Friday, October 2, 2009

Oracle Blog from Innotiive Asia (M) Sdn Bhd

A new oracle blog will be out somewhere on the 2nd week of October 2009 that will be maintained by Innotiive Asia's   Oracle Consultants. 

There will be alot of info for new and experienced DBAs. This blog is also used by Innotiive's DBAs to share their experience. You can also share your own experiences and also ask questions and there will a group of dedicated DBAs to answer your questions.

Please give your suggestions on how to improve this blog so that the DBAs can benefit, especially for Malaysians....


http://oracleinnotiive.wordpress.com

 

Monday, August 10, 2009

Why is excessive redo generated during an Online/Hot Backup

Just a question asked by someone and here is the answer. There is no better person to answer this question than Tom Kyte...:-)

There is not excessive redo generated, there is additional information logged into

the online redo log during a hot backup the first time a block is modified in a

tablespace that is in hot backup mode. 

 

in hot backup mode only 2 things are different:

 

o the first time a block is changed in a datafile that is in hot backup mode, the ENTIRE

BLOCK is written to the redo log files, not just the changed bytes.  Normally only the

changed bytes (a redo vector) is written. In hot backup mode, the entire block is logged

the FIRST TIME.  This is because you can get into a situation where the process copying

the datafile and DBWR are working on the same block simultaneously.  Lets say they are

and the OS blocking read factor is 512bytes (the OS reads 512 bytes from disk at a time).

 The backup program goes to read an 8k Oracle block.  The OS gives it 4k.  Meanwhile --

DBWR has asked to rewrite this block.  the OS schedules the DBWR write to occur right

now.  The entire 8k block is rewritten.  The backup program starts running again

(multi-tasking OS here) and reads the last 4k of the block.  The backup program has now

gotten an impossible block -- the head and tail are from two points in time.  We cannot

deal with that during recovery.  Hence, we log the entire block image so that during

recovery, this block is totally rewritten from redo and is consistent with itself at

least.  We can recover it from there.

 

o the datafile headers which contain the SCN of the last completed checkpoint are NOT

updated while a file is in hot backup mode.  This lets the recovery process understand

what archive redo log files might be needed to fully recover this file.

 

To limit the effect of this additional logging, you should ensure you only place one

tablepspace at a time in backup mode and bring the tablespace out of backup mode as soon

as you have backed it up.  This will reduce the number of blocks that may have to be

logged to the minimum possible.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Will be blogging again!!!

Please accept my appologies for not blogging for 8 months...... Been busy being a new father....

Will be starting to blog very soon. Please lookup this blog for new and informative issues on Oracle Database.

Thank y0u and see you soon.....