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Blockchain across Oracle

You're reading from   Blockchain across Oracle Understand the details and implications of the Blockchain for Oracle developers and customers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788474290
Length 530 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Robert van Molken Robert van Molken
Author Profile Icon Robert van Molken
Robert van Molken
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part I FREE CHAPTER
2. An Introduction to the Blockchain 3. How Blockchain Will Disrupt Your Organization 4. Part II
5. Blockchain 101 - Assets, Transactions, and Hashes 6. Blockchain 101 - Blocks, Chains, and Consensus 7. Blockchain 101 - Security, Privacy, and Smart Contracts 8. Understanding the Blockchain Data Flow 9. Public Versus Permissioned Blockchains and their Providers 10. Part III
11. Ethereum Versus Hyperledger 12. Building a Next-Generation Oracle B2B Platform 13. Introducing the Oracle Blockchain Cloud Service 14. Setting Up Your Permissioned Blockchain 15. Designing and Developing Your First Smart Contract 16. Deploying and Testing Your First Smart Contract 17. Configuring, Extending, and Monitoring Your Network 18. Part IV
19. Blockchain Across the Financial Services Industry 20. Blockchain Across the Transportation Industry 21. Blockchain Across the Healthcare Industry 22. Future Industry and Technology Directions 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Blocks

In Chapter 3, Blockchain 101 - Assets, Transactions, and Hashes, I explained that when assets are transferred from one entity to another, they are recorded as a transaction. A blockchain sees a great deal of transaction activity, so instead of recording every transaction separately, the transactions executed during a given period of time are permanently recorded in a block. Each block is made up of a list of transactions. Think of it as a paper ledger or notebook where an individual page holds multiple records. In this case, each page represents a block.

How many transactions each block can hold depends on the configured block size of the blockchain and the payload size of the combined transactions. It does not mean that a block always has to reach its maximum block size in order to be verified, as a block can also hold as little as one transaction....

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