Book Image

Oracle Data Guard 11gR2 Administration : Beginner's Guide

Book Image

Oracle Data Guard 11gR2 Administration : Beginner's Guide

Overview of this book

Data Guard is the high availability, disaster recovery and data replication solution for Oracle Databases. With the huge growth of Data Guard it's getting harder to encounter an Oracle DBA not dealing with Data Guard. Since it's a common DBA task to provide high availability of databases, Data Guard is a must-know topic for every Oracle Database Administrator."Oracle Data Guard 11g R2 Beginner's Administration Guide" is a practical guide that provides all the information you will need to configure and maintain Data Guard. This book will show you what Data Guard can really do.By following the practical examples in this book, you'll learn to set up your Data Guard Broker, the management framework for Data Guard configurations. Learn and implement different data protection modes, perform role transitions between databases (switchover and failover) and configure Active Data Guard. Next, we will dive into the features of Snapshot Standby. The book progresses into looking at Data Guard configuration with other Oracle products (such as EM, RAC, and RMAN) and patch databases in Data Guard. The final chapters will cover commonly encountered Data Guard issues and Data Guard best practices, which are very important to make a Data Guard configuration perfect and take maximum advantage of Data Guard properties.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Oracle Data Guard 11gR2 Administration Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Pop Quiz Answers
Index

Oracle Data Guard fast-start failover


In Data Guard configurations, in case of any disasters in primary database systems or any corruptions or errors in the database that are not recoverable quickly, a failover can be performed manually on the standby database to convert it to a primary database and use it for production services. Another option is to automate the failover using the fast-start failover feature. A fast-start failover can be configured or managed either by DGMGRL or grid control.

If a fast-start failover is not configured and the production database is completely unavailable, and if you want to perform a failover on the standby database in such a case, you first have to understand the status of the standby database, whether all the archived logs or redo has been applied or not. Then you have to perform a failover manually. After the failover, you have to recreate a new standby database. These steps will increase the downtime of the system. Fast-start failover will be invoked...