Oracle8i Concepts
Release 2 (8.1.6)

Part Number A76965-01

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5
Database and Instance
Startup and Shutdown

This chapter explains the procedures involved in starting and stopping an Oracle instance and database. It includes:

Introduction to an Oracle Instance

Every running Oracle database is associated with an Oracle instance. When a database is started on a database server (regardless of the type of computer), Oracle allocates a memory area called the System Global Area (SGA) and starts one or more Oracle processes. This combination of the SGA and the Oracle processes is called an Oracle instance. The memory and processes of an instance manage the associated database's data efficiently and serve the one or multiple users of the database.

Figure 5-1 shows an Oracle instance.

See Also:

 

Figure 5-1 An Oracle Instance


The Instance and the Database

After starting an instance, Oracle associates the instance with the specified database. This is called mounting the database. The database is then ready to be opened, which makes it accessible to authorized users.

Multiple instances can execute concurrently on the same computer, each accessing its own physical database. In clustered and massively parallel systems (MPP), the Oracle Parallel Server allows multiple instances to mount a single database.

Only the database administrator can start up an instance and open the database. If a database is open, the database administrator can shut down the database so that it is closed. When a database is closed, users cannot access the information that it contains.

Security for database startup and shutdown is controlled via connections to Oracle with administrator privileges. Normal users do not have control over the current status of an Oracle database.

See Also:

Oracle8i Parallel Server Concepts for information about the Oracle Parallel Server. 

Connecting with Administrator Privileges

Database startup and shutdown are powerful administrative options and are restricted to users who connect to Oracle with administrator privileges. Depending on the operating system, one of the following conditions establishes administrator privileges for a user:

When you connect with SYSDBA or SYSOPER privileges, you are placed in the schema owned by SYS. SYSOPER privileges are a subset of SYSDBA privileges.

See Also:

  • Your operating system-specific Oracle documentation for more information about how administrator privileges work on your operating system.

  • Chapter 26, "Controlling Database Access" for more information about password files and authentication schemes for database administrators.

 

Parameter Files

To start an instance, Oracle must read a parameter file--a text file containing a list of configuration parameters (initialization parameters) for that instance and database. You set these parameters to particular values to initialize many of the memory and process settings of an Oracle instance. Most initialization parameters belong to one of the following groups:

Among other things, the initialization parameters tell Oracle:

An Example of a Parameter File

The following is an example of a typical parameter file:

db_block_buffers = 550 
db_name = ORA8PROD 
db_domain = US.ACME.COM 
# 
license_max_users = 64 
# 
control_files = filename1, filename2 
# 
log_archive_dest = c:\logarch 
log_archive_format = arch%S.ora 
log_archive_start = TRUE 
log_buffer = 64512 
log_checkpoint_interval = 256000 
# rollback_segments = rs_one, rs_two 

Changing Parameter Values

The database administrator can adjust variable parameters to improve the performance of a database system. Exactly which parameters most affect a system is a function of numerous database characteristics and variables.

Modified parameter values take effect only when the instance starts up and reads the parameter file. Some parameters can also be changed dynamically by using the ALTER SESSION or ALTER SYSTEM statement while the instance is running.

See Also:

 

NLS Parameters

Oracle treats string literals defined for National Language Support (NLS) parameters in the file as if they are in the database character set.

See Also:

Oracle8i National Language Support Guide for more information about National Language Support.  

Instance and Database Startup

The three steps to starting a Oracle database and making it available for systemwide use are:

  1. Start an instance.

  2. Mount the database.

  3. Open the database.

A database administrator can perform these steps using Oracle Enterprise Manager.

See Also:

Oracle Enterprise Manager Administrator's Guide  

Starting an Instance

When Oracle starts an instance, first it reads a parameter file to determine the values of initialization parameters and then it allocates an SGA--a shared area of memory used for database information--and creates background processes. At this point, no database is associated with these memory structures and processes.

See Also:

 

Restricted Mode of Instance Startup

You can start an instance in restricted mode (or later alter an existing instance to be in restricted mode). This restricts connections to only those users who have been granted the RESTRICTED SESSION system privilege.

Forcing an Instance to Startup in Abnormal Situations

In unusual circumstances, a previous instance might not have been shut down cleanly. For example, one of the instance's processes might not have terminated properly. In such situations, the database might return an error during normal instance startup. To resolve this problem, you must terminate all remnant Oracle processes of the previous instance before starting the new instance.

Mounting a Database

The instance mounts a database to associate the database with that instance. After mounting the database, the instance finds the database control files and opens them. (Control files are specified in the CONTROL_FILES initialization parameter in the parameter file used to start the instance.) Oracle then reads the control files to get the names of the database's datafiles and redo log files.

At this point, the database is still closed and is accessible only to the database administrator. The database administrator can keep the database closed while completing specific maintenance operations. However, the database is not yet available for normal operations.

Mounting a Database with the Oracle Parallel Server


Note:

The features described in this section are available only if you have purchased Oracle8i Enterprise Edition with the Parallel Server Option.

See Getting to Know Oracle8i for more information.  


If Oracle allows multiple instances to mount the same database concurrently, the database administrator can use the initialization parameter PARALLEL_SERVER to make the database available to multiple instances. The default value of the PARALLEL_SERVER parameter is FALSE. Versions of Oracle that do not support the Parallel Server Option only allow PARALLEL_SERVER to be FALSE.

If PARALLEL_SERVER is FALSE for the first instance that mounts a database, only that instance can mount the database. If PARALLEL_SERVER is set to TRUE on the first instance, other instances can mount the database if their PARALLEL_SERVER parameters are set to TRUE. The number of instances that can mount the database is subject to a predetermined maximum, which you can specify when creating the database.

See Also:

for more information about the use of multiple instances with a single database 

Mounting a Standby Database

A standby database maintains a duplicate copy of your primary database and provides continued availability in the event of a disaster.

The standby database is constantly in recovery mode. To maintain your standby database, you must mount it in standby mode using the ALTER DATABASE statement and apply the archived redo logs that your primary database generates.

You can open a standby database in read-only mode to use it as a temporary reporting database. You cannot open a standby database in read-write mode.

See Also:

 

Mounting a Clone Database

A clone database is a specialized copy of a database that can be used for tablespace point-in-time recovery. When you perform tablespace point-in-time recovery, you mount the clone database and recover the tablespaces to the desired time, then export metadata from the clone to the primary database and copy the datafiles from the recovered tablespaces.

See Also:

Oracle8i Backup and Recovery Guide for detailed information about clone databases and tablespace point-in-time recovery 

Opening a Database

Opening a mounted database makes it available for normal database operations. Any valid user can connect to an open database and access its information. Usually a database administrator opens the database to make it available for general use.

When you open the database, Oracle opens the online datafiles and online redo log files. If a tablespace was offline when the database was previously shut down, the tablespace and its corresponding datafiles will still be offline when you reopen the database.

If any of the datafiles or redo log files are not present when you attempt to open the database, Oracle returns an error. You must perform recovery on a backup of any damaged or missing files before you can open the database.

See Also:

"Online and Offline Tablespaces" for information about opening an offline tablespace 

Crash Recovery

If the database was last closed abnormally, either because the database administrator aborted its instance or because of a power failure, Oracle automatically performs crash recovery when the database is reopened.

See Also:

"Database Instance Failure" 

Rollback Segment Acquisition

When you open the database, the instance attempts to acquire one or more rollback segments.

See Also:

"The Rollback Segment SYSTEM" and "Oracle Instances and Types of Rollback Segments" 

Resolution of In-Doubt Distributed Transaction

Occasionally a database may close abnormally with one or more distributed transactions in doubt (neither committed nor rolled back). When you reopen the database and crash recovery is complete, the RECO background process automatically, immediately, and consistently resolves any in-doubt distributed transactions.

See Also:

for information about recovery from distributed transaction failures 

Opening a Database in Read-Only Mode

You can open any database in read-only mode to prevent its data contents from being modified by user transactions. Read-only mode restricts database access to read-only transactions, which cannot write to the datafiles or to the redo log files.

Disk writes to other files, such as control files, operating system audit trails, trace files, and alert files, can continue in read-only mode. Temporary tablespaces for sort operations are not affected by the database being open in read-only mode. However, you cannot take permanent tablespaces offline while a database is open in read-only mode. Job queues are not available in read-only mode.

Read-only mode does not restrict database recovery or operations that change the database's state without generating redo data. For example, in read-only mode:

One useful application of read-only mode occurs when standby databases function as temporary reporting databases.

In an Oracle Parallel Server, all instances must open the database either in read-write mode or in read-only mode.

See Also:

Oracle8i Administrator's Guide for information about how to open a database in read-only mode.  

Database and Instance Shutdown

The three steps to shutting down a database and its associated instance are:

  1. Close the database.

  2. Dismount the database.

  3. Shut down the instance.

A database administrator can perform these steps using Oracle Enterprise Manager. Oracle automatically performs all three steps whenever an instance is shut down.

See Also:

Oracle Enterprise Manager Administrator's Guide 

Closing a Database

When you close a database, Oracle writes all database data and recovery data in the SGA to the datafiles and redo log files, respectively. Next, Oracle closes all online datafiles and online redo log files. (Any offline datafiles of any offline tablespaces will have been closed already. If you subsequently reopen the database, any tablespace that was offline and its datafiles remain offline and closed, respectively.) At this point, the database is closed and inaccessible for normal operations. The control files remain open after a database is closed but still mounted.

Closing the Database by Aborting the Instance

In rare emergency situations, you can abort the instance of an open database to close and completely shut down the database instantaneously. This process is fast, because the operation of writing all data in the buffers of the SGA to the datafiles and redo log files is skipped. The subsequent reopening of the database requires crash recovery, which Oracle performs automatically.


Note:

If a system crash or power failure occurs while the database is open, the instance is, in effect, aborted, and crash recovery is performed when the database is reopened.  


Dismounting a Database

Once the database is closed, Oracle dismounts the database to disassociate it from the instance. At this point, the instance remains in the memory of your computer.

After a database is dismounted, Oracle closes the control files of the database.

Shutting Down an Instance

The final step in database shutdown is shutting down the instance. When you shut down an instance, the SGA is removed from memory and the background processes are terminated.

Abnormal Instance Shutdown

In unusual circumstances, shutdown of an instance might not occur cleanly; all memory structures might not be removed from memory or one of the background processes might not be terminated. When remnants of a previous instance exist, subsequent instance startup most likely will fail. In such situations, the database administrator can force the new instance to start up by first removing the remnants of the previous instance and then starting a new instance, or by issuing a SHUTDOWN ABORT statement in Oracle Enterprise Manager.

See Also:

Oracle8i Administrator's Guide for more detailed information about instance and database startup and shutdown 


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