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Oracle® Database Oracle Clusterware and Oracle Real Application Clusters Administration and Deployment Guide
10
g
Release 2 (10.2)
Part Number B14197-03
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Contents
Title and Copyright Information
Preface
Audience
Documentation Accessibility
Related Documents
Conventions
What's New in Real Application Clusters Administration and Deployment?
Oracle Database 10
g
Release 2 (10.2) New Features in RAC Administration and Deployment
Oracle Database 10
g
Release 1 (10.1) New Features for RAC Administration
1
Introduction to Oracle Clusterware and Oracle Real Application Clusters
Oracle Clusterware and Oracle Real Application Clusters
The Oracle Clusterware Architecture and Oracle Clusterware Processing
Oracle Clusterware Software Component Processing Details
The Oracle Clusterware Software Components
Oracle Clusterware Processes on UNIX-Based Systems
Oracle Clusterware Services on Windows-Based Systems
The Real Application Clusters Architecture and Real Application Clusters Processing
The Real Application Clusters Software Components
Oracle Clusterware Components and High Availability
The Oracle Clusterware Voting Disk and Oracle Cluster Registry
Oracle Clusterware High Availability and the Application Programming Interface
Workload Management with Real Application Clusters
Introduction to Installing Oracle Clusterware and Real Application Clusters
Oracle Clusterware Installation Process Description
Real Application Clusters Installation and Database Creation Process Description
Cloning Oracle Clusterware and RAC Software in Grid Environments
Additional Considerations and Features for Real Application Clusters
Managing Real Application Clusters Environments
Designing Real Application Clusters Environments
Administrative Tools for Real Application Clusters Environments
Monitoring Real Application Clusters Environments
Evaluating Performance in Real Application Clusters Environments
2
Introduction to Oracle Clusterware and RAC Administration and Deployment
Real Application Clusters Documentation Overview
Platform-Specific Oracle Real Application Clusters Installation and Configuration Guides
Introduction to Administering Real Application Clusters
Administering Real Application Clusters
Voting Disk and Oracle Cluster Registry Device Administration
Database Instance Management and Database Administration in RAC
Storage Management in Real Application Clusters
Oracle Clusterware for Real Application Clusters
Additional Real Application Clusters Administrative Topics
Overview of Using Enterprise Manager with Real Application Clusters
Overview of Deploying Applications on Real Application Clusters
Code Changes are Not Required for Applications
Implementing Oracle Features with Real Application Clusters
Automatic Storage Management
Cluster File Systems in Real Application Clusters
Storage Management Features and Real Application Clusters
Services in Oracle Database 10
g
The Oracle Clusterware and High Availability in Real Application Clusters
High Availability with Oracle Clusterware
The Oracle Clusterware and High Availability
Additional Oracle High Availability Features and Solutions
Connection Load Balancing with Real Application Clusters
Recovery Manager (RMAN) in Real Application Clusters
Data Guard
Primary/Secondary Instance Configurations in Earlier Releases
3
Administering Oracle Clusterware Components
Administering Voting Disks in Real Application Clusters
Backing up Voting Disks
Recovering Voting Disks
Changing the Voting Disk Configuration after Installing Real Application Clusters
Administering the Oracle Cluster Registry in Real Application Clusters
Adding, Replacing, Repairing, and Removing the OCR
Adding an Oracle Cluster Registry
Replacing an Oracle Cluster Registry
Repairing an Oracle Cluster Registry Configuration on a Local Node
Removing an Oracle Cluster Registry
Managing Backups and Recovering the OCR Using OCR Backup Files
Restoring the Oracle Cluster Registry from Automatically Generated OCR Backups
Diagnosing OCR Problems with the OCRDUMP and OCRCHECK Utilities
Using the OCRDUMP Utility
Using the OCRCHECK Utility
Overriding the Oracle Cluster Registry Data Loss Protection Mechanism
Administering the Oracle Cluster Registry with OCR Exports
Importing Oracle Cluster Registry Content on UNIX-Based Systems
Importing Oracle Cluster Registry Content on Windows-Based Systems
Implementing the Oracle Hardware Assisted Resilient Data Initiative for the OCR
Upgrading and Downgrading the OCR Configuration in Real Application Clusters
HARD-Compatible OCR Blocks in Oracle9
i
Administering Multiple Cluster Interconnects on UINIX-Based Platforms
Failover and Failback and CLUSTER_INTERCONNECTS
4
Administering Storage
Overview of Storage in Oracle Real Application Clusters
Datafile Access in Real Application Clusters
Redo Log File Storage in Real Application Clusters
Automatic Undo Management in Real Application Clusters
Automatic Storage Management in Real Application Clusters
Automatic Storage Management Components in RAC
Modifying Disk Group Configurations for ASM in RAC
Standalone ASM Disk Group Management
Administering ASM Instances and Disk Groups with Enterprise Manager in RAC
Administering ASM Instances with SRVCTL in RAC
5
Administering Database Instances and Cluster Databases
Overview of Real Application Clusters Management Tools
Overview of Administering Real Application Clusters with Enterprise Manager
Overview of Administering Real Application Clusters with SQL*Plus
Overview of Administering Real Application Clusters with SRVCTL
Starting and Stopping Instances and Real Application Clusters Databases
Starting Up and Shutting Down with Enterprise Manager
Starting Up and Shutting Down with SQL*Plus
Intermittent Windows Shutdown Issue in RAC Environments
Lengthy Startup of OracleDBConsole and OracleCRService on Windows
Starting Up and Shutting Down with SRVCTL
Customizing How Oracle Clusterware Manages RAC Databases
Switching Between the Automatic and Manual Policies
Overview of Initialization Parameter Files in Real Application Clusters
Setting Server Parameter File Parameter Values for Real Application Clusters
Parameter File Search Order in Real Application Clusters
Initialization Parameter Use in Real Application Clusters
Parameters that Must Have Identical Settings on All Instances
Parameters That Must Have Unique Settings on All Instances
Parameters that Should Have Identical Settings on All Instances
Summary of Parameter Use in Real Application Clusters Databases
Backing Up the Server Parameter File
6
Introduction to Workload Management
Introduction to Workload Management and Application High Availability
Service Deployment Options
Using Oracle Services
Default Service Connections
Connection Load Balancing
Fast Application Notification
Overview of Fast Application Notification
Application High Availability with Services and FAN
Managing Unplanned Outages
Managing Planned Outages
Fast Application Notification High Availability Events
Using Fast Application Notification Callouts
Load Balancing Advisory
Overview of the Load Balancing Advisory
Configuring Your Environment to Use the Load Balancing Advisory
Load Balancing Advisory FAN Events
Oracle Clients that Are Integrated with Fast Application Notification
Enabling Java Database Connectivity Clients to Receive FAN Events
Using FAN with Thick JDBC and Thin JDBC Clients
Enabling Oracle Call Interface Clients to Receive FAN High Availability Events
Enabling ODP.NET Clients to Receive FAN High Availability Events
Enabling ODP.NET Clients to Receive FAN Load Balancing Advisory Events
Services and Distributed Transaction Processing in RAC
Enabling Distributed Transaction Processing for Services
Administering Services
Administering Services with Enterprise Manager, DBCA, PL/SQL, and SRVCTL
Administering Services with Enterprise Manager
Service-Related Tasks that You Can Perform with Enterprise Manager
Cluster Managed Database Services Page
Cluster Managed Database Services Detail Page
Create Services Page
Accessing the Enterprise Manager Services Pages
Administering Services with the Database Configuration Assistant
Using the Database Configuration Assistant to Add and Modify Services
Using the Database Configuration Assistant to Administer Services
Administering Services with the PL/SQL DBMS_SERVICE Package
CREATE_SERVICE
MODIFY_SERVICE
DELETE_SERVICE
START_SERVICE
STOP_SERVICE
DISCONNECT_SESSION
Administering Services with SRVCTL
Creating Services with SRVCTL
Starting and Stopping Services with SRVCTL
Enabling and Disabling Services with SRVCTL
Relocating Services with SRVCTL
Obtaining the Statuses of Services with SRVCTL
Obtaining the Configuration of Services with SRVCTL
Measuring Performance by Service Using the Automatic Workload Repository
Service Thresholds and Alerts
Services and Thresholds Alerts Example
Enabling Event Notification for Connection Failures in Real Application Clusters
7
Configuring Recovery Manager and Archiving
Overview of Configuring RMAN for Real Application Clusters
Configuring the RMAN Snapshot Control File Location
Configuring the RMAN Control File and SPFILE Autobackup Feature
Configuring Channels for RMAN in Real Application Clusters
Configuring Channels to use Automatic Workload Balancing
Configuring Channels to Use a Specific Channel
Managing Archived Redo Logs Using RMAN in Real Application Clusters
Archived Redo Log File Conventions in RAC
RMAN Archiving Configuration Scenarios
Automatic Storage Management and Cluster File System Archiving Scheme
Advantages of the Cluster File System Archiving Scheme
Initialization Parameter Settings for the Cluster File System Archiving Scheme
Location of Archived Logs for the Cluster File System Archiving Scheme
Non-Cluster File System Local Archiving Scheme
Considerations for Using Non-Cluster File System Local Archiving
Initialization Parameter Settings for Non-Cluster File System Local Archiving
Location of Archived Logs for Non-Cluster File System Local Archiving
File System Configuration for Non-Cluster File System Local Archiving
Changing the Archiving Mode in Real Application Clusters
Monitoring the Archiver Processes
8
Managing Backup and Recovery
RMAN Backup Scenario for Non-Cluster File System Backups
RMAN Restore Scenarios for Real Application Clusters
Cluster File System Restore Scheme
Non-Cluster File System Restore Scheme
Using RMAN or Enterprise Manager to Restore the Server Parameter File (SPFILE)
RMAN Recovery Through Resetlogs in Real Application Clusters
RMAN and Oracle Net in Real Application Clusters
Instance Recovery in Real Application Clusters
Single Node Failure in Real Application Clusters
Multiple-Node Failures in Real Application Clusters
Using RMAN to Create Backups in Real Application Clusters
Channel Connections to Cluster Instances
Node Affinity Awareness of Fast Connections
Deleting Archived Redo Logs after a Successful Backup
Autolocation for Backup and Restore Commands
Media Recovery in Real Application Clusters
Parallel Recovery in Real Application Clusters
Parallel Recovery with RMAN
Disabling Parallel Recovery
Disabling Instance and Crash Recovery Parallelism
Disabling Media Recovery Parallelism
Using a Flash Recovery Area in Real Application Clusters
9
Administrative Options
Enterprise Manager Tasks for Real Application Clusters
Using Enterprise Manager Grid Control to Discover Nodes and Instances
Enterprise Manager Pages for Real Application Clusters
Databases Summary Page
Cluster Database Home Page
Cluster Database Instances Pages
The Databases Overview Page for Real Application Clusters
The Cluster Home Page for Real Application Clusters
Real Application Clusters Administration Procedures for Enterprise Manager
Administering Enterprise Manager Jobs in Real Application Clusters
Creating Enterprise Manager Jobs in Real Application Clusters
Administering Alerts in Real Application Clusters with Enterprise Manager
Performing Scheduled Maintenance Using Defined Blackouts in Enterprise Manager
Additional Information About SQL*Plus in Real Application Clusters
How SQL*Plus Commands Affect Instances
Verifying that Instances are Running
Quiescing Real Application Clusters Databases
Quiesced State and Cold Backups
Administering System and Network Interfaces with OIFCFG
Defining Network Interfaces with OIFCFG
Syntax and Commands for the OIFCFG Command-Line Tool
Changing VIP Addresses
10
Adding and Deleting Nodes and Instances on UNIX-Based Systems
Cloning Oracle Clusterware and RAC Software in Grid Environments
Quick-Start Node and Instance Addition and Deletion Procedures
Adding an Oracle Clusterware Home to a New Node
Adding an Oracle Clusterware Home to a New Node Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Adding an Oracle Clusterware Home to a New Node Using OUI in Silent Mode
Adding an Oracle Home with RAC to a New Node
Adding an Oracle Home with RAC to a New Node Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Adding an Oracle Home with RAC to a New Node Using OUI in Silent Mode
Deleting an Oracle Home with RAC from an Existing Node
Deleting an Oracle Home with RAC Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Deleting an Oracle Home with RAC Using OUI in Silent Mode
Deleting an Oracle Clusterware Home from an Existing Node
Deleting an Oracle Clusterware Home Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Deleting an Oracle Clusterware Home Using OUI in Silent Mode
Detailed Node and Instance Addition and Deletion Procedures
Overview of Node Addition Procedures
Step 1: Connecting New Nodes to the Cluster
Making Physical Connections
Installing the Operating System
Creating Oracle Users
Verifying the Installation with the Cluster Verification Utility
Checking the Installation
Step 2: Extending Clusterware and Oracle Software to New Nodes
Adding Nodes at the Vendor Clusterware Layer
Adding Nodes at the Oracle Clusterware Layer
Step 3: Preparing Storage on New Nodes
Raw Device Storage Preparation for New Nodes
Step 4: Adding Nodes at the Oracle RAC Database Layer
Step 5: Adding Database Instances to New Nodes
Using Enterprise Manager to Add Database Instances to New Nodes
Using DBCA in Interactive Mode to Add Database Instances to New Nodes
Using DBCA in Silent Mode to Add Database Instances to New Nodes
Adding Nodes that Already Have Clusterware and Oracle Software to a Cluster
Overview of Node Deletion Procedures
Step 1: Deleting Instances from Real Application Clusters Databases
Using Enterprise Manager to Delete Database Instances from Existing Nodes
Using DBCA in Interactive Mode to Delete Database Instances from Existing Nodes
Using DBCA in Silent Mode to Delete Instance from Existing Nodes
Step 2: Deleting Nodes from Real Application Clusters Databases
Step 3: ASM Instance Clean-Up Procedures for Node Deletion
11
Adding and Deleting Nodes and Instances on Windows-Based Systems
Cloning Oracle Clusterware and RAC Software in Grid Environments
Quick-Start Node and Database Instance Addition and Deletion Procedures
Adding an Oracle Clusterware Home to a New Node
Adding an Oracle Clusterware Home to a New Node Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Adding an Oracle Clusterware Home to a New Node Using OUI in Silent Mode
Adding an Oracle Home with RAC to a New Node
Adding an Oracle Home with RAC to a New Node Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Adding an Oracle Home with RAC to a New Node Using OUI in Silent Mode
Deleting an Oracle Home with RAC from an Existing Node
Deleting an Oracle Home with RAC Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Deleting an Oracle Home with RAC Using OUI in Silent Mode
Deleting an Oracle Clusterware Home from an Existing Node
Deleting an Oracle Clusterware Home Using OUI in Interactive Mode
Deleting an Oracle Clusterware Home Using OUI in Silent Mode
Detailed Node and Database Instance Addition and Deletion Procedures
Overview of Node Addition Procedures
Step 1: Connecting New Nodes to the Cluster
Making Physical Connections
Installing the Operating System
Verifying the Installation with the Cluster Verification Utility
Checking the Installation
Step 2: Extending Oracle Software to New Nodes at the Oracle Clusterware Layer
Step 3: Preparing Storage on New Nodes
Raw Device Storage Preparation for New Nodes
Configure Raw Partitions
Step 4: Adding Nodes at the Oracle RAC Database Layer
Step 5: Adding Database Instances to New Nodes
Using Enterprise Manager to Add Database Instances to New Nodes
Using DBCA in Interactive Mode to Add Database Instances to New Nodes
Using DBCA in Silent Mode to Add Database Instances to New Nodes
Connecting to iSQL*Plus after Adding a Node
Adding Nodes that Already Have Clusterware and Oracle Software to a Cluster
Overview of Node Deletion Procedures
Step 1: Deleting Instances from Real Application Clusters Databases
Using Enterprise Manager to Delete Database Instances from Existing Nodes
Using DBCA in Interactive Mode to Delete Database Instances from Existing Nodes
Using DBCA in Silent Mode to Delete Instance from Existing Nodes
Step 2: Deleting Nodes from Real Application Clusters Databases
Step 3: ASM Instance Clean-Up Procedures for Node Deletion
12
Design and Deployment Techniques
Service Configuration Recommendations for High Availability
Service Topologies and Workload Management in Real Application Clusters
Recommended Real Application Clusters Service Configurations
Automatic Workload Repository
Setting Service Levels and Thresholds
How Oracle Clusterware Manages Service Relocation
General Database Deployment Topics for Real Application Clusters
Tablespace Use in Real Application Clusters
Object Creation and Performance in Real Application Clusters
Node Addition and Deletion and the SYSAUX Tablespace in Real Application Clusters
Distributed Transactions and Real Application Clusters
13
Monitoring Performance
Overview of Monitoring Real Application Clusters Databases
Verifying the Interconnect Settings for Real Application Clusters
Influencing Interconnect Processing
Performance Views in Real Application Clusters
Real Application Clusters Performance Statistics
The Content of Real Application Clusters Statistics
Automatic Workload Repository in Real Application Clusters Environments
Monitoring Real Application Clusters Statistics and Events
RAC Statistics and Events in AWR and Statspack Reports
Real Application Clusters Wait Events
Monitoring Performance by Analyzing GCS and GES Statistics
Analyzing Cache Fusion Impact in Real Application Clusters
Analyzing Performance Using GCS and GES Statistics
Analyzing Cache Fusion Transfer Impact Using GCS Statistics
Analyzing Response Times Based on Wait Events
Monitoring Performance with Oracle Enterprise Manager
Overview of Enterprise Manager Monitoring
Collection-Based Monitoring
Metrics
Alerts
Thresholds
Real-Time Performance Monitoring
Using the Cluster Database Performance Page
Cluster Host Load Average Chart
Global Cache Block Access Latency Chart
Average Active Sessions Chart
Database Throughput Charts
Top Consumers Page
Top Sessions Page
Instance Activity Page
Top Segments Page
Database Locks Page
Using the Cluster Database Instance Performance Page
Page Characteristics
Creating Reports
Using the Cluster Performance Page
Using the Cluster Interconnects Page
14
Making Applications Highly Available Using Oracle Clusterware
Overview of Using the Oracle Clusterware Commands to Enable High Availability
Overview of Managing Custom Applications with Oracle Clusterware Commands
Creating Application Profiles
Application Resource Profiles
Required and Optional Profile Attributes
Application Profile Attributes
Default Profile Locations
Example of Using Oracle Clusterware Commands to Create Application Resources
Using crs_profile to Create An Application Resource Profile
The Oracle Clusterware Required Resources List
Creating VIPs for Applications
Application Placement Policies
Optional Resources in Placement Decisions
Oracle Clusterware Action Program Guidelines
How Oracle Clusterware Runs Action Programs
User Defined Attributes
Windows crsuser Program
Using Oracle Clusterware Commands
Registering Application Resources
Starting Application Resources
Relocating Applications and Application Resources
Stopping Applications and Application Resources
Managing Automatic Oracle Clusterware Resource Operations for Action Scripts
Preventing Automatic Database Instance Restarts
Automatically Manage Restart Attempts Counter for Resources
Implications of Restart and Timeout Features for Previous Releases
Unregistering Applications and Application Resources
Displaying Clusterware Application and Application Resource Status Information
15
Application-Specific Deployment Topics
General Deployment Strategies for Real Application Clusters-Based Applications
Deploying OLTP Applications in Real Application Clusters
Flexible Implementation with Cache Fusion
Deploying Data Warehouse Applications with Real Application Clusters
Speed-Up for Data Warehouse Applications on Real Application Clusters
Parallel Execution in Data Warehouse Systems and RAC
Using Parallel Instance Groups
Data Security Considerations in Real Application Clusters
Transparent Data Encryption and Wallets
Windows Firewall Considerations
Oracle Executables Requiring Firewall Exceptions
Configuring the Windows Firewall
Troubleshooting Windows Firewall Exceptions
A
Troubleshooting
Overview of Troubleshooting Real Application Clusters
Diagnosing Oracle Clusterware High Availability Components
Dynamic Debugging
Component Level Debugging
Oracle Clusterware Shutdown and Startup
Enabling and Disabling Oracle Clusterware Daemons
Diagnostics Collection Script
The Oracle Clusterware Alerts
Resource Debugging
Checking the Health of the Clusterware
Clusterware Log Files and the Unified Log Directory Structure
The Cluster Ready Services Daemon (crsd) Log Files
Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) Log Files
Cluster Synchronization Services (CSS) Log Files
Event Manager (EVM) Log Files
RACG Log Files
Troubleshooting the Oracle Cluster Registry
Using the OCRDUMP Utility to View Oracle Cluster Registry Content
Using the OCRCHECK Utility
Oracle Cluster Registry Troubleshooting
Enabling Additional Tracing for Real Application Clusters High Availability
Generating Additional Trace Information for a Running Resource
Verifying Event Manager Daemon Communications
Diagnosing Oracle Real Application Clusters Components
Where to Find Files for Analyzing Errors
Background Thread Trace Files in Real Application Clusters
User Process Trace Files in Real Application Clusters
Using Instance-Specific Alert Files in Real Application Clusters
Enabling Tracing for Java-Based Tools and Utilities in Real Application Clusters
Resolving Pending Shutdown Issues
Using the Cluster Verification Utility
Cluster Verification Utility Requirements
Understanding CVU Commands, Help, Output, and Nodelist Shortcuts
Using CVU Help
Verbose Mode and UNKNOWN Output
Cluster Verification Utility Nodelist Shortcuts
Cluster Verification Utility Configuration File
Performing Various CVU Tests
Cluster Verification Utility System Requirements Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility Storage Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility Connectivity Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility User and Permissions Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility Node Comparisons and Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility Installation Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility Oracle Clusterware Component Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility Cluster Integrity Verifications
Cluster Verification Utility Argument and Option Definitions
Known Issues for the Cluster Verification Utility
Database Versions Supported by Cluster Verification Utility
Linux Shared Storage Accessibility (ssa) Check Reports Limitations
Shared Disk Discovery on Red Hat Linux
B
High Availability Oracle Clusterware Command-Line Reference and C API
Using Oracle Clusterware Commands
Application Profile Syntax
Security and Permissions
The Oracle Clusterware Commands
crs_getperm
Syntax and Options for crs_getperm
Example of crs_getperm
crs_profile
Syntax and Options for crs_profile
Examples of crs_profile
Errors for crs_profile
crs_register
Syntax and Options for crs_register
Example of crs_register
Errors for crs_register
Related Commands for crs_register
crs_relocate
Syntax and Options for crs_relocate
Example of crs_relocate
Errors for crs_relocate
crs_setperm
Syntax and Options for crs_setperm
Example of crs_setperm
crs_stat
Syntax and Options for crs_stat
Examples of crs_stat
crs_start
Syntax and Options for crs_start
Examples of crs_start
Errors for crs_start
crs_stop
Syntax and Options for crs_stop
Examples of crs_stop
crs_unregister
Syntax and Options for crs_unregister
Example of crs_unregister
Errors for crs_unregister
C Application Programming Interface to Oracle Clusterware
clscrs_init_crs
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_term_crs
Parameter
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_getnodename
Parameters
Syntax
clscrs_env_create
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_env_set
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_env_delete
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_env_format
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_start_resource
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_stop_resource
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_check_resource
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_register_resource
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_unregister_resource
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
clscrs_stat
Parameters
Returns
Syntax
Functions for Managing Resource Structures
Export Operations
Stringpair Operations
Splist Operations
Resource Operations
Resource List Operations
C
Oracle Clusterware Messages
CRS—Oracle Clusterware Messages
D
Oracle Cluster Registry Configuration Tool Command Syntax
The OCR Configuration Tool Command Syntax and Options
E
Server Control Utility Reference
Overview of SRVCTL for Administering Real Application Clusters
Guidelines for Using SRVCTL in Real Application Clusters
Obtaining Command-Line Help for SRVCTL
SRVCTL Command Syntax and Options
SRVCTL Cluster Database Configuration Tasks
SRVCTL General Cluster Database Administration Tasks
SRVCTL Node-Level Tasks
SRVCTL Command Reference
SRVCTL Commands
SRVCTL Commands Summary
SRVCTL Objects Summary
srvctl add
srvctl add database
srvctl add instance
srvctl add service
srvctl add nodeapps
srvctl add asm
srvctl config
srvctl config database
srvctl config service
srvctl config nodeapps
srvctl config asm
srvctl config listener
srvctl enable
srvctl enable database
srvctl enable instance
srvctl enable service
srvctl enable asm
srvctl disable
srvctl disable database
srvctl disable instance
srvctl disable service
srvctl disable asm
srvctl start
srvctl start database
srvctl start instance
srvctl start service
srvctl start nodeapps
srvctl start asm
srvctl start listener
srvctl stop
srvctl stop database
srvctl stop instance
srvctl stop service
srvctl stop nodeapps
srvctl stop asm
srvctl stop listener
srvctl modify
srvctl modify database
srvctl modify instance
srvctl modify service
srvctl modify nodeapps
srvctl relocate
srvctl relocate service
srvctl status
srvctl status database
srvctl status instance
srvctl status service
srvctl status nodeapps
srvctl status asm
srvctl getenv
srvctl getenv database
srvctl getenv instance
srvctl getenv service
srvctl getenv nodeapps
srvctl setenv and unsetenv
srvctl setenv database
srvctl setenv instance
srvctl setenv service
srvctl setenv nodeapps
srvctl unsetenv database
srvctl unsetenv instance
srvctl unsetenv service
srvctl unsetenv nodeapps
srvctl remove
srvctl remove database
srvctl remove instance
srvctl remove service
srvctl remove nodeapps
srvctl remove asm
F
Oracle Real Application Clusters Tools Messages
Overview of Real Application Clusters-Specific Messages
Prefixes and Message Codes for RAC-Specific Messages
Types of Real Application Clusters Messages and Related Files
PRKA—Cluster Node Applications Messages
PRKC—Cluster Command Messages
PRKD—Global Services Daemon Messages
PRKE—Global Services Daemon Controller Utility Messages
PRKH—Server Manager (SRVM) Messages
PRKI—Cluster Pre-Install Messages
PRKN—Server Manager (SRVM) System Library Messages
PRKO—Server Control (SRVCTL) Utility Messages
PRKP—Cluster Database Management Messages
PRKR—Cluster Registry Messages
PRKS—Automatic Storage Management Messages
PRKU—Command-Line Parser Utility Messages
PRKV—Virtual IP Configuration Assistant Messages
Glossary
Index