The Program Global Area is a nonshared per process memory area in Oracle Also called Process Global Area The PGA contains a stack and session information (session information is in the SGA for MTS)
Short for pin grid array, a type of chip in which the connecting pins are located on the bottom in concentric squares PGA chips are particularly good for chips that have many pins, such as modern microprocessors
Pin grid array, a type of chip package in which the connecting pins are located on the bottom in concentric squares
Pin Grid Array IC package with an area array of pins attached to the bottom side of a package
Pin Grid Array, the method in which the CPU uses to interact with the CPU socket [image]
Pin-Grid Array A packaging technology for high-pin-count packages Name derived from the array of pins at the bottom of the package The pins go through holes in a printed circuit board I/O lead counts as high as 600 can be achieved with PGA designs
Pin Grid Array, the method in which the CPU uses to interact with the CPU socket
Pin Grid Array A type of socket for a Central Processing Unit The PGA Socket has all its pins lined up in even rows, as opposed to the SPGA Socket which has its rows staggered
Oracle: Program Global Area The PGA is a memory region containing data and control information for a single process (server or background) One PGA is allocated for each server process, the PGA is exclusive to that server process and is read and written only by Oracle code acting on behalf of that process A PGA is allocated by Oracle when a user connects to an Oracle database and a session is created
the Professional Golfers' Association Example: "The PGA of America has over 25,000 dues paying members It is made up of club professionals, touring professionals, and many other types of golf professionals "