Oracle® Database Backup and Recovery User's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E10642-04 |
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A duplicate database that is created over a network without restoring backups of the target database. This technique is an alternative to backup-based duplication.
The parent incarnation is the database incarnation from which the current incarnation branched following an OPEN RESETLOGS
operation. The parent of the parent incarnation is an ancestor incarnation. Any parent of an ancestor incarnation is also an ancestor incarnation.
A database backup that is exempted from the normal backup and recovery strategy. Typically, these backups are archived onto separate storage media and retained for long periods.
A copy of one of the filled members of an online redo log group made when the database is in ARCHIVELOG
mode. After the LGWR process fills each online redo log with redo records, the archiver process copies the log to one or more redo log archiving destinations. This copy is the archived redo log. RMAN does not distinguish between an original archived redo log and an image copy of an archived redo log; both are considered image copies.
archived redo log deletion policy
A configurable, persistent RMAN policy that governs when archived redo logs can be deleted. You can configure the policy with the CONFIGURE ARCHIVELOG DELETION POLICY
command.
An RMAN features that enables RMAN to complete a backup even when some archived log destinations are missing logs or have logs with corrupt blocks. For example, if you back up logs in the fast recovery area that RMAN determines are corrupt, RMAN can search for logs in other archiving locations and back them up instead if they are intact.
The mode of the database in which Oracle Database copies filled online redo logs to disk. Specify the mode at database creation or with the ALTER
DATABASE
ARCHIVELOG
statement.
See Also: archived redo log, NOARCHIVELOG mode
The operation in which a filled online redo log file is copied to an offline log archiving destination. An offline copy of an online redo logs is called an archived redo log. You must run the database in ARCHIVELOG
mode to archive redo logs.
A server process can begin an I/O and then perform other work while waiting for the I/O to complete while RMAN is either reading or writing data. RMAN can also begin multiple I/O operations before waiting for the first I/O to complete.
The ability of RMAN to perform backup and restore tasks without requiring the use of the ALLOCATE CHANNNEL
command. You can use the CONFIGURE
command to specify disk and tape channels. Then, you can issue commands such as BACKUP
and RESTORE
at the RMAN command prompt without manually allocating channels. RMAN uses whatever configured channels that it needs in order to execute the commands.
Automatic Diagnostic Repository (ADR)
A system-managed repository for storing and organizing database trace files and other diagnostic data. ADR provides a comprehensive view of all the serious errors encountered by the database and maintains all relevant data needed for problem diagnostic and their eventual resolution. The repository contains data describing incidents, traces, dumps, alert messages, data repair records, data integrity check records, SQL trace information, core dumps, and so on.
The initialization parameter DIAGNOSTIC_DEST
specifies the location of the ADR base, which is the directory that contains one or more ADR homes. Each ADR home is used by a product or a product instance to store diagnostic data in well-defined subdirectories. For example, diagnostic data for an Oracle database instance is stored in its ADR home, which includes an alert
subdirectory for alert messages, a trace
subdirectory for trace files, and so on. The easiest way to locate trace files and the alert log is to run the following SQL query: SELECT NAME, VALUE FROM V$DIAG_INFO
.
Automatic Storage Management (ASM)
A vertical integration of both the file system and the volume manager built specifically for Oracle database files. ASM consolidates storage devices into easily managed disk groups and provides benefits such as mirroring and striping without requiring a third-party logical volume manager.
automatic undo management mode
A mode of the database in which undo data is stored in a dedicated undo tablespace. The only undo management that you must perform is the creation of the undo tablespace. All other undo management is performed automatically.
An RMAN channel that is connected to an auxiliary instance. An auxiliary channel is specified with the AUXILIARY
keyword of the ALLOCATE CHANNEL
or CONFIGURE CHANNEL
command.
(1) A database created from target database backups with the RMAN DUPLICATE
command.
(2) A temporary database that is restored to a new location and then started with a new instance name during tablespace point-in-time recovery (TSPITR). A TSPITR auxiliary database contains the recovery set and auxiliary set.
In a transportable tablespace operation, the location on disk where auxiliary set files such as the parameter file, datafiles (other than those of the tablespaces being transported), control files, and online redo logs of the auxiliary instance can be stored.
The Oracle instance associated with an auxiliary database, or the temporary instance used in tablespace point-in-time recovery (TSPITR) or a transportable tablespace operation.
In TSPITR, the set of files that is not in the recovery set but which must be restored in the auxiliary database for the TSPITR operation to be successful. In a transportable tablespace operation, the auxiliary set includes datafiles and other files required for the tablespace transport but which are not themselves part of the recovery set.
(1) A backup copy of data, that is, a database, tablespace, table, datafile, control file, or archived redo log. Backups can be physical (at the database file level) or logical (at the database object level). Physical backups can be created by using RMAN to back up one or more datafiles, control files or archived redo log files. You can create logical backups with Data Pump Export.
(2) In an RMAN context, the output of the BACKUP
command. The output format of a backup can be a backup set, proxy copy, or image copy. Logs archived by the database are considered copies rather than backups.
The set of concepts, procedures, and strategies involved in protecting the database against data loss due to media failure or users errors.
A backup of the control file. You can back up the control file with the RMAN backup
command or with the SQL statement ALTER
DATABASE
BACKUP
CONTROLFILE
TO
'
filename
'
.
The encryption of backup sets by using one of the algorithms listed in V$RMAN_ENCRYPTION_ALGORITHMS
. RMAN can transparently encrypt data written to backup sets and decrypt those backup sets when they are needed in a RESTORE
operation. RMAN offers three modes of encryption: transparent, password-protected, and dual-mode.
The database mode (also called hot backup mode) initiated when you issue the ALTER
TABLESPACE
...
BEGIN
BACKUP
or ALTER
DATABASE
BEGIN
BACKUP
command before taking an online backup. You take a tablespace out of backup mode when you issue the ALTER
TABLESPACE
...
END
BACKUP
or ALTER
DATABASE
END
BACKUP
command.
When making a user-managed backup of datafiles in an online tablespace, you must place the tablespace in backup mode to protect against the possibility of a fractured block. In backup mode, updates to the database create more than the usual amount of redo. Each time a block in the buffer cache becomes dirty, the database must write an image of the changed block to the redo log file, in addition to recording the changes to the data. RMAN does not require you to put the database in backup mode.
See Also: corrupt block
A configuration enabling RMAN to automatically skip backups of files that it has already backed up. You enable and disable backup optimization with the CONFIGURE
command.
The physical file format used to store an RMAN backup set. Each logical backup set contains one or more physical backup pieces.
A user-defined policy for determining how long backups and archived logs need to be retained for media recovery. You can define a retention policy in terms of backup redundancy or a recovery window. RMAN retains the datafile backups required to satisfy the current retention policy, and any archived redo logs required for complete recovery of those datafile backups.
A backup of one or more datafiles, control files, server parameter files, and archived redo log files. Each backup set consists of one or more binary files. Each binary file is called a backup piece. Backup pieces are written in a proprietary format that can only be created or restored by RMAN.
Backup sets are produced by the RMAN BACKUP
command. A backup set usually consists of only one backup piece. RMAN divides the contents of a backup set among multiple backup pieces only if you limit the backup piece size using the MAXPIECESIZE
option of the ALLOCATE CHANNEL
or CONFIGURE CHANNEL
command.
See Also: unused block compression, multiplexing, RMAN
The exclusion of undo not needed for recovery of an RMAN backup because they describe already-committed transactions. For example, a user updates the salaries
table in the USERS
tablespace. The change is written to the USERS
tablespace, while the before image of the data is written to the UNDO
tablespace. A subsequent RMAN backup of the UNDO
tablespace may not include the undo for the salary change. Backup undo optimization is built-in RMAN behavior and cannot be disabled.
A duplicate database that is created by restoring and recovering backups of the target database. This technique is an alternative to active database duplication.
The entirety of the recovery catalog schema. The base recovery catalog is distinguished from a virtual private catalog, which is a subset of a recovery catalog.
A database option that causes Oracle to track datafile blocks affected by each database update. The tracking information is stored in a block change tracking file. When block change tracking is enabled, RMAN uses the record of changed blocks from the change tracking file to improve incremental backup performance by only reading those blocks known to have changed, instead of reading datafiles in their entirety.
A binary file used by RMAN to record changed blocks to improve incremental backup performance. You create and rename this file with the ALTER DATABASE
statement.
The recovery of specified blocks within a datafile with the Recovery Manager RECOVER ... BLOCK
command. Block media recovery leaves the affected datafiles online and restores and recovers only the damaged or corrupted blocks.
The termination of a disk mirroring procedure so that a mirror image is no longer kept up-do-date.
An RMAN channel represents one stream of data to or from a backup device. A channel can either be a DISK
channel (used to perform disk I/O) or an SBT channel (used to perform I/O through a third-party media manager). Each allocated channel starts a new Oracle Database session. The session then performs backup, restore, and recovery operations.
See Also: target database
An invocation of a checker, which is a diagnostic procedure registered with the Health Monitor.
A data structure that defines an SCN in the redo thread of a database. Checkpoints are recorded in the control file and each datafile header, and are a crucial element of recovery.
A number calculated by the database from all the bytes stored in a data or redo block. If the DB_BLOCK_CHECKSUM
initialization parameter is enabled, then the database calculates the checksum for every datafile or online redo log block and stores it in the block header when writing to disk. The database can use the checksum value to check consistency.
Control file records containing information used by RMAN for backups and recovery operations. These records are arranged in a logical ring. When all available record slots are full, Oracle either expands the control file to make room for a new records or overwrites the oldest record. The CONTROL_FILE_RECORD_KEEP_TIME
initialization parameter controls how many days records must be kept before they can be overwritten. The default for CONTROL_FILE_RECORD_KEEP_TIME
is 7 days.
See Also: noncircular reuse records
A backup of one or more database files taken while the database is closed. Typically, closed backups are whole database backups. If you closed the database consistently, then all the files in the backup are consistent. Otherwise, the backups are inconsistent.
See Also: consistent shutdown, consistent backup
See closed backup
In an RMAN context, a client-side text file containing a sequence of RMAN commands. You can run command files with the @
or @@
commands from within RMAN or from the operating system prompt with the @
or CMDFILE
parameters.
Recovery of one or more datafiles that applies all redo generated after the restored backup. Typically, you perform complete media recovery when media failure damages one or more datafiles or control files. You fully recover the damaged files using all redo generated since the restored backup was taken.
See Also: incomplete recovery
A whole database backup that you can open with the RESETLOGS
option without performing media recovery. You do not need to apply redo to this backup to make it consistent. Unless you apply the redo generated since the consistent backup was created, however, you lose all transactions since the time of the consistent backup.
You can only take consistent backups after you have performed a consistent shutdown of the database. The database must not be re-opened until the backup has completed.
See Also: fuzzy file, inconsistent backup
A database shut down with the IMMEDIATE
, TRASACTIONAL
, or NORMAL
options of the statement. A database shut down cleanly does not require recovery; it is already in a consistent state.
The automatic backup of the current control file and server parameter file that RMAN makes after backups and, if the database is in ARCHIVELOG
mode, after structural changes.
The control file autobackup has a default filename that allows RMAN to restore it even if the control file and recovery catalog are lost. You can override the default filename.
A script generated by the CONVERT DATABASE
command that you can use to convert datafile formats on the destination host.
To back up a bit-for-bit image of an Oracle file (Oracle datafiles, control files, and archived redo logs) onto disk. You can copy in two ways:
Using operating system utilities (for example, the UNIX cp
or dd
)
Using the RMAN BACKUP
AS
COPY
command
See Also: backup
An Oracle block that is not in a recognized Oracle format, or whose contents are not internally consistent. Typically, corruptions are caused by faulty hardware or operating system problems. Oracle identifies corrupt blocks as either logically corrupt (an Oracle internal error) or media corrupt (the block format is not correct).
You can repair a media corrupt block with block media recovery, or dropping the database object that contains the corrupt block so that its blocks are reused for another object. If media corruption is due to faulty hardware, then neither solution will work until the hardware fault is corrected.
The automatic application of online redo records to a database after either a single-instance database crashes or all instances of an Oracle Real Applications Cluster configuration crash. Crash recovery only requires redo from the online logs: archived redo logs are not required.
See Also: recover
A check to determine whether files on disk or in the media management catalog correspond to the data in the RMAN repository. Because the media manager can mark tapes as expired or unusable, and because files can be deleted from disk or otherwise become corrupted, the RMAN repository can contain outdated information about backups. Run the CROSSCHECK
command to perform a crosscheck.
See Also: validation
An incremental backup that backs up all the blocks changed since the most recent backup at level 0. When recovering with cumulative incremental backups, only the most recent cumulative incremental backup must be applied.
See Also: differential incremental backup, incremental backup
The database incarnation in which the database is currently generating redo.
The online redo log file in which the LGWR background process is currently logging redo records.
See Also: redo log, redo log group
The use of media recovery or Oracle Flashback Technology to recover lost or corrupted data.
An Oracle Database tool that automatically diagnoses persistent data failures, presents repair options to the user, and executes repairs at the user's request.
A location for the Oracle managed datafiles, control files, and online redo log files. The database area is specified by the DB_CREATE_FILE_DEST
initialization parameter.
The thread checkpoint that has the lowest SCN. All changes in all enabled redo threads with SCNs prior to the database checkpoint SCN are guaranteed to have been written to disk.
See Also: checkpoint, datafile checkpoint
See DBID
database point-in-time recovery (DBPITR)
The recovery of an entire database to a specified past target time, SCN, or log sequence number.
See Also: incomplete recovery, tablespace point-in-time recovery (TSPITR)
See registration
A data structure that defines an SCN in the redo thread of a database for a particular datafile. Every datafile has a checkpoint SCN, which you can view in V$DATAFILE.CHECKPOINT_CHANGE#
. All changes with an SCN lower than this SCN are guaranteed to be in the datafile.
The application of redo records to a restored datafile in order to roll it forward to a more current time. Unless you are doing block media recovery, the datafile must be offline while being recovered.
An internal, uniquely generated number that differentiates databases. Oracle creates this number automatically when you create the database.
The computer on which a duplicate database resides.
When using the RMAN CONVERT
command, the platform on which the destination database is running. The destination database is the database into which you are transporting data.
differential incremental backup
A type of incremental backup that backs up all blocks that have changed since the most recent backup at level 1 or level 0. For example, in a differential level 1 backup RMAN determines which level 1 or level 0 incremental backup is most recent and then backs up all blocks changed since that backup. Differential backups are the default type of incremental backup. When recovering using differential incremental backups, RMAN must apply all differential incremental level 1 backups since the restored datafile backup.
See Also: cumulative incremental backup, incremental backup
When multiple OPEN RESETLOGS
operations have been performed, the incarnation path that includes the parent incarnation of the current database incarnation as well as each ancestor incarnation of the current incarnation.
A strategic response to the loss of all data associated with a database installation. For example, a fire may destroy a server in a data center, forcing you to reinstall Oracle Database on a new server and recover the lost database from backups.
A collection of disks that are managed as a unit by Automatic Storage Management (ASM). The components of a disk group include disks, files, and allocation units.
A user-specified limit to the size of the fast recovery area. When the disk quota is reached, Oracle automatically deletes files that are no longer needed.
In RMAN, a duplexed backup set is an RMAN-generated identical copy of a backup set. Each backup piece is in the original backup set is copied, with each copy getting a unique copy number (for example, 0tcm8u2s_1_1
and 0tcm8u2s_1_2
).
A database created from target database backups using the RMAN duplicate command.
See Also: auxiliary database
A backup whose status in the RMAN repository is EXPIRED
, which means that the backup was not found. RMAN marks backups and copies as expired when you run a CROSSCHECK
command and the files are absent or inaccessible.
The extraction of logical data (that is, not physical files) from a database into a binary file using Data Pump Export. You can then use Data Pump Import to import the data into a database.
See Also: logical backup
A file created by the Data Pump Export utility. The dump file set is made up of one or more disk files that contain table data, database object metadata, and control information. The files are written in a proprietary, binary format.
In the context of Data Recovery Advisor, a failure is a persistent data corruption that has been diagnosed by the database. A failure can manifest itself as observable symptoms such as error messages and alerts, but a failure is different from a symptom because it represents a diagnosed problem. Failures are recorded in a repository for diagnostic data located outside of the database.
For each failure, Data Recovery Advisor generates a problem statement that unambiguously describes it. Examples of failures include inaccessible datafiles and corrupted undo segments. Data Recovery Advisor maps every failure to a repair option or set of repair options.
The priority of a failure diagnosed by Data Recovery Advisor. Every failure that is not closed has CRITICAL
, HIGH
, or LOW
status. You can manually change the status of HIGH
and LOW
failures with the CHANGE
command.
The status of a failure diagnosed by Data Recovery Advisor. Every failure has OPEN
or CLOSED
status.
A contiguous range of blocks in a datafile. A multisection backup processes a large file in parallel by copying each section to a separate backup piece.
An optional disk location that you can use to store recovery-related files such as control file and online redo log copies, archived redo log files, flashback logs, and RMAN backups. Oracle Database and RMAN manage the files in the fast recovery area automatically. You can specify the disk quota, which is the maximum size of the fast recovery area. Formerly referred to as flash recovery area.
A historical repository of transactional changes to every record in a table for the duration of the record's lifetime. A flashback data archive enables you to use some of the logical flashback features to transparently access historical data from far in the past.
The range of SCNs for which there is currently enough flashback log data to support the FLASHBACK
DATABASE
command. The flashback database window cannot extend further back than the earliest SCN in the available flashback logs.
Oracle-generated logs used to perform flashback database operations. The database can only write flashback logs to the fast recovery area. Flashback logs are written sequentially and are not archived. They cannot be backed up to disk.
A user-specified time or SCN that specifies how far into the past you want to be able to perform a flashback of the database.
An archived redo log received by a logical standby database for a LogMiner session. Unlike normal archived logs, foreign archived logs have a different DBID. For this reason, they cannot be backed up or restored on a logical standby database.
A block in which the header and footer are not consistent at a given SCN. In a user-managed backup, an operating system utility can back up a datafile at the same time that DBWR is updating the file. It is possible for the operating system utility to read a block in a half-updated state, so that the block that is copied to the backup media is updated in its first half, while the second half contains older data. In this case, the block is fractured.
For non-RMAN backups, the ALTER TABLESPACE ... BEGIN BACKUP
or ALTER DATABASE BEGIN BACKUP
command is the solution for the fractured block problem. When a tablespace is in backup mode, and a change is made to a data block, the database logs a copy of the entire block image before the change so that the database can reconstruct this block if media recovery finds that this block was fractured.
A non-incremental RMAN backup. The word "full" does not refer to how much of the database is backed up, but to the fact that the backup is not incremental. Consequently, you can make a full backup of one datafile.
An RMAN operation that updates the recovery catalog with all changed metadata in the database's control file. You can initiate a full catalog resynchronization by issuing the RMAN command RESYNC
CATALOG
. (It is rarely necessary to use RESYNC
CATALOG
because RMAN automatically performs resynchronizations when needed.)
A datafile that contains at least one block with an SCN greater than or equal to the checkpoint SCN in the datafile header. Fuzzy files are possible because database writer does not update the SCN in the file header with each file block write. For example, this situation occurs when Oracle updates a datafile that is in backup mode. A fuzzy file that is restored always requires media recovery.
A restore point for which the database is guaranteed to retain the flashback logs for an Oracle Flashback Database operation. Unlike a normal restore point, a guaranteed restore point does not age out of the control file and must be explicitly dropped. Guaranteed restore points utilize space in the fast recovery area, which must be defined.
See online backup
See backup mode
A bit-for-bit copy of a single datafile, archived redo log file, or control file that is:
Usable as-is to perform recovery (unlike a backup set, which uses unused block compression and is in an RMAN-specific format)
Generated with the RMAN BACKUP
AS
COPY
command, an operating system command such as the UNIX cp
, or by the Oracle archiver process
A separate version of a database. The incarnation of the database changes when you open it with the RESETLOGS
option, but you can recover backups from a prior incarnation so long as the necessary redo is available.
A synonym for database point-in-time recovery (DBPITR).
See Also: complete recovery, media recovery, recover
A backup in which some of the files in the backup contain changes that were made after the files were checkpointed. This type of backup needs recovery before it can be made consistent. Inconsistent backups are usually created by taking online database backups. You can also make an inconsistent backup by backing up datafiles while a database is closed, either:
Immediately after the crash of an Oracle instance (or, in a RAC configuration, all instances)
After shutting down the database using SHUTDOWN
ABORT
Inconsistent backups are only useful if the database is in ARCHIVELOG
mode and all archived redo logs created since the backup are available.
See Also: consistent backup, online backup, system change number (SCN), whole database backup
An RMAN backup in which only modified blocks are backed up. Incremental backups are classified by level. A level 0 incremental backup performs the same function as a full backup in that they both back up all blocks that have ever been used. The difference is that a full backup will not affect blocks backed up by subsequent incremental backups, whereas an incremental backup will affect blocks backed up by subsequent incremental backups.
Incremental backups at level 1 back up only blocks that have changed since previous incremental backups. Blocks that have not changed are not backed up. An incremental backup can be either a differential incremental backup or a cumulative incremental backup.
An RMAN datafile copy that is updated by means of an incremental backup. An effective backup strategy is to copy a datafile, make an incremental backup, and then merge the incremental backup into the image copy. This strategy reduces the time required for media recovery because the image copy is updated with the latest data block changes.
The termination of an Oracle instance due to a hardware failure, Oracle internal error, or SHUTDOWN
ABORT
statement. Crash or instance recovery is always required after an instance failure.
In an Oracle RAC configuration, the application of redo data to an open database by an instance when this instance discovers that another instance has crashed.
See Also: recover
A type of block corruption in which the corruption occurs between blocks rather than within the block itself. This type of corruption can only be logical corruption.
A type of block corruption in which the corruption occurs within the block itself. this type of corruption can be either a physical corruption or logical corruption.
An RMAN incremental backup that backs up all data blocks in the datafiles being backed up. An incremental backup at level 0 is identical in content to a full backup, but unlike a full backup the level 0 backup is considered a part of the incremental backup strategy.
The number of input files simultaneously read and then written into the same RMAN backup piece.
A utility that enables log files to be read, analyzed, and interpreted by means of SQL statements.
See Also: archived redo log
A number that uniquely identifies a set of redo records in a redo log file. When Oracle fills one online redo log file and switches to a different one, Oracle automatically assigns the new file a log sequence number.
See Also: log switch, redo log
The point at which LGWR stops writing to the active redo log file and switches to the next available redo log file. LGWR switches when either the active log file is filled with redo records or you force a switch manually.
See Also: redo log
A backup of database schema objects, such as tables. Logical backups are created and restored with the Oracle Data Pump Export utility. You can restore objects from logical backups using the Data Pump Import utility.
The set of Oracle Flashback Technology features other than Oracle Flashback Database. The logical features enable you to view or rewind individual database objects or transactions to a past time.
A type of corruption in which the block has a valid checksum, the header and footer match, and so on, but the contents are logically inconsistent.
A backup that you want to exclude from a backup retention policy, but want to record in the recovery catalog. Typically, long-term backups are snapshots of the database that you may want to use in the future for report generation.
A write to persistent storage that the database believes has occurred based on information from the I/O subsystem, when in fact the write has not occurred.
Damage to the disks containing any of the files used by Oracle, such as the datafiles, archived redo log files, or control file. When Oracle detects media failure, it takes the affected files offline.
See Also: media recovery
A third-party networked backup system that can be integrated with Recovery Manager so that database backups can be written directly to tertiary storage.
Multiplexing in which the media manager rather than RMAN manages the mixing of blocks during an RMAN backup. One type of media manager multiplexing occurs when the media manager writes the concurrent output from multiple RMAN channels to a single sequential device. Another type occurs when a backup mixes database files and non-database files on the same tape.
A catalog of records maintained by a media manager. This catalog is completely independent from the RMAN recovery catalog. The Oracle Secure Backup catalog is an example of a media management catalog.
A software library that RMAN can use to back up to tertiary storage. An SBT interface conforms to a published API and is supplied by a media management vendor. Oracle Secure Backup includes an SBT interface for use with RMAN.
The application of redo or incremental backups to a restored backup datafile or individual data block.
When performing media recovery, you can recover a database, tablespace, datafile, or set of blocks within a datafile. Media recovery can be either complete recovery (in which all changes in the redo logs are applied) or incomplete recovery (in which only changes up to a specified point in time are applied). Media recovery is only possible when the database is in ARCHIVELOG
mode.
See Also: block media recovery, recover
Maintaining identical copies of data on one or more disks. Typically, mirroring is performed on duplicate hard disks at the operating system level, so that if one of the disks is unavailable, the other disk can continue to service requests without interruptions. When mirroring files, Oracle Database writes once while the operating system writes to multiple disks. When multiplexing files, Oracle Database writes the same data to multiple files.
A backup set that contains blocks from multiple input files. For example, you could multiplex 10 datafiles into one backup set. Only whole files, never partial files, are included in a backup set.
The meaning of the term depends on which files are multiplexed:
online redo logs
The automated maintenance of more than one identical copy of the online redo log.
control file
The automated maintenance of more than one identical copy of a database's control file.
backup set
The RMAN technique of reading database files simultaneously from the disks and then writing the blocks to the same backup piece.
archived redo logs
The Oracle archiver process is able to archive multiple copies of a redo log.
See Also: mirroring
An RMAN backup set in which each backup piece contains a file section, which is a contiguous range of blocks in a datafile. A multisection backup set contains multiple backup pieces, but a backup set never contains only a part of a datafile.
You create a multisection backup by specifying the SECTION SIZE
parameter on the BACKUP
command. An RMAN channel can process each file section independently, either serially or in parallel. Thus, in a multisection backup, multiple channels can back up a single file.
In a tape drive, the speed of writing to a tape without compression. This speed represents the upper limit of the backup rate.
The mode of the database in which Oracle does not require filled online redo logs to be archived before they can be overwritten. Specify the mode at database creation or change it with the ALTER
DATABASE
NOARCHIVELOG
command.
If you run in NOARCHIVELOG
mode, it severely limits the possibilities for recovery of lost or damaged data.
See Also: archived redo log, ARCHIVELOG mode
Control file records containing critical information needed by the Oracle database. These records are never automatically overwritten. Some examples of information in noncircular reuse records include the locations of datafiles and online redo logs.
See Also: circular reuse records
A label for an SCN or time. For commands that support an SCN or time, you can often specify a restore point. Normal restore points exist in the circular list and can be overwritten in the control file. However, if the restore point pertains to an archival backup, then it will be preserved in the recovery catalog.
A backup that is not need to satisfy the current backup retention policy. For example, if your retention policy dictates that you must maintain one backup of each datafile, but you have two backups of datafile 1, then the second backup of datafile 1 is considered obsolete.
A tablespace is offline normal when taken offline with the ALTER
TABLESPACE
...
OFFLINE
NORMAL
statement. The datafiles in the tablespace are checkpointed and do not require recovery before being brought online. If a tablespace is not taken offline normal, then its datafiles must be recovered before being brought online.
An SBT backup that requires retrieval by the media manager before RMAN can restore it. You can list offsite backups with RESTORE ... PREVIEW
.
A backup of one or more datafiles taken while a database is open and the datafiles are online. When you make a user-managed backup while the database is open, you must put the tablespaces in backup mode by issuing an ALTER
TABLESPACE
BEGIN
BACKUP
command. (You can also use ALTER
DATABASE
BEGIN
BACKUP
to put all tablespaces in your database into backup mode in one step.)
You should not put tablespaces in backup mode when performing backups with RMAN.
The online redo log is a set of two or more files that record all changes made to the database. Whenever a change is made to the database, Oracle generates a redo record in the redo buffer. The LGWR process writes the contents of the redo buffer into the online redo log.
The current online redo log is the one being written to by LGWR. When LGWR gets to the end of the file, it performs a log switch and begins writing to a new log file. If you run the database in ARCHIVELOG
mode, then each filled online redo log file must be copied to one or more archiving locations before LGWR can overwrite them.
See Also: archived redo log
The Oracle online redo log consists of two or more online redo log groups. Each group contains one or more identical online redo log members. An online redo log member is a physical file containing the redo records.
A physical online redo log file within an online redo log group. Each log group must have one or more members. Each member of a group is identical.
The return of the whole database to a prior consistent SCN by means of the FLASHBACK DATABASE
command in RMAN or SQL. A database flashback is different from traditional media recovery because it does not involve the restore of physical files, instead restoring your current datafiles to past states using saved images of changed data blocks. This feature uses flashback logs and archived redo logs.
A set of Oracle Database features that provide an additional layer of data protection. These features include Oracle Flashback Query, Oracle Flashback Version Query, Oracle Flashback Transaction Query, Oracle Flashback Transaction, Oracle Flashback Table, Oracle Flashback Drop, and Oracle Flashback Database.
You can use flashback features to view past states of data and rewind parts or all of your database. In general, flashback features are more efficient and less disruptive than media recovery in most situations in which they apply.
A service that automates naming, location, creation, and deletion of database files such as control files, redo log files, datafiles and others, based on a few initialization parameters. You can use Oracle managed files on top of a traditional file system supported by the host operating system, for example, VxFS or ODM. It can simplify many aspects of the database administration by eliminating the need to devise your own policies for such details.
An Oracle media manager that supplies reliable data protection through file system backup to tape. The Oracle Secure Backup SBT interface also enables you to use RMAN to back up Oracle databases. All major tape drives and tape libraries in SAN, Gigabit Ethernet, and SCSI environments are supported.
A service on Windows systems that acts as coordinator between an Oracle database instance and other Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) components, enabling data providers to create a shadow copy of files managed by the Oracle instance. For example, the Oracle VSS writer can place datafiles in hot backup mode to provide a recoverable copy of these datafiles in a shadow copy set.
Oracle-suggested backup strategy
A backup strategy available through a wizard in Oracle Enterprise Manager. The strategy involves periodically applying a level 1 incremental backup to a level 0 backup to create an incrementally updated backup. If run daily, this strategy provides 24 hour point-in-time recovery from disk.
Backups that were not made in the direct ancestral path of the current incarnation of the database. Orphaned backups cannot be used in the current incarnation.
A form of recovery in which several processes simultaneously apply changes from redo log files. The RECOVERY_PARALLELISM
initialization parameter determines the level of parallelism for instance and crash recovery. You can use the PARALLEL
and NOPARALLEL
options of the RECOVER
command to control parallelism for media recovery.Oracle Database automatically chooses the optimum degree of recovery parallelism. In most cases, manually setting the level of parallelism for instance, crash, or media recovery is not recommended or necessary.
The database incarnation from which the current incarnation branched following an OPEN RESETLOGS
operation.
A type of resynchronization in which RMAN transfers data about archived logs, backup sets, and datafile copies from the target control file to the recovery catalog.
A file created by the ORAPWD
command, and required if you want to connect using the SYSDBA
or SYSOPER
privileges over a network. For details on password files, see the Oracle Database Administrator's Guide.
A backup of physical files. A physical backup contrasts with a logical backup such as a table export.
A type of corruption in which the database does not recognize a corrupt block. The database may not recognize the block because the checksum is invalid, the block contains all zeros, or the header and footer of the block do not match.
The datafiles, control files, and redo logs in a database at a given time. Issue the RMAN REPORT
SCHEMA
command to obtain a list of tablespaces and datafiles.
The incomplete recovery of database files to a noncurrent time. Point-in-time recovery is also known as incomplete recovery.
See Also: media recovery, recover
A critical error in the database that is recorded in the Automatic Diagnostic Repository (ADR). Critical errors include internal errors and other severe errors. Each problem has a problem key, which is a set of attributes that describe the problem. The problem key includes the ORA error number, error parameter values, and other information.
A backup in which the media manager manages the transfer of data between the media storage device and disk during RMAN backup and restore operations.
A disk or partition without a file system. Thus, you cannot use ls
, Windows Explorer, and so on to view their contents. The raw partition appears to Oracle Database as a single file.
To recover a database file or a database is typically to perform media recovery, crash recovery, or instance recovery. This term can also be used generically to refer to reconstructing or re-creating lost data by any means.
See Also: complete recovery, incomplete recovery
When used to refer to a database file or a database, the application of redo data or incremental backups to database files in order to reconstruct lost changes. The three types of recovery are instance recovery, crash recovery, and media recovery. Oracle performs the first two types of recovery automatically using online redo records; only media recovery requires you to restore a backup and issue commands.
See Also: complete recovery, incomplete recovery
A set of Oracle tables and views used by RMAN to store RMAN repository information about one or more Oracle databases. RMAN uses this metadata to manage the backup, restore, and recovery of Oracle databases.
Use of a recovery catalog is optional although it is highly recommended. For example, starting with Oracle Database 11g, a single recovery catalog schema can keep track of database filenames for all databases in a Data Guard environment. This catalog schema also keeps track of where the online redo logs, standby redo logs, tempfiles, archived redo logs, backup sets, and image copies are created for all databases.
The primary storage for RMAN repository information for a database is always in the control file of the database. A recovery catalog is periodically updated with RMAN repository data from the control file. In the event of the loss of your control file, the recovery catalog can provide most or all of the lost metadata required for restore and recovery of your database. The recovery catalog can also store records of archival backups and RMAN stored scripts for use with target databases.
See Also: recovery catalog database
An Oracle database that contains a recovery catalog schema. You should not store the recovery catalog in the target database.
The recovery catalog database schema that contains the recovery catalog tables and views.
The primary utility for physical backup and recovery of Oracle databases. RMAN keeps records of Oracle databases in its own structure called an RMAN repository, manages storage of backups, validates backups. You can use it with or without the central information repository called a recovery catalog. If you do not use a recovery catalog, then RMAN uses the database's control file to store information necessary for backup and recovery operations. You can use RMAN in conjunction with third-party media management software to back up files to tertiary storage.
See Also: backup piece, backup set, copy, media manager, recovery catalog
One or more tablespaces that are being recovered to an earlier point in time during tablespace point-in-time recovery (TSPITR). After TSPITR, all database objects in the recovery set have been recovered to the same point in time.
See Also: auxiliary set
A recovery window is one type of RMAN backup retention policy, in which the DBA specifies a period of time and RMAN ensures retention of backups and archived redo logs required for point-in-time recovery to any time during the recovery window. The interval always ends with the current time and extends back in time for the number of days specified by the user.
For example, if the retention policy is set for a recovery window of seven days, and the current time is 11:00 AM on Tuesday, RMAN retains the backups required to allow point-in-time recovery back to 11:00 AM on the previous Tuesday.
A data dictionary table containing information about dropped objects. Dropped tables and any associated objects such as indexes, constraints, nested tables, and so on are not removed and still occupy space. The Flashback Drop feature uses the recycle bin to retrieve dropped objects.
A redo log can be either an online redo log or an archived redo log. The online redo log is a set of two or more redo log groups that records all changes made to Oracle datafiles and control files. An archived redo log is a copy of an online redo log that has been written to an offline destination.
Each online redo log member (which corresponds to an online redo log file) belongs to a redo log group. Redo log groups contain one or more members. A redo log group with more than one member is called a multiplexed redo log group. The contents of all members of a redo log group are identical.
The redo generated by an instance. If the database runs in a single instance configuration, then the database has only one thread of redo.
In a retention policy, the setting that determines many copies of each backed-up file to keep. A redundancy-based retention policy is contrasted with retention policy that uses a recovery window.
A set of backups enabling you to recover from the failure or loss of any Oracle database file.
In RMAN, the execution of a REGISTER
DATABASE
command in order to record the existence of a target database in the recovery catalog. A target database is uniquely identified in the catalog by its DBID. You can register more than one database in the same catalog, and also register the same database in multiple catalogs.
In the context of Data Recovery Advisor, a repair is an action or set of actions that fixes one or more failures. Examples repairs include block media recovery, datafile media recovery, Oracle Flashback Database, and so on.
In the context of Data Recovery Advisor, one possible technique for repairing a failure. Different repair options are intended to fix the same problem, but represent different advantages and disadvantages in terms of repair time and data loss.
A technique for opening a database that archives any current online redo logs (if using ARCHIVELOG
mode), resets the log sequence number to 1, and clears the online redo logs. An ALTER DATABASE OPEN RESETLOGS
statement begins a new database incarnation. The starting SCN for the new incarnation, sometimes called the RESETLOGS
SCN, is the incomplete recovery SCN of the media recovery preceding the OPEN RESETLOGS
, plus one.
An ALTER DATABASE OPEN RESETLOGS
statement is required after incomplete recovery or recovery with a backup control file. An OPEN
RESETLOGS
operation does not affect the recoverability of the database. Backups from before the OPEN
RESETLOGS
operation remain valid and can be used along with backups taken after the OPEN
RESETLOGS
operation to repair any damage to the database.
The process of making the contents of a split mirror identical with the contents of the storage devices from which the mirror was split. The operating system or the hardware managing the mirror refreshs a broken mirror from the half that is up-to-date and then maintains both sides of the mirror.
The feature that enables RMAN to back up only those files that have not been backed up since a specified date. The unit of restartability is last completed backup set or image copy. You can use this feature after a backup fails to back up the parts of the database missed by the failed backup.
The replacement of a lost or damaged file with a backup. You can restore files either with commands such as UNIX cp
or the RMAN RESTORE
command.
The automatic search by RMAN for usable backups in a restore operation if a corrupted or inaccessible backup is found.
The default behavior in which RMAN avoids restoring datafiles from backup when possible.
A user-defined a name associated with an SCN of the database corresponding to the time of the creation of the restore point. A restore point can be a guaranteed restore point or a normal restore point.
The operation that updates the recovery catalog with current metadata from the target database control file. You can initiate a full resynchronization of the catalog by issuing a RESYNC
CATALOG
command. A partial resynchronization transfers information to the recovery catalog about archived redo log files, backup sets, and datafile copies. RMAN resynchronizes the recovery catalog automatically when needed.
In a Data Guard environment, the updating of a primary or standby database control file with metadata obtained from the recovery catalog. For example, if you configure persistent RMAN settings for a standby database that is not the connected target database, then RMAN performs a reverse resynchronization the next time RMAN connects as target to the standby database. In this way, the recovery catalog keeps the metadata in the control files in a Data Guard environment up to date.
The set of BACKUP
commands executed within a single RMAN session. For example, assume that you start the RMAN client, execute BACKUP DATABASE
, BACKUP ARCHIVELOG
, and RECOVER COPY
, and then exit the RMAN client. The RMAN backup job consists of the database backup and the archived redo log backup.
An Oracle Database executable that interprets commands, directs server sessions to execute those commands, and records its activity in the target database control file. The RMAN executable is automatically installed with the database and is typically located in the same directory as the other database executables. For example, the RMAN client on Linux is named rman
and is located in $ORACLE_HOME/bin
.
The set of RMAN commands executed in an RMAN session. For example, assume that you start the RMAN client, execute BACKUP DATABASE
, BACKUP ARCHIVELOG
, and RECOVER COPY
, and then exit the RMAN client. The RMAN job consists of the two backups and the roll forward of the datafile copy.
Commands that you can use the manage RMAN metadata records and backups. The maintenance commands are CATALOG
, CHANGE
, CROSSCHECK
, and DELETE
.
The record of RMAN metadata about backup and recovery operations on the target database. The authoritative copy of the RMAN repository is always stored in the control file of the target database. A recovery catalog can also be used for longer-term storage of the RMAN repository, and can serve as an alternate source of RMAN repository data if the control file of your database is lost.
See Also: recovery catalog database, resynchronization
An RMAN session begins when the RMAN client is started and ends when you exit from the client or the RMAN process is terminated. Multiple RMAN commands can be executed in a single RMAN session.
The use of rollback segments to undo uncommitted changes applied to the database during the rolling forward stage of recover.
The application of redo records or incremental backups to datafiles and control files in order to recover changes to those files.
See Also: rolling back
System Backup to Tape. This term specifies a nondisk backup device type, typically a tape library or tape drive. RMAN supports channels of type disk and SBT.
In the Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) infrastructure on Windows, a consistent snapshot of a component or volume.
A copy of a database control file created in an operating system-specific location by Recovery Manager. RMAN creates the snapshot control file so that it has a consistent version of a control file to use when either resynchronizing the recovery catalog or backing up the control file.
The database that you are copying when you create a duplicate database.
The host on which a source database resides.
When using the RMAN CONVERT
command, the platform on which the source database is running. The source database contains the data to be transported to a database running on a different platform.
A backup of database files that were previously mirrored. Some third-party tools allow you to use mirroring a set of disks or logical devices, that is, maintain an exact duplicate of the primary data in another location. Splitting a mirror involves separating the file copies so that you can use them independently. With the ALTER SYSTEM SUSPEND/RESUME
database feature, you can suspend I/O to the database, split the mirror, and make a backup of the split mirror.
A sequence of RMAN commands stored in the recovery catalog. Stored scripts can be global or local. Global scripts can be shared by all databases registered in the recovery catalog.
A server process can perform only one task at a time while RMAN is either reading or writing data.
A stamp that defines a committed version of a database at a point in time. Oracle assigns every committed transaction a unique SCN.
In a transportable tablespace operation, the location on disk which (by default) contains the datafile copies and other output files when the tablespace transport command completes.
tablespace point-in-time recovery (TSPITR)
The recovery of one or more non-SYSTEM
tablespaces to a noncurrent time. You use RMAN to perform TSPITR.
Identifier for an RMAN backup. If you generate a backup set, then the tag is assigned to each backup piece rather than to the backup set. If you do not specify a tag for a backup, then RMAN assigns one automatically.
In an RMAN environment, the database to which you are connected as TARGET
. The target database is the database on which you are performing RMAN operations.
The computer on which a target database resides.
In an RMAN environment, the instance associated with a target database.
A file that belongs to a temporary tablespace and is created with the TEMPFILE
option. Temporary tablespaces cannot contain permanent database objects such as tables, and are typically used for sorting. Because tempfiles cannot contain permanent objects, RMAN does not back them up. RMAN does keep track of the locations of tempfiles in the control file, however, and during recovery re-creates the tempfiles as needed at those locations.
A script generated by the CONVERT DATABASE
command. This script contains SQL statements used to create the new database on the destination platform.
A feature that transports a set of tablespaces from one database to another, or from one database to itself. Transporting a tablespace into a database is like creating a tablespace with preloaded data.
Datafiles for the set of tablespaces in a transportable tablespace operation, and an export file containing metadata for the set of tablespaces. You use Data Pump Export to perform the export.
A simulated recovery initiated with the RECOVER ... TEST
command in RMAN or SQL*Plus. A trial recovery applies redo in a way similar to normal media recovery, but it never writes its changes to disk and it always rolls back its changes. Trial recovery occurs only in memory.
The minimum amount of time that Oracle Database attempts to retain old undo data in the undo tablespace before overwriting it. Old (committed) undo data that is older than the current undo retention period is said to be expired. Old undo data with an age that is less than the current undo retention period is said to be unexpired.
A dedicated tablespace that stores only undo information when the database is run in automatic undo management mode.
A feature by which RMAN reduces the size of datafile backup sets by skipping data blocks. RMAN always skips blocks that have never been used. Under certain conditions, which are described in the BACKUP AS BACKUPSET
entry in Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference, RMAN also skips previously used blocks that are not currently being used.
A backups made using a non-RMAN method, for example, using an operating system utility. For example, you can make a user-managed backup by running the cp
command on Linux or the COPY
command on Windows. A user-managed backup is also called an operating system backup.
user-managed backup and recovery
A backup and recovery strategy for an Oracle database that does not use RMAN. This term is equivalent to operating system backup and recovery. You can back up and restore database files using operating system utilities (for example, the cp
command in UNIX), and recover using the SQL*Plus RECOVER
command.
In an RMAN context, a test that checks database files for block corruption or checks a backup set to determine whether it can be restored. RMAN can check for both physical and logical block corruption.
A subset of the metadata in a base recovery catalog to which a database user is granted access. The owner of a base recovery catalog can grant or revoke restricted access to the recovery catalog to other database users. Each restricted user has full read/write access to his own virtual private catalog.
Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS)
An infrastructure on Windows server platforms that enables requestors, writers, and providers to participate in the creation of a consistent snapshot called a shadow copy. The VSS service uses well-defined COM interfaces. See Oracle Database Platform Guide for Microsoft Windows to learn how to use RMAN with VSS.
A backup of the control file and all datafiles that belong to a database.