Book Image

Oracle 11g R1 / R2 Real Application Clusters Handbook

Book Image

Oracle 11g R1 / R2 Real Application Clusters Handbook

Overview of this book

RAC or Real Application Clusters is a grid computing solution that allows multiple nodes (servers) in a clustered system to mount and open a single database that resides on shared disk storage. Should a single system (node) fail, the database service will still be available on the remaining nodes. RAC is an integral part of the Oracle database setup: one database, multiple users accessing it, in real time. This book will enable DBAs to get their finger on the pulse of the Oracle 11g RAC environment quickly and easily. This practical handbook documents how to administer a complex Oracle 11g RAC environment. It covers all areas of the Oracle 11g R1 RAC environment, with bonus R2 information included, and is indispensable if you are an Oracle DBA charged with configuring and implementing Oracle11g. It presents a complete method for the design, installation, and configuration of Oracle 11g RAC, ultimately enabling rapid administration of Oracle 11g RAC environments.Packed with real-world examples, expert tips, and troubleshooting advice, the book begins by introducing the concept of RAC and High Availability. It then dives deep into the world of RAC design, installation, and configuration, enabling you to support complex RAC environments for real-world deployments. Chapters cover RAC and High Availability, Oracle 11g RAC Architecture, Oracle 11g RAC Installation, Automatic Storage Management, Troubleshooting, Workload Management, and much more. By following the practical examples in the book, you will learn every concept of the RAC environment and how to successfully support complex Oracle 11g R1 and R2 RAC environments for various deployments in real-world situations.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Oracle 11g R1/R2 Real Application Clusters Handbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface

New ASM features and RAC


There are many new features in Oracle 11g RAC that are introduced with ASM enhancements. Many of these involve ASM configuration.

New SYSASM privilege for Oracle 11gR1 ASM

Introduced in Oracle 11gR1, the SYSASM privilege allows you to separate the database operating system credentials from ASM credentials. This can be useful in today's era of auditing controls and compliance to fulfill requirements for Sarbanes Oxley (SOX), as well as to divide storage support between system administrators and DBA staff members.

For Oracle 11g, you should now use the SYSASM privilege instead of the SYSDBA privilege to connect to and administer an ASM instance. Although before Oracle 11gR2, you were still able to manage ASM from SYSDBA, it is not recommended. In the event that you still decide to use the SYSDBA privilege to connect to an ASM instance, Oracle will send a warning to the alert log file because commands that you run using SYSDBA privileges on an ASM instance are supposed...