Thursday, December 29, 2011
Database Hardening
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
ORA-01652 unable to extend temp segment by 64 in tablespace USR
ORA-1653: unable to extend table by 4096 in tablespace USR
Saturday, December 24, 2011
ORA-01114: IO error writing block to file 201 (block # 763489) ORA-27072: I/O error Linux Error: 28: No space left on device
Create / Clear Temporary tablespace
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp2
TEMPFILE 'E:\SNSD1011\TEMP02.ORA' SIZE 5M REUSE
AUTOEXTEND ON NEXT 1M MAXSIZE unlimited
EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL UNIFORM SIZE 1M;
2)
ALTER DATABASE DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp2;
3)
DROP TABLESPACE temporary INCLUDING CONTENTS AND DATAFILES;
4)
cREATE TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temporary
TEMPFILE 'E:\SNSD1011\TEMP01.ORA' SIZE 500M REUSE
AUTOEXTEND ON NEXT 100M MAXSIZE unlimited
EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL UNIFORM SIZE 1M;
5)
ALTER DATABASE DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temporary;
6)
DROP TABLESPACE temp2 INCLUDING CONTENTS AND DATAFILES;
7)
SELECT tablespace_name, file_name, bytes
FROM dba_temp_files WHERE tablespace_name = 'temporary';
TNS-12518: TNS:listener could not hand off client connection TNS-12560 TNS-00530 32-bit Windows Error: 2: No such file or directory
Friday, December 23, 2011
Transparent Data Encryption (TDE)
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Find and Delete duplicate check Constraints
Oracle Connection taking long time to establish / tnsping taking too long
Running SQL query
Microsoft ODBC driver for Oracle on 64 bit Machine
you will be unable to use the drive until these software
The Microsoft ODBC Driver can be installed under 64-bit Windows but 64-bit applications cannot access MS ODBC driver because it comes only in 32-bit version. For 32-bit applications under 64-bit Windows there's ODBC Data Source Administrator for the 32-bit ODBC drivers %systemdrive%\Windows\SysWoW64\odbcad32.exe (usually C:\WINDOWS\SysWOW64\odbcad32.exe).
They put the 32 bit odbcad32.exe in the syswow64 directory. They put the 64 bit odbcad32.exe in the system32 directory. 32 bit apps will pick up the 32 bit registry setting and 64 bit will pick up the 64 bit registry setting. system32 comes before syswow64 in the system path so the 64bit software runs before the 32 bit software.
Install Oracle Server 10.2.0.4
Solution: also install oracle client versiob 10.2.0.3 and above to get required driver
Table Defragmentation / Table Reorganization / Table Rebuilding
have an option to reorganize (or defragement) the table by traditional export/truncate/import method, i.e., exporting data from affected table, truncate the
table, then importing data back to the table.
There is an “alter table table_name move” command that you can use to defragment tables.
Note: This method does not apply to tables with with 'LONG' columns.
--------detecting chained row-----
SELECT owner, table_name, chain_cnt FROM dba_tables WHERE chain_cnt > 0;
List Chained Rows
Creating a CHAINED_ROWS Table
@D:\oracle\product\10.2.0\db_1\RDBMS\ADMIN\utlchain.sql will create following table
create table CHAINED_ROWS (
owner_name varchar2(30),
table_name varchar2(30),
cluster_name varchar2(30),
partition_name varchar2(30),
subpartition_name varchar2(30),
head_rowid rowid,
analyze_timestamp date
);
SELECT owner_name,table_name, head_rowid FROM chained_rows;
-------------------
SELECT dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) "Block-Nr", count(*) "Rows"
FROM
GROUP BY dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) order by 1;
SELECT chain_cnt,
round(chain_cnt/num_rows*100,2) pct_chained,
avg_row_len, pct_free , pct_used
FROM user_tables
WHERE TABLE_NAME IN (
SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
If the table includes LOB column(s), this statement can be used to move the table along with LOB data and LOB index segments (associated with this table)
which the user explicitly specifies. If not specified, the default is to not move the LOB data and LOB index segments.
---------------------------Detect all Tables with Chained and Migrated Rows------------------------
1) Analyze all or only your Tables
SELECT 'ANALYZE TABLE '||table_name||' LIST CHAINED ROWS INTO CHAINED_ROWS;' FROM user_tables;
Analyze only chained rows tables
SELECT owner, table_name, chain_cnt FROM dba_tables WHERE owner='LDBO' and chain_cnt > 0;
set heading off;
set feedback off;
set pagesize 1000;
spool C:\temp\chained_statistics.sql;
SELECT 'ANALYZE TABLE ' ||table_name||' LIST CHAINED ROWS INTO CHAINED_ROWS;'
FROM dba_tables WHERE owner='LDBO' and chain_cnt > 0;
spool off
2) Alter Table ......Move
set heading off;
set feedback off;
set pagesize 1000;
spool C:\temp\defrag.sql;
SELECT DISTINCT 'ALTER TABLE ' ||table_name|| FROM CHAINED_ROWS;
spool off
or
select sum(bytes/1024/1024) "FOR INITIAL VALUE OR MORE"
from dba_segments
where owner = 'LDBO'
and segment_name = 'TBLOPTIONACCESSHISTORY';
SELECT DISTINCT 'ALTER TABLE ' ||table_name||' MOVE PCTFREE 20 PCTUSED 40 STORAGE (INITIAL 20K NEXT 40K MINEXTENTS 2 MAXEXTENTS 20 PCTINCREASE 0);' FROM
CHAINED_ROWS;
3) Rebuild Indexes because these tables’s indexes are in unstable state.
connect deltek/xxx@fin;
set heading off;
set feedback off;
set pagesize 1000;
spool C:\temp\rebuild_index.sql;
SELECT 'ALTER INDEX ' ||INDEX_NAME||' REBUILD;' FROM DBA_INDEXES WHERE TABLE_NAME IN ( SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
spool off
4) Analyze Tables for compute statistics after defragmentation
set heading off;
set feedback off;
set pagesize 1000;
spool C:\temp\compute_stat.sql;
SELECT 'ANALYZE TABLE '||table_name||' COMPUTE STATISTICS;' FROM user_tables WHERE TABLE_NAME IN ( SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
spool off
5) Show the RowIDs for all chained rows
This will allow you to quickly see how much of a problem chaining is in each table. If chaining is prevalent in a table, then that table should be rebuild
with a higher value for PCTFREE
SELECT owner_name,
table_name,
count(head_rowid) row_count
FROM chained_rows
GROUP BY owner_name,table_name
/
6) SELECT owner, table_name, chain_cnt FROM dba_tables WHERE chain_cnt > 0;
SELECT dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) "Block-Nr", count(*) "Rows"
FROM row_mig_chain_demo
GROUP BY dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) order by 1;
delete FROM chained_rows;
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Change Snapshot Setting
BEGIN
DBMS_WORKLOAD_REPOSITORY.modify_snapshot_settings(
retention => 66240, -- = 46 Days
interval => 15) -- = 15 Minutes
;
END;
/
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Detect Row Chaining, Migrated Row and Avoid it
This query will show how many chained (and migrated) rows each table has:
SELECT owner, table_name, chain_cnt FROM dba_tables WHERE chain_cnt > 0;
-------------------
SELECT a.name, b.value
FROM v$statname a, v$mystat b
WHERE a.statistic# = b.statistic#
AND lower(a.name) = 'table fetch continued row';
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SELECT 'Chained or Migrated Rows = '||value FROM v$sysstat WHERE name = 'table fetch continued row';
Result:
Chained or Migrated Rows = 31637
Explain:
You could have 1 table with 1 chained row that was fetched 31'637 times. You could have 31'637 tables, each with a chained row, each of which was fetched once. You could have any combination of the above -- any combo.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How many Rows in a Table are chained?
ANALYZE TABLE row_mig_chain_demo COMPUTE STATISTICS;
SELECT chain_cnt,
round(chain_cnt/num_rows*100,2) pct_chained,
avg_row_len, pct_free , pct_used
FROM user_tables
WHERE table_name = 'ROW_MIG_CHAIN_DEMO';
CHAIN_CNT PCT_CHAINED AVG_ROW_LEN PCT_FREE PCT_USED
---------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ----------
3 100 3691 10 40
PCT_CHAINED shows 100% which means all rows are chained or migrated.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
List Chained Rows
You can look at the chained and migrated rows of a table using the ANALYZE statement with the LIST CHAINED ROWS clause. The results of this statement are stored in a specified table created explicitly to accept the information returned by the LIST CHAINED ROWS clause. These results are useful in determining whether you have enough room for updates to rows.
Creating a CHAINED_ROWS Table
To create the table to accept data returned by an ANALYZE ... LIST CHAINED ROWS statement, execute the UTLCHAIN.SQL or UTLCHN1.SQL script in $ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/admin. These scripts are provided by the database. They create a table named CHAINED_ROWS in the schema of the user submitting the script.
D:\oracle\product\10.2.0\db_1\RDBMS\ADMIN\utlchain.sql will create following table
create table CHAINED_ROWS (
owner_name varchar2(30),
table_name varchar2(30),
cluster_name varchar2(30),
partition_name varchar2(30),
subpartition_name varchar2(30),
head_rowid rowid,
analyze_timestamp date
);
After a CHAINED_ROWS table is created, you specify it in the INTO clause of the ANALYZE statement.
ANALYZE TABLE row_mig_chain_demo LIST CHAINED ROWS;
SELECT owner_name,table_name, head_rowid FROM chained_rows;
-----------------------------How to avoid Chained and Migrated Rows?--------------------------
Increasing PCTFREE can help to avoid migrated rows. If you leave more free space available in the block, then the row has room to grow. You can also reorganize or re-create tables and indexes that have high deletion rates. If tables frequently have rows deleted, then data blocks can have partially free space in them. If rows are inserted and later expanded, then the inserted rows might land in blocks with deleted rows but still not have enough room to expand. Reorganizing the table ensures that the main free space is totally empty blocks.
The ALTER TABLE ... MOVE statement enables you to relocate data of a nonpartitioned table or of a partition of a partitioned table into a new segment, and optionally into a different tablespace for which you have quota. This statement also lets you modify any of the storage attributes of the table or partition, including those which cannot be modified using ALTER TABLE. You can also use the ALTER TABLE ... MOVE statement with the COMPRESS keyword to store the new segment using table compression.
ALTER TABLE MOVE
First count the number of Rows per Block before the ALTER TABLE MOVE
SELECT dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) "Block-Nr", count(*) "Rows"
FROM row_mig_chain_demo
GROUP BY dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) order by 1;
Block-Nr Rows
---------- ----------
2066 3
Now, de-chain the table, the ALTER TABLE MOVE rebuilds the row_mig_chain_demo table in a new segment, specifying new storage parameters:
SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS;
ALTER TABLE tbloptionaccesshistory MOVE
PCTFREE 20
PCTUSED 40
STORAGE (INITIAL 20K
NEXT 40K
MINEXTENTS 2
MAXEXTENTS 20
PCTINCREASE 0);
Table altered.
Again count the number of Rows per Block after the ALTER TABLE MOVE
SELECT dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) "Block-Nr", count(*) "Rows"
FROM tbloptionaccesshistory
GROUP BY dbms_rowid.rowid_block_number(rowid) order by 1;
Rebuild the Indexes for the Table
Moving a table changes the rowids of the rows in the table. This causes indexes on the table to be marked UNUSABLE, and DML accessing the table using these indexes will receive an ORA-01502 error. The indexes on the table must be dropped or rebuilt. Likewise, any statistics for the table become invalid and new statistics should be collected after moving the table.
ANALYZE TABLE row_mig_chain_demo COMPUTE STATISTICS;
ERROR at line 1:
ORA-01502: index 'SCOTT.SYS_C003228' or partition of such index is in unusable
state
This is the primary key of the table which must be rebuilt.
ALTER INDEX SYS_C003228 REBUILD;
Index altered.
------------
SELECT 'ALTER INDEX ' ||INDEX_NAME||' REBUILD;' FROM DBA_INDEXES WHERE TABLE_NAME IN ( SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
-------------
ANALYZE TABLE row_mig_chain_demo COMPUTE STATISTICS;
Table analyzed.
---------------------
SELECT 'ANALYZE TABLE '||table_name||' COMPUTE STATISTICS;' FROM user_tables WHERE TABLE_NAME IN ( SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
------------------------
SELECT chain_cnt,
round(chain_cnt/num_rows*100,2) pct_chained,
avg_row_len, pct_free , pct_used
FROM user_tables
WHERE TABLE_NAME IN (
SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
CHAIN_CNT PCT_CHAINED AVG_ROW_LEN PCT_FREE PCT_USED
---------- ----------- ----------- ---------- ----------
If the table includes LOB column(s), this statement can be used to move the table along with LOB data and LOB index segments (associated with this table) which the user explicitly specifies. If not specified, the default is to not move the LOB data and LOB index segments.
---------------
SELECT owner, table_name, chain_cnt FROM dba_tables WHERE chain_cnt > 0;
-----------------
---------------------------Detect all Tables with Chained and Migrated Rows------------------------
1) Analyse all or only your Tables
SELECT 'ANALYZE TABLE '||table_name||' LIST CHAINED ROWS INTO CHAINED_ROWS;'
FROM user_tables
/
SELECT owner, table_name, chain_cnt FROM dba_tables WHERE owner='LDBO' and chain_cnt > 0;
SELECT 'ANALYZE TABLE ' ||table_name||' LIST CHAINED ROWS INTO CHAINED_ROWS;'
FROM dba_tables WHERE owner='LDBO' and chain_cnt > 0
/
SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS;
2) Alter Table ......Move
SELECT DISTINCT 'ALTER TABLE ' ||table_name||' MOVE PCTFREE 20 PCTUSED 40 STORAGE (INITIAL 20K NEXT 40K MINEXTENTS 2 MAXEXTENTS 20 PCTINCREASE 0);' FROM CHAINED_ROWS;
3) Rebuild Indexes
SELECT 'ALTER INDEX ' ||INDEX_NAME||' REBUILD;' FROM DBA_INDEXES WHERE TABLE_NAME IN ( SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
4) Analyze Tables
SELECT 'ANALYZE TABLE '||table_name||' COMPUTE STATISTICS;' FROM user_tables WHERE TABLE_NAME IN ( SELECT distinct table_name FROM CHAINED_ROWS);
5) Show the RowIDs for all chained rows
This will allow you to quickly see how much of a problem chaining is in each table. If chaining is prevalent in a table, then that table should be rebuild with a higher value for PCTFREE
SELECT owner_name,
table_name,
count(head_rowid) row_count
FROM chained_rows
GROUP BY owner_name,table_name
/
6) SELECT owner, table_name, chain_cnt FROM dba_tables WHERE chain_cnt > 0;
Conclusion
Migrated rows affect OLTP systems which use indexed reads to read singleton rows. In the worst case, you can add an extra I/O to all reads which would be really bad. Truly chained rows affect index reads and full table scans.
Row migration is typically caused by UPDATE operation
Row chaining is typically caused by INSERT operation.
SQL statements which are creating/querying these chained/migrated rows will degrade the performance due to more I/O work.
To diagnose chained/migrated rows use ANALYZE command , query V$SYSSTAT view
To remove chained/migrated rows use higher PCTFREE using ALTER TABLE MOVE.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Move segments from one Tablespace to another
Tables + indexes of tables EMP,PRODUCTS,CUSTOMERS into tablespace TBS1.
All the other tables + indexes of this user into tablespace TBS2.
set serveroutput on
--***********************************************
-- (Run the script as DBA user)
-- Parameters:
---------------
-- user_name : owner to which to move segments
-- TBS1 : Tablespace-A
-- Tables_TBS1 : list of tables to move to tablespace-A
-- TBS2 : tablespace to move all tables NOT in the list
-- put_Output : if 'true' - create output of operations (dbms_output)
-- put_Execute : if 'true' - execute the move operations
--***********************************************
declare
User_Name varchar2(20) default 'PROD_USER';
TBS1 varchar2(20) default 'TBS1';
Tables_TBS1 varchar2(1000) default 'EMP,PRODUCTS,CUSTOMERS';
TBS2 varchar2(20) default 'TBS2';
put_Output boolean default true;
put_Execute boolean default true;
Sort_memory number default 10000000;
TBS varchar2(20);
begin
Tables_TBS1 := upper(','||Tables_TBS1||',');
execute immediate 'alter session set sort_area_size = '||to_char(Sort_memory);
for crs in (select distinct s.owner, s.segment_name, s.partition_name, s.tablespace_name, s.segment_type from dba_segments s where owner like User_Name and segment_type in ('TABLE','TABLE PARTITION','TABLE SUBPARTITION')) loop
if instr(Tables_TBS1,','||crs.segment_name||',') != 0 then
TBS := TBS1;
else
TBS := TBS2;
end if;
if crs.tablespace_name = TBS then
--------------------------------------------------
-- Table is already in the correct tablespace.
-- check only indexes.
--------------------------------------------------
for crs2 in (select distinct s.owner, s.segment_name, s.partition_name, s.tablespace_name, s.segment_type from dba_indexes i, dba_segments s
where i.table_owner=crs.owner and i.table_name = crs.segment_name and s.segment_type in ('INDEX','INDEX PARTITION','INDEX SUBPARTITION')
and s.owner = i.owner and s.segment_name = i.index_name and (s.partition_name = crs.partition_name or s.partition_name is null and crs.partition_name is null)) loop
if instr(Tables_TBS1,','||crs.segment_name||',') != 0 then
TBS := TBS1;
else
TBS := TBS2;
end if;
if crs2.tablespace_name != TBS then
if crs2.segment_type in ('INDEX PARTITION') then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('> INDEX PARTITION '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||':'||crs2.partition_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter index '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' rebuild partition '||crs2.partition_name ||' tablespace '||TBS; end if;
elsif crs2.segment_type in ('INDEX SUBPARTITION') then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('> INDEX SUBPARTITION '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||':'||crs2.partition_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter index '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' rebuild subpartition '||crs2.partition_name ||' tablespace '||TBS; end if;
elsif crs2.segment_type = 'INDEX' then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('> INDEX '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter index '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' rebuild tablespace '||TBS; end if;
end if;
end if;
end loop;
else
--------------------------------------------------
-- Move Table AND all rebuild ALL the indexes.
--------------------------------------------------
if crs.segment_type in ('TABLE PARTITION') then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('TABLE PARTITION '||crs.owner||'.'||crs.segment_name||':'||crs.partition_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter table '||crs.owner||'.'||crs.segment_name||' move partition '||crs.partition_name ||' tablespace '||TBS; end if;
elsif crs.segment_type in ('TABLE SUBPARTITION') then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('TABLE SUBPARTITION '||crs.owner||'.'||crs.segment_name||':'||crs.partition_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter table '||crs.owner||'.'||crs.segment_name||' move subpartition '||crs.partition_name ||' tablespace '||TBS; end if;
elsif crs.segment_type = 'TABLE' then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('TABLE '||crs.owner||'.'||crs.segment_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter table '||crs.owner||'.'||crs.segment_name||' move tablespace '||TBS; end if;
end if;
for crs2 in (select distinct s.owner, s.segment_name, s.partition_name, s.tablespace_name, s.segment_type from dba_indexes i, dba_segments s
where i.table_owner=crs.owner and i.table_name = crs.segment_name and s.segment_type in ('INDEX','INDEX PARTITION','INDEX SUBPARTITION')
and s.owner = i.owner and s.segment_name = i.index_name and (s.partition_name = crs.partition_name or s.partition_name is null and crs.partition_name is null)) loop
if crs2.segment_type in ('INDEX PARTITION') then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('> INDEX PARTITION '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||':'||crs2.partition_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter index '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' rebuild partition '||crs2.partition_name ||' tablespace '||TBS; end if;
elsif crs2.segment_type in ('INDEX SUBPARTITION') then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('> INDEX SUBPARTITION '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||':'||crs2.partition_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter index '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' rebuild subpartition '||crs2.partition_name ||' tablespace '||TBS; end if;
elsif crs2.segment_type = 'INDEX' then
if put_Output then dbms_output.put_line ('> INDEX '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' -> '||TBS); end if;
if put_Execute then execute immediate 'alter index '||crs2.owner||'.'||crs2.segment_name||' rebuild tablespace '||TBS; end if;
end if;
end loop;
end if;
end loop;
end;
/
Thursday, December 15, 2011
EMAIL NOTIFICATION changes in init.ora parameters
Auditing changes to init.ora parameters (via pfile or spfile) is an important DBA task. Sometimes, users which have “alter system” privilege can make unauthorized changes to the initialization parameters in the spfile on a production database. Hence, auditing changes to parameters is a critical DBA task. Fortunately, it's quite simple to audit these changes by implementing the audit_sys_operations=true.
Here is a method to track changes to the initialization parameters. In order to track all changes to parameters we can use audit for thealter system statement for any specific user
We should follow below steps to track changes to init.ora parameters:
1. ALTER SYSTEM SET audit_trail=db SCOPE=SPFILE;
2. SHUTDOWN IMMEDIATE
3. STARTUP
4. CREATE USER TEST IDENTIFIED BY TEST;
5. GRANT DBA TO TEST;
6. AUDIT ALTER SYSTEM BY test;
7. CONN TEST/TEST
8. ALTER SYSTEM SET AUDIT_TRAIL=db SCOPE=SPFILE;
9. Create an alert script to notify the DBA when a parameter has changed.
Let's start by finding the action_name in the dba_audit_trail view for the alter system command:
SQL> select username, timestamp, action_name from dba_audit_trail;
USERNAME TIMESTAMP ACTION_NAME
------------------------------ ------------- ----------------------------
TEST 29-MAY-09 ALTER SYSTEM
STEP 1 - We can track changes made by SYS user by setting audit_sys_operations parameter to TRUE.
SQL> alter system set audit_sys_operations=true scope=spfile;
System altered.
STEP 2 - Next, we bounce the instance to make the change take effect:
SQL> shutdown immediate
Database closed.
Database dismounted.
ORACLE instance shut down.
SQL> startup
ORACLE instance started.
Total System Global Area 285212672 bytes
Fixed Size 1218992 bytes
Variable Size 92276304 bytes
Database Buffers 188743680 bytes
Redo Buffers 2973696 bytes
Database mounted.
Database opened.
Here we see our auditing parameters:
SQL> show parameter audit
NAME TYPE VALUE
------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------
audit_file_dest string /home/oracle/oracle/product/10 .2.0/db_1/admin/fkhalid/adump
audit_sys_operations boolean TRUE
audit_syslog_level string
audit_trail string DB
SQL> alter system set audit_trail=db scope=spfile;
System altered.
STEP 3 - Here we go to the adump directory and examine the audit files:
SQL> host
[oracle@localhost bin]$ cd /home/oracle/oracle/product/10.2.0/db_1/admin/kam/adump/
[oracle@localhost adump]$ ls
ora_5449.aud ora_5476.aud ora_5477.aud ora_5548.aud ora_5575.aud ora_5576.aud
[oracle@localhost adump]$ cat ora_5576.aud
Audit file /home/oracle/oracle/product/10.2.0/db_1/admin/kam/adump/ora_5576.aud
Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Production
With the Partitioning, OLAP and Data Mining options
ORACLE_HOME = /home/oracle/oracle/product/10.2.0/db_1/
System name: Linux
Node name: localhost.localdomain
Release: 2.6.18-92.el5
Version: #1 SMP Tue Jun 10 18:49:47 EDT 2008
Machine: i686
Instance name: kam
Redo thread mounted by this instance: 1
Oracle process number: 15
Unix process pid: 5576, image: oracle@localhost.localdomain (TNS V1-V3)
Fri May 29 02:38:30 2009
ACTION : 'alter system set audit_trail=db scope=spfile'
DATABASE USER: '/'
PRIVILEGE : SYSDBA
CLIENT USER: oracle
CLIENT TERMINAL: pts/2
STATUS: 0
STEP 4 - Now, create a crontab job to seek new entries in the adump directory.
#******************************************************
# list the full-names of all possible adump files . . . .
#******************************************************
rm -f /tmp/audit_list.lst
find $DBA/$ORACLE_SID/adump/*.trc -mtime -1 -print >> /tmp/audit_list.lst
STEP 5 - When found, send the DBA an e-mail:
# If initialization paramneter has changed, send an e-mail
if [ -f /tmp/audit_list.lst]; then
then
# Now, be sure that we don't clog the mailbox.
# the following statement checks to look for existing mail,
# and only sends mail when mailbox is empty . . .
if [ ! -s /var/spool/mail/oramy_sid ]
then
cat /oracle/MY_SID/scripts/oracheck.log | mail oramy_sid
fi
sendmail . . .
fi
Please beware that using the auditing command imposes additional work on the production database.
How to fix - ORA-12514
1. Test communication between the client and the listener
We will use tnsping to complete this step. It's a common misconception that tnsping tests connectivity to the instance. In actual fact, it only tests connectivity to the listener.
Here, we will use it to prove that a) the tnsnames.ora has the correct hostname and port, and b) that there is a listener listening on the specified host and port. Run tnsping:
tnsping
oracle@bloo$ tnspinng scr9
Used TNSNAMES adapter to resolve the alias
Attempting to contact (DESCRIPTION = (ADDRESS_LIST = (ADDRESS =
(PROTOCOL = TCP) (HOST = bloo)(PORT = 1521))) (CONNECT_DATA =
(SERVER = DEDICATED) (SERVICE_NAME = scr9)))
OK (40 msec)
If not, here are some common errors, and some suggestions for fixing them:
TNS-03505: Failed to resolve name
The specified database name was not found in the tnsnames.ora, onames or ldap. This means that tnsping hasn't even got as far as trying to make contact with a server - it simply can't find any record of the database that you are trying to tnsping. Make sure that you've spelled the database name correctly, and that it has an entry in the tnsnames.ora.
If you have a sqlnet.ora, look at for the setting NAMES.DEFAULT_DOMAIN. If it is set, then all entries in your tnsnames.ora must have a matching domain suffix.
TNS-12545: Connect failed because target host or object does not exist
The host specified in the tnsnames is not contactable. Verify that you have spelled the host name correctly. If you have, try pinging the host with 'ping
TNS-12541: TNS:no listener
The hostname was valid but the listener was not contactable. Things to check are that the tnsnames has the correct port (and hostname) specified, and that the listener is running on the server and using the correct port.
tnsping hangs for a long time
I've seen this happen in situations where there is something listening on the host/port - but it isn't an oracle listener. Make sure you have specified the correct port, and that your listener is running. If all looks ok, try doing a 'netstat -ap | grep 1521' (or whatever port you are using) to find out what program is listening on that port.
2. Attempt a connection to the instance
Once you have proven that the tnsnames is talking to the listener properly, the next step is to attempt a full connection to the instance. To do this we.ll use sqlplus:
sqlplus [username]/[password]@
If it works you will successfully log into the instance. If not, here are some common errors:
ORA-01017: invalid username/password; logon denied
This is actually a good error in these circumstances! Even though you didn't use the correct username or password, you must have successfully made contact with the instance.
ORA-12505: TNS:listener does not currently know of SID given in connect
Either the SID is misspelled in the tnsnames, or the listener isn't listening for it. Check the tnsnames.ora first. If it looks ok, do a 'lsnrctl status' on your server, to see what databases the listener is listening for.
ORA-12514: TNS:listener could not resolve SERVICE_NAME given in connect
This is quite a common error and it means that, while the listener was contactable, the database (or rather the service) specified in the tnsnames wasn't one of the things that it was listening out for.
Begin by looking at your tnsnames.ora. In it, you will a setting like SERVICE_NAME=
If you are running a single instance database (ie. not RAC), and you are sure that you are not using services, it might be easier to change SERVICE_NAME= to SID= in your tnsnames. Using service names is the more modern way of doing things, and it does have benefits, but SID still works perfectly well (for now anyway).
If you would prefer to continue using service names, you must first check that you have not misspelled the service name in your tnsnames. If it looks alright, next check that the listener is listening for the service. Do this by running 'lsnrctl services' on your server. If there isn't an entry for your service, you need to make sure that the service_names parameter is set correctly on the database.
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Missing ArchiveLog at Standby server
Switchover and Failover steps
1. SELECT SWITCHOVER_STATUS FROM V$DATABASE;
SWITCHOVER_STATUS
-----------------
TO STANDBY
1 row selected
2. ALTER DATABASE COMMIT TO SWITCHOVER TO PHYSICAL STANDBY;
3. SHUTDOWN IMMEDIATE;
STARTUP MOUNT;
4. SELECT SWITCHOVER_STATUS FROM V$DATABASE;
SWITCHOVER_STATUS
------------
TO_PRIAMRY
5. at standby ALTER DATABASE COMMIT TO SWITCHOVER TO PRIMARY;
6. alter database open [if db opened read only since last time it was started]
else shutdown and restart
7. ALTER SYSTEM SWITCH LOGFILE;
FAILOVER
First resolve gap:
A) Identify and resolve any gaps in the archived redo log files.
SQL> SELECT THREAD#, LOW_SEQUENCE#, HIGH_SEQUENCE# FROM V$ARCHIVE_GAP;
THREAD# LOW_SEQUENCE# HIGH_SEQUENCE#
---------- ------------- --------------
1 90 92
ALTER DATABASE REGISTER PHYSICAL LOGFILE 'filespec1';
B) Repeat A) until all gaps are resolved.
C) Copy any other missing archived redo log files.
SQL> SELECT UNIQUE THREAD# AS THREAD, MAX(SEQUENCE#)
2> OVER (PARTITION BY thread#) AS LAST from V$ARCHIVED_LOG;
THREAD LAST
---------- ----------
1 100
ALTER DATABASE REGISTER PHYSICAL LOGFILE 'filespec1';
now initiate failover at standby
1. ALTER DATABASE RECOVER MANAGED STANDBY DATABASE FINISH FORCE;
2. ALTER DATABASE COMMIT TO SWITCHOVER TO PRIMARY;
3. alter database open [if db opened read only since last time it was started]
else shutdown and restart