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Oracle® Database 2 Day DBA
10g Release 2 (10.2)

Part Number B14196-02
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Overview of Database Backup and Recovery

The focus in Oracle backup and recovery is generally on the physical backup of database files, which permit the full reconstruction of your database. The files protected by the backup and recovery facilities built into Enterprise Manager include datafiles, control files, server parameter files (SPFILEs), and archived redo log files. With these files your database can be reconstructed. The backup mechanisms that work at the physical level protect against damage at the file level, such as the accidental deletion of a datafile or the failure of a disk drive.

Logical-level backups, such as exporting database objects like tables or tablespaces, are a useful supplement to physical backups for some purposes. Nevertheless, logical backups cannot protect your entire database. An effective backup strategy must be based on physical-level backups.

Oracle Database's flashback features provide a range of physical and logical data recovery tools as efficient, easy-to-use alternatives to physical and logical backups. The flashback features enable you to reverse the effects of unwanted database changes without restoring datafiles from backup or performing media recovery.

This chapter introduces the following logical-level flashback features:

Neither of the preceding features requires advance preparation such as creating logical-level exports to allow for retrieval of your lost data. Both can be used while your database is available. Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Basics discusses the flashback features of the Oracle database at greater length.

The Oracle Enterprise Manager physical backup and recovery features are built on the Recovery Manager (RMAN) command-line client. Enterprise Manager makes available much of the functionality of RMAN, and provides wizards and automatic strategies to simplify and further automate RMAN-based backup and recovery.


See Also:

Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Basics and Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Advanced User's Guide for more details on the full range of Oracle Database backup capabilities

Oracle Backup, Restore, and Recovery Concepts

To back up your database is to make copies of your datafiles, control file, and archived redo logs (if your database runs in ARCHIVELOG mode). Restoring a database from a backup means copying the physical files that make up the database from a backup medium (disk or tape) to their locations during normal database operation. Recovery of your database is the process of updating database files restored from a backup with the changes made to the database since the backup, typically using redo log files.

Consistent and Inconsistent Backups

A backup can be consistent or inconsistent. A backup is consistent when there are no changes in the redo log that have not already been applied to the datafiles at the time of the backup.

To make a consistent backup, your database must have been shut down normally. It cannot be reopened for the duration of the backup. In shutting down the database, all committed changes in the redo log are written to the datafiles, so the datafiles are in a transaction-consistent state. This process is known as an offline backup because the entire database is offline for the duration of the backup.

In contrast to a consistent backup, an inconsistent backup is made while the database is open. In an inconsistent backup, the online redo logs contain changes that have not yet been applied to the datafiles. The datafiles are not in a transaction-consistent state. The database must be run in ARCHIVELOG mode to preserve the redo log. The online redo log at the moment of the backup must be archived and backed up along with the datafiles to preserve these changes.

In spite of the name, an inconsistent backup is as robust a form of backup as a consistent backup. The great advantage to making inconsistent backups is that you can back up your database while the database is open for updates.

Restoring from Consistent and Inconsistent Backups

When you restore your datafiles from a consistent backup, you can open the database immediately. When datafiles are restored from an inconsistent backup, you cannot open the database until committed changes recorded in the redo logs are applied to the datafiles, bringing them to a transaction-consistent state. The process of applying changes from the redo log to the datafiles restored from an inconsistent backup is called media recovery.

Media Recovery

If you restore the archived redo logs and the datafiles from backups, then you must perform media recovery before you can open the database. Any database transactions in the archived redo logs not already reflected in the datafiles are applied to the datafiles, bringing them to a transaction-consistent state before the database is opened.

Media recovery requires a control file, datafiles (typically restored from backup), and online and archived redo logs containing changes since the time the datafiles were backed up. Media recovery is most often used to recover from a media failure, such as the loss of a file or disk, or a user error, such as the deletion of the contents of a table.

There are two forms of media recovery: complete recovery and point-in-time recovery. In complete recovery, datafiles are restored from backup; all changes from the archived and online redo logs are applied to the datafiles. The database is returned to its state at the time of failure and can be opened with no loss of committed changes.

In point-in-time recovery, you return your database to its contents at a target time of your choosing in the past. You start with a backup of datafiles created prior to the target time and a complete set of archived redo log files from the time of that backup through the target time. During recovery, each change between the backup time and the target time is applied to the datafiles.

Point-in-time recovery can return your whole database to its state at any time between the time of your backup and the most recent change in the archived redo logs. All changes after the target time are discarded. Point-in-time recovery is also sometimes called incomplete recovery because you do not recover the complete set of changes to your database.

Enterprise Manager provides a convenient interface to both complete and point-in-time recovery in the form of a Recovery Wizard. However, this book focuses on complete recovery. Point-in-time recovery is discussed at more length in Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Basics.

The Flash Recovery Area

To simplify the management of backup and recovery related files, Oracle enables you to create a flash recovery area for your database. You must designate the following:

  • A location, which is typically a directory on disk

  • A maximum disk quota for the flash recovery area

  • A retention policy to specify your database recoverability goals

You can then direct backup-related activities, including archiving of redo logs, to store generated files in the flash recovery area. Oracle Database automatically manages this storage, deleting files that are no longer required on disk to meet your recoverability objectives if space is required for other files. A backup moved to tape is eligible for automatic deletion from the flash recovery area. Periodically copying backups to tape frees space in the flash recovery area for other files.

A flash recovery area simplifies backup storage management tasks. Therefore, it is strongly recommended. Except as noted, examples in this chapter assume the use of a flash recovery area.

The RMAN Repository

RMAN maintains a record of all database files, backup and recovery files, and backup history for your database. This record is referred to as the RMAN repository.

Every backup action that you perform through RMAN or Enterprise Manager is recorded in the repository, along with the location of and other metadata about every backup created by RMAN on disk or tape. If you back up a file without using RMAN, such as by copying the file on disk at the host operating system level, then you can add information about that copy to the RMAN repository as well. At recovery time, you can issue a command such as RESTORE DATABASE. Oracle uses the records in the repository to select backups on disk and tape needed to complete the recovery.

The primary location for the RMAN repository is in the database control file. This is one more reason why protecting your control file is a vital part of your backup strategy. In some installations, a second copy of the RMAN repository for one or more Oracle databases is stored in a set of tables called the recovery catalog. The recovery catalog is located in a separate Oracle database. Use of a recovery catalog is optional and is beyond the scope of this book.