oracle 9i, death of the dba? database administration for ebusiness steve lemme vp product marketing...
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Oracle 9i, Death Of The DBA?
Database Administration for eBusiness
Steve LemmeVP Product MarketingComputer Associates
Author “Implementing and Managing Oracle Databases”
OOW 01 Paper #714
Top Reasons To Move to Oracle 9iAn Oracle DBA’s Perspective
Steve LemmeVP Product Management
Computer AssociatesAuthor “Implementing and Managing Oracle
Databases”[email protected]
Session id:
2002
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
Objectives
500 new features, lets cut to the chase 9i features a DBA should checkout How those features add business value Why those drive a 9i upgrade The Business Return On Upgrade (ROU)
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
With All That's NewWhat Do You Do?
Wait? Install them all?
– Space?
Try them all?– Time?
Upgrade to 9i and ignore them? Get the benefit - learn, test, plan Upgrade!
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#10 Oracle 9i RAC
What Stands Out?– Provides High Availability– Enables application failover – Enables better scalability– Multiple instances can share a single physical DB– Instances with common data & control files, yet
individual log files and rollback segments– Global cache management synchronization
technology (Cache Fusion)– Load balancing
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#10 9i RAC (ROU)
Why Does This Help?– Provides rapid and automatic recovery from failures
(node failure, instance crash, …)– Provides increased scalability– Masks failures to end users – Reduces or eliminates the need for custom
application failover coding/scripting– Better usage of subsystem resources– Assists with database consolidation– Automation of complex cache management with
Cache Fusion
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#10 Summary
Primary Consideration– Hardware– More physical items to manage
Bottom Line– Need HA– Running OPS– Consider 9i RAC
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#9 9i Oracle Managed Files
What Stands Out?– Automatically creates and deletes files for
tablespaces, temp files, redo logs, control files– Create DB objects without specifying underlying
operating system files– If a group is dropped, corresponding Oracle-
managed files are deleted at operating system level– Default file system directory can be changed
dynamically– OMF data file can be added to an existing
tablespace – OMF and non-OMF files can coexist– Logical volume manager RAID support, large
extensible file system support
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#9 9i OMF (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Eliminates tracking of what DB files match up
to what system files– Reduces time and risks associated with data
file mix-ups errors• Like accidental system file deletion• Time to figure how to create and where
– Reduces space wasted by obsolete files– Standardized naming of database files – Eliminates put operating system–specific file
names in SQL scripts, increasing portability
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#9 Summary
Primary Considerations– Stripped file systems– Extensible logical volumes– File system that provides large, extensible files– Still need to manage subsystem space
Bottom Line– Have Junior administrators– DBAs in separate group from Sys Admins– Lots of databases files– Consider 9i OMF
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#8 9i External Tables
What Stands Out?– External data as a virtual table
• Queried and joined directly and in parallel• Doesn’t requiring it to be loaded in the database
– Reading defined in SQL*Loader control file format– Access rights are controlled through SELECT
TABLE and read/write directory privileges– SQL, PL/SQL and JAVA operations are permitted on
the table• Create Views and Synonyms• SELECT, JOIN, SORT• Parallel Queryable
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#8 9i External Tables (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Single copy of the data is kept
• Data files can stay where stored by applications• Saves storage• Reduces mix ups of which file to load is where
– Eliminates SQL*Load time• File natively read by Oracle• No longer necessary to stage the data inside the database
for comparison or transformation • Don’t have to wait for completion of long load• Reduces resources consumption
– Helps reduce data scheduling complexity
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#8 Summary
Primary Considerations– Read only– Cannot index
Bottom Line– When complete external source needs to
be joined with existing DB objects and transformed
– Have external large data sets queried infrequently
– Consider 9i External Tables
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#7 9i Automated Undo
What Stands Out? – Automated rollback undo and retention or manually– Transactions can span multiple undo segments – Defined by UNDO_MANAGEMENT parameter:
• AUTO: The instance manages undo data automatically• MANUAL: DBA manages rollback segments manually
– Undo data managed by single tablespace defined by• UNDO_TABLESPACE - Defaults to SYS_UNDO• UNDO_RETENTION - Seconds to try and keep “historic” information
– Minimum of one UNDO tablespace• Default is SYSTEM tablespace and unlimited space• You can have multiple, but recommended that you have only one• UNDO tablespace must be locally managed
– UNDO_SUPPRESS_ERRORS• Set to TRUE, application coded RBS-related commands succeed
– Enables Query Flashback
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#7 9i Automated Undo (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Reduces manually rollback segment management
• Saves time determining the correct number• Saves time managing them individually
– Reduces risk of common mix-ups creating, dropping, or altering rollback segments
– Enhances application performance• Reduces risk of stopped applications waiting for rollback• Reduces rollback contention of resources
– UNDO_SUPPRESS_ERRORS eliminates need to wait until applications recode
– Automatic UNDO speeds crash recovery
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#7 Summary
Primary Considerations – Be aware of database corruption bug pre-9.0.1.1.0 patch set – Can’t use both methods in same instance; for migration it’s possible:
• Create undo tablespaces in a database that is using rollback segments• Drop rollback segments in a database that is using undo tablespaces
– UNDO_MANAGEMENT - AUTO• Space - need sufficiently large UNDO tablespace• Each Tx assigned its own undo segment until space runs out, then they share
– Space quota is by consumer group, not by user• One user may prevent all other users from executing DML
Bottom Line– Considering hardware, storage upgrades to deal with rollback issues– Current recovery time not meeting service levels – Spending lots of time on Rollbacks? 9i Automated Undo
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#6 9i Temporary Tablespace
What Stands Out? – Temporary is for non-permanent database objects– Objects persist for duration of the session– User’s temporary tablespace either SYSTEM or a
tablespace type TEMPORARY• Used/enforced during “create user”
– Can specify a db-wide default temporary tablespace• Cannot be specified as SYSTEM• Will be locally managed• Created with ALTER DATABASE or the CREATE
DATABASE command
– Can have multiple TEMPORARY tablespaces
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#6 9i Temporary Tablespace (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Don’t have to:
• Remember to create user with temporary tablespace• Find user having SYS tablespace as their temp tablespace
– Space management (extent allocation and deallocation) is locally managed reducing complexity
– Helps optimize sort performance • Processes performing sorts reuse existing sort extents of
the sort segment, rather than allocating a segment (and potentially many extents) for each sort
• Sort segment created for each instance is reused (only dropped if tablespace is dropped)
– Temporary tablespaces can be striped for better I/O
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#6 Summary
Primary Considerations – Temporary tablespaces cannot contain permanent
objects such as tables– If tablespace was not created with a standard block
size, you cannot change it from permanent to temporary
– You cannot take a temporary tablespace offline Bottom Line
– Lots of moving of data between OLTP database and data warehouses
– Eliminates the annoying SYSTEM tablespace usage for temporary space
– Consider temporary tablespace
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#5 9i Multiple Block Size
What Stands Out? – Non-standard block size
• Up to five non-standard block sizes• Power-of-two value between 2 KB and 32 KB
– Can add buffers for new block size dynamically• ALTER SYSTEM SET DB_nK_CACHE_SIZE
– Index Organized Table overflow, out-of-line large object (LOB) segments can be stored in a tablespace with a block size different than that of the base table
– Standard block size• Defined at creation using DB_BLOCK_SIZE• Can’t change without recreating DB• For SYSTEM and TEMPORARY tablespaces• The default for the other tablespaces
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#5 9i Multiple Block Size (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Enables transporting of tablespaces between
databases with different block sizes– Enable better performance of I/O
• Small blocks enable faster active rows in buffer cache • Large blocks on indexes reduce B*-tree depth• More flexibility to match and optimize objects in
tablespaces of appropriate block size
– Add buffers dynamically for new block size doesn’t require restarting database
– Useful in hybrid databases where DSS transactions benefit from large block sizes, while OLTP operations suited to smaller block sizes
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#5 Summary
Primary Considerations – Partitions of partitioned objects must reside in
tablespaces of the same block size– Temporary tablespaces, permanent tablespaces
used as default temporary tablespaces, must be of standard block size
Bottom Line– Considering hardware, storage upgrades for better
database performance– Lots of time spent moving objects to get better I/O– Moving lots of data between OLTP database and
data warehouses – 9i Multiple Block Sizes
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#4 9i Resource Manager
What Stands Out? – Automatically switches a session's group based on resource plan
directive• Estimated execution time of an operation, proactively • Switches long running operation from high priority to a low priority
– Automatic policy-based detection of long and short running SQL• Limit resource use by user group, time of day • Control active sessions and session execution time • Once limit is exceeded, subsequent sessions will be queued• “Time-out” to prevent a session from waiting in the queue indefinitely
– SWITCH_GROUP, SWITCH_TIME, SWITCH_ESTIMATE • Define period operation can run before switched to another group
– Plan directive UNDO_POOL• Limits the amount of undo space that can be used• When exceeded, prevents DML (INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE)• SELECT statements are still allowed
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#4 9i Resource Manager (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Provides fine grained control of resources consumed– Automatically manages resource consumption
• Eliminates issues with runaway or blocking sessions
– Provides predictable performance in mixed workload environments
– Enables meeting service levels by blocking execution of long running queries during the peak usage period• Business-critical processes assigned more CPU• Dynamically allocates runtime memory based on current
available memory and each query’s requirements• Degree of parallelism is dynamically chosen based on
available resources and each query’s requirements
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#4 Summary
Primary Considerations – Takes some time to setup– Need to have configuration management to
know who has set up what Bottom Line
– Considering hardware, storage upgrades to deal with performance issues
– Need to control problem apps/users– Need to meet service level objectives– Consider 9i Resource Manager
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#3 9i Data Guard
What Stands Out? – The new Standby Database, ready for prime time– No change to the application needed– Can switchover to a standby without resetlogs– Real-time copy of data to protect against data loss
• Propagate changes made to primary database, not every I/O
• Failover without other hardware or software mirroring– Failover to a local or remote site – Local and remote standbys– Flexible data protection modes
• Application of changes from the primary can be delayed• Can be used to offload backups• Customers can optimize logical standby for queries by
adding new indexes, views etc
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#3 9i Data Guard (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Protect against user errors, data corruption,
disasters– Leverage standby for backups, maintenance, and
reporting– Reduces downtime for planned outages such as
operating system or hardware upgrades– Delay enables detection of user errors and prevents
their propagation to standby– Protection from data corruption
• File system corruptions on the primary do not propagate to standby because the received redo is validated before it is applied to the standby
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#3 Summary
Primary Considerations – Extra hardware & software– Network links
Bottom Line– Offload backups and reporting– Protect against data loss including human
error, corruption and natural disasters– Consider 9i Data Guard
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#2 9i Flashback Query
What Stands Out? – Go back to:
• Version of the database at a specified clock time • Or a specified system change number (SCN)
– Enabled during session, terminates when session ends– To perform over a 24-hour period, undo_retention set to 24 hours – FAST_START_MTTR_TARGET
• # of seconds database takes to perform crash recovery of a single instance• Dynamic parameter
– Query speed depends on amount of data and # of changes to make– Need to set up
• UNDO_RETENTION parameter– Default 30 secs, or ‘if not yet committed’
• Sufficiently large undo tablespace– UNDO_MANAGEMENT must be auto
– Need execute privilege on DBMS_FLASHBACK to use the feature
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#2 9i Oracle Flashback (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Makes recovery easier and faster– Faster recovery gets business up sooner– Enables fixing ‘human error’ Undo OOPS
• Accidentally delete rows from a table; enables to then recover the deleted rows
– Estimated time provides indication of expected time of recovery
– View an old image of data, without disrupting database services
– Flashback is faster and easier to set-up and supports more data types than Log Miner
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#2 Summary
Primary Considerations – Watch balance between performance and recoverability– Retention is reliant upon amount of space available – Cannot perform FB query over a database link– Does not apply to PL/SQL packages, procedures, or functions– Can’t be used while a transaction is active– In Flashback mode, user cannot perform DML or DDL
operations Bottom Line
– Require application self-service error correction capabilities– Need to quickly recover accidentally deleted data– Consider 9i Flashback
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#1 9i Fine-Grained Audit
What Stands Out? – Create explicit auditing conditions against data – Capture the SQL statement, not the data– 250 configurable audit options
• Set by statement, by system privilege, by object or by user• Extensible auditing through database triggers • Attach audit policy to table or view with WHERE condition on
SELECT statements • Whenever a column is selected in any part of a DML statement
– AUDIT COLUMN reduces false audit conditions– Selective data encryption via PL/SQL or Java (JCA/JCE)– Can invoke a procedure as part of the audit– Attach audit policy to table or view (DBMS_FGA)– Specify audit condition using SQL triggering audit condition
(predicate)– Event handler can alert administrator to triggering condition
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#1 9i Fine-Grained Audit (ROU)
Why Does This Help? – Enable application driven security policies, instead
on embedding code in the applications– Enables extensible, more granular audit records– Ensuring users have the minimum set of privileges
required to perform their job functions – Enables holding users accountable for their actions– Helps identify misuse– Reduces the # of records written to audit logs– Enables intrusion detection through event handler– Increase security as development groups do not
have to share specific application security info
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
#1 Summary
Primary Considerations– One audit column only– Does not automatically capture records– Additional administration
Bottom Line– Audit records are essential in proving the violation
of access rights – Need data intrusion detection– Need security of data– Consider 9i Fine Grained Auditing
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
Business Is Ever Changing
Status quo Deploy new Hire additional staff Enforce architectural
guidelines Leverage technology to
manage complexity
Less functionality, costs Risk, education, costs Increased costs Better infrastructure
management, costs Time, resources, risk
reduction in costs
When facing the new challenges, we must either:
Action Result
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
Integration
Flexibility
Availability
Budget
People
Performance
Manageability
Scalability
Extensibility
Technology
Balancing the RequirementsWith Available Resources
It requires people or technologyIt requires people or technology
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
In Conclusion
Today's DB servers are complex and powerful engines that drive Internet-enabled applications
New Oracle 9i features can help reduce existing work
The DBA role has expanded to include functions such as App Server Administration, RAC etc.
DBA’s still need to learn, and manage them These “TOP TEN” features are ten valid business
reasons why you should consider a 9i upgrade
(c) 2001 Computer Associates International, Inc. All trademarks, trade names, service marks and logos referenced herein belong to their respective companies. No unauthorized copying or distribution permitted.
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