Skip Headers
Oracle® Data Guard Concepts and Administration
11
g
Release 2 (11.2)
Part Number E17022-05
Home
Book List
Index
Master Index
Contact Us
Next
PDF
·
Mobi
·
ePub
Contents
List of Examples
List of Figures
List of Tables
Title and Copyright Information
Preface
Audience
Documentation Accessibility
Related Documents
Conventions
What's New in Oracle Data Guard?
New Features in Oracle Data Guard 11.2
New Features in Oracle Data Guard 11.1
Part I Concepts and Administration
1
Introduction to Oracle Data Guard
1.1
Data Guard Configurations
1.1.1
Primary Database
1.1.2
Standby Databases
1.1.3
Configuration Example
1.2
Data Guard Services
1.2.1
Redo Transport Services
1.2.2
Apply Services
1.2.3
Role Transitions
1.3
Data Guard Broker
1.3.1
Using Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control
1.3.2
Using the Data Guard Command-Line Interface
1.4
Data Guard Protection Modes
1.5
Client Failover
1.6
Data Guard and Complementary Technologies
1.7
Summary of Data Guard Benefits
2
Getting Started with Data Guard
2.1
Standby Database Types
2.1.1
Physical Standby Databases
2.1.2
Logical Standby Databases
2.1.3
Snapshot Standby Databases
2.2
User Interfaces for Administering Data Guard Configurations
2.3
Data Guard Operational Prerequisites
2.3.1
Hardware and Operating System Requirements
2.3.2
Oracle Software Requirements
2.4
Standby Database Directory Structure Considerations
3
Creating a Physical Standby Database
3.1
Preparing the Primary Database for Standby Database Creation
3.1.1
Enable Forced Logging
3.1.2
Configure Redo Transport Authentication
3.1.3
Configure the Primary Database to Receive Redo Data
3.1.4
Set Primary Database Initialization Parameters
3.1.5
Enable Archiving
3.2
Step-by-Step Instructions for Creating a Physical Standby Database
3.2.1
Create a Backup Copy of the Primary Database Datafiles
3.2.2
Create a Control File for the Standby Database
3.2.3
Create a Parameter File for the Standby Database
3.2.4
Copy Files from the Primary System to the Standby System
3.2.5
Set Up the Environment to Support the Standby Database
3.2.6
Start the Physical Standby Database
3.2.7
Verify the Physical Standby Database Is Performing Properly
3.3
Post-Creation Steps
4
Creating a Logical Standby Database
4.1
Prerequisite Conditions for Creating a Logical Standby Database
4.1.1
Determine Support for Data Types and Storage Attributes for Tables
4.1.2
Ensure Table Rows in the Primary Database Can Be Uniquely Identified
4.2
Step-by-Step Instructions for Creating a Logical Standby Database
4.2.1
Create a Physical Standby Database
4.2.2
Stop Redo Apply on the Physical Standby Database
4.2.3
Prepare the Primary Database to Support a Logical Standby Database
4.2.3.1
Prepare the Primary Database for Role Transitions
4.2.3.2
Build a Dictionary in the Redo Data
4.2.4
Transition to a Logical Standby Database
4.2.4.1
Convert to a Logical Standby Database
4.2.4.2
Adjust Initialization Parameters for the Logical Standby Database
4.2.5
Open the Logical Standby Database
4.2.6
Verify the Logical Standby Database Is Performing Properly
4.3
Post-Creation Steps
5
Data Guard Protection Modes
5.1
Data Guard Protection Modes
5.2
Setting the Data Protection Mode of a Primary Database
6
Redo Transport Services
6.1
Introduction to Redo Transport Services
6.2
Configuring Redo Transport Services
6.2.1
Redo Transport Security
6.2.1.1
Redo Transport Authentication Using SSL
6.2.1.2
Redo Transport Authentication Using a Password File
6.2.2
Configuring an Oracle Database to Send Redo Data
6.2.2.1
Viewing Attributes With V$ARCHIVE_DEST
6.2.3
Configuring an Oracle Database to Receive Redo Data
6.2.3.1
Creating and Managing a Standby Redo Log
6.2.3.2
Configuring Standby Redo Log Archival
6.2.3.3
Cases Where Redo Is Written Directly To an Archived Redo Log File
6.3
Cascaded Redo Transport Destinations
6.3.1
Configuring a Cascaded Destination
6.3.2
Data Protection Considerations
6.3.3
Cascading Scenarios
6.3.3.1
Cascading to a Physical Standby
6.3.3.2
Cascading to Multiple Physical Standbys
6.4
Monitoring Redo Transport Services
6.4.1
Monitoring Redo Transport Status
6.4.2
Monitoring Synchronous Redo Transport Response Time
6.4.3
Redo Gap Detection and Resolution
6.4.3.1
Manual Gap Resolution
6.4.4
Redo Transport Services Wait Events
6.5
Tuning Redo Transport
7
Apply Services
7.1
Introduction to Apply Services
7.2
Apply Services Configuration Options
7.2.1
Using Real-Time Apply to Apply Redo Data Immediately
7.2.2
Specifying a Time Delay for the Application of Archived Redo Log Files
7.2.2.1
Using Flashback Database as an Alternative to Setting a Time Delay
7.3
Applying Redo Data to Physical Standby Databases
7.3.1
Starting Redo Apply
7.3.2
Stopping Redo Apply
7.3.3
Monitoring Redo Apply on Physical Standby Databases
7.4
Applying Redo Data to Logical Standby Databases
7.4.1
Starting SQL Apply
7.4.2
Stopping SQL Apply on a Logical Standby Database
7.4.3
Monitoring SQL Apply on Logical Standby Databases
8
Role Transitions
8.1
Introduction to Role Transitions
8.1.1
Preparing for a Role Transition
8.1.2
Choosing a Target Standby Database for a Role Transition
8.1.3
Switchovers
8.1.4
Failovers
8.1.5
Role Transition Triggers
8.2
Role Transitions Involving Physical Standby Databases
8.2.1
Performing a Switchover to a Physical Standby Database
8.2.2
Performing a Failover to a Physical Standby Database
8.3
Role Transitions Involving Logical Standby Databases
8.3.1
Performing a Switchover to a Logical Standby Database
8.3.2
Performing a Failover to a Logical Standby Database
8.4
Using Flashback Database After a Role Transition
8.4.1
Using Flashback Database After a Switchover
8.4.2
Using Flashback Database After a Failover
9
Managing Physical and Snapshot Standby Databases
9.1
Starting Up and Shutting Down a Physical Standby Database
9.1.1
Starting Up a Physical Standby Database
9.1.2
Shutting Down a Physical Standby Database
9.2
Opening a Physical Standby Database
9.2.1
Real-time query
9.2.1.1
Monitoring Apply Lag in a Real-time Query Environment
9.2.1.2
Configuring Apply Lag Tolerance in a Real-time Query Environment
9.2.1.3
Forcing Redo Apply Synchronization in a Real-time Query Environment
9.2.1.4
Real-time Query Restrictions
9.2.1.5
Automatic Repair of Corrupt Data Blocks
9.2.1.6
Manual Repair of Corrupt Data Blocks
9.2.1.7
Tuning Queries on a Physical Standby Database
9.3
Primary Database Changes That Require Manual Intervention at a Physical Standby
9.3.1
Adding a Datafile or Creating a Tablespace
9.3.1.1
Using the STANDBY_FILE_MANAGEMENT Parameter with Raw Devices
9.3.1.2
Recovering from Errors
9.3.2
Dropping Tablespaces and Deleting Datafiles
9.3.2.1
Using DROP TABLESPACE INCLUDING CONTENTS AND DATAFILES
9.3.3
Using Transportable Tablespaces with a Physical Standby Database
9.3.4
Renaming a Datafile in the Primary Database
9.3.5
Add or Drop a Redo Log File Group
9.3.6
NOLOGGING or Unrecoverable Operations
9.3.7
Refresh the Password File
9.3.8
Reset the TDE Master Encryption Key
9.4
Recovering Through the OPEN RESETLOGS Statement
9.5
Monitoring Primary, Physical Standby, and Snapshot Standby Databases
9.5.1
Using Views to Monitor Primary, Physical, and Snapshot Standby Databases
9.5.1.1
V$DATABASE
9.5.1.2
V$MANAGED_STANDBY
9.5.1.3
V$ARCHIVED_LOG
9.5.1.4
V$LOG_HISTORY
9.5.1.5
V$DATAGUARD_STATUS
9.5.1.6
V$ARCHIVE_DEST
9.6
Tuning Redo Apply
9.7
Managing a Snapshot Standby Database
9.7.1
Converting a Physical Standby Database into a Snapshot Standby Database
9.7.2
Using a Snapshot Standby Database
9.7.3
Converting a Snapshot Standby Database into a Physical Standby Database
10
Managing a Logical Standby Database
10.1
Overview of the SQL Apply Architecture
10.1.1
Various Considerations for SQL Apply
10.1.1.1
Transaction Size Considerations
10.1.1.2
Pageout Considerations
10.1.1.3
Restart Considerations
10.1.1.4
DML Apply Considerations
10.1.1.5
DDL Apply Considerations
10.1.1.6
Password Verification Functions
10.2
Controlling User Access to Tables in a Logical Standby Database
10.3
Views Related to Managing and Monitoring a Logical Standby Database
10.3.1
DBA_LOGSTDBY_EVENTS View
10.3.2
DBA_LOGSTDBY_LOG View
10.3.3
V$DATAGUARD_STATS View
10.3.4
V$LOGSTDBY_PROCESS View
10.3.5
V$LOGSTDBY_PROGRESS View
10.3.6
V$LOGSTDBY_STATE View
10.3.7
V$LOGSTDBY_STATS View
10.4
Monitoring a Logical Standby Database
10.4.1
Monitoring SQL Apply Progress
10.4.2
Automatic Deletion of Log Files
10.5
Customizing a Logical Standby Database
10.5.1
Customizing Logging of Events in the DBA_LOGSTDBY_EVENTS View
10.5.2
Using DBMS_LOGSTDBY.SKIP to Prevent Changes to Specific Schema Objects
10.5.3
Setting up a Skip Handler for a DDL Statement
10.5.4
Modifying a Logical Standby Database
10.5.4.1
Performing DDL on a Logical Standby Database
10.5.4.2
Modifying Tables That Are Not Maintained by SQL Apply
10.5.5
Adding or Re-Creating Tables On a Logical Standby Database
10.6
Managing Specific Workloads In the Context of a Logical Standby Database
10.6.1
Importing a Transportable Tablespace to the Primary Database
10.6.2
Using Materialized Views
10.6.3
How Triggers and Constraints Are Handled on a Logical Standby Database
10.6.4
Using Triggers to Replicate Unsupported Tables
10.6.5
Recovering Through the Point-in-Time Recovery Performed at the Primary
10.6.6
Running an Oracle Streams Capture Process on a Logical Standby Database
10.7
Tuning a Logical Standby Database
10.7.1
Create a Primary Key RELY Constraint
10.7.2
Gather Statistics for the Cost-Based Optimizer
10.7.3
Adjust the Number of Processes
10.7.3.1
Adjusting the Number of APPLIER Processes
10.7.3.2
Adjusting the Number of PREPARER Processes
10.7.4
Adjust the Memory Used for LCR Cache
10.7.5
Adjust How Transactions are Applied On the Logical Standby Database
10.8
Backup and Recovery in the Context of a Logical Standby Database
11
Using RMAN to Back Up and Restore Files
11.1
About RMAN File Management in a Data Guard Configuration
11.1.1
Interchangeability of Backups in a Data Guard Environment
11.1.2
Association of Backups in a Data Guard Environment
11.1.3
Accessibility of Backups in a Data Guard Environment
11.2
About RMAN Configuration in a Data Guard Environment
11.3
Recommended RMAN and Oracle Database Configurations
11.3.1
Oracle Database Configurations on Primary and Standby Databases
11.3.2
RMAN Configurations at the Primary Database
11.3.3
RMAN Configurations at a Standby Database Where Backups are Performed
11.3.4
RMAN Configurations at a Standby Where Backups Are Not Performed
11.4
Backup Procedures
11.4.1
Using Disk as Cache for Tape Backups
11.4.1.1
Commands for Daily Tape Backups Using Disk as Cache
11.4.1.2
Commands for Weekly Tape Backups Using Disk as Cache
11.4.2
Performing Backups Directly to Tape
11.4.2.1
Commands for Daily Backups Directly to Tape
11.4.2.2
Commands for Weekly Backups Directly to Tape
11.5
Registering and Unregistering Databases in a Data Guard Environment
11.6
Reporting in a Data Guard Environment
11.7
Performing Backup Maintenance in a Data Guard Environment
11.7.1
Changing Metadata in the Recovery Catalog
11.7.2
Deleting Archived Logs or Backups
11.7.3
Validating Recovery Catalog Metadata
11.8
Recovery Scenarios in a Data Guard Environment
11.8.1
Recovery from Loss of Datafiles on the Primary Database
11.8.2
Recovery from Loss of Datafiles on the Standby Database
11.8.3
Recovery from Loss of a Standby Control File
11.8.4
Recovery from Loss of the Primary Control File
11.8.5
Recovery from Loss of an Online Redo Log File
11.8.6
Incomplete Recovery of the Primary Database
11.9
Additional Backup Situations
11.9.1
Standby Databases Too Geographically Distant to Share Backups
11.9.2
Standby Database Does Not Contain Datafiles, Used as a FAL Server
11.9.3
Standby Database File Names Are Different From Primary Database
11.10
Using RMAN Incremental Backups to Roll Forward a Physical Standby Database
11.10.1
Steps for Using RMAN Incremental Backups
12
Using SQL Apply to Upgrade the Oracle Database
12.1
Benefits of a Rolling Upgrade Using SQL Apply
12.2
Requirements to Perform a Rolling Upgrade Using SQL Apply
12.3
Figures and Conventions Used in the Upgrade Instructions
12.4
Performing a Rolling Upgrade By Creating a New Logical Standby Database
12.5
Performing a Rolling Upgrade With an Existing Logical Standby Database
12.6
Performing a Rolling Upgrade With an Existing Physical Standby Database
13
Data Guard Scenarios
13.1
Configuring Logical Standby Databases After a Failover
13.1.1
When the New Primary Database Was Formerly a Physical Standby Database
13.1.2
When the New Primary Database Was Formerly a Logical Standby Database
13.2
Converting a Failed Primary Into a Standby Database Using Flashback Database
13.2.1
Flashing Back a Failed Primary Database into a Physical Standby Database
13.2.2
Flashing Back a Failed Primary Database into a Logical Standby Database
13.2.3
Flashing Back a Logical Standby Database to a Specific Applied SCN
13.3
Using Flashback Database After Issuing an Open Resetlogs Statement
13.3.1
Flashing Back a Physical Standby Database to a Specific Point-in-Time
13.3.2
Flashing Back a Logical Standby Database to a Specific Point-in-Time
13.4
Recovering After the NOLOGGING Clause Is Specified
13.4.1
Recovery Steps for Logical Standby Databases
13.4.2
Recovery Steps for Physical Standby Databases
13.4.3
Determining If a Backup Is Required After Unrecoverable Operations
13.5
Creating a Standby Database That Uses OMF or Oracle ASM
13.6
Recovering From Lost-Write Errors on a Primary Database
13.7
Converting a Failed Primary into a Standby Database Using RMAN Backups
13.7.1
Converting a Failed Primary into a Physical Standby Using RMAN Backups
13.7.2
Converting a Failed Primary into a Logical Standby Using RMAN Backups
13.8
Changing the Character Set of a Primary Without Re-Creating Physical Standbys
Part II Reference
14
Initialization Parameters
15
LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_n Parameter Attributes
AFFIRM and NOAFFIRM
ALTERNATE
COMPRESSION
DB_UNIQUE_NAME
DELAY
LOCATION and SERVICE
MANDATORY
MAX_CONNECTIONS
MAX_FAILURE
NET_TIMEOUT
NOREGISTER
REOPEN
SYNC and ASYNC
TEMPLATE
VALID_FOR
16
SQL Statements Relevant to Data Guard
16.1
ALTER DATABASE Statements
16.2
ALTER SESSION Statements
16.3
ALTER SYSTEM Statements
17
Views Relevant to Oracle Data Guard
Part III Appendixes
A
Troubleshooting Data Guard
A.1
Common Problems
A.1.1
Renaming Datafiles with the ALTER DATABASE Statement
A.1.2
Standby Database Does Not Receive Redo Data from the Primary Database
A.1.3
You Cannot Mount the Physical Standby Database
A.2
Log File Destination Failures
A.3
Handling Logical Standby Database Failures
A.4
Problems Switching Over to a Physical Standby Database
A.4.1
Switchover Fails Because Redo Data Was Not Transmitted
A.4.2
Switchover Fails Because SQL Sessions Are Still Active
A.4.3
Switchover Fails with the ORA-01102 Error
A.4.4
Redo Data Is Not Applied After Switchover
A.4.5
Roll Back After Unsuccessful Switchover and Start Over
A.5
Problems Switching Over to a Logical Standby Database
A.5.1
Failures During the Prepare Phase of a Switchover Operation
A.5.1.1
Failure While Preparing the Primary Database
A.5.1.2
Failure While Preparing the Logical Standby Database
A.5.2
Failures During the Commit Phase of a Switchover Operation
A.5.2.1
Failure to Convert the Original Primary Database
A.5.2.2
Failure to Convert the Target Logical Standby Database
A.6
What to Do If SQL Apply Stops
A.7
Network Tuning for Redo Data Transmission
A.8
Slow Disk Performance on Standby Databases
A.9
Log Files Must Match to Avoid Primary Database Shutdown
A.10
Troubleshooting a Logical Standby Database
A.10.1
Recovering from Errors
A.10.1.1
DDL Transactions Containing File Specifications
A.10.1.2
Recovering from DML Failures
A.10.2
Troubleshooting SQL*Loader Sessions
A.10.3
Troubleshooting Long-Running Transactions
A.10.4
Troubleshooting ORA-1403 Errors with Flashback Transactions
B
Upgrading and Downgrading Databases in a Data Guard Configuration
B.1
Before You Upgrade the Oracle Database Software
B.2
Upgrading Oracle Database with a Physical Standby Database in Place
B.3
Upgrading Oracle Database with a Logical Standby Database in Place
B.4
Modifying the COMPATIBLE Initialization Parameter After Upgrading
B.5
Downgrading Oracle Database with No Logical Standby in Place
B.6
Downgrading Oracle Database with a Logical Standby in Place
C
Data Type and DDL Support on a Logical Standby Database
C.1
Datatype Considerations
C.1.1
Supported Datatypes in a Logical Standby Database
C.1.2
Unsupported Datatypes in a Logical Standby Database
C.2
Support for Transparent Data Encryption (TDE)
C.3
Support for Tablespace Encryption
C.4
Support For Row-level Security and Fine-Grained Auditing
C.4.1
Row-level Security
C.4.2
Fine-Grained Auditing
C.4.3
Skipping and Enabling PL/SQL Replication
C.5
Oracle Label Security
C.6
Oracle E-Business Suite
C.7
Supported Table Storage Types
C.8
Unsupported Table Storage Types
C.9
PL/SQL Supplied Packages Considerations
C.9.1
Supported PL/SQL Supplied Packages
C.9.2
Unsupported PL/SQL Supplied Packages
C.9.3
Handling XML and XDB PL/SQL Packages in Logical Standby
C.9.3.1
The DBMS_XMLSCHEMA Schema
C.9.3.2
The DBMS_XMLINDEX Package
C.9.3.3
Dealing With Unsupported PL/SQL Procedures
C.9.3.4
Manually Compensating for Unsupported PL/SQL
C.9.3.5
Proactively Compensating for Unsupported PL/SQL
C.9.3.6
Compensating for Ordering Sensitive Unsupported PL/SQL
C.10
Unsupported Tables
C.11
Skipped SQL Statements on a Logical Standby Database
C.12
DDL Statements Supported by a Logical Standby Database
C.12.1
DDL Statements that Use DBLINKS
C.12.2
Replication of AUD$ and FGA_LOG$ on Logical Standbys
C.13
Distributed transactions and XA Support
C.14
Support for SecureFile LOBs
C.15
Character Set Considerations
D
Data Guard and Oracle Real Application Clusters
D.1
Configuring Standby Databases in an Oracle RAC Environment
D.1.1
Setting Up a Multi-Instance Primary with a Single-Instance Standby
D.1.2
Setting Up Oracle RAC Primary and Standby Databases
D.1.2.1
Configuring an Oracle RAC Standby Database to Receive Redo Data
D.1.2.2
Configuring an Oracle RAC Primary Database to Send Redo Data
D.2
Configuration Considerations in an Oracle RAC Environment
D.2.1
Format for Archived Redo Log Filenames
D.2.2
Data Protection Modes
D.2.3
Role Transitions
D.2.3.1
Switchovers
D.3
Troubleshooting
D.3.1
Switchover Fails in an Oracle RAC Configuration
E
Creating a Standby Database with Recovery Manager
E.1
Prerequisites
E.2
Overview of Standby Database Creation with RMAN
E.2.1
Purpose of Standby Database Creation with RMAN
E.2.2
Basic Concepts of Standby Creation with RMAN
E.2.2.1
Active Database and Backup-Based Duplication
E.2.2.2
DB_UNIQUE_NAME Values in an RMAN Environment
E.2.2.3
Recovery of a Standby Database
E.2.2.4
Standby Database Redo Log Files
E.2.2.5
Password Files for the Standby Database
E.3
Using the DUPLICATE Command to Create a Standby Database
E.3.1
Creating a Standby Database with Active Database Duplication
E.3.2
Creating a Standby Database with Backup-Based Duplication
F
Setting Archive Tracing
F.1
Setting the LOG_ARCHIVE_TRACE Initialization Parameter
F.2
Choosing an Integer Value
Index
Scripting on this page enhances content navigation, but does not change the content in any way.