Duplicate in Oracle 10 to a remote server

One of my fellow DBA’s ran into a problem when trying to get duplicate working for restoring the database to another server.
After we resolved the issue and learned the lesson that a simple mistake can lead to hours of rman frustration . I thought it would be interesting to document .

The problem

Duplicate development database to new development server.

Tool Used

Rman command line

Server

AIX 5.3

After the DBA took the backup and had the backup NFS mounted on the system. He was unable to run duplicate on the new node. All auxialliary setup was complete and had seemed perfect.
An Rman catalog was used and Rman kept complaining that there were no backups to restore.

We tried a couple of things

remounted the NFS with the options rw,bg,hard,nointr,rsize=32768,wsize=32768,tcp,vers=3,timeo=600,actimeo=0

based on Note:424785.1 which we thought didnt work

Looked at Note:356199.1 and set event=”10298 trace name context forever, level 32″

This didnt help either

The duplicate script was simple

connect target test/test@test
connect catalog abc/abc@abc
connect auxiliary aux/aux@aux
run {
duplicate target database to aux
}

The commands were being executed from the auxiliary server and network config was testedto be valid.

The Solution

The problem turned out to be that the dev database was changed to be an archivelog database and the archive logs were not backed up as part of the backup process. Rman kept generating an SCN that was in the archivelogs that it could not find in the catalog at all( I’m guessing since it was connected to the target it got the info from there).
As soon as the archive logs were backed up and made available the duplicate worked like a charm.

Moral of the Story : Rman needs less cryptic messages

Technorati Tags: , ,

Duplicate in Oracle 10 to a remote server

One of my fellow DBA’s ran into a problem when trying to get duplicate working for restoring the database to another server.
After we resolved the issue and learned the lesson that a simple mistake can lead to hours of rman frustration . I thought it would be interesting to document .

The problem

Duplicate development database to new development server.

Tool Used

Rman command line

Server

AIX 5.3

After the DBA took the backup and had the backup NFS mounted on the system. He was unable to run duplicate on the new node. All auxialliary setup was complete and had seemed perfect.
An Rman catalog was used and Rman kept complaining that there were no backups to restore.

We tried a couple of things

remounted the NFS with the options rw,bg,hard,nointr,rsize=32768,wsize=32768,tcp,vers=3,timeo=600,actimeo=0

based on Note:424785.1 which we thought didnt work

Looked at Note:356199.1 and set event=”10298 trace name context forever, level 32″

This didnt help either

The duplicate script was simple

connect target test/test@test
connect catalog abc/abc@abc
connect auxiliary aux/aux@aux
run {
duplicate target database to aux
}

The commands were being executed from the auxiliary server and network config was testedto be valid.

The Solution

The problem turned out to be that the dev database was changed to be an archivelog database and the archive logs were not backed up as part of the backup process. Rman kept generating an SCN that was in the archivelogs that it could not find in the catalog at all( I’m guessing since it was connected to the target it got the info from there).
As soon as the archive logs were backed up and made available the duplicate worked like a charm.

Moral of the Story : Rman needs less cryptic messages

Technorati Tags: , ,

My First Openworld

Well thanks to the folks at Oracle I get to go to my First Oracle Openworld. While i have had the opportunity to go to IOUG and Hotsos have never had the chance to make it to Openworld.
Here is a list of the sessions i plan to attend based on my initial run thru of the schedule builder. I’m still hoping to get into the exam cram on sunday and maybe find more sessions of value

Sunday, Sep 21
08:30-10:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Real Application Clusters Scalability Panel
10:00-11:30 Remove From Schedule Oracle Security Risks
13:00-14:30 Remove From Schedule Security Roundtable
16:00-17:30 Remove From Schedule Storage: A New Paradigm for Databases (IOUG)
17:45-19:00 Keynote: James Carville and Mary Matalin
Monday, Sep 22
09:00-11:00 Oracle Keynote: Charles Phillips and Chuck Rozwat
11:30-12:30 Remove From Schedule Application Diagnostics for DBAs: Visibility into Your Application That the Middle-Tier Administrator Cannot Provide You

13:00-14:00 Remove From Schedule Implementing Oracle Active Data Guard 11g as an Active Standby Database for Production Reporting
14:30-15:30 Remove From Schedule Performance Fundamentals for Oracle Database 10g and Oracle Database 11g
16:00-17:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Database Performance: A Comprehensive View Including Linux, Scalability, New Platforms, and Solid State
17:30-18:30 Remove From Schedule How to Prevent SQL Injections
Tuesday, Sep 23
09:00-10:00 Remove From Schedule Inside Oracle Database 11g Optimizer: Removing the Mystery
09:00-10:00 Executive Solution Session: Intelligently Communicate with Customers and Optimize Billing Operations
11:30-12:30 Remove From Schedule Advanced Performance Diagnostics: What the GUI Doesn’t Tell You
13:00-14:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Active Data Guard: Standby on Steroids, Disaster Recovery Included
14:30-16:30 Keynote: Paul S. Ottelini, Intel and Thomas Kurian, Oracle
17:00-18:00 Remove From Schedule Analyze Oracle Data Guard 11g to Improve Its Operation and Performance
Wednesday, Sep 24
08:00-09:00 Remove From Schedule Morning How-To Session: Top 10 Things to Do to Green Your Life and Save Money
09:00-10:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Advanced Compression: Throw Away Half of Your Disks, and Run Your Database Faster
11:30-12:30 Remove From Schedule Encrypt All Application Data: Oracle Database 11g Tablespace Encryption
13:00-14:00 Remove From Schedule SQL Tuning Roundtable with the Experts
14:30-16:30 Keynote: Larry Ellison, Oracle and Mark Hurd, HP
17:00-18:00 Remove From Schedule Change, Change, Change …
Thursday, Sep 25
08:00-09:00 Remove From Schedule Morning How-To Session: Treading Lightly on the Planet–How to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint
09:00-10:00 Remove From Schedule Advanced Oracle Troubleshooting: No Magic Is Needed–A Systematic Approach Will Do
10:30-11:30 Remove From Schedule Oracle ACE Director Birds-of-a-Feather Tips and Techniques Panel
12:00-13:00 Remove From Schedule Offloading Work to Your Standby Database in Oracle Database 11g (IOUG)
13:30-14:30 Remove From Schedule Real-World Database Performance Roundtable
15:00-16:00 Remove From Schedule Reorganizing Objects

My First Openworld

Well thanks to the folks at Oracle I get to go to my First Oracle Openworld. While i have had the opportunity to go to IOUG and Hotsos have never had the chance to make it to Openworld.
Here is a list of the sessions i plan to attend based on my initial run thru of the schedule builder. I’m still hoping to get into the exam cram on sunday and maybe find more sessions of value

Sunday, Sep 21
08:30-10:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Real Application Clusters Scalability Panel
10:00-11:30 Remove From Schedule Oracle Security Risks
13:00-14:30 Remove From Schedule Security Roundtable
16:00-17:30 Remove From Schedule Storage: A New Paradigm for Databases (IOUG)
17:45-19:00 Keynote: James Carville and Mary Matalin
Monday, Sep 22
09:00-11:00 Oracle Keynote: Charles Phillips and Chuck Rozwat
11:30-12:30 Remove From Schedule Application Diagnostics for DBAs: Visibility into Your Application That the Middle-Tier Administrator Cannot Provide You

13:00-14:00 Remove From Schedule Implementing Oracle Active Data Guard 11g as an Active Standby Database for Production Reporting
14:30-15:30 Remove From Schedule Performance Fundamentals for Oracle Database 10g and Oracle Database 11g
16:00-17:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Database Performance: A Comprehensive View Including Linux, Scalability, New Platforms, and Solid State
17:30-18:30 Remove From Schedule How to Prevent SQL Injections
Tuesday, Sep 23
09:00-10:00 Remove From Schedule Inside Oracle Database 11g Optimizer: Removing the Mystery
09:00-10:00 Executive Solution Session: Intelligently Communicate with Customers and Optimize Billing Operations
11:30-12:30 Remove From Schedule Advanced Performance Diagnostics: What the GUI Doesn’t Tell You
13:00-14:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Active Data Guard: Standby on Steroids, Disaster Recovery Included
14:30-16:30 Keynote: Paul S. Ottelini, Intel and Thomas Kurian, Oracle
17:00-18:00 Remove From Schedule Analyze Oracle Data Guard 11g to Improve Its Operation and Performance
Wednesday, Sep 24
08:00-09:00 Remove From Schedule Morning How-To Session: Top 10 Things to Do to Green Your Life and Save Money
09:00-10:00 Remove From Schedule Oracle Advanced Compression: Throw Away Half of Your Disks, and Run Your Database Faster
11:30-12:30 Remove From Schedule Encrypt All Application Data: Oracle Database 11g Tablespace Encryption
13:00-14:00 Remove From Schedule SQL Tuning Roundtable with the Experts
14:30-16:30 Keynote: Larry Ellison, Oracle and Mark Hurd, HP
17:00-18:00 Remove From Schedule Change, Change, Change …
Thursday, Sep 25
08:00-09:00 Remove From Schedule Morning How-To Session: Treading Lightly on the Planet–How to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint
09:00-10:00 Remove From Schedule Advanced Oracle Troubleshooting: No Magic Is Needed–A Systematic Approach Will Do
10:30-11:30 Remove From Schedule Oracle ACE Director Birds-of-a-Feather Tips and Techniques Panel
12:00-13:00 Remove From Schedule Offloading Work to Your Standby Database in Oracle Database 11g (IOUG)
13:30-14:30 Remove From Schedule Real-World Database Performance Roundtable
15:00-16:00 Remove From Schedule Reorganizing Objects

Dataguard 11g – No more same hardware/software requirement(partially)

While trying to look at dataguard as a reporting environment i found a very neat and fundamentally cost saving feature added on to dataguard in Oracle 11.
According to the Docs

“As of Oracle Database 11g, Data Guard provides increased flexibility for Data Guard configurations in which the primary and standby systems may have different CPU architectures, operating systems (for example, Windows & Linux), operating system binaries (32-bit/64-bit), and Oracle database binaries (32-bit/64-bit).

This is very interesting and actually provide a lot of cost savings to companies that have systems using Windows based servers and can purchase cheaper linux boxes and make that available . The problem is based on the matrix in note 413484.1 pretty much only Windows and Linux can live in a mixed environment . AIX and Solaris can only live with the same architecture.

Dataguard 11g – No more same hardware/software requirement(partially)

While trying to look at dataguard as a reporting environment i found a very neat and fundamentally cost saving feature added on to dataguard in Oracle 11.
According to the Docs

“As of Oracle Database 11g, Data Guard provides increased flexibility for Data Guard configurations in which the primary and standby systems may have different CPU architectures, operating systems (for example, Windows & Linux), operating system binaries (32-bit/64-bit), and Oracle database binaries (32-bit/64-bit).

This is very interesting and actually provide a lot of cost savings to companies that have systems using Windows based servers and can purchase cheaper linux boxes and make that available . The problem is based on the matrix in note 413484.1 pretty much only Windows and Linux can live in a mixed environment . AIX and Solaris can only live with the same architecture.

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