4 Creating a CDB: Advanced Topics

This chapter covers creating a CDB in greater detail.

Specifying CREATE DATABASE Statement Clauses

When you execute a CREATE DATABASE statement, Oracle Database performs several operations. The actual operations performed depend on the clauses that you specify in the CREATE DATABASE statement and the initialization parameters that you have set.

About CREATE DATABASE Statement Clauses

You can use the CREATE DATABASE clauses to simplify the creation and management of your database.

When you execute a CREATE DATABASE statement, Oracle Database performs at least these operations:

  • Creates the data files for the database

  • Creates the control files for the database

  • Creates the online redo logs for the database and establishes the ARCHIVELOG mode

  • Creates the SYSTEM tablespace

  • Creates the SYSAUX tablespace

  • Creates the data dictionary

  • Sets the character set that stores data in the database

  • Sets the database time zone

  • Mounts and opens the database for use

Protecting Your Database: Specifying Passwords for SYS and SYSTEM Users

To protect your database, specify passwords for SYS and SYSTEM users.

  • In the CREATE DATABASE statement, include clauses that specify the password for users SYS and SYSTEM.

The clauses of the CREATE DATABASE statement used for specifying the passwords for users SYS and SYSTEM are:

  • USER SYS IDENTIFIED BY password

  • USER SYSTEM IDENTIFIED BY password

When choosing a password, keep in mind that passwords are case-sensitive. Also, there may be password formatting requirements for your database.

See Also:

Oracle Database Security Guide for information about the Oracle guidelines for creating secure passwords

Creating a Locally Managed SYSTEM Tablespace

During database creation, create a locally managed SYSTEM tablespace. A locally managed tablespace uses a bitmap stored in each data file to manage the extents.

  • Specify the EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement to create a locally managed SYSTEM tablespace.

If you do not specify the EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL clause, then by default the database creates a dictionary-managed SYSTEM tablespace. Dictionary-managed tablespaces are deprecated.

If you create your database with a locally managed SYSTEM tablespace, and if you are not using Oracle Managed Files, then ensure that the following conditions are met:

  • You specify the DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement.

  • You include the UNDO TABLESPACE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement.

See Also:

Specify Data File Attributes for the SYSAUX Tablespace

The SYSAUX tablespace is created by default, but you can specify its data file attributes during database creation.

To specify data file attributes for the SYSAUX tablespace:

  • Include the SYSAUX DATAFILE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement.

If you include a DATAFILE clause for the SYSTEM tablespace, then you must specify the SYSAUX DATAFILE clause as well, or the CREATE DATABASE statement will fail. This requirement does not exist if the Oracle Managed Files feature is enabled (see "Specifying Oracle Managed Files at Database Creation").

About the SYSAUX Tablespace

The SYSAUX tablespace is always created at database creation.

The SYSAUX tablespace serves as an auxiliary tablespace to the SYSTEM tablespace. Because it is the default tablespace for many Oracle Database features and products that previously required their own tablespaces, it reduces the number of tablespaces required by the database. It also reduces the load on the SYSTEM tablespace.

You can specify only data file attributes for the SYSAUX tablespace, using the SYSAUX DATAFILE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement. Mandatory attributes of the SYSAUX tablespace are set by Oracle Database and include:

  • PERMANENT

  • READ WRITE

  • EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL

  • SEGMENT SPACE MANAGEMENT AUTO

You cannot alter these attributes with an ALTER TABLESPACE statement, and any attempt to do so will result in an error. You cannot drop or rename the SYSAUX tablespace.

The size of the SYSAUX tablespace is determined by the size of the database components that occupy SYSAUX. You can view a list of these components by querying the V$SYSAUX_OCCUPANTS view. Based on the initial sizes of these components, the SYSAUX tablespace must be at least 400 MB at the time of database creation. The space requirements of the SYSAUX tablespace will increase after the database is fully deployed, depending on the nature of its use and workload.

The SYSAUX tablespace has the same security attributes as the SYSTEM tablespace.

See Also:

Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide to learn how to manage the SYSAUX tablespace

Using Automatic Undo Management: Creating an Undo Tablespace

Automatic undo management uses an undo tablespace.

  • To enable automatic undo management, set the UNDO_MANAGEMENT initialization parameter to AUTO in your initialization parameter file. Alternatively, omit this parameter so that the database defaults to automatic undo management.

In this mode, undo data is stored in an undo tablespace and is managed by Oracle Database. To define and name the undo tablespace yourself, you must include the UNDO TABLESPACE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement at database creation time. If you omit this clause, and automatic undo management is enabled, then the database creates a default undo tablespace named SYS_UNDOTBS.

Note:

If you decide to define the undo tablespace yourself, then ensure that its block size matches the highest data file block size for the database.

See Also:

Creating a Default Tablespace

Oracle strongly recommends that you create a default tablespace. Oracle Database assigns to this tablespace any non-SYSTEM users for whom you do not explicitly specify a different tablespace.

To specify a default tablespace for the database:

  • Include the DEFAULT TABLESPACE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement

If you do not specify the DEFAULT TABLESPACE clause, then the SYSTEM tablespace is the default tablespace for non-SYSTEM users.

See Also:

Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for the syntax of the DEFAULT TABLESPACE clause of CREATE DATABASE and ALTER DATABASE

Creating a Default Temporary Tablespace

When you create a default temporary tablespace, Oracle Database assigns it as the temporary tablespace for users who are not explicitly assigned a temporary tablespace.

To create a default temporary tablespace for the CDB:

  • Include the DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement.

You can explicitly assign a temporary tablespace or tablespace group to a user in the CREATE USER statement. However, if you do not do so, and if no default temporary tablespace has been specified for the database, then by default these users are assigned the SYSTEM tablespace as their temporary tablespace. It is not good practice to store temporary data in the SYSTEM tablespace, and it is cumbersome to assign every user a temporary tablespace individually. Therefore, Oracle recommends that you use the DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE clause of CREATE DATABASE.

Note:

When you specify a locally managed SYSTEM tablespace, the SYSTEM tablespace cannot be used as a temporary tablespace. In this case you must create a default temporary tablespace. This behavior is explained in "Creating a Locally Managed SYSTEM Tablespace".

See Also:

Specifying Oracle Managed Files at Database Creation

You can minimize the number of clauses and parameters that you specify in your CREATE DATABASE statement by using the Oracle Managed Files feature.

  • Specify either a directory or Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM) disk group in which your files are created and managed by Oracle Database.

By including any of the initialization parameters DB_CREATE_FILE_DEST, DB_CREATE_ONLINE_LOG_DEST_n, or DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST in your initialization parameter file, you instruct Oracle Database to create and manage the underlying operating system files of your database. Oracle Database will automatically create and manage the operating system files for the following database structures, depending on which initialization parameters you specify and how you specify clauses in your CREATE DATABASE statement:

  • Tablespaces and their data files

  • Temporary tablespaces and their temp files

  • Control files

  • Online redo log files

  • Archived redo log files

  • Flashback logs

  • Block change tracking files

  • RMAN backups

The following CREATE DATABASE statement shows briefly how the Oracle Managed Files feature works, assuming you have specified required initialization parameters:

CREATE DATABASE mynewdb
     USER SYS IDENTIFIED BY sys_password
     USER SYSTEM IDENTIFIED BY system_password
     EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL
     UNDO TABLESPACE undotbs1
     DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE tempts1
     DEFAULT TABLESPACE users
     ENABLE PLUGGABLE DATABASE
       SEED
       SYSTEM DATAFILES SIZE 125M AUTOEXTEND ON NEXT 10M MAXSIZE UNLIMITED
       SYSAUX DATAFILES SIZE 100M;
  • The SYSTEM tablespace is created as a locally managed tablespace. Without the EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL clause, the SYSTEM tablespace is created as dictionary managed, which is not recommended.

  • No DATAFILE clause is specified, so the database creates an Oracle managed data file for the SYSTEM tablespace.

  • No LOGFILE clauses are included, so the database creates two Oracle managed redo log file groups.

  • No SYSAUX DATAFILE is included, so the database creates an Oracle managed data file for the SYSAUX tablespace.

  • No DATAFILE subclause is specified for the UNDO TABLESPACE and DEFAULT TABLESPACE clauses, so the database creates an Oracle managed data file for each of these tablespaces.

  • No TEMPFILE subclause is specified for the DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE clause, so the database creates an Oracle managed temp file.

  • If no CONTROL_FILES initialization parameter is specified in the initialization parameter file, then the database also creates an Oracle managed control file.

  • If you are using a server parameter file, then the database automatically sets the appropriate initialization parameters.

    See Also:

Supporting Bigfile Tablespaces During Database Creation

Oracle Database simplifies management of tablespaces and enables support for extremely large databases by letting you create bigfile tablespaces.

Bigfile tablespaces can contain only one file, but that file can have up to 4G blocks. The maximum number of data files in an Oracle Database is limited (usually to 64K files). Therefore, bigfile tablespaces can significantly enhance the storage capacity of an Oracle Database.

This section discusses the clauses of the CREATE DATABASE statement that let you include support for bigfile tablespaces.

See Also:

Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide for more information about bigfile tablespaces

Specifying the Default Tablespace Type

The SET DEFAULT...TABLESPACE clause of the CREATE DATABASE statement determines the default type of tablespace for this database in subsequent CREATE TABLESPACE statements.

  • Specify either SET DEFAULT BIGFILE TABLESPACE or SET DEFAULT SMALLFILE TABLESPACE.

If you omit this clause, then the default is a bigfile tablespace. The use of bigfile tablespaces further enhances the Oracle Managed Files feature, because bigfile tablespaces make data files completely transparent for users. SQL syntax for the ALTER TABLESPACE statement has been extended to allow you to perform operations on tablespaces, rather than the underlying data files.

The CREATE DATABASE statement shown in "Specifying Oracle Managed Files at Database Creation" can be modified as follows to specify that the default type of tablespace is a bigfile tablespace:

CREATE DATABASE mynewdb
     USER SYS IDENTIFIED BY sys_password
     USER SYSTEM IDENTIFIED BY system_password
     SET DEFAULT BIGFILE TABLESPACE
     UNDO TABLESPACE undotbs1
     DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE tempts1
     ENABLE PLUGGABLE DATABASE
        SEED
        SYSTEM DATAFILES SIZE 125M AUTOEXTEND ON NEXT 10M MAXSIZE UNLIMITED
        SYSAUX DATAFILES SIZE 100M;

To dynamically change the default tablespace type after database creation, use the SET DEFAULT TABLESPACE clause of the ALTER DATABASE statement:

ALTER DATABASE SET DEFAULT SMALLFILE TABLESPACE;

You can determine the current default tablespace type for the database by querying the DATABASE_PROPERTIES data dictionary view as follows:

SELECT PROPERTY_VALUE FROM DATABASE_PROPERTIES 
   WHERE PROPERTY_NAME = 'DEFAULT_TBS_TYPE';
Overriding the Default Tablespace Type

The SYSTEM and SYSAUX tablespaces are always created with the default tablespace type. However, you optionally can explicitly override the default tablespace type for the UNDO and DEFAULT TEMPORARY tablespace during the CREATE DATABASE operation.

  • Specify an UNDO TABLESPACE clause or a DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE clause that overrides the default tablespace type.

For example, you can create a bigfile UNDO tablespace in a database with the default tablespace type of smallfile as follows:

CREATE DATABASE mynewdb
...
     BIGFILE UNDO TABLESPACE undotbs1
        DATAFILE '/u01/oracle/oradata/mynewdb/undotbs01.dbf'
        SIZE 200M REUSE AUTOEXTEND ON MAXSIZE UNLIMITED;

You can create a smallfile DEFAULT TEMPORARY tablespace in a database with the default tablespace type of bigfile as follows:

CREATE DATABASE mynewdb
   SET DEFAULT BIGFILE TABLESPACE
...
     SMALLFILE DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE tempts1
        TEMPFILE '/u01/oracle/oradata/mynewdb/temp01.dbf' 
        SIZE 20M REUSE
...

Specifying the Database Time Zone and Time Zone File

Oracle Database datetime and interval data types and time zone support make it possible to store consistent information about the time of events and transactions.

Setting the Database Time Zone

You can set the database time zone with the SET TIME_ZONE clause of the CREATE DATABASE statement.

  • Set the database time zone when the database is created by using the SET TIME_ZONE clause of the CREATE DATABASE statement.

If you do not set the database time zone, then it defaults to the time zone of the host operating system.

You can change the database time zone for a session by using the SET TIME_ZONE clause of the ALTER SESSION statement.

See Also:

Oracle Database Globalization Support Guide for more information about setting the database time zone

About the Database Time Zone Files

Two time zone files are included in a subdirectory of the Oracle home directory. The time zone files contain the valid time zone names.

The following information is also included for each time zone:

  • Offset from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)

  • Transition times for Daylight Saving Time

  • Abbreviations for standard time and Daylight Saving Time

The default time zone file is ORACLE_HOME/oracore/zoneinfo/timezlrg_11.dat. A smaller time zone file with fewer time zones can be found in ORACLE_HOME/oracore/zoneinfo/timezone_11.dat.

To view the time zone names in the file being used by your database, use the following query:

SELECT * FROM V$TIMEZONE_NAMES;

See Also:

Oracle Database Globalization Support Guide for more information about managing and selecting time zone files

Specifying the Database Time Zone File

All databases that share information must use the same time zone data file.

The database server always uses the large time zone file by default.

To use the small time zone file on the client and know that all your data will refer only to regions in the small file:

  • Set the ORA_TZFILE environment variable on the client to the full path name of the timezone version.dat file on the client, where version matches the time zone file version that is being used by the database server.

If you are already using the default larger time zone file on the client, then it is not practical to change to the smaller time zone file, because the database may contain data with time zones that are not part of the smaller file.

Specifying FORCE LOGGING Mode

Some data definition language statements (such as CREATE TABLE) allow the NOLOGGING clause, which causes some database operations not to generate redo records in the database redo log. The NOLOGGING setting can speed up operations that can be easily recovered outside of the database recovery mechanisms, but it can negatively affect media recovery and standby databases.

Oracle Database lets you force the writing of redo records even when NOLOGGING has been specified in DDL statements. The database never generates redo records for temporary tablespaces and temporary segments, so forced logging has no affect for objects.

See Also:

Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for information about operations that can be done in NOLOGGING mode

Using the FORCE LOGGING Clause

You can force the writing of redo records even when NOLOGGING is specified in DDL statements.

To put the database into FORCE LOGGING mode:

  • Include the FORCE LOGGING clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement.

If you do not specify this clause, then the database is not placed into FORCE LOGGING mode.

Use the ALTER DATABASE statement to place the database into FORCE LOGGING mode after database creation. This statement can take a considerable time for completion, because it waits for all unlogged direct writes to complete.

You can cancel FORCE LOGGING mode using the following SQL statement:

ALTER DATABASE NO FORCE LOGGING;

Independent of specifying FORCE LOGGING for the database, you can selectively specify FORCE LOGGING or NO FORCE LOGGING at the tablespace level. However, if FORCE LOGGING mode is in effect for the database, it takes precedence over the tablespace setting. If it is not in effect for the database, then the individual tablespace settings are enforced. Oracle recommends that either the entire database is placed into FORCE LOGGING mode, or individual tablespaces be placed into FORCE LOGGING mode, but not both.

The FORCE LOGGING mode is a persistent attribute of the database. That is, if the database is shut down and restarted, it remains in the same logging mode. However, if you re-create the control file, the database is not restarted in the FORCE LOGGING mode unless you specify the FORCE LOGGING clause in the CREATE CONTROL FILE statement.

See Also:

Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide for information about using the FORCE LOGGING clause for tablespace creation.

Performance Considerations of FORCE LOGGING Mode

FORCE LOGGING mode results in some performance degradation.

If the primary reason for specifying FORCE LOGGING is to ensure complete media recovery, and there is no standby database active, then consider the following:

  • How many media failures are likely to happen?

  • How serious is the damage if unlogged direct writes cannot be recovered?

  • Is the performance degradation caused by forced logging tolerable?

If the database is running in NOARCHIVELOG mode, then generally there is no benefit to placing the database in FORCE LOGGING mode. Media recovery is not possible in NOARCHIVELOG mode, so if you combine it with FORCE LOGGING, the result may be performance degradation with little benefit.

Starting with Oracle Database 18c, the following two new nologging clauses are introduced, which enable non-logged operations to be carried out and have Active Data Guard standby databases receive all the data, thus preventing performance degradation caused by large redo log generation by the FORCE LOGGING mode:

  • STANDBY NOLOGGING FOR DATA AVAILABILITY

  • STANDBY NOLOGGING FOR LOAD PERFORMANCE

See Also:

Oracle Data Guard Concepts and Administration for more information about these STANDBY NOLOGGING clauses

Specifying Initialization Parameters

You can add or edit basic initialization parameters before you create your new database.

See Also:

About Initialization Parameters and Initialization Parameter Files

When an Oracle instance starts, it reads initialization parameters from an initialization parameter file. This file must at a minimum specify the DB_NAME parameter. All other parameters have default values.

The initialization parameter file can be either a read-only text file, a PFILE, or a read/write binary file.

The binary file is called a server parameter file. A server parameter file enables you to change initialization parameters with ALTER SYSTEM commands and to persist the changes across a shutdown and startup. It also provides a basis for self-tuning by Oracle Database. For these reasons, it is recommended that you use a server parameter file. You can create one manually from your edited text initialization file, or automatically by using Database Configuration Assistant (DBCA) to create your database.

Before you manually create a server parameter file, you can start an instance with a text initialization parameter file. Upon startup, the Oracle instance first searches for a server parameter file in a default location, and if it does not find one, searches for a text initialization parameter file. You can also override an existing server parameter file by naming a text initialization parameter file as an argument of the STARTUP command.

Default file names and locations for the text initialization parameter file are shown in the following table:

Platform Default Name Default Location

UNIX and Linux

initORACLE_SID.ora

For example, the initialization parameter file for the mynewdb database is named:

initmynewdb.ora

ORACLE_BASE_CONFIG/dbs

Windows

initORACLE_SID.ora

ORACLE_HOME\database

If you are creating an Oracle database for the first time, Oracle suggests that you minimize the number of parameter values that you alter. As you become more familiar with your database and environment, you can dynamically tune many initialization parameters using the ALTER SYSTEM statement. If you are using a text initialization parameter file, then your changes are effective only for the current instance. To make them permanent, you must update them manually in the initialization parameter file, or they will be lost over the next shutdown and startup of the database. If you are using a server parameter file, then initialization parameter file changes made by the ALTER SYSTEM statement can persist across shutdown and startup.

Sample Initialization Parameter File

Oracle Database provides generally appropriate values in a sample text initialization parameter file. You can edit these Oracle-supplied initialization parameters and add others, depending upon your configuration and options and how you plan to tune the database.

The sample text initialization parameter file is named init.ora and is found in the following location on most platforms:

ORACLE_HOME/dbs

The following is the content of the sample file:

##############################################################################
# Example INIT.ORA file
#
# This file is provided by Oracle Corporation to help you start by providing
# a starting point to customize your RDBMS installation for your site. 
# 
# NOTE: The values that are used in this file are only intended to be used
# as a starting point. You may want to adjust/tune those values to your
# specific hardware and needs. You may also consider using Database
# Configuration Assistant tool (DBCA) to create INIT file and to size your
# initial set of tablespaces based on the user input.
###############################################################################
 
# Change '<ORACLE_BASE>' to point to the oracle base (the one you specify at
# install time)
 
db_name='ORCL'
memory_target=1G
processes = 150
db_block_size=8192
db_domain=''
db_recovery_file_dest='<ORACLE_BASE>/flash_recovery_area'
db_recovery_file_dest_size=2G
diagnostic_dest='<ORACLE_BASE>'
dispatchers='(PROTOCOL=TCP) (SERVICE=ORCLXDB)'
open_cursors=300 
remote_login_passwordfile='EXCLUSIVE'
undo_tablespace='UNDOTBS1'
# You may want to ensure that control files are created on separate physical
# devices
control_files = (ora_control1, ora_control2)
compatible ='12.0.0'
enable_pluggable_database=TRUE
Text Initialization Parameter File Format

The text initialization parameter file specifies the values of parameters in name/value pairs.

The text initialization parameter file (PFILE) must contain name/value pairs in one of the following forms:

  • For parameters that accept only a single value:

    parameter_name=value
    
  • For parameters that accept one or more values (such as the CONTROL_FILES parameter):

    parameter_name=(value[,value] ...)
    

Parameter values of type string must be enclosed in single quotes ('). Case (upper or lower) in file names is significant only if case is significant on the host operating system.

For parameters that accept multiple values, to enable you to easily copy and paste name/value pairs from the alert log, you can repeat a parameter on multiple lines, where each line contains a different value.

control_files='/u01/app/oracle/oradata/orcl/control01.ctl'
control_files='/u01/app/oracle/oradata/orcl/control02.ctl'
control_files='/u01/app/oracle/oradata/orcl/control03.ctl'

If you repeat a parameter that does not accept multiple values, then only the last value specified takes effect.

See Also:

Expressions in Initialization Parameter Settings

Set the value of an initialization parameter to the desired numeric value, text value, or expression.

Starting with Oracle Database Release 21c, you can use expressions when setting the value of initialization parameters. The expressions can contain other initialization parameters and one or more of the following:

  • arithmetic operators (+, -, *, /)
  • environment variables
  • MIN or MAX function

Examples:

SGA_TARGET = SYSTEM_MEMORY * 0.4
PARALLEL_MAX_SERVERS = MAX(100, PROCESSES * 0.4)
DB_CREATE_FILE_DEST=$ORACLE_HOME/oracle/database_files

Determining the Global Database Name

The global database name consists of the user-specified local database name and the location of the database within a network structure.

  • Set the DB_NAME and DB_DOMAIN initialization parameters.

The DB_NAME initialization parameter determines the local name component of the database name, and the DB_DOMAIN parameter, which is optional, indicates the domain (logical location) within a network structure. The combination of the settings for these two parameters must form a database name that is unique within a network.

For example, to create a database with a global database name of test.us.example.com, edit the parameters of the new parameter file as follows:

DB_NAME = test
DB_DOMAIN = us.example.com

You can rename the GLOBAL_NAME of your database using the ALTER DATABASE RENAME GLOBAL_NAME statement. However, you must also shut down and restart the database after first changing the DB_NAME and DB_DOMAIN initialization parameters and recreating the control files. Recreating the control files is easily accomplished with the command ALTER DATABASE BACKUP CONTROLFILE TO TRACE. See Oracle Database Backup and Recovery User's Guide for more information.

See Also:

Oracle Database Utilities for information about using the DBNEWID utility, which is another means of changing a database name

DB_NAME Initialization Parameter

The DB_NAME initialization parameter specifies a database identifier.

DB_NAME must be set to a text string of no more than 8 characters. The database name must start with an alphabetic character. During database creation, the name provided for DB_NAME is recorded in the data files, redo log files, and control file of the database. If during database instance startup the value of the DB_NAME parameter (in the parameter file) and the database name in the control file are different, then the database does not start.

DB_DOMAIN Initialization Parameter

In a distributed database system, the DB_DOMAIN initialization parameter specifies the logical location of the database within the network structure.

DB_DOMAIN is a text string that specifies the network domain where the database is created. If the database you are about to create will ever be part of a distributed database system, then give special attention to this initialization parameter before database creation. This parameter is optional.

See Also:

Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide for more information about distributed databases

Specifying a Fast Recovery Area

The Fast Recovery Area is a location in which Oracle Database can store and manage files related to backup and recovery. It is distinct from the database area, which is a location for the current database files (data files, control files, and online redo logs).

Specify the Fast Recovery Area with the following initialization parameters:

  • DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST: Location of the Fast Recovery Area. This can be a directory, file system, or Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM) disk group.

    In an Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) environment, this location must be on a cluster file system, Oracle ASM disk group, or a shared directory configured through NFS.

  • DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST_SIZE: Specifies the maximum total bytes to be used by the Fast Recovery Area. This initialization parameter must be specified before DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST is enabled.

In an Oracle RAC environment, the settings for these two parameters must be the same on all instances.

You cannot enable these parameters if you have set values for the LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST and LOG_ARCHIVE_DUPLEX_DEST parameters. You must disable those parameters before setting up the Fast Recovery Area. You can instead set values for the LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_n parameters.

Oracle recommends using a Fast Recovery Area, because it can simplify backup and recovery operations for your database.

See Also:

Oracle Database Backup and Recovery User's Guide to learn how to create and use a Fast Recovery Area

Specifying Control Files

Every database has a control file, which contains entries that describe the structure of the database (such as its name, the timestamp of its creation, and the names and locations of its data files and redo files). The CONTROL_FILES initialization parameter specifies one or more names of control files, separated by commas.

  • Set the CONTROL_FILES initialization parameter.

When you execute the CREATE DATABASE statement, the control files listed in the CONTROL_FILES parameter are created.

If you do not include CONTROL_FILES in the initialization parameter file, then Oracle Database creates a control file in the same directory as the initialization parameter file, using a default operating system–dependent file name. If you have enabled Oracle Managed Files, the database creates Oracle managed control files.

If you want the database to create new operating system files when creating database control files, the file names listed in the CONTROL_FILES parameter must not match any file names that currently exist on your system. If you want the database to reuse or overwrite existing files when creating database control files, ensure that the file names listed in the CONTROL_FILES parameter match the file names that are to be reused, and include a CONTROLFILE REUSE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement.

Oracle strongly recommends you use at least two control files stored on separate physical disk drives for each database.

Specifying Database Block Sizes

The DB_BLOCK_SIZE initialization parameter specifies the standard block size for the database.

  • Set the DB_BLOCK_SIZE initialization parameter.

This block size is used for the SYSTEM tablespace and by default in other tablespaces. Oracle Database can support up to four additional nonstandard block sizes.

DB_BLOCK_SIZE Initialization Parameter

The most commonly used block size should be picked as the standard block size. In many cases, this is the only block size that you must specify.

  • Set the DB_BLOCK_SIZE initialization parameter.

Typically, DB_BLOCK_SIZE is set to either 4K or 8K. If you do not set a value for this parameter, then the default data block size is operating system specific, which is generally adequate.

You cannot change the block size after database creation except by re-creating the database. If the database block size is different from the operating system block size, then ensure that the database block size is a multiple of the operating system block size. For example, if your operating system block size is 2K (2048 bytes), the following setting for the DB_BLOCK_SIZE initialization parameter is valid:

DB_BLOCK_SIZE=4096

A larger data block size provides greater efficiency in disk and memory I/O (access and storage of data). Therefore, consider specifying a block size larger than your operating system block size if the following conditions exist:

  • Oracle Database is on a large computer system with a large amount of memory and fast disk drives. For example, databases controlled by mainframe computers with vast hardware resources typically use a data block size of 4K or greater.

  • The operating system that runs Oracle Database uses a small operating system block size. For example, if the operating system block size is 1K and the default data block size matches this, the database may be performing an excessive amount of disk I/O during normal operation. For best performance in this case, a database block should consist of multiple operating system blocks.

    See Also:

    Your operating system specific Oracle documentation for details about the default block size.

Nonstandard Block Sizes

You can create tablespaces of nonstandard block sizes.

To create tablespaces of nonstandard block sizes:

  • Specify the BLOCKSIZE clause in a CREATE TABLESPACE statement.

These nonstandard block sizes can have any of the following power-of-two values: 2K, 4K, 8K, 16K or 32K. Platform-specific restrictions regarding the maximum block size apply, so some of these sizes may not be allowed on some platforms.

To use nonstandard block sizes, you must configure subcaches within the buffer cache area of the SGA memory for all of the nonstandard block sizes that you intend to use. The initialization parameters used for configuring these subcaches are described in Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide.

The ability to specify multiple block sizes for your database is especially useful if you are transporting tablespaces between databases. You can, for example, transport a tablespace that uses a 4K block size from an OLTP environment to a data warehouse environment that uses a standard block size of 8K.

Note:

A 32K block size is valid only on 64-bit platforms.

Caution:

Oracle recommends against specifying a 2K block size when 4K sector size disks are in use, because performance degradation can occur. For an explanation, see Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide.

Specifying the Maximum Number of Processes

The PROCESSES initialization parameter determines the maximum number of operating system processes that can be connected to Oracle Database concurrently.

  • Set the PROCESSES initialization parameter.

The value of this parameter must be a minimum of one for each background process plus one for each user process. The number of background processes will vary according the database features that you are using. For example, if you are using Advanced Queuing or the file mapping feature, then you will have additional background processes. If you are using Automatic Storage Management, then add three additional processes for the database instance.

If you plan on running 50 user processes, a good estimate would be to set the PROCESSES initialization parameter to 70.

Specifying the DDL Lock Timeout

You can specify the amount of time that blocking DDL statements wait for locks.

A data definition language (DDL) statement is either nonblocking or blocking, and both types of DDL statements require exclusive locks on internal structures. If these locks are unavailable when a DDL statement runs, then nonblocking and blocking DDL statements behave differently:

  • Nonblocking DDL waits until every concurrent DML transaction that references the object affected by the DDL either commits or rolls back.

  • Blocking DDL fails, though it might have succeeded if it had been executed subseconds later when the locks become available.

To enable blocking DDL statements to wait for locks, specify a DDL lock timeout—the number of seconds a DDL command waits for its required locks before failing.

  • To specify a DDL lock timeout, set the DDL_LOCK_TIMEOUT parameter.

The permissible range of values for DDL_LOCK_TIMEOUT is 0 to 1,000,000. The default is 0. You can set DDL_LOCK_TIMEOUT at the system level, or at the session level with an ALTER SESSION statement.

Note:

The DDL_LOCK_TIMEOUT parameter does not affect nonblocking DDL statements.

Specifying the Method of Undo Space Management

Every Oracle Database must have a method of maintaining information that is used to undo changes to the database. Such information consists of records of the actions of transactions, primarily before they are committed. Collectively these records are called undo data.

To set up an environment for automatic undo management using an undo tablespace.

  • Set the UNDO_MANAGEMENT initialization parameter to AUTO, which is the default.

UNDO_MANAGEMENT Initialization Parameter

The UNDO_MANAGEMENT initialization parameter determines whether an instance starts in automatic undo management mode, which stores undo in an undo tablespace. Set this parameter to AUTO to enable automatic undo management mode. AUTO is the default if the parameter is omitted or is null.

UNDO_TABLESPACE Initialization Parameter

The UNDO_TABLESPACE initialization parameter enables you to override that default undo tablespace for an instance.

When an instance starts up in automatic undo management mode, it attempts to select an undo tablespace for storage of undo data. If the database was created in automatic undo management mode, then the default undo tablespace (either the system-created SYS_UNDOTBS tablespace or the user-specified undo tablespace) is the undo tablespace used at instance startup. You can override this default for the instance by specifying a value for the UNDO_TABLESPACE initialization parameter. This parameter is especially useful for assigning a particular undo tablespace to an instance in an Oracle Real Application Clusters environment.

If no undo tablespace is specified by the UNDO_TABLESPACE initialization parameter, then the first available undo tablespace in the database is chosen. If no undo tablespace is available, then the instance starts without an undo tablespace, and undo data is written to the SYSTEM tablespace. You should avoid running in this mode.

Note:

When using the CREATE DATABASE statement to create a database, do not include an UNDO_TABLESPACE parameter in the initialization parameter file. Instead, include an UNDO TABLESPACE clause in the CREATE DATABASE statement.

Specifying the Database Compatibility Level

The COMPATIBLE initialization parameter controls the database compatibility level.

  • Set the COMPATIBLE initialization parameter to a release number.

About the COMPATIBLE Initialization Parameter

The COMPATIBLE initialization parameter enables or disables the use of features in the database that affect file format on disk. For example, if you create an Oracle Database 19c database, but specify COMPATIBLE=12.0.0 in the initialization parameter file, then features that require Oracle Database 19c compatibility generate an error if you try to use them. Such a database is said to be at the 12.0.0 compatibility level.

You can advance the compatibility level of your database by changing the COMPATIBLE initialization parameter. If you do, then there is no way to start the database using a lower compatibility level setting, except by doing a point-in-time recovery to a time before the compatibility was advanced.

The default value for the COMPATIBLE parameter is the release number of the most recent major release.

Note:

  • When you set this parameter in a server parameter file (SPFILE) using the ALTER SYSTEM statement, you must specify SCOPE=SPFILE, and you must restart the database for the change to take effect.

  • The COMPATIBLE initialization parameter must be specified as at least three decimal numbers separated by a dot, such as 19.0.0.

See Also:

Setting the License Parameter

If you use named user licensing, Oracle Database can help you enforce this form of licensing. You can set a limit on the number of users created in the database. Once this limit is reached, you cannot create more users.

Note:

This mechanism assumes that each person accessing the database has a unique user name and that no people share a user name. Therefore, so that named user licensing can help you ensure compliance with your Oracle license agreement, do not allow multiple users to log in using the same user name.

To limit the number of users created in a database, set the LICENSE_MAX_USERS initialization parameter in the database initialization parameter file.

The following example sets the LICENSE_MAX_USERS initialization parameter:

LICENSE_MAX_USERS = 200

Note:

Oracle no longer offers licensing by the number of concurrent sessions. Therefore the LICENSE_MAX_SESSIONS and LICENSE_SESSIONS_WARNING initialization parameters are no longer needed and have been deprecated.

Managing Initialization Parameters Using a Server Parameter File

Initialization parameters for the Oracle Database have traditionally been stored in a text initialization parameter file. For better manageability, you can choose to maintain initialization parameters in a binary server parameter file that is persistent across database startup and shutdown.

What Is a Server Parameter File?

A server parameter file can be thought of as a repository for initialization parameters that is maintained on the system running the Oracle Database server. It is, by design, a server-side initialization parameter file.

Initialization parameters stored in a server parameter file are persistent, in that any changes made to the parameters while an instance is running can persist across instance shutdown and startup. This arrangement eliminates the need to manually update initialization parameters to make persistent any changes effected by ALTER SYSTEM statements. It also provides a basis for self-tuning by the Oracle Database server.

A server parameter file is initially built from a text initialization parameter file using the CREATE SPFILE statement. (It can also be created directly by the Database Configuration Assistant.) The server parameter file is a binary file that cannot be edited using a text editor. Oracle Database provides other interfaces for viewing and modifying parameter settings in a server parameter file.

Note:

Although you can open the binary server parameter file with a text editor and view its text, do not manually edit it. Doing so will corrupt the file. You will not be able to start your instance, and if the instance is running, it could fail.

When you issue a STARTUP command with no PFILE clause, the Oracle instance searches an operating system–specific default location for a server parameter file from which to read initialization parameter settings. If no server parameter file is found, the instance searches for a text initialization parameter file. If a server parameter file exists but you want to override it with settings in a text initialization parameter file, you must specify the PFILE clause when issuing the STARTUP command.

See Also:

"Starting Up a CDB"

Migrating to a Server Parameter File

If you are currently using a text initialization parameter file, then you can migrate to a server parameter file.

To migrate to a server parameter file:

  1. If the initialization parameter file is located on a client system, then transfer the file (for example, FTP) from the client system to the server system.

    Note:

    If you are migrating to a server parameter file in an Oracle Real Application Clusters environment, you must combine all of your instance-specific initialization parameter files into a single initialization parameter file. Instructions for doing this and other actions unique to using a server parameter file for instances that are part of an Oracle Real Application Clusters installation are discussed in Oracle Real Application Clusters Administration and Deployment Guide and in your platform-specific Oracle Real Application Clusters Installation Guide.

  2. Create a server parameter file in the default location using the CREATE SPFILE FROM PFILE statement. See "Creating a Server Parameter File" for instructions.

    This statement reads the text initialization parameter file to create a server parameter file. The database does not have to be started to issue a CREATE SPFILE statement.

  3. Start up or restart the instance.

    The instance finds the new SPFILE in the default location and starts up with it.

Server Parameter File Default Names and Locations

Oracle recommends that you allow the database to give the SPFILE the default name and store it in the default location. This eases administration of your database. For example, the STARTUP command assumes this default location to read the SPFILE.

The following table shows the default name and location for both the text initialization parameter file (PFILE) and server parameter file (SPFILE) for the UNIX, Linux, and Windows platforms, both with and without the presence of Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM). The table assumes that the SPFILE is a file.

Table 4-1 PFILE and SPFILE Default Names and Locations on UNIX, Linux, and Windows

Platform PFILE Default Name SPFILE Default Name PFILE Default Location SPFILE Default Location

UNIX and Linux

initORACLE_SID.ora

spfileORACLE_SID.ora

ORACLE_BASE_CONFIG/dbs or the same location as the data files

Without Oracle ASM:

ORACLE_BASE_CONFIG/dbs or the same location as the data files

When Oracle ASM is present:

In the same disk group as the data files (assuming the database was created with DBCA)

Windows

initORACLE_SID.ora

spfileORACLE_SID.ora

Oracle_Home\database

Without Oracle ASM:

OH\database

When Oracle ASM is present:

In the same disk group as the data files (assuming the database was created with DBCA)

Note:

Upon startup, the instance first searches for an SPFILE named spfileORACLE_SID.ora, and if not found, searches for spfile.ora. Using spfile.ora enables all Real Application Cluster (Oracle RAC) instances to use the same server parameter file.

If neither SPFILE is found, the instance searches for the text initialization parameter file initORACLE_SID.ora.

If you create an SPFILE in a location other than the default location, you must create in the default PFILE location a "stub" PFILE that points to the server parameter file. For more information, see "Starting Up a Database".

When you create the database with DBCA when Oracle ASM is present, DBCA places the SPFILE in an Oracle ASM disk group, and also causes this stub PFILE to be created.

Creating a Server Parameter File

You use the CREATE SPFILE statement to create a server parameter file. You must have the SYSDBA, SYSOPER, or SYSBACKUP administrative privilege to execute this statement.

To create a server parameter file:

  • Run the CREATE SPFILE statement.

Note:

When you use the Database Configuration Assistant to create a database, it automatically creates a server parameter file for you.

The CREATE SPFILE statement can be executed before or after instance startup. However, if the instance has been started using a server parameter file, an error is raised if you attempt to re-create the same server parameter file that is currently being used by the instance.

You can create a server parameter file (SPFILE) from an existing text initialization parameter file or from memory. Creating the SPFILE from memory means copying the current values of initialization parameters in the running instance to the SPFILE.

The following example creates a server parameter file from text initialization parameter file /u01/oracle/dbs/init.ora. In this example no SPFILE name is specified, so the file is created with the platform-specific default name and location shown in Table 4-1.

CREATE SPFILE FROM PFILE='/u01/oracle/dbs/init.ora';

The next example illustrates creating a server parameter file and supplying a name and location.

CREATE SPFILE='/u01/oracle/dbs/test_spfile.ora'
       FROM PFILE='/u01/oracle/dbs/test_init.ora';

The next example illustrates creating a server parameter file in the default location from the current values of the initialization parameters in memory.

CREATE SPFILE FROM MEMORY;

Whether you use the default SPFILE name and default location or specify an SPFILE name and location, if an SPFILE of the same name already exists in the location, it is overwritten without a warning message.

When you create an SPFILE from a text initialization parameter file, comments specified on the same lines as a parameter setting in the initialization parameter file are maintained in the SPFILE. All other comments are ignored.

The SPFILE Initialization Parameter

The SPFILE initialization parameter contains the name of the current server parameter file.

When the default server parameter file is used by the database—that is, you issue a STARTUP command and do not specify a PFILE parameter—the value of SPFILE is internally set by the server. The SQL*Plus command SHOW PARAMETERS SPFILE (or any other method of querying the value of a parameter) displays the name of the server parameter file that is currently in use.

Changing Initialization Parameter Values

You can change initialization parameter values to affect the operation of a database instance.

About Changing Initialization Parameter Values

The ALTER SYSTEM statement enables you to set, change, or restore to default the values of initialization parameters. If you are using a text initialization parameter file, the ALTER SYSTEM statement changes the value of a parameter only for the current instance, because there is no mechanism for automatically updating text initialization parameters on disk. You must update them manually to be passed to a future instance. Using a server parameter file overcomes this limitation.

There are two kinds of initialization parameters:

  • Dynamic initialization parameters can be changed for the current Oracle Database instance. The changes take effect immediately.

  • Static initialization parameters cannot be changed for the current instance. You must change these parameters in the text initialization file or server parameter file and then restart the database before changes take effect.

Setting or Changing Initialization Parameter Values

With a server parameter file, use the SET clause of the ALTER SYSTEM statement to set or change initialization parameter values.

  • Run an ALTER SYSTEM SET statement.

For example, the following statement changes the maximum number of failed login attempts before the connection is dropped. It includes a comment, and explicitly states that the change is to be made only in the server parameter file.

ALTER SYSTEM SET SEC_MAX_FAILED_LOGIN_ATTEMPTS=3
                 COMMENT='Reduce from 10 for tighter security.'
                 SCOPE=SPFILE;

The next example sets a complex initialization parameter that takes a list of attributes. Specifically, the parameter value being set is the LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_n initialization parameter. This statement could change an existing setting for this parameter or create a new archive destination.

ALTER SYSTEM 
     SET LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_4='LOCATION=/u02/oracle/rbdb1/',MANDATORY,'REOPEN=2'
         COMMENT='Add new destination on Nov 29'
         SCOPE=SPFILE;

When a value consists of a list of parameters, you cannot edit individual attributes by the position or ordinal number. You must specify the complete list of values each time the parameter is updated, and the new list completely replaces the old list.

The SCOPE Clause in ALTER SYSTEM SET Statements

The optional SCOPE clause in ALTER SYSTEM SET statements specifies the scope of an initialization parameter change.

SCOPE Clause Description

SCOPE = SPFILE

The change is applied in the server parameter file only. The effect is as follows:

  • No change is made to the current instance.

  • For both dynamic and static parameters, the change is effective at the next startup and is persistent.

This is the only SCOPE specification allowed for static parameters.

SCOPE = MEMORY

The change is applied in memory only. The effect is as follows:

  • The change is made to the current instance and is effective immediately.

  • For dynamic parameters, the effect is immediate, but it is not persistent because the server parameter file is not updated.

For static parameters, this specification is not allowed.

SCOPE = BOTH

The change is applied in both the server parameter file and memory. The effect is as follows:

  • The change is made to the current instance and is effective immediately.

  • For dynamic parameters, the effect is persistent because the server parameter file is updated.

For static parameters, this specification is not allowed.

It is an error to specify SCOPE=SPFILE or SCOPE=BOTH if the instance did not start up with a server parameter file. The default is SCOPE=BOTH if a server parameter file was used to start up the instance, and MEMORY if a text initialization parameter file was used to start up the instance.

For dynamic parameters, you can also specify the DEFERRED keyword. When specified, the change is effective only for future sessions.

When you specify SCOPE as SPFILE or BOTH, an optional COMMENT clause lets you associate a text string with the parameter update. The comment is written to the server parameter file.

Clearing Initialization Parameter Values

You can use the ALTER SYSTEM RESET statement to clear an initialization parameter value. When you do so, the initialization parameter value is changed to its default value or its startup value.

The ALTER SYSTEM RESET statement includes a SCOPE clause. When executed in a non-CDB or a multitenant container database (CDB) root, the ALTER SYSTEM RESET statement and SCOPE clause behave differently than when the statement is executed in a pluggable database (PDB), an application root, or an application PDB.

The startup value of a parameter is the value of the parameter in memory after the instance's startup or PDB open has completed. This value can be seen in the VALUE and DISPLAY_VALUE columns in the V$SYSTEM_PARAMETER view immediately after startup. The startup value can be different from the value in the spfile or the default value (if the parameter is not set in the spfile), since the value of the parameter can be adjusted internally at startup.

The SCOPE values for the ALTER SYSTEM RESET statement behave as follows in a non-CDB and in the CDB$ROOT of a CDB:

  • SCOPE=SPFILE: If an instance is using spfile, removes the parameter from the spfile; the default value takes effect upon the next instance startup.

  • SCOPE=MEMORY: The startup value takes effect immediately. However, the change is not stored in instance's spfile and will be lost upon instance restart.

  • SCOPE=BOTH: If an instance is using spfile, removes the parameter from the spfile; the default value takes effect immediately and the change is available across instance restart.

Note:

SCOPE=BOTH changes the way SCOPE=MEMORY behaves. After SCOPE=BOTH is issued, SCOPE=MEMORY always resets the parameter to the default value.

The SCOPE values for the ALTER SYSTEM RESET statement behave as follows in a PDB, an application root, or an application PDB:

  • SCOPE=SPFILE: Removes the parameter from the container's spfile; the container will inherit the parameter value from its root upon the next PDB open.

  • SCOPE=MEMORY: There are two cases:

    • The parameter is present in container's spfile when the container is opened. The parameter value is updated to the startup value for the parameter. This change is not stored in container’s spfile and will be lost upon the next container open.

    • The parameter is not present in container’s spfile when the container is opened. The container starts inheriting the parameter value from its root.

  • SCOPE=BOTH: Removes the parameter from the container’s spfile; the container will inherit the parameter value from its root.

Note:

  • SCOPE=BOTH changes the way SCOPE=MEMORY behaves. After SCOPE=BOTH is issued, the container always inherits the parameter value from its root when SCOPE=MEMORY is issued.

  • In a case where a container inherits a parameter value from its root, a PDB inherits the value from CDB$ROOT. In an application container, an application PDB inherits the parameter value from its application root, and an application root inherits the parameter value from CDB$ROOT.

See Also:

Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for information about the ALTER SYSTEM command

Exporting the Server Parameter File

You can use the CREATE PFILE statement to export a server parameter file (SPFILE) to a text initialization parameter file.

  • Run a CREATE PFILE statement.

Exporting the server parameter file might be necessary for several reasons:

  • For diagnostic purposes, listing all of the parameter values currently used by an instance. This is analogous to the SQL*Plus SHOW PARAMETERS command or selecting from the V$PARAMETER or V$PARAMETER2 views.

  • To modify the server parameter file by first exporting it, editing the resulting text file, and then re-creating it using the CREATE SPFILE statement

The exported file can also be used to start up an instance using the PFILE clause.

You must have the SYSDBA, SYSOPER, or SYSBACKUP administrative privilege to execute the CREATE PFILE statement. The exported file is created on the database server system. It contains any comments associated with the parameter in the same line as the parameter setting.

The following example creates a text initialization parameter file from the SPFILE:

CREATE PFILE FROM SPFILE;

Because no names were specified for the files, the database creates an initialization parameter file with a platform-specific name, and it is created from the platform-specific default server parameter file.

The following example creates a text initialization parameter file from a server parameter file, but in this example the names of the files are specified:

CREATE PFILE='/u01/oracle/dbs/test_init.ora'
  FROM SPFILE='/u01/oracle/dbs/test_spfile.ora';

Note:

An alternative is to create a PFILE from the current values of the initialization parameters in memory. The following is an example of the required command:

CREATE PFILE='/u01/oracle/dbs/test_init.ora' FROM MEMORY;

Backing Up the Server Parameter File

You can create a backup of your server parameter file (SPFILE) by exporting it. If the backup and recovery strategy for your database is implemented using Recovery Manager (RMAN), then you can use RMAN to create a backup of the SPFILE. The SPFILE is backed up automatically by RMAN when you back up your database, but RMAN also enables you to specifically create a backup of the currently active SPFILE.

  • Back up the server parameter file either by exporting it or by using RMAN.

Recovering a Lost or Damaged Server Parameter File

You can recover the server parameter file (SPFILE). If your server parameter file (SPFILE) becomes lost or corrupted, then the current instance may fail, or the next attempt at starting the database instance may fail.

There are several ways to recover the SPFILE:

  • If the instance is running, issue the following command to re-create the SPFILE from the current values of initialization parameters in memory:

    CREATE SPFILE FROM MEMORY;

    This command creates the SPFILE with the default name and in the default location. You can also create the SPFILE with a new name or in a specified location. See "Creating a Server Parameter File" for examples.

  • If you have a valid text initialization parameter file (PFILE), re-create the SPFILE from the PFILE with the following statement:

    CREATE SPFILE FROM PFILE;

    This command assumes that the PFILE is in the default location and has the default name. See "Creating a Server Parameter File" for the command syntax to use when the PFILE is not in the default location or has a nondefault name.

  • Restore the SPFILE from backup.

    See "Backing Up the Server Parameter File" for more information.

  • If none of the previous methods are possible in your situation, perform these steps:

    1. Create a text initialization parameter file (PFILE) from the parameter value listings in the alert log.

      When an instance starts up, the initialization parameters used for startup are written to the alert log. You can copy and paste this section from the text version of the alert log (without XML tags) into a new PFILE.

      See Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide for more information.

    2. Create the SPFILE from the PFILE.

      See "Creating a Server Parameter File" for instructions.

Read/Write Errors During a Parameter Update

If an error occurs while reading or writing the server parameter file during a parameter update, the error is reported in the alert log and all subsequent parameter updates to the server parameter file are ignored. At this point, you can take one of the following actions:

  • Shut down the instance, recover the server parameter file and described earlier in this section, and then restart the instance.

  • Continue to run the database if you do not care that subsequent parameter updates will not be persistent.

Methods for Viewing Parameter Settings

You can view parameter settings using several different methods.

Method Description

SHOW PARAMETERS

This SQL*Plus command displays the values of initialization parameters in effect for the current session.

SHOW SPPARAMETERS

This SQL*Plus command displays the values of initialization parameters in the server parameter file (SPFILE).

CREATE PFILE

This SQL statement creates a text initialization parameter file (PFILE) from the SPFILE or from the current in-memory settings. You can then view the PFILE with any text editor.

V$PARAMETER

This view displays the values of initialization parameters in effect for the current session.

V$PARAMETER2

This view displays the values of initialization parameters in effect for the current session. It is easier to distinguish list parameter values in this view because each list parameter value appears in a separate row.

V$SYSTEM_PARAMETER

This view displays the values of initialization parameters in effect for the instance. A new session inherits parameter values from the instance-wide values.

V$SYSTEM_PARAMETER2

This view displays the values of initialization parameters in effect for the instance. A new session inherits parameter values from the instance-wide values. It is easier to distinguish list parameter values in this view because each list parameter value appears in a separate row.

V$SPPARAMETER

This view displays the current contents of the SPFILE. The view returns FALSE values in the ISSPECIFIED column if an SPFILE is not being used by the instance.

See Also:

Oracle Database Reference for a complete description of views

Managing Application Workloads with Database Services

A database service is a named representation of one or more database instances. Services enable you to group database workloads and route a particular work request to an appropriate instance.

Database Services

A database service represents a single database. This database can be a single-instance database or an Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) database with multiple concurrent database instances. A global database service is a service provided by multiple databases synchronized through data replication.

About Database Services

Database services divide workloads for a single database into mutually disjoint groupings.

Each database service represents a workload with common attributes, service-level thresholds, and priorities. The grouping is based on attributes of work that might include the application function to be used, the priority of execution for the application function, the job class to be managed, or the data range used in the application function or job class. For example, the Oracle E-Business Suite defines a database service for each responsibility, such as general ledger, accounts receivable, order entry, and so on. When you configure database services, you give each service a unique name, associated performance goals, and associated importance. The database services are tightly integrated with Oracle Database and are maintained in the data dictionary.

Connection requests can include a database service name. Thus, middle-tier applications and client/server applications use a service by specifying the database service as part of the connection in TNS connect data. If no database service name is included and the Net Services file listener.ora designates a default database service, then the connection uses the default database service.

Database services enable you to configure a workload for a single database, administer it, enable and disable it, and measure the workload as a single entity. You can do this using standard tools such as the Database Configuration Assistant (DBCA), Oracle Net Configuration Assistant, and Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control (Cloud Control). Cloud Control supports viewing and operating services as a whole, with drill down to the instance-level when needed.

In an Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) environment, a database service can span one or more instances and facilitate workload balancing based on transaction performance. This capability provides end-to-end unattended recovery, rolling changes by workload, and full location transparency. Oracle RAC also enables you to manage several database service features with Cloud Control, the DBCA, and the Server Control utility (SRVCTL).

Database services describe applications, application functions, and data ranges as either functional services or data-dependent services. Functional services are the most common mapping of workloads. Sessions using a particular function are grouped together. In contrast, data-dependent routing routes sessions to database services based on data keys. The mapping of work requests to database services occurs in the object relational mapping layer for application servers and TP monitors. For example, in Oracle RAC, these ranges can be completely dynamic and based on demand because the database is shared.

In addition to database services that are used by applications, Oracle Database also supports two internal database services: SYS$BACKGROUND is used by the background processes only, and SYS$USERS is the default database service for user sessions that are not associated with services.

Using database services requires no changes to your application code. Client-side work can connect to a named database service. Server-side work, such as Oracle Scheduler, parallel execution, and Oracle Database Advanced Queuing, set the database service name as part of the workload definition. Work requests executing under a database service inherit the performance thresholds for the service and are measured as part of the service.

See Also:

Database Services and Performance

Database services offer an extra dimension in performance tuning.

Tuning by "service and SQL" can replace tuning by "session and SQL" in the majority of systems where all sessions are anonymous and shared. With database services, workloads are visible and measurable. Resource consumption and waits are attributable by application. Additionally, resources assigned to database services can be augmented when loads increase or decrease. This dynamic resource allocation enables a cost-effective solution for meeting demands as they occur. For example, database services are measured automatically, and the performance is compared to service-level thresholds. Performance violations are reported to Cloud Control, enabling the execution of automatic or scheduled solutions.

Oracle Database Features That Use Database Services

Several Oracle Database features support database services.

The Automatic Workload Repository (AWR) manages the performance of services. AWR records database service performance, including execution times, wait classes, and resources consumed by services. AWR alerts warn when database service response time thresholds are exceeded. The dynamic views report current service performance metrics with one hour of history. Each database service has quality-of-service thresholds for response time and CPU consumption.

In addition, the Database Resource Manager can map database services to consumer groups. Therefore, you can automatically manage the priority of one database service relative to others. You can use consumer groups to define relative priority in terms of either ratios or resource consumption.

You also can specify an edition attribute for a database service. Editions make it possible to have two or more versions of the same objects in the database. When you specify an edition attribute for a database service, all subsequent connections that specify the database service use this edition as the initial session edition.

Specifying an edition as a database service attribute can make it easier to manage resource usage. For example, database services associated with an edition can be placed on a separate instance in an Oracle RAC environment, and the Database Resource Manager can manage resources used by different editions by associating resource plans with the corresponding database services.

For Oracle Scheduler, you optionally assign a database service when you create a job class. During execution, jobs are assigned to job classes, and job classes can run within database services. Using database services with job classes ensures that the work executed by the job scheduler is identified for workload management and performance tuning.

For parallel query and parallel DML, the query coordinator connects to a database service just like any other client. The parallel query processes inherit the database service for the duration of the execution. At the end of query execution, the parallel execution processes revert to the default database service.

Creating Database Services

There are a few ways to create database services, depending on your database configuration.

Note:

Starting with Oracle Database 19c, customer use of the SERVICE_NAMES parameter is deprecated. It can be desupported in a future release. To manage your services, Oracle recommends that you use the SRVCTL or GDSCTL command line utilities, or the DBMS_SERVICE package.

Note:

This section describes creating services locally.

To create a database service:

  • If your single-instance database is being managed by Oracle Restart, use the SRVCTL utility to create the database service.

    srvctl add service -db db_unique_name -service service_name
    
  • If your single-instance database is not being managed by Oracle Restart, do one of the following:

    • Append the desired database service name to the SERVICE_NAMES parameter.

    • Call the DBMS_SERVICE.CREATE_SERVICE package procedure.

  • (Optional) Define database service attributes with Cloud Control or with DBMS_SERVICE.MODIFY_SERVICE.

Oracle Net Listener (the listener) receives incoming client connection requests and manages the traffic of these requests to the database server. The listener handles connections for registered services, and it supports dynamic service registration.

See Also:

Global Data Services

Starting with Oracle Database 12c, you can use Global Data Services (GDS) for workload management involving multiple Oracle databases.

GDS enables administrators to automatically and transparently manage client workloads across replicated databases that offer common services. These common services are known as global services.

GDS enables you to integrate multiple databases in various locations into private GDS configurations that can be shared by global clients. Benefits include the following:

  • Enables central management of global resources

  • Provides global scalability, availability, and run-time load balancing

  • Allows you to dynamically add databases to the GDS configuration and dynamically migrate global services

  • Extends service management, load balancing, and failover capabilities for distributed environments of replicated databases that use features such as Oracle Active Data Guard, Oracle GoldenGate, and so on

  • Provides high availability through seamless failover of global services across databases (located both locally or globally)

  • Provides workload balancing both within and between data centers through services, connection load balancing, and runtime load balancing

  • Allows efficient utilization of the resources of the GDS configuration to service client requests

See Also:

Oracle Database Global Data Services Concepts and Administration Guide for an overview of Global Data Services

Reset Database Session State to Prevent Application State Leaks

When you use the RESET_STATE service attribute, the session state set by an application in a request is cleared when the request ends.

The service attribute RESET_STATE is recommended for all stateless applications to prevent the leakage of a session state to later reuses.

Stateless Applications

A stateless application is an application program that does not use the session state of one request, such as context and PL/SQL states that were set by a prior usage of that session, in another web request or similar connection pool usage. The necessary state to handle the request is contained within the request, as a part of the request itself; in the URL, query-string parameters, request body, or headers.

In a cloud environment, it is preferable for applications to be stateless for scalability and portability. Being stateless enables greater scalability because the server does not have to maintain, update, or communicate a session state. For example, load balancers do not have to consider session affinity for stateless systems. Most modern web applications are stateless.

Prevent Application State Leaking to Later Usages

Setting the session state in a request leaves the session with the current state, meaning that subsequent usages of that session can see the current session state. For example, when an application borrows and returns a connection to a connection pool, if the sessions state is not cleared, the next usage of that connection can see the session state of the previous usage.

RESET_STATE is an attribute of the database service. When you use the RESET_STATE service attribute, the session state set by an application in a request is cleared when the database request ends. When RESET_STATE is used, an application can depend on the state being reset at the end of a request. Without RESET_STATE, application developers must cancel their cursors and clear the session state that has been set before returning their connections to a pool for reuse.

RESET_STATE is used with applications that are stateless between requests. These type of applications use the session state in a request, and do not rely on that session state in the later requests. The necessary session state that the request needs is contained within the request itself. REST, ORDS, Oracle Application Express (APEX) are examples of stateless applications.

RESET_STATE is available for all applications that use Oracle and third party connection pools with request boundaries. Setting RESET_STATE to LEVEL1 enables automatic resetting of session states at an explicit end of request. RESET_STATE does not apply to implicit request boundaries, such as those with DRCP implicit statement caching.

Using the RESET_STATE attribute has the following impact at the end of a request:

  • Cursors are canceled.
  • PL/SQL global variables are cleared.
  • Temporary tables that have a session-based duration are truncated.
  • Temporary LOBs that have a session-based duration are cleared.
  • Session local sequences are reset.

RESET_STATE is a very important database feature that enables your developers to rely on the session state being clean when a session is returned to a connection pool with request boundaries. This can be an Oracle connection pool or a custom connection pool with added request boundaries. RESET_STATE also improves your protection when using Transparent Application Continuity (TAC), because the session state is clean at the beginning of a new request.

Database Service Data Dictionary Views

You can query data dictionary views to find information about database services.

You can find information about database services in the following views:

The following additional views also contain some information about database services:

The ALL_SERVICES view includes a GLOBAL_SERVICE column, and the V$SERVICES and V$ACTIVE_SERVICES views contain a GLOBAL column. These views and columns enable you to determine whether a database service is a global service.

Managing Standard Edition High Availability for Oracle Databases

The Standard Edition High Availability feature provides protection against unplanned outages for Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 single instance databases using Oracle Clusterware.

Note:

Standard Edition High Availability is supported in this release of Oracle Database.

Note:

The srvctl commands used with Standard Edition High Availability are different from those used with Oracle Restart. For Standard Edition High Availability, refer to the srvctl commands documented in the Oracle Real Application Clusters Administration and Deployment Guide.

About Standard Edition High Availability

In this release, you can install Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 in high availability mode.

Standard Edition High Availability provides cluster-based failover for single-instance Standard Edition Oracle Databases using Oracle Clusterware.

Oracle Standard Edition High Availability benefits from the cluster capabilities and storage solutions that are already part of Oracle Grid Infrastructure, such as Oracle Clusterware, Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM) and Oracle Advanced Cluster File System (Oracle ACFS).

Using integrated, shared, and concurrently mounted storage, such as Oracle ASM and Oracle ACFS for database files as well as for unstructured data, enables Oracle Grid Infrastructure to restart an Oracle Database on a failover node much faster than any cluster solution that relies on failing over and remounting volumes and file systems.

Standard Edition High Availability is supported on Linux x86-64.

Note:

This section is specific to Standard Edition High Availability, which provides cluster-based database failover for Standard Edition Oracle Databases 23ai and later. For more information about high availability options for Oracle Database, see Oracle Clusterware Administration and Deployment Guide.

Requirements for Using Standard Edition High Availability With Oracle Databases

To use Standard Edition High Availability, deploy Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 in accordance with these configuration requirements.

  • The database is created in a cluster running Oracle Grid Infrastructure for a Standalone Cluster, with its database files placed in Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM) or Oracle Advanced Cluster File System (Oracle ACFS).
  • When using the Database Configuration Assistant, do not create a listener when creating an Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 database that you want to configure for Standard Edition High Availability.
  • Register the database with Single Client Access Name (SCAN) listeners as remote listeners, and node listeners as the local listener.
  • Create a database service. Use this service, instead of the default database service, when you connect applications or database clients to the database.
  • Ensure that the server parameter file (spfile) and password file are on Oracle ASM or Oracle ACFS. If the spfile and password file were placed on a local file system when the database was created or configured, then move these files to Oracle ASM or Oracle ACFS.

Refer to the database installation documentation for additional requirements that must be met.

Enabling Standard Edition High Availability for Oracle Databases

You enable Standard Edition High Availability to provide cluster-based failover for an Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 database.

Note:

The steps in this topic must be performed after you install the Oracle Database software binaries to configure Standard Edition High Availability, as described in the Oracle Database Installation Guide for Linux, and create a database. If you have an existing Standard Edition 2 database that runs on one cluster node, and you want to enable Standard Edition High Availability for this database, you need to add a node to the configuration.

Note:

Skip this topic, if you use the following topic Create Standard Edition High Availability Database Using DBCA

Prerequisites

  • Ensure that the initialization parameter local_listener is not set. This is to enable node listeners to be automatically used and database connections to be made over the node virtual IP address.

    Use the following command to display the current listener configuration:

    SQL> SHOW PARAMETER LOCAL_LISTENER;

    If the output of the above command shows a local listener name, then reset the local listener using the following command:

    SQL> ALTER SYSTEM RESET LOCAL_LISTENER SCOPE = BOTH;

    The database must be restarted for the listener configuration change to take effect. However, if the database is relocated to another node, as part of verifying the Standard Edition High Availability configuration, then the database need not be restarted.

  • When the database files are stored in Oracle Advanced Cluster File System (Oracle ACFS), the Oracle ACFS file system must be registered in Oracle Clusterware and the dependency of the database resource on the corresponding Oracle ACFS resources must be configured using srvctl commands. For example:

    $ srvctl modify database -db se2cdb2 -acfspath /u01/app/oradata

To enable Standard Edition High Availability for an Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 database:

  1. If the database was created using the CREATE DATABASE command, then register the database with Oracle Clusterware.

    Databases created using the CREATE DATABASE command are not automatically registered with Oracle Clusterware. Use the srvctl add database command to register the database.

    For example, the following command registers the single instance database, whose unique name is se2cdb, with the nodes node2 and node3:

    $ srvctl add database -db se2cdb -oraclehome $ORACLE_HOME 
    -dbtype SINGLE -spfile +DATA/SE2CDB1/PARAMETERFILE/spfile.276.1030845691 
    -node node2,node3
  2. If the database is already registered with Oracle Clusterware, use the srvctl modify database command to enable Standard Edition High Availability.

    For example, the following command enables Standard Edition High Availability on a Standard Edition 2 database whose database unique name is se2cdb:

    $ srvctl modify database -db se2cdb -node node2,node3

    Note:

    The -fixed option to create a fixed single instance database is not supported with Standard Edition High Availability.

After you enable Standard Edition High Availability for a database:

  • When there is an unplanned outage of the node which runs the database instance, the instance is restarted on an available node in the configured node list.
  • When there is an unplanned termination of the database instance, an attempt is made to restart the instance on the current node. If the restart fails, a failover is initiated to an available node in the configured node list.
  • When the node which runs the database instance completely loses connectivity to the public network, the instance is relocated to an available node in the configured node list.

Note:

The order of nodes in the node list determines the node on which the database is started. Oracle Clusterware attempts to start the database on the first node in the node list. If the first node is unavailable, it moves to the next node in the node list.

Oracle Clusterware also uses the order of nodes in the node list to determine the failover target, if the current node fails. Failover targets are considered starting with the first node in the list and until a suitable candidate is found and unless other circumstances in the cluster prevent this order to determine the failover node.

To verify the Standard Edition High Availability configuration, especially its current configured node list, use the srvctl config database command. For example:

$ srvctl config database -db se2cdb 
...
Type: SINGLE
...
Configured nodes:
        node2, node3

Notice from the output that the type of database is single, but there are multiple configured nodes. This indicates that Standard Edition High Availability is enabled.

Further verification can be performed by relocating the database to another configured node.

Create Standard Edition High Availability Database Using DBCA

Oracle Database Configuration Assistant (Oracle DBCA) enables you to create a Standard Edition High Availability (SEHA), single-instance Oracle Database.

After you complete installing Standard Edition High Availability database software you can use Oracle DBCA, in either interactive or silent mode, to create a single-instance Oracle Database. For details see Deploying Standard Edition High Availability.

A Standard Edition High Availability database:

  • is a single instance database with failover capability.
  • uses Oracle ASM or Oracle ACFS for the database storage files (NAS is not supported).

DBCA provides these capabilities for the Standard Edition High Availability single instance database:

  • DBCA provides an interface to select node list for placement of the Standard Edition High Availability database.
  • DBCA creates a service for the Standard Edition High Availability database.
  • DBCA creates spfile and password file in Oracle ASM or Oracle ACFS based on db storage location.

Creating a Standard Edition High Availability database with DBCA

  1. Start Oracle Database Configuration Assistant (Oracle DBCA) in interactive mode.
    cd $ORACLE_HOME/bin
     ./dbca
  2. In the Select Database Operation screen, select Create a database and click Next.
  3. In the Select Database Creation Mode screen, select Advanced configuration and click Next.
  4. In the Select Database Deployment Type page, for the Database type field select Oracle SEHA (SI) database. Select Automatic as the Database Management policy, and select an appropriate template for your database. Click Next.

  5. Select the database template, then Click Next .
  6. In the Select List of Nodes page, select each node you wish to use for your single instance cluster. Click Next.
  7. On the Specify Database Identification Details page, provide a Global database name and a SID prefix.
  8. Respond to the configuration screens and prompts as needed to complete the database creation process. Configuration screens vary depending on the configuration option that you select.

Silent Mode Options for Standard Edition High Availability

-databaseConfigType SEHA

[-SEHAServiceName Service name for the service to be created for Standard Edition High Availability database]. This option is mandatory when the databaseConfigType is SEHA]

Sample command line for Oracle ASM:
dbca -silent -createDatabase -createAsContainerDatabase true 
-templateName $ORACLE_HOME/assistants/dbca/templates/General_Purpose.dbc -gdbname test 
-sehaNodeList node1,node2 -storageType ASM -diskgroupName +DATA –databaseConfigType SEHA 
–SEHAServiceName dbtestsvc
Sample command line for Oracle ACFS:
dbca -silent -createDatabase -createAsContainerDatabase true 
-templateName $ORACLE_HOME/assistants/dbca/templates/General_Purpose.dbc -gdbname testdb 
-sehaNodeList node1,node2 -storageType FS –datafileDestination /acfsmount/oradata –databaseConfigType SEHA 
–SEHAServiceName dbtestsvc

Relocating a Standard Edition High Availability Database to Another Node

To manage planned outages, you can relocate an Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 database that uses Standard Edition High Availability to another configured node.

The node to which the database is being relocated must be part of the configured node list for this database.

To relocate an active Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 database from its current node to another configured node:

  • Use the srvctl relocate command.

    This command performs an offline relocation. It shuts down the database on the existing node and then starts it on the new node.

For example, the following command relocates the Standard Edition 2 database named se2cdb, that uses Standard Edition High Availability, to the node node5:

$ srvctl relocate database -db se2cdb -node node5

Note:

The –abort and –revert options of srvctl relocate database command are not supported with Standard Edition High Availability.

Adding a Node to a Standard Edition High Availability Database

Adding new nodes to an existing Standard Edition High Availability configuration provides enhanced failover capabilities to your Standard Edition 2 database.

You may need to add nodes in certain scenarios. Assume that you configured two nodes for your Standard Edition High Availability database. Subsequently, a new node is added to the cluster and you want to include this new node in your database configuration. You can do this by adding the node to the Standard Edition High Availability configuration. Another scenario is when you want to enable Standard Edition High Availability for an existing Standard Edition 2 database.

To add a node to a Standard Edition High Availability database:

  1. Extend the Oracle Database Oracle home to the new node. The steps depend on the storage used.

    For a local (non-shared) Oracle home:

    1. Log in to the first cluster node (on which you configured Standard Edition High Availability) as the Oracle installation owner user account (oracle).

    2. Navigate to the ORACLE_HOME/addnode directory and run the addnode.sh script on Linux or addnode.bat on Windows.

      For example, to extend the Oracle home to node3 on Linux:

      $ ./addnode.sh -silent "CLUSTER_NEW_NODES={node3}"

    For a shared Oracle home using Oracle ACFS:

    1. Start the Oracle ACFS resource on the new node by running the following command as root from the Grid_home/bin directory:

      # srvctl start filesystem -device volume_device [-node node_name]

      Note:

      Make sure the Oracle ACFS resources, including Oracle ACFS registry resource and Oracle ACFS file system resource where the Oracle home is located, are online on the newly added node.
    2. Log in to the first cluster node (on which you configured Standard Edition High Availability) as the Oracle installation owner user account (oracle).

    3. Attach the Oracle home on the first cluster node to the node that you want to add.

      $ $ORACLE_HOME/addnode/addnode.sh -silent CLUSTER_NEW_NODES=new_node_name
  2. On the new node (that must be added), as the root user, and run the ORACLE_HOME/root.sh script.
    # /u01/app/oracle/product/21.0.0/dbhome_1/root.sh
  3. On any configured node, including the node that is being added, as the oracle user, add the new node by using the srvctl modify database command.

    The -node argument must list the existing configured nodes and the new node that is being added.

    For example, the following command adds the node node3 to the database with unique name se2cdb. Existing configured nodes are node1 and node2.

    $ srvctl modify database -db se2cdb -node node1,node2,node3
You can optionally verify the new configuration as described in Enabling Standard Edition High Availability for Oracle Databases.

Removing a Configured Node from a Standard Edition High Availability Database

Use srvctl commands to remove a node from the list of nodes configured for a Standard Edition High Availability database.

Navigate to the Oracle Database home directory. On Linux, log in to the database host computer as the Oracle installation owner user account (oracle). On Windows, log in to the database host computer as Administrator.

To remove a configured node from a database that uses Standard Edition High Availability:

  1. List the existing configured nodes by using the srvctl config database command.
  2. If the database is currently running on the node that you want to remove, relocate the database to another configured node by using the srvctl relocate database command.
  3. Remove the node by using the srvctl modify database command with the -node argument.
    The -node argument must list all the configured nodes, except the node that must be removed.

Example 4-1 Removing a Configured Node from a Standard Edition High Availability Database

The example assumes that the database with unique name sec2cdb uses Standard Edition High Availability and the configured nodes are node1, node2, and node3. The database is currently running on node3. To remove node2 from the list of configured nodes for this database, log in as a user who installed the Oracle Database home and run the following command:

$ srvctl modify database -db sec2cdb -node node1,node3

Starting and Stopping Standard Edition High Availability Databases

Use srvctl commands to start or stop an Oracle Database that is configured for Standard Edition High Availability.

Navigate to the Oracle Database home directory. On Linux, log in to the database host computer as the Oracle installation owner user account (oracle). On Windows, log in to the database host computer as Administrator.

To start up a Standard Edition High Availability database:

  • Use the srvctl start database command.

    Optionally, include the -node argument to specify the node on which the database must be started.

To stop a Standard Edition High Availability database:

  • Use the srvctl stop database command

Example 4-2 Starting Up a Standard Edition High Availability Database on a Specified Node

This example starts up a database with the unique name se2cdb on the node named node3.

$ srvctl start database -db sec2cdb -node node3

Example 4-3 Stopping a Standard Edition High Availability Database

This example stops a database instance that is configured to use Standard Edition High Availability. The unique name of the database is sec2cdb.

$ srvctl stop database -db sec2cdb

Deactivating Standard Edition High Availability for Oracle Databases

When you deactivate Standard Edition High Availability for a single instance Oracle Database, the database is no longer part of a high availability failover configuration.

To deactivate Standard Edition High Availability for an Oracle Database:

  • Use the srvctl modify command and include only one node in the -node argument.

Example 4-4 Deactivating the Use of Standard Edition High Availability for an Oracle Database

This example deactivates the use of Standard Edition High Availability for the database with unique name se2cdb and configures only one node, node1, for this database:

srvctl modify database -db se2cdb -node node1

All previously configured nodes are removed and the database is now a single-instance database that is registered with Oracle Clusterware.

Cloning a Database

This section describes various methods of cloning an Oracle database.

Cloning a Database with CloneDB in a Non-multitenant Environment

CloneDB enables you to clone a database in a non-multitenant environment multiple times without copying the data files into several different locations. Instead, CloneDB uses copy-on-write technology, so that only the blocks that are modified require additional storage on disk.

About Cloning a Database with CloneDB

It is often necessary to clone a production database for testing purposes or other purposes.

Common reasons to clone a production database include the following:

  • Deployment of a new application, or an update of an existing application, that uses the database

  • A planned operating system upgrade on the system that runs the database

  • New storage for the database installation

  • Reporting

  • Analysis of older data

Before deploying a new application, performing an operating system upgrade, or using new storage, thorough testing is required to ensure that the database works properly under the new conditions. Cloning can be achieved by making copies of the production data files in one or more test environments, but these copies typically require large amounts of storage space to be allocated and managed.

With CloneDB, you can clone a database multiple times without copying the data files into several different locations. Instead, Oracle Database creates the files in the CloneDB database using copy-on-write technology, so that only the blocks that are modified in the CloneDB database require additional storage on disk.

Cloning a database in this way provides the following advantages:

  • It reduces the amount of storage required for testing purposes.

  • It enables the rapid creation of multiple database clones for various purposes.

The CloneDB databases use the data files of a database backup. Using the backup data files ensures that the production data files are not accessed by the CloneDB instances and that the CloneDB instances do not compete for the production database's resources, such as CPU and I/O resources.

Note:

  • The instructions in this section about cloning a database with CloneDB are not applicable for a database in a multitenant environment.

  • The CloneDB feature is not intended for performance testing.

See Also:

"Cloning a Database in a Multitenant Environment" for more information about cloning a database in a multitenant environment

Cloning a Database with CloneDB

You can clone a database with CloneDB.

Before cloning a database, the following prerequisites must be met:

  • Each CloneDB database must use Direct NFS Client, and the backup of the production database must be located on an NFS volume.

    Direct NFS Client enables an Oracle database to access network attached storage (NAS) devices directly, rather than using the operating system kernel NFS client. This CloneDB database feature is available on platforms that support Direct NFS Client.

    See Oracle Grid Infrastructure Installation Guide for your operating system for information about Direct NFS Client.

  • At least 2 MB of additional System Global Area (SGA) memory is required to track the modified blocks in a CloneDB database.

    See Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide.

  • Storage for the database backup and for the changed blocks in each CloneDB database is required.

    The storage required for the database backup depends on the method used to perform the backup. A single full RMAN backup requires the most storage. Storage snapshots carried out using the features of a storage appliance adhere to the requirements of the storage appliance. A single backup can support multiple CloneDB databases.

    The amount of storage required for each CloneDB database depends on the write activity in that database. Every block that is modified requires an available block of storage. Therefore, the total storage requirement depends on the number of blocks modified in the CloneDB database over time.

This section describes the steps required to create one CloneDB database and uses these sample databases and directories:

  • The Oracle home for the production database PROD1 is /u01/prod1/oracle.

  • The files for the database backup are in /u02/oracle/backup/prod1.

  • The Oracle home for CloneDB database CLONE1 is /u03/clone1/oracle.

To clone a database with CloneDB:

  1. Create a backup of your production database. You have the following backup options:

    • An online backup

      If you perform an online backup, then ensure that your production database is in ARCHIVELOG mode and that all of the necessary archived redo log files are saved and accessible to the CloneDB database environment.

    • A full offline backup

      If you perform a full offline backup, then ensure that the backup files are accessible to the CloneDB database environment.

    • A backup that copies the database files

      If you specify BACKUP AS COPY in RMAN, then RMAN copies each file as an image copy, which is a bit-for-bit copy of a database file created on disk. Image copies are identical to copies created with operating system commands such as cp on Linux or COPY on Windows, but are recorded in the RMAN repository and so are usable by RMAN. You can use RMAN to make image copies while the database is open. Ensure that the copied database files are accessible to the CloneDB database environment.

    See Oracle Database Backup and Recovery User’s Guide for information about backing up a database.

  2. Create a text initialization parameter file (PFILE) if one does not exist.

    If you are using a server parameter file (SPFILE), then run the following statement on the production database to create a PFILE:

    CREATE PFILE FROM SPFILE;
  3. Create SQL scripts for cloning the production database.

    You will use one or more SQL scripts to create a CloneDB database in a later step. To create the SQL scripts, you can either use an Oracle-supplied Perl script called clonedb.pl, or you can create a SQL script manually.

    To use the clonedb.pl Perl script, complete the following steps:

    1. Set the following environment variables at an operating system prompt:

      MASTER_COPY_DIR - Specify the directory that contains the backup created in Step 1. Ensure that this directory contains only the backup of the data files of the production database.

      CLONE_FILE_CREATE_DEST - Specify the directory where CloneDB database files will be created, including data files, log files, control files.

      CLONEDB_NAME - Specify the name of the CloneDB database.

      S7000_TARGET - If the NFS host providing the file system for the backup and the CloneDB database is a Sun Storage 7000, then specify the name of the host. Otherwise, do not set this environment variable. Set this environment variable only if cloning must be done using storage snapshots. You can use S7000 storage arrays for Direct NFS Client without setting this variable.

    2. Run the clonedb.pl Perl script.

      The script is in the $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/install directory and has the following syntax:

      $ORACLE_HOME/perl/bin/perl $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/install/clonedb.pl 
      prod_db_pfile [sql_script1] [sql_script2]

      Specify the following options:

      prod_db_pfile - Specify the full path of the production database's PFILE.

      sql_script1 - Specify a name for the first SQL script generated by clonedb.pl. The default is crtdb.sql.

      sql_script2 - Specify a name for the second SQL script generated by clonedb.pl. The default is dbren.sql.

      The clonedb.pl script copies the production database's PFILE to the CloneDB database's directory. It also creates two SQL scripts that you will use to create the CloneDB database.

    3. Check the two SQL scripts that were generated by the clonedb.pl Perl script, and make changes if necessary.

    4. Modify the initialization parameters for the CloneDB database environment, and save the file.

      Change any initialization parameter that is specific to the CloneDB database environment, such as parameters that control SGA size, PGA target, the number of CPUs, and so on. The CLONEDB parameter must be set to TRUE, and the initialization parameter file includes this parameter. See Oracle Database Reference for information about initialization parameters.

    5. In SQL*Plus, connect to the CloneDB database with SYSDBA administrative privilege.

    6. Run the SQL scripts generated by the clonedb.pl Perl script.

      For example, if the scripts use the default names, then run the following scripts at the SQL prompt:

      crtdb.sql
      dbren.sql

    To create a SQL script manually, complete the following steps:

    1. Connect to the database with SYSDBA or SYSBACKUP administrative privilege.

      See Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide.

    2. Generate a backup control file script from your production database by completing the following steps:

      Run the following SQL statement:

      ALTER DATABASE BACKUP CONTROLFILE TO TRACE;

      This statement generates a trace file that contains the SQL statements that create the control file. The trace file containing the CREATE CONTROLFILE statement is stored in a directory determined by the DIAGNOSTIC_DEST initialization parameter. Check the database alert log for the name and location of this trace file.

    3. Open the trace file generated in Step 3b, and copy the STARTUP NOMOUNT and CREATE CONTROLFILE statements in the trace file to a new SQL script.

    4. Edit the new SQL script you created in Step 3c in the following ways:

      Change the name of the database to the name of the CloneDB database you are creating. For example, change PROD1 to CLONE1.

      Change the locations of the log files to a directory in the CloneDB database environment. For example, change/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_log1.f to /u03/clone1/oracle/dbs/t_log1.f.

      Change the locations of the data files to the backup location. For example, change /u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_db1.f to /u02/oracle/backup/prod1/t_db1.f.

      The following is an example of the original statements generated by the ALTER DATABASE BACKUP CONTROLFILE TO TRACE statement:

      STARTUP NOMOUNT
      CREATE CONTROLFILE REUSE DATABASE "PROD1" NORESETLOGS  ARCHIVELOG
          MAXLOGFILES 32
          MAXLOGMEMBERS 2
          MAXDATAFILES 32
          MAXINSTANCES 1
          MAXLOGHISTORY 292
      LOGFILE
        GROUP 1 '/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_log1.f'  SIZE 25M BLOCKSIZE 512,
        GROUP 2 '/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_log2.f'  SIZE 25M BLOCKSIZE 512
      -- STANDBY LOGFILE
      DATAFILE
        '/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_db1.f',
        '/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_ax1.f',
        '/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_undo1.f',
        '/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/t_xdb1.f',
        '/u01/prod1/oracle/dbs/undots.dbf'
      CHARACTER SET WE8ISO8859P1;
      

      The following is an example of the modified statements in the new SQL script:

      STARTUP NOMOUNT PFILE=/u03/clone1/oracle/dbs/clone1.ora
      CREATE CONTROLFILE REUSE DATABASE "CLONE1" RESETLOGS  ARCHIVELOG
          MAXLOGFILES 32
          MAXLOGMEMBERS 2
          MAXDATAFILES 32
          MAXINSTANCES 1
          MAXLOGHISTORY 292
      LOGFILE
        GROUP 1 '/u03/clone1/oracle/dbs/t_log1.f'  SIZE 25M BLOCKSIZE 512,
        GROUP 2 '/u03/clone1/oracle/dbs/t_log2.f'  SIZE 25M BLOCKSIZE 512
      -- STANDBY LOGFILE
      DATAFILE
        '/u02/oracle/backup/prod1/t_db1.f',
        '/u02/oracle/backup/prod1/t_ax1.f',
        '/u02/oracle/backup/prod1/t_undo1.f',
        '/u02/oracle/backup/prod1/t_xdb1.f',
        '/u02/oracle/backup/prod1/undots.dbf'
      CHARACTER SET WE8ISO8859P1;
      

      If you have a storage level snapshot taken on a data file, then you can replace the RMAN backup file names with the storage snapshot names.

    5. After you edit the SQL script, save it to a location that is accessible to the CloneDB database environment.

      Make a note of the name and location of the new SQL script. You will run the script in a subsequent step. In this example, assume the name of the script is create_clonedb1.sql

    6. Copy the text initialization parameter file (PFILE) from the production database environment to the CloneDB database environment.

      For example, copy the text initialization parameter file from /u01/prod1/oracle/dbs to /u03/clone1/oracle/dbs. The name and location of the file must match the name and location specified in the STARTUP NOMOUNT command in the modified SQL script. In the example in Step 3d, the file is /u03/clone1/oracle/dbs/clone1.ora.

    7. Modify the initialization parameters for the CloneDB database environment, and save the file.

      Add the CLONEDB parameter, and ensure that this parameter is set to TRUE. Change any other initialization parameter that is specific to the CloneDB database environment, such as parameters that control SGA size, PGA target, the number of CPUs, and so on. See Oracle Database Reference for information about initialization parameters.

    8. In SQL*Plus, connect to the CloneDB database with SYSDBA administrative privilege.

    9. Run the SQL script you saved in Step 3e.

      For example, enter the following in SQL*Plus:

      @create_clonedb1.sql
    10. For each data file in the backup location, run the CLONEDB_RENAMEFILE procedure in the DBMS_DNFS package and specify the appropriate location in the CloneDB database environment.

      For example, run the following procedure if the backup data file is /u02/oracle/backup/prod1/t_db1.f and the CloneDB database data file is /u03/clone1/oracle/dbs/t_db1.f:

      BEGIN
        DBMS_DNFS.CLONEDB_RENAMEFILE(
          srcfile  => '/u02/oracle/backup/prod1/t_db1.f',
          destfile => '/u03/clone1/oracle/dbs/t_db1.f');
      END;
      /

      See Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for more information about the DBMS_DNFS package.

  4. If you created your CloneDB database from an online backup, then recover the CloneDB database. This step is not required if you performed a full offline backup or a BACKUP AS COPY backup.

    For example, run the following SQL statement on the CloneDB database:

    RECOVER DATABASE USING BACKUP CONTROLFILE UNTIL CANCEL;

    This statement prompts for the archived redo log files for the period when the backup was performed.

  5. Open the database by running the following SQL statement:

    ALTER DATABASE OPEN RESETLOGS;

    The CloneDB database is ready for use.

To create additional CloneDB databases of the production database, repeat Steps 3-5 for each CloneDB database.

After Cloning a Database with CloneDB

After a CloneDB database is created, you can use it in almost any way you use your production database. Initially, a CloneDB database uses a minimal amount of storage for each data file. Changes to rows in a CloneDB database cause storage space to be allocated on demand.

You can use the same backup files to create multiple CloneDB databases. This backup can be taken either by RMAN or by storage level snapshots. If you have a storage level snapshot taken on a data file, then you can replace the RMAN backup file names with the storage snapshot names.

You can use the V$CLONEDFILE view to show information about each data file in the CloneDB database. This information includes the data file name in the backup, the corresponding data file name in the CloneDB database, the number of blocks read from the backup file, and the number of requests issued against the backup file.

Because CloneDB databases use the backup files as their backend storage, the backup files must be available to each CloneDB database for it to run. If the backup files become unavailable, then the CloneDB databases return errors.

When your use of a CloneDB database is complete, you can destroy the CloneDB database environment. You can delete all of the files in the CloneDB database environment without affecting the production database environment or the backup environment.

See Also:

Oracle Database Reference for more information about the V$CLONEDFILE view

Cloning a Database in a Multitenant Environment

You can clone a database in a multitenant environment.

Refer to Oracle Multitenant Administrator's Guide for more information about cloning a database in a multitenant environment.

Cloning a Database with Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM)

Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM) provides support for cloning a pluggable database (PDB) in a multitenant container database (CDB). Oracle ASM does not support cloning a non-CDB.

See the following guides for more information:

Dropping a Database

Dropping a CDB involves removing its data files, online redo logs, control files, and initialization parameter files.

WARNING:

Dropping a CDB deletes all its data.

To drop a database:

  • Submit the following statement:

    DROP DATABASE;

The DROP DATABASE statement first deletes all control files and all other database files listed in the control file. It then shuts down the database instance.

To use the DROP DATABASE statement successfully, the database must be mounted in exclusive and restricted mode.

The DROP DATABASE statement has no effect on archived redo log files, nor does it have any effect on copies or backups of the database. It is best to use RMAN to delete such files.

If you used the Database Configuration Assistant to create your database, you can use that tool to delete (drop) your database and remove the files.