulties debugging failed instances
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  • Pricing
  • User Interface
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Support Rating
No answers on this topic
Support availability and resolution response time make it a better choice.
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Alternatives Considered
Denodo is great, but if you want or need local storage and/or replication, then Oracle Data Service Integrator is the way to go. ODSI allowed us to perform data aggregation and run reports against locally stored data, which was a must in our environment. Oracle is the clear winner when it comes to choosing a mature product that gets the job done.
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Market value and support extended by Redhat is the winner against Veritas. It has cool features and functionality but still, if your organization is Redhat shop it's better to go for the Jboss option.
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Return on Investment
  • It provided terrific bulk data movement and data transformation services which we desperately needed
  • It allowed to reduce development costs and lower the total cost of ownership among disparate architectures
  • The enterprise edition's ELT allowed us to generate native code for wildly varied RDBMS
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  • Flexibility
  • Cost is not effective
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ScreenShots