oracle support at low prices oracle dba outsourcing oracle database tuning oracle price list
 
oracle 10g backup & recovery features Related links: Oracle10g backup & recovery prices | Oracle 10g database installation & set up package £800 | Oracle 10g support package for £770 pcm

backup & recovery

Flashback Enhancements:    
The flashback feature introduced in Oracle 9i has been considerably improved in 10g. Having set things up appropriately, flashback data is written to flashback logs on the local filesystem and using these, you can flashback an entire database to a previous moment in time - much quicker than restoring from a backup and rolling forward with archivelogs. With the aid of the new Recycle Bin feature you can flashback tables to before they were dropped and even flashback queries and transactions.
Flash Recovery Area:    
This is an area of disk space designed to allow you to keep all your recovery-related database files in a single location. You set a size for the flash recovery area although this is a soft limit rather than hard disk limit. Files to go in here are RMAN backup sets and controlfile backups; redo log files; control files; archivelog files and flashback log files. You can use the RMAN “backup recovery area” command to back up the entire flash recovery area to tape or another disk.
Recovery through Resetlogs:    
This is now possible using an additional tag in the archive_log_format init.ora parameter. The new %r format command shows which incarnation of the database the log refers to as well as the thread and sequence number.
RMAN - Backup Command Changes:    
The backup and copy commands have been merged together into just the backup command. To do a file copy backup you can use the “backup as copy” syntax to over-ride the default creation of backup sets.
RMAN - Restore Failover:    
During the restore process, RMAN can now automatically failover to a copy of a backup piece if the original is for some reason not available. If no copy can be found then it can fail over to an earlier backup piece and just roll forward with more archivelogs.
RMAN - Fast Incremental Backup:    
With the addition of the Block Change Tracking feature, incremental RMAN backups can be done in a fraction of the time of level zero backups. An external file is configured on the server which keeps track of any changed blocks since the last backup, this information is then used to only backup those blocks.
RMAN - Incrementally Updated File Copy Backups:    
Perhaps one of the best new RMAN enhancements is the ability to just update your backup sets instead of backing up the whole database every night. Provided you have enough disk space to keep your backups online, RMAN can initially create a file copy backup of the database and then update these copies using available incremental backups every time the “recover copy of database” command is issued.
Top of page
RMAN - User-catalogued Backup Pieces:    

Of great relief to many DBAs will be the fact that you can now manually add a backup piece into the RMAN catalogue using the CATALOG command. This means that if you have created an image copy of your own, or if you have simply had to move a backup piece to another location, you can now attach it manually to the controlfile or recovery catalogue so it can be used in recoveries. This means that if you cannot replicate the exact location of your backup directory when restoring on a new server, you can still make use of files at a different location. It also means that you can use backups even if you had to recreate your controlfile.

RMAN - Channel Failover:    
If you are using multiple channels in an RMAN operation, the process can automatically failover between channels if a particular channel encounters an error.
RMAN - Binary Compression for Backup Sets:    
RMAN already compresses backups by not backing up unused data blocks but with 10g you can take this even further and apply binary compression to backup sets to further reduce disk usage.
 SYSAUX Tablespace:    
This new tablespace sits alongside the SYSTEM tablespace and serves the purpose of keeping system-related schemas out of the SYSTEJM tablespace. This includes AWR data, Log Miner data, Streams, Oracle Text and Oracle Spatial. You can also put any of your own schemas in there as you see fit.
RMAN - Backup Duration and Throttling:    
It is now possible to configure RMAN to terminate a backup after a specified amount of time or to throttle a backup process in order to minimise the load on the server.
 
  << previous page   next page >>
Top of page
 

Copyright Pro-DBA.com 1999-2008, all rights reserved. 11 Greenwich Quay, Clarence Road, London, SE8 3EY.