Oracle® Database Backup and Recovery User's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E10642-05 |
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This chapter describes how to perform setup and configuration tasks. This chapter contains the following topics:
Whereas "Configuring Channels" explains the basics for configuring channels, this section explains more advanced channel topics. This section contains the following topics:
See Also:
"RMAN Channels" for a conceptual overview of configured and allocated channels, and Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference forCONFIGURE
syntaxWhether you allocate channels manually or use automatic channel allocation, you can use channel commands and options to control behavior. Table 6-1 summarizes the ways in which you can control channel behavior. Unless noted, all channel parameters are supported in both CONFIGURE CHANNEL
and ALLOCATE CHANNEL
commands.
Table 6-1 Channel Control Options
Type of Channel Control | Commands |
---|---|
Limit I/O bandwidth consumption |
Use the |
Limit backup sets and pieces |
Use the |
Vendor-specific instructions |
Use the |
Channel parallel backup and restore operations |
Use |
Connection settings for database instances |
Specify which instance performs an operation with the |
See Also:
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference forALLOCATE
CHANNEL
syntax, and Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference for CONFIGURE
syntaxIn addition to configuring parameters that apply to all channels of a particular type, you can also configure parameters that apply to one specific channel. Run the CONFIGURE CHANNEL
n
command (where n
is a positive integer less than 255) to configure a specific channel.
When manually numbering channels, you must specify one or more channel options (for example, MAXPIECESIZE
or FORMAT
) for each channel. When you use that specific numbered channel in a backup, the configured settings for that channel are used instead of the configured generic channel settings.
Configure specific channels by number when it is necessary to control the parameters set for each channel separately. This technique is necessary in the following situations:
When running an Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) database in which individual nodes do not have access to the full set of backups. Each channel must be configured with a node-specific connect string so that all backups are accessible by at least one channel.
When using a media manager that requires different PARMS
settings on each channel.
See Also:
Oracle Real Application Clusters Administration and Deployment Guide to learn about RMAN backups in an Oracle RAC environmentIn this example, you want to send disk backups to two different disks. Configure disk channels as follows:
CONFIGURE DEFAULT DEVICE TYPE TO disk; # backup goes to disk CONFIGURE DEVICE TYPE disk PARALLELISM 2; # two channels used in parallel CONFIGURE CHANNEL 1 DEVICE TYPE DISK FORMAT '/disk1/%U' # 1st channel to disk1 CONFIGURE CHANNEL 2 DEVICE TYPE DISK FORMAT '/disk2/%U' # 2nd channel to disk2 BACKUP DATABASE; # backup - first channel goes to disk1 and second to disk2
Assume a different case in which you have two tape drives and want each drive to use tapes from a different tape media family. Configure your default output device and default tape channels as shown in Example 6-1 to use parallel database backups.
Example 6-1 Configuring Channel Parallelism for Tape Devices
CONFIGURE DEFAULT DEVICE TYPE TO sbt; # backup goes to sbt CONFIGURE DEVICE TYPE sbt PARALLELISM 2; # two sbt channels allocated by default # Configure channel 1 to pool named first_pool CONFIGURE CHANNEL 1 DEVICE TYPE sbt PARMS 'ENV=(OB_MEDIA_FAMILY=first_pool)'; # configure channel 2 to pool named second_pool CONFIGURE CHANNEL 2 DEVICE TYPE sbt PARMS 'ENV=(OB_MEDIA_FAMILY=second_pool)'; BACKUP DATABASE; # first stream goes to 'first_pool' and second to 'second_pool'
In Example 6-1, the backup data is divided between the two tape devices. Each configured channel backs up approximately half the total data.
The PARALLELISM
setting is not constrained by the number of specifically configured channels. For example, if you back up to 20 different tape devices, then you can configure 20 different SBT channels, each with a manually assigned number (from 1 to 20) and each with a different set of channel options. In such a situation, you can set PARALLELISM
to any value up to the number of devices, in this instance 20.
RMAN always numbers parallel channels starting with 1
and ending with the PARALLELISM
setting. For example, if the default device is SBT and parallelism is set to 3, then RMAN names the channels as follows:
ORA_SBT_TAPE_1 ORA_SBT_TAPE_2 ORA_SBT_TAPE_3
RMAN always uses the name ORA_SBT_TAPE_
n even if you configure DEVICE
TYPE
sbt
(not the synonymous sbt_tape
). RMAN always allocates the number of channels specified in PARALLELISM
, using specifically configured channels if you have configured them and generic channels if you have not. If you configure specific channels with numbers higher than the parallelism setting, then this setting prevents RMAN from using them.
See Also:
"RMAN Channels" to learn about channels"Configuring the Environment for RMAN Backups" explains the basics for configuring RMAN to make backups. This section explains more advanced configuration options. This section contains the following topics:
In tape backups, it is possible for a multiplexed backup set to span multiple tapes, which means that blocks from each data file in the backup set are written to multiple tapes. If one tape of a multivolume backup set fails, then you lose the data on all the tapes rather than just one. If a backup is not a multisection backup, then a backup set always includes a whole data file rather than a partial data file. You can use MAXSETSIZE
to specify that each backup set should fit on one tape rather than spanning multiple tapes.
The CONFIGURE MAXSETSIZE
command limits the size of backup sets created on a channel. This CONFIGURE
setting applies to any channel, whether manually allocated or configured, when the BACKUP
command is used to create backup sets. The default value is given in bytes and is rounded down to the lowest kilobyte value.
The value set by the CONFIGURE MAXSETSIZE
command is a default for the given channel. You can override the configured MAXSETSIZE
value by specifying a MAXSETSIZE
option for an individual BACKUP
command.
Assume that you issue the following commands at the RMAN prompt:
CONFIGURE DEFAULT DEVICE TYPE TO sbt; CONFIGURE CHANNEL DEVICE TYPE sbt PARMS 'ENV=(OB_MEDIA_FAMILY=first_pool)'; CONFIGURE MAXSETSIZE TO 7500K; BACKUP TABLESPACE users; BACKUP TABLESPACE tools MAXSETSIZE 5G;
The results are as follows:
The backup of the users
tablespace uses the configured SBT channel and the configured default MAXSETSIZE
setting of 7500K
.
The backup of the tools
tablespace uses the MAXSETSIZE
setting of 5G
specified in the BACKUP
command.
See Also:
Backup piece size is an issue when it exceeds the maximum file size permitted by the file system or media management software. You can use the MAXPIECESIZE
parameter of the CONFIGURE
CHANNEL
or ALLOCATE
CHANNEL
command to limit the size of backup pieces.
For example, to limit the backup piece size to 2 gigabytes or less, you can configure the automatic DISK
channel as follows and then run BACKUP
DATABASE
:
CONFIGURE CHANNEL DEVICE TYPE DISK MAXPIECESIZE 2G; BACKUP DATABASE;
Note:
In version 2.0 of the media management API, media management vendors can specify the maximum size of a backup piece that can be written to their media manager. RMAN respects this limit regardless of the settings that you configure forMAXPIECESIZE
.See Also:
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference to learn about theCONFIGURE CHANNEL ... MAXPIECESIZE
commandYou can use the CONFIGURE ... BACKUP COPIES
command to specify how many copies of each backup piece should be created on the specified device type for the specified type of file. This type of backup is known as a duplexed backup set. The CONFIGURE
settings for duplexing only affect backups of data files, control files, and archived logs into backup sets, and do not affect image copies.
RMAN can duplex backups to either disk or tape, but cannot duplex backups to tape and disk simultaneously. When backing up to tape, ensure that the number of copies does not exceed the number of available tape devices. The following examples show possible duplexing configurations:
# Makes 2 disk copies of each data file and control file backup set # (autobackups excluded) CONFIGURE DATAFILE BACKUP COPIES FOR DEVICE TYPE DISK TO 2; # Makes 3 copies of every archived redo log backup to tape CONFIGURE ARCHIVELOG BACKUP COPIES FOR DEVICE TYPE sbt TO 3;
To return a BACKUP
COPIES
configuration to its default value, run the same CONFIGURE
command with the CLEAR
option, as in the following example:
CONFIGURE DATAFILE BACKUP COPIES FOR DEVICE TYPE sbt CLEAR;
By default, CONFIGURE
...
BACKUP
COPIES
is set to 1
for each device type.
Note:
If you do not want to create a persistent copies configuration, then you can specify copies with theBACKUP
COPIES
and the SET BACKUP COPIES
commands.See Also:
"Multiple Copies of RMAN Backups" for an overview of duplexed backups
"Duplexing Backup Sets" to learn how to create duplexed backups
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference for BACKUP
syntax
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference for CONFIGURE
syntax
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference for SET
syntax
Sometimes you may want to omit a specified tablespace from part of the regular backup schedule. Here are some possible scenarios to consider:
A tablespace is easy to rebuild, so it is more cost-effective to rebuild it than back it up every day.
A tablespace contains temporary or test data that you do not need to back up.
A tablespace does not change often and therefore should be backed up on a different schedule from other backups.
You can run CONFIGURE EXCLUDE FOR TABLESPACE
to exclude the specified tablespace from the BACKUP DATABASE
command. The exclusion condition applies to any data files that you add to this tablespace in the future.
For example, you can exclude testing tablespaces cwmlite
and example
from whole database backups as follows:
CONFIGURE EXCLUDE FOR TABLESPACE cwmlite; CONFIGURE EXCLUDE FOR TABLESPACE example;
If you run the following command, then RMAN backs up all tablespaces in the database except cwmlite
and example
:
BACKUP DATABASE;
You can still back up the configured tablespaces by explicitly specifying them in a BACKUP
command or by specifying the NOEXCLUDE
option on a BACKUP
DATABASE
command. For example, you can enter one of the following commands:
BACKUP DATABASE NOEXCLUDE; #backs up database, including cwmlite and example BACKUP TABLESPACE cwmlite, example; # backs up only cwmlite and example
You can disable the exclusion feature for cwmlite
and example
as follows:
CONFIGURE EXCLUDE FOR TABLESPACE cwmlite CLEAR; CONFIGURE EXCLUDE FOR TABLESPACE example CLEAR;
RMAN includes these tablespaces in future whole database backups.
See Also:
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference for BACKUP
and CONFIGURE
syntax
RMAN supports precompression processing and binary compression of backup sets.
Better backup compression ratios are achieved by consolidating the free space in each data block, and setting that free space to binary zeroes. This precompression processing stage has the most benefit for data blocks that have been the subject of many deletes and inserts operations. Conversely, it has no effect on data blocks that are still in their initial loaded state.
The OPTIMIZE FOR LOAD
option controls precompression processing. By specifying the default, OPTIMIZE FOR LOAD TRUE
, you ensure that RMAN optimizes CPU usage and avoids precompression block processing. By specifying OPTIMIZE FOR LOAD FALSE
, RMAN uses additional CPU resources to perform precompression block processing.
See Also:
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference for CONFIGURE
and SET
syntax
You can configure the basic compression algorithm, which does not require the Advanced Compression Option, with the following syntax:
If you have enabled the Oracle Database 11g Release 2 Advanced Compression Option, you can choose from the following compression levels:
Compression Level | Performance Benefits and Trade-Offs |
---|---|
HIGH |
Best suited for backups over slower networks where the limiting factor is network speed. |
MEDIUM |
Recommended for most environments. Good combination of compression ratios and speed. |
LOW |
Least effect on backup throughput. |
The compression ratio generally increases from low to high, with a trade-off of potentially consuming more CPU resources.
Because the performance of the various compression levels depends on the nature of the data in the database, network configuration, system resources and the type of computer system and its capabilities, Oracle cannot document universally applicable performance statistics. Which level is best for your environment depends on how balanced your system is regarding bandwidth into the CPU and the actual speed of the CPU. It is highly recommended that you run tests with the different compression levels on the data in your environment. Choosing a compression level based on your environment, network traffic characteristics (workload), and data set is the only way to ensure that the backup set compression level can satisfy your organization's performance requirements and applicable service level agreements.
Note:
If you are backing up to tape and your tape device performs its own compression, then you should not use both RMAN backup set compression and the media manager vendor's compression. See the discussion of tuning RMAN tape backup performance in Chapter 22, "Tuning RMAN Performance".
Restoring a compressed backup is performed inline, and does not require decompression.
For improved security, you can configure backup encryption for RMAN backup sets. Encrypted backups cannot be read if they are obtained by unauthorized users. This feature requires the Enterprise Edition of the database.
The V$RMAN_ENCRYPTION_ALGORITHMS view contains a list of encryption algorithms supported by RMAN. If no encryption algorithm is specified, then the default encryption algorithm is 128-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). RMAN encryption requires the COMPATIBLE
initialization parameter at a target database to be at least 10.2.0.
RMAN offers the following encryption modes:
Transparent Encryption of Backups
This is the default mode and uses the Oracle wallet. A wallet is a password-protected container used to store authentication and signing credentials, including private keys, certificates, and trusted certificates needed by SSL.
Password Encryption of Backups
This mode uses only password protection. You must provide a password when creating and restoring encrypted backups.
Dual Mode Encryption of Backups
This mode requires either the wallet or a password.
Note:
Wallet-based encryption is more secure than password-based encryption because no passwords are involved. You should use password-based encryption only when it is absolutely necessary because your backups must be transportable.Encrypted backups are decrypted automatically during restore and recovery, if the required decryption keys are available. Each backup set gets a separate key. The key is stored in encrypted form in the backup piece. The backup is decrypted with keys obtained with a user-supplied password or the Oracle wallet.
To create encrypted backups on disk with RMAN, the database must use the Advanced Security Option. The Oracle Secure Backup SBT is the only supported interface for making encrypted RMAN backups directly to tape. RMAN issues an ORA-19916
error if you attempt to create encrypted RMAN backups using an SBT library other than Oracle Secure Backup. The Advanced Security Option is not required when making encrypted backups using the Oracle Secure Backup SBT.
When you use the BACKUP
BACKUPSET
command with encrypted backup sets, the backup sets are backed up in encrypted form. Because BACKUP
BACKUPSET
copies an encrypted backup set to disk or tape, no decryption key is needed during BACKUP
BACKUPSET
. The data is never decrypted during any part of the operation. The BACKUP
BACKUPSET
command can neither encrypt nor decrypt backup sets.
See Also:
Oracle Database Advanced Security Administrator's Guide for details about configuring the Oracle walletTransparent encryption can create and restore encrypted backups with no DBA intervention, as long as the required Oracle key management infrastructure is available. Transparent encryption is best suited for day-to-day backup operations, where backups are restored to the same database from which they were created. Transparent encryption is the default for RMAN encryption.
When you use transparent encryption, you must first configure an Oracle wallet for each database, as described in Oracle Database Advanced Security Administrator's Guide. Transparent backup encryption supports both the encrypted and autologin forms of the Oracle wallet. When you use the Oracle wallet, the wallet must be opened before you can perform backup encryption. When you use the autologin wallet, encrypted backup operations can be done at any time, because the autologin wallet is always open.
Caution:
If you use an autologin wallet, do not back it up along with your encrypted backup data, because users can read the encrypted backups if they obtain both the backups and the autologin wallet. It is safe to back up the Oracle wallet because that form of the wallet cannot be used without the wallet password.After the Oracle wallet is configured, encrypted backups can be created and restored with no further DBA intervention. If some columns in the database are encrypted with transparent data encryption, and if those columns are backed up using backup encryption, then those columns are encrypted a second time during the backup. When the backup sets are decrypted during a restore operation, the encrypted columns are returned to their original encrypted form.
Because the Oracle key management infrastructure archives all previous master keys in the Oracle wallet, changing or resetting the current database master key does not affect your ability to restore encrypted backups performed with an older master key. You can reset the database master key at any time. RMAN can restore all encrypted backups that were ever created by this database.
Caution:
If you lose your Oracle wallet, then you cannot restore any transparently encrypted backups.Password encryption requires that the DBA provide a password when creating and restoring encrypted backups. Restoring a password-encrypted backup requires the same password that was used to create the backup.
Password encryption is useful for backups that are restored at remote locations, but which must remain secure in transit. Password encryption cannot be persistently configured. You do not need to configure an Oracle wallet if password encryption is used exclusively.
Caution:
If you forget or lose the password that you used to encrypt a password-encrypted backup, then you cannot restore the backup.To use password encryption, use the SET
ENCRYPTION
ON
IDENTIFIED
BY
password
ONLY
command in your RMAN scripts.
Dual-mode encrypted backups can be restored either transparently or by specifying a password. Dual-mode encrypted backups are useful when you create backups that are normally restored on site using the Oracle wallet, but which occasionally must be restored offsite, where the Oracle wallet is not available.
When restoring a dual-mode encrypted backup, you can use either the Oracle wallet or a password for decryption.
Caution:
If you forget or lose the password that you used to encrypt a dual-mode encrypted backup and you also lose your Oracle wallet, then you cannot restore the backup.To create dual-mode encrypted backup sets, specify the SET
ENCRYPTION
ON
IDENTIFIED
BY
password
command in your RMAN scripts.
You can use the CONFIGURE
command to persistently configure transparent encryption of backups. You can use the command to specify the following:
Whether to use transparent encryptions for backups of all database files
Whether to use transparent encryptions for backups of specific tablespaces
Which algorithm to use for encrypting backups
You can also use the SET
ENCRYPTION
command to perform the following actions:
Override the encryption settings specified by the CONFIGURE
ENCRYPTION
command. For example, you can use SET
ENCRYPTION
OFF
to create an unencrypted backup, even though a database is configured for encrypted backups.
Set a password for backup encryption, persisting until the RMAN client exits. Because of the sensitive nature of passwords, RMAN does not permit configuration of passwords that persist across RMAN sessions.
Using or not using persistent configuration settings controls whether archived redo log backups are encrypted. Backup sets containing archived redo log files are encrypted if any of the following are true:
SET
ENCRYPTION
ON
is in effect when the archive log backup is being created.
Encryption is configured for backups of the whole database or at least one tablespace.
This behavior ensures that the redo associated with any encrypted backup of a data file is also encrypted.
To configure the environment so that all RMAN backups are encrypted:
Set up the Oracle wallet as explained in Oracle Database Advanced Security Administrator's Guide.
Issue the following RMAN command:
CONFIGURE ENCRYPTION FOR DATABASE ON;
At this stage, all RMAN backup sets created by this database use transparent encryption by default.
You can explicitly override the persistent encryption configuration for an RMAN session with the following command:
SET ENCRYPTION ON;
The encryption setting remains in effect until you issue the SET
ENCRYPTION
OFF
command during an RMAN session, or change the persistent setting again with the following command:
CONFIGURE ENCRYPTION FOR DATABASE OFF;
You can use the CONFIGURE
command to persistently configure the default algorithm to use for encryption when writing backup sets. Possible values are listed in V$RMAN_ENCRYPTION_ALGORITHMS
. The default algorithm is AES 128-bit.
To configure the default backup encryption algorithm:
Start RMAN and connect to a target database and a recovery catalog (if used).
Ensure that the target database is mounted or open.
Execute the CONFIGURE ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM
command, specifying a valid value from V$RMAN_ENCRYPTION_ALGORITHMS.ALGORITHM_NAME
.
The following example configures the algorithm to AES 256-bit encryption:
CONFIGURE ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM TO 'AES256';
Assume that you are performing tablespace point-in-time recovery (TSPITR) or performing data transfer with RMAN. In this case, you may want to set the names of data files in the auxiliary instance before starting the TSPITR or database duplication. The command is as follows, where datafileSpec
identifies some data file by its original name or data file number, and filename
is the new path for the specified file:
CONFIGURE AUXNAME FOR datafileSpec TO 'filename';
For example, you might configure a new auxiliary name for data file 2
as follows:
CONFIGURE AUXNAME FOR DATAFILE 2 TO '/newdisk/datafiles/df2.df';
As with other settings, the CONFIGURE
command setting persists across RMAN sessions until cleared with CONFIGURE
...
CLEAR
, as shown in the following example:
CONFIGURE AUXNAME FOR DATAFILE 2 CLEAR;
If you are performing TSPITR or running the DUPLICATE
command, then by using CONFIGURE AUXNAME
you can preconfigure the file names for use on the auxiliary database without manually specifying the auxiliary file names during the procedure.
When renaming files with the DUPLICATE
command, CONFIGURE AUXNAME
is an alternative to SET NEWNAME
command. The difference is that after you set the AUXNAME
the first time, you do not need to reset the file name when you issue another DUPLICATE
command; the AUXNAME
setting remains in effect until you issue CONFIGURE AUXNAME
...
CLEAR
. In contrast, you must reissue the SET NEWNAME
command every time you rename files.
See Chapter 21, "Performing RMAN Tablespace Point-in-Time Recovery (TSPITR)," for more details on using CONFIGURE
AUXNAME
with TSPITR, and Chapter 24, "Duplicating a Database," for more details on using CONFIGURE
AUXNAME
in performing database duplication.
When RMAN must resynchronize the recovery catalog with a read-consistent version of the control file, it creates a temporary snapshot control file. RMAN needs a snapshot control file when resynchronizing with the recovery catalog or when making a backup of the current control file.
The default location for the snapshot control file is platform-specific and depends on the Oracle home of each target database. For example, the default file name on some Linux platforms is $ORACLE_HOME/dbs/snapcf_@.f
. If a fast recovery area is configured for a target database, then the default location for the snapshot control file is not the fast recovery area.
You can see the current snapshot location by running the SHOW
command. This example shows a snapshot location that is determined by the default rule:
RMAN> SHOW SNAPSHOT CONTROLFILE NAME; CONFIGURE SNAPSHOT CONTROLFILE NAME TO '/oracle/dbs/snapcf_trgt.f'; # default
This example shows a snapshot control file that has a nondefault file name:
RMAN> SHOW SNAPSHOT CONTROLFILE NAME; CONFIGURE SNAPSHOT CONTROLFILE NAME TO '/oracle/oradata/trgt/snap_trgt.ctl';
Use the CONFIGURE
SNAPSHOT
CONTROLFILE
NAME
TO
'
filename
'
command to change the name of the snapshot control file. Subsequent snapshot control files that RMAN creates use the specified file name.
For example, start RMAN and then enter:
CONFIGURE SNAPSHOT CONTROLFILE NAME TO '/oracle/oradata/trgt/snap_trgt.ctl';
You can also set the snapshot control file name to a raw device.
To reset the snapshot control file location to the default, run the CONFIGURE
SNAPSHOT
CONTROLFILE
NAME
CLEAR
command.
See Also:
Oracle Real Application Clusters Administration and Deployment Guide for details about handling snapshot control files in Oracle RAC configurations
RMAN cannot connect to a target database through a shared server dispatcher. RMAN requires a dedicated server process. If your target database is configured for a shared server, then you must modify your Oracle Net configuration to provide dedicated server processes for RMAN connections.
To ensure that RMAN does not connect to a dispatcher when a target database is configured for a shared server, the net service name used by RMAN must include (SERVER=DEDICATED)
in the CONNECT_DATA
attribute of the connect string.
Oracle Net configuration varies greatly from system to system. The following procedure illustrates only one method. This scenario assumes that the following service name in tnsnames.ora
file connects to a target database using the shared server architecture, where inst1
is a value of the SERVICE_NAMES
initialization parameter:
inst1_shs = (DESCRIPTION= (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=inst1_host)(port=1521)) (CONNECT_DATA=(SERVICE_NAME=inst1)(SERVER=shared)) )
To use RMAN with a shared server:
Create a net service name in the tnsnames.ora
file that connects to the nonshared SID. For example, enter:
inst1_ded = (DESCRIPTION= (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=inst1_host)(port=1521)) (CONNECT_DATA=(SERVICE_NAME=inst1)(SERVER=dedicated)) )
Start SQL*Plus and then connect using both the shared server and dedicated server service names to confirm the mode of each session.
For example, connect with SYSDBA
privileges to inst1_ded
and then execute the following SELECT
statement (sample output included):
SQL> SELECT SERVER 2 FROM V$SESSION 3 WHERE SID = (SELECT DISTINCT SID FROM V$MYSTAT); SERVER --------- DEDICATED 1 row selected.
To connect to a shared server session, you connect with SYSDBA
privileges to inst1_shs
and then execute the following SELECT
statement (sample output included):
SQL> SELECT SERVER 2 FROM V$SESSION 3 WHERE SID = (SELECT DISTINCT SID FROM V$MYSTAT); SERVER --------- SHARED 1 row selected.
Start RMAN and connect to the target database using the dedicated service name. Optionally, connect to a recovery catalog. For example, enter:
% rman RMAN> CONNECT TARGET SYS@inst1_ded target database Password: password connected to target database: INST1 (DBID=39525561) RMAN> CONNECT CATALOG rman@catdb
See Also:
Your platform-specific Oracle documentation and your Oracle Database Net Services Reference for a complete description of Oracle Net connect string syntaxA data block lost write occurs when an I/O subsystem acknowledges the completion of the block write, but the write did not occur in the persistent storage. On a subsequent block read, the I/O subsystem returns the stale version of the data block, which might be used to update other blocks of the database, thereby corrupting it.
You can set the DB_LOST_WRITE_PROTECT
initialization parameter to TYPICAL
or FULL
so that a database records buffer cache block reads in the redo log. The default setting is NONE
. When the parameter is set to TYPICAL
, the instance logs buffer cache reads for read/write tablespaces in the redo log, but not read-only tablespaces. When set to FULL
, the instance also records reads for read-only tablespaces. The performance overhead for TYPICAL
mode is approximately 5 to 10% and potentially higher for FULL
mode.
Lost write detection is most effective when used with Data Guard. In this case, you set DB_LOST_WRITE_PROTECT
in both primary and standby databases. When a standby database applies redo during managed recovery, it reads the corresponding blocks and compares the SCNs with the SCNs in the redo log. If the block SCN on the primary database is lower than on the standby database, then it detects a lost write on the primary database and throws an external error (ORA-752
). If the SCN is higher, it detects a lost write on the standby database and throws an internal error (ORA-600 [3020]
). In either case, the standby database writes the reason for the failure in the alert log and trace file.
To repair a lost write on a primary database, you must initiate failover to the standby database. To repair a lost write on a standby database, you must re-create the entire standby database or restore a backup of only the affected files.
Enabling lost write detection is also useful when you are not using Data Guard. In this case, you can encounter a lost write in two ways: during normal database operation or during media recovery. In the first case, there is no direct way to detect the error. Indirect symptoms such as inconsistent tables cannot be unambiguously traced to the lost write. If you retained a backup made before the suspected lost write, however, then you can restore this backup to an alternative location and recover it. To diagnose the problem, recover the database or tablespace to the SCN of the stale block read, which then generates the lost write error (ORA-752
).
If a lost write error is encountered during media recovery, the only response is to open the database with the RESETLOGS
option. The database is in a consistent state, but all data after the RESETLOGS
SCN is lost. If you recover a backup made after database creation, you have no guarantee that other stale blocks have not corrupted the database. This possibility exists because the restored backup may have been made after an earlier lost write. To guarantee that no lost writes have corrupted the database, you must perform media recovery from database creation, which is not a practical strategy for most database environments.
See Also:
Oracle Data Guard Concepts and Administration to learn how to use a standby database for lost write detection and repair
Oracle Database Reference to learn about the DB_LOST_WRITE_PROTECT
initialization parameter