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Easy Database Upgrade using Transient Logical Database
Starting
with Oracle Database 11g release 1, the Oracle MAA implemented best
practices for performing rolling database upgrades (e.g. upgrade to new
patch set or new Oracle Database release) using Active Data Guard in a
rolling manner with a transient logical Standby. In Oracle Database 12c
Release 1, the 'Rolling Upgrade Using Oracle Active Data Guard' feature
provides a streamlined method of performing rolling upgrades reducing
some 42 steps down to 6 using the DBMS_ROLLING PL/SQL package. This
demonstration shows just how simple and controlled the rolling upgrade
process is now with this new method.
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demo
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Far Sync Zero Data Loss at any Distance - Active Data Guard
The
impact that synchronous zero data loss protection has on database
performance can lead to undesirable compromises. Customers with large
distance between sites must compromise on protection and use
asynchronous transport, accepting data loss in return for acceptable
performance. Active Data Guard Far Sync, a new capability for Oracle
Database 12c, eliminates compromise by extending zero data loss
protection to any standby database located at any distance from a
primary database, and doing so at minimal expense and without additional
complexity. This demonstration shows how Active Data Guard 12c Far
Sync is configured and zero data loss failovers performed.
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demo
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Global Temporary Tables and Sequences - Active Data Guard
As
of Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1), the new temporary undo feature
allows the undo for changes to a global temporary table (GTT) to be
stored in the temporary tablespace as opposed to the undo tablespace.
Undo stored in the temporary tablespace does not generate redo, thus
enabling redo-less changes to global temporary tables. This allows DML
operations on global temporary tables on Oracle Active Data Guard
standbys. In addition sequences created at the primary database can be
accessed from Active Data Guard standby databases as well, both global
to the entire Data Guard configuration or local only to the current
session. This demonstration shows how to enable and use GTTs and both
Global and Session Sequences on an Active Data Guard standby database.
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Automatic Block Repair at a Primary Database - Active Data Guard
This
demonstrates how Active Data Guard 11g will automatically repair
physical on-disk block corruption at a primary database. Block-level
data loss usually results from intermittent, random I/O errors, as well
as memory corruptions that are written to disk. Normally when Oracle
discovers a corruption it marks the block as media corrupt, writes it to
disk, and returns an ORA-1578 error to the application. No subsequent
read of the block will be successful until the block is recovered
manually. However, if the corruption occurs on a primary database that
has an Active Data Guard standby, block media recovery is performed
automatically, transparent to the application, using a good copy of the
block from the active standby database. Conversely, bad blocks on an
active standby database are automatically recovered using the good
version from the primary database.
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Automatic Block Repair at a Standby Database - Active Data Guard
This
demonstrates how Active Data Guard 11g will automatically repair
physical on-disk block corruption that occurs at a standby database
completely independent of the primary. Detection and automatic repair of
physical on-disk block corruption at a standby database is initiated by
1) any read-write transaction at the primary database, 2) any read-only
transaction at the primary database, or 3) any block that is read by
media recovery or by read-only transactions at the Active Data Guard
standby. Automatic repair is transparent to both Redo Apply and to
applications running at either the primary or active standby database;
Oracle will signal that the repair has occurred in the database alert
log. Active Data Guard uses multiple approaches to detect and
automatically repair corruption at a standby database both to maintain
data protection and to provide high availability for read-only workload
offloaded to the standby system.
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Production Offload - Oracle Active Data Guard
This
demonstrates the benefits of using a synchronized physical standby
database that is open read-only to offload ad-hoc queries and reporting
from your production database, thus achieving scalable performance and
fast, predictable response times for read-write business transactions.
Click on the demo link to download the demo and run on your desktop, use the control at the bottom of the demo screen to initiate demo. Click here for Active Data Guard MAA Best Practices.
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Data Pump and Standby Statspack - Active Data Guard
This
demonstrates how to utilize an Active Data Guard standby database as a
source for Data Pump to extract data for other uses. The demonstration
also shows how to use Standby Statspack to collect statistics from an
Active Standby Database to assist in query tuning. Click on the demo link to download the demo and run on your desktop, use the control at the bottom of the demo screen to initiate demo. See My Oracle Support Note 454848.1 for details on using Standby Statspack.
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Query Service Level Agreement - Active Data Guard
This
demonstrates how to configure automatic monitoring of an Active Data
Guard standby database. Should the standby apply lag exceed designated
service level agreements for any reason (e.g. a network outage or if
apply stops to protect against primary data corruptions), Data Guard
will automatically notify applications that the standby is not current
and read-only queries can be redirected to another active standby
database or the primary to insure service level objectives are met. Click on the demo link to download the demo and run on your desktop, use the control at the bottom of the demo screen to initiate demo.
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DML Redirection - Active Data Guard
There
are many read-mostly applications that are able to use an Active Data
Guard standby database to offload read-only workload from the primary
database by redirecting a small number of required DML operations back
to the primary database. This demonstration shows how to configure DML
redirection using Active Data Guard. Click on the demo link to download the demo and run on your desktop, use the control at the bottom of the demo screen to initiate demo.
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