Oracle Database 10g. High Availablity with RAC Flashback & Data Guard

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The sources here are rather limited, and as with most chapters there is heavy reliance on Oracle documentation for Oracle Database 10g.

RMAN: A Primer

This is an excellent resource for a foundational understanding of RMAN, with a strong slant toward conceptual understanding and architectural explanation. You might recognize the workshop format, as it is the same one used in our HA book.

Preparing an RMAN Backup Strategy

The basics cover configuration of both the permanent configuration parameters and the flashback recovery area setup, particularly Chapter 3.

Backups for the Available Database

Chapter 6 covers media management, more about the flashback recovery area, as well as setting up the auxiliary instance and the snapshot controlfile.

Chapter 4 covers the creation and usage of incrementally updated backups. This chapter also covers backing up the flashback recovery area to tape.

Backup Housekeeping

Chapter 6 covers maintenance operations.

Performing Recovery

See Chapter 5 for straightforward examples of restore and recovery operations with RMAN.

Media Management Considerations

This book has excellent coverage of linking RMAN to media management on multiple vendor products, including Veritas Netbackup, Legato Networker, HP Omniback, and Tivoli Data Protection. The exact nature of the operations is explained conceptually in Chapter 4.

RMAN and Data Guard

Chapter 17 provides excellent examples of creating physical standby databases in Oracle9i( not much has changed).

Appendix D covers the creation of the physical standby using RMAN.

RMAN and RAC

Chapter 18 covers the critical information concerning RMAN and RAC, including a detailed account of archivelog setup in a pre-OCFS world. There are two excellent workshops that cover duplicating from RAC to a single-node database, and creating a single-node standby from a RAC database.

Chapters 6 and 7 both provide in-depth coverage of setting up RMAN on your cluster, and provide significant coverage of archivelog backup and maintenance.

Oracle and Split Mirror Technologies

Chapter 7 covers the basics of using split mirrors for backups. However, this model assumes that you are merely using the split mirror as the backup itself, instead of connecting to this backup and taking an RMAN media backup.

This is the best document on using RMAN to take a backup from a split-mirror backup that is currently available to the public. It references old versions of all software involved, but the principles and concepts are still applicable.


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