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Recovery Manager Quick Start Guide

Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Advanced User's Guide presents in-depth information on RMAN architecture, backup and recovery concepts and mechanisms, advanced recovery techniques such as point-in-time recovery and database flashback features, and backup and recovery performance tuning. It also covers user-managed backup and recovery, using host operating system facilities instead of RMAN. This volume is essential for backup and recovery of more sophisticated database deployments, and for advanced recovery scenarios....
Oracle® Database Recovery Manager Quick Start Guide 10g Release 1 (10.1) December 2003 Part No. B10769-01 Recovery Manager Quick Start Guide has three purposes: s To introduce the basic concepts of Oracle backup and recovery, and the Recovery Manager (RMAN), the tool Oracle recommends that you use for your backup and recovery s To orient you on the rest of the backup and recovery documentation set s To serve as a convenient quick reference for the most frequently used RMAN commands, options and views This document is organized into the following sections: s Overview of Backup and Recovery Documentation Set s Overview of the RMAN Environment s Starting and Exiting RMAN s Configuring Persistent Settings for the RMAN Environment s Backing Up Database Files s Restoring and Recovering Database Files s Reporting on RMAN Operations s Managing the RMAN Repository s Repetitive Tasks: RMAN and Scripting s RMAN Syntax Quick Reference s Backup and Recovery Views s Documentation Accessibility Oracle is a registered trademark, and SQL*Plus is a trademark or registered trademark of Oracle Corporation. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners. Copyright  2003 Oracle Corporation. All Rights Reserved. Conventions for Command Syntax The following table shows the syntax convention used in this manual. Convention Meaning [] Brackets enclose one or more optional items. Do not enter the brackets. {} Braces enclose two or more items, one of which is required. Do not enter the braces. | A vertical bar represents a choice of two or more options within brackets or braces. Enter one of the options. Do not enter the vertical bar. ... Horizontal ellipsis points indicate either: s That we have omitted parts of the code that are not directly related to the example s That you can repeat a portion of the code . Vertical ellipsis points indicate that we have omitted several lines of code not directly related to the example. . . Other You must enter symbols other than brackets, braces, vertical bars, notation and ellipsis points as shown. Bold Bold type indicates the introduction of a significant term. Usually a brief definition or a longer discussion follows the introduction of the term. Italics Italicized text indicates placeholders or variables for which you must supply particular values. UPPERCASE Uppercase typeface indicates elements supplied by the system. We show these terms in uppercase in order to distinguish them from terms you define. Unless terms appear in brackets, enter them in the order and with the spelling shown. However, because these terms are not case sensitive, you can enter them in lowercase. lowercase Lowercase typeface indicates programmatic elements that you supply. For example, lowercase indicates names of tables, columns, or files. Note: Some programmatic elements use a mixture of UPPERCASE and lowercase. Enter these elements as shown. 2 Overview of Backup and Recovery Documentation Set Besides this quick start guide, there are three volumes in the backup and recovery documentation set. s Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Basics explains the concepts of backup and recovery and the most common techniques for using RMAN for backup, recovery and reporting in more detail, as well as providing more information on how to plan a backup and recovery strategy. s Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Advanced User's Guide presents in-depth information on RMAN architecture, backup and recovery concepts and mechanisms, advanced recovery techniques such as point-in-time recovery and database flashback features, and backup and recovery performance tuning. It also covers user-managed backup and recovery, using host operating system facilities instead of RMAN. This volume is essential for backup and recovery of more sophisticated database deployments, and for advanced recovery scenarios. s Oracle Database Recovery Manager Reference provides complete information on syntax and semantics for all Recovery Manager commands, and describes the database views available for reporting on backup and recovery activities. Overview of the RMAN Environment Installed with the database, Recovery Manager (RMAN) is an Oracle database client which performs backup and recovery tasks on your databases and automates administration of your backup strategies. It greatly simplifies backing up, restoring, and recovering database files. The RMAN environment consists of the utilities and databases that play a role in backing up your data. At a minimum, the environment for RMAN must include the following: s The target database to be backed up s The RMAN client, which interprets backup and recovery commands, directs server sessions to execute those commands, and records your backup and recovery activity in the target database control file. Some environments will also use these optional components: s A flash recovery area, a disk location in which the database can store and manage files related to backup and recovery; s Media management software, required for RMAN to interface with backup devices such as tape drives; s A recovery catalog database, a separate database schema used to record RMAN activity against one or more target databases. 3 About the Target Database The target database is the database that you are backing up, restoring, or recovering with RMAN. About the RMAN Client RMAN is a command-line-oriented database client, much like SQL*Plus, with its own command syntax. From the RMAN client you can issue RMAN commands and SQL statements to perform and report on backup and recovery operations. RMAN can take interactive input or read input from plain text files (called command files). RMAN then communicates with one or more server processes on the target database server which actually perform the work. You can also access RMAN through the Enterprise Manager; for details see Oracle Enterprise Manager Administrator's Guide. The RMAN executable is typically installed in the same directory as the other database executables. On Unix systems, for example, the RMAN executable is located in $ORACLE_HOME/bin. About the RMAN Repository RMAN maintains metadata about the target database and its backup and recovery operations in the RMAN repository. Among other things, RMAN stores information about its own configuration settings, the target database schema, archived redo logs, and all backup files on disk or tape. RMAN’s LIST, REPORT, and SHOW commands display RMAN repository information. RMAN repository data is always stored in the control file of the target database. The CONTROL_FILE_RECORD_KEEP_TIME initialization parameter controls how long backup records are kept in the control file before those records are re-used to hold information about more recent backups. The repository can also be kept in a recovery catalog, a separate database that keeps historical data on backup activities much longer than the control file and preserves backup information if the control file is lost. About the Flash Recovery Area The Automatic Disk-Based Backup and Recovery feature simplifies managing disk space and files related to backup and recovery, by managing all backup and recovery related files in a flash recovery area. You set the flash recovery area size and location, using the DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST and DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST_SIZE initialization parameters. You also specify a retention policy that dictates when backups may be discarded. RMAN then manages your backup storage, deleting obsolete backups and backups already copied to tape when space is needed, but keeping as many 4 backups on disk as space permits. This minimizes restores from tape during data recovery operations to shorten restore and recovery times. About the Recovery Catalog In addition to RMAN repository records, the recovery catalog can also hold RMAN stored scripts, sequences of RMAN commands for common backup tasks. Centralized storage of scripts in the recovery catalog can be more convenient than working with command files. Except for stored scripts, all of RMAN’s features work equally well with or without a recovery catalog. For more information on the recovery catalog see Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Advanced User's Guide. About Media Managers To access sequential media devices like tape libraries, RMAN uses third-party media management software. A media manager controls these devices during backup and recovery, managing the loading, labeling and unloading of media, among other functions. Oracle Corporation’s Backup Solutions Program (BSP) works with vendors to help them produce media management software for their devices. For enterprises that already use media management software in their enterprise, many of those software products can be directly integrated with RMAN. Contact your media management software vendor for details about whether they participate in the BSP and have an RMAN-compatible media management layer. Starting and Exiting RMAN The RMAN client is started by issuing the rman command at the command prompt of your operating system. RMAN must connect to a target database (with SYSDBA privileges) to perform backup and recovery tasks. RMAN can also connect to a recovery catalog database if you are using one. Specify target and recovery catalog databases using command line options or using the CONNECT command. This command connects RMAN to a target database and a recovery catalog: % rman TARGET / CATALOG cat_usr/pwd@cat_str Connect to a target database without using a recovery catalog: % rman TARGET SYS/pwd@target_str Starting RMAN without connecting to a database % rman Once started, RMAN displays an "RMAN>" prompt for your commands. 5 Syntax of Common RMAN Command-line Options RMAN [ TARGET [=] connectStringSpec | { CATALOG [=] connectStringSpec } | LOG [=] ['] filename ['] [ APPEND ] . . . ]... connectStringSpec::= ['] [userid] [/ [password]] [@net_service_name] ['] This example appends the output from an RMAN session to a text file at $ORACLE_HOME/dbs/log/msglog.log % rman TARGET / LOG $ORACLE_HOME/dbs/log/msglog.log APPEND To quit the RMAN client, type EXIT at the RMAN prompt: RMAN> EXIT Configuring Persistent Settings for the RMAN Environment You can configure persistent settings in the RMAN environment, which apply to all subsequent operations, even if you exit and restart RMAN. Configuring Disk Devices and Channels RMAN channels are connections to server sessions on the target database, which are used to perform all backup, restore and recovery operations. By default, RMAN allocates one disk channel for all operations. You can configure dditional channels for use with disks and with other media. By default, RMAN sends all backups to disk. If a flash recovery area is configured, it is the default destination; otherwise the default directory is platform-dependent. If, as recommended, you use the flash recovery area as the destination for all disk backups, you would set up a flash recovery area and use the following CONFIGURE command: RMAN> CONFIGURE CHANNEL DEVICE TYPE DISK FORMAT CLEAR; The following command configures RMAN to write disk backups to the /tmp directory: RMAN> CONFIGURE CHANNEL DEVICE TYPE DISK FORMAT '/tmp/%U'; The format specifier %U is replaced with unique filenames for the files when you take backups. Refer to Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Advanced User's Guide. for more details on configuring destinations for your disk backups. 6 Configuring Tape Devices and Channels After configuring your media management software, you can make the media manager the default destination for RMAN backups: RMAN> CONFIGURE DEFAULT DEVICE TYPE TO sbt; Some media managers require a PARMS string to configure device settings: RMAN> CONFIGURE CHANNEL DEVICE TYPE sbt PARMS=’ENV=mml_env_settings'; Multiple channels can be configured to run backups in parallel. This command configures two sbt channels for use in RMAN jobs: RMAN> CONFIGURE DEVICE TYPE sbt PARALLELISM 2; Configuring a Retention Policy Retention policy governs how long backup files are retained. Retention policy can be set in terms of a recovery window (how far into the past you need to be able to recover your database), or a redundancy value (how many backups of each file must be retained). This command ensures that RMAN retains all backups needed to recover the database to any point in time in the last 7 days: RMAN> CONFIGURE RETENTION POLICY TO RECOVERY WINDOW OF 7 DAYS; This command ensures that RMAN retains three backups of each datafile: RMAN> CONFIGURE RETENTION POLICY TO REDUNDANCY 3; Use DELETE OBSOLETE to immediately delete backups no longer required by the retention policy. (For backups stored in a flash recovery area, you do not need to perform this step. The database automatically deletes obsolete files and files already backed up to tape when space is needed.) You can use the KEEP option of the BACKUP and CHANGE commands to override the configured retention policy for individual backups-- for example, to force the retention of a specific backup. Configuring Control File Autobackups This command configures RMAN to back up the control file after each backup or copy: RMAN> CONFIGURE CONTROLFILE AUTOBACKUP ON; By default, RMAN automatically names control file autobackups and stores them in the flash recovery area. The following command configures RMAN to write control file autobackups to the /mybackupdir directory: RMAN> CONFIGURE CONTROLFILE AUTOBACKUP FORMAT FOR DEVICE TYPE DISK TO '/mybackupdir/cf%F'; 7 The %F element of the format string combines the DBID, day, month, year, and sequence number to generate a unique filename. %F is required for control file autobackups. Restoring Default Values for Configured Settings Reset any CONFIGURE setting to its default by running the command with the CLEAR option, as shown here: RMAN> CONFIGURE CHANNEL DEVICE TYPE sbt CLEAR; RMAN> CONFIGURE RETENTION POLICY CLEAR; RMAN> CONFIGURE CONTROLFILE AUTOBACKUP FORMAT FOR DEVICE TYPE DISK CLEAR; Viewing Current Settings This command shows all configurable settings: RMAN> SHOW ALL; The output lists the CONFIGURE commands to recreate this configuration. Backing Up Database Files Use the BACKUP command to back up files. You will usually configure default devices and channels in advance; BACKUP backs up your data to the configured default device and channels for the type of backup requested. If you specify BACKUP AS COPY, then RMAN copies the files as image copies, bit-for-bit copies of database files that can only be created on disk. This command creates image copy backups of all datafiles in the database: RMAN> BACKUP AS COPY DATABASE; If you specify BACKUP AS BACKUPSET, then RMAN stores its backups in backup sets. A backup set consists of one or more backup pieces, physical files containing the data. A backup set usually contains only one backup piece. Only RMAN can create and restore backup sets. The following command creates a backup of the database and archived logs on tape, in backup set format, using the configured channels: RMAN> BACKUP DEVICE TYPE sbt DATABASE PLUS ARCHIVELOG; Backing Up Individual Files You can back up individual tablespaces, database files, server parameter files, and backup sets with various options, as in these examples: RMAN> BACKUP ARCHIVELOG COMPLETION TIME BETWEEN ’SYSDATE-31’ AND ’SYSDATE-7’; RMAN> BACKUP TABLESPACE system, users, tools; RMAN> BACKUP AS BACKUPSET DATAFILE ’ORACLE_HOME/oradata/trgt/users01.dbf’, ’ORACLE_HOME/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf’; RMAN> BACKUP CURRENT CONTROLFILE TO ’/backup/curr_cf.copy’; 8 RMAN> BACKUP SPFILE; RMAN> BACKUP BACKUPSET ALL; Note that in the above examples you should enter the path to your Oracle home in place of "ORACLE_HOME". Backup Options Here are some often-used BACKUP command options: Parameter Example Explanation FORMAT FORMAT ’/tmp/%U’ Specifies a location and name for backup pieces and copies. You must use substitution variables to generate unique filenames. TAG TAG ’monday_bak’ Specifies a user-defined string as a label for the backup. If you do not specify a tag, then RMAN assigns a default tag with the date and time. The following BACKUP commands illustrate these options: RMAN> BACKUP FORMAT='AL_%d/%t/%s/%p' ARCHIVELOG LIKE ’%arc_dest%’; RMAN> BACKUP TAG ’weekly_full_db_bkup’ DATABASE MAXSETSIZE 10M; RMAN> BACKUP COPIES 2 DEVICE TYPE sbt BACKUPSET ALL; Incremental Backups If you specify BACKUP INCREMENTAL, RMAN will create incremental backups of your database. Incremental backups capture on a block-by-block basis changes in your database since a previous incremental backup. The starting point for an incremental backup strategy is a level 0 incremental backup, which backs up all blocks in the database. Level 1 incremental backups, taken at regular intervals, contain only changed blocks since a previous incremental backup. These can be cumulative (including all blocks changed since the most recent level 0 backup) or differential (including only blocks changed since the most recent incremental backup, whether it is level 0 or level 1). Incremental backups are generally smaller and faster to create than full database backups. Recovery from an incremental backup is faster than recovery using redo logs alone. During a restore from incremental backup, the level 0 backup is used as the starting point, then changed blocks are updated based on level 1 backups where possible to avoid re-applying changes from redo one at a time. Recovering with incremental backups requires no additional effort on your part. If incremental backups are available, RMAN will use them during recovery. RMAN’s incrementally updated backups feature allows for a more efficient incremental backup routine. Changes from level 1 backups can be used to roll forward an image copy level 0 incremental backup, so that it 9 includes all changes as of the SCN at which the level 1 incremental backup was created. Recovery using the updated level 0 incremental backup is faster, because all changes from the level 1 incremental backup have already been applied. See Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Basics for more details and examples for incremental backups and incrementally updated backups. Validating Backups You can run a test RMAN backup that does not generate any output. Validation confirms that a backup could be run, by confirming that all database files exist, are in their correct location, and are free of physical and logical corruption. For example: RMAN> BACKUP VALIDATE DATABASE ARCHIVELOG ALL; Restoring and Recovering Database Files Use the RESTORE and RECOVER commands for RMAN restore and recovery of physical database files. Restoring datafiles is retrieving them from backups as needed for a recovery operation. Recovery is the application of changes from redo logs and incremental backups to a restored datafile, to bring the datafile to a desired SCN or point in time. Recovering the Whole Database Use the RESTORE DATABASE and RECOVER DATABASE commands on the whole database. For example: RMAN> STARTUP FORCE MOUNT; RMAN> RESTORE DATABASE; RMAN> RECOVER DATABASE; RMAN> ALTER DATABASE OPEN; Note that the database must not be open when restoring or recovering the entire database. Recovering Current Tablespaces Use the RESTORE TABLESPACE and RECOVER TABLESPACE commands on individual tablespaces when the database is open. Take the tablespace that needs recovery offline, restore and then recover the tablespace, and bring the recovered tablespace online. The following steps recover the users tablespace: RMAN> SQL 'ALTER TABLESPACE users OFFLINE'; RMAN> RESTORE TABLESPACE users; RMAN> RECOVER TABLESPACE users; RMAN> SQL 'ALTER TABLESPACE users ONLINE'; Recovering Current Datafiles Use the RESTORE DATAFILE and RECOVER DATAFILE commands on individual current datafiles when the database is open. Take the datafile that needs recovery offline, restore and recover the 10 datafile, and bring the datafile online. For example, to restore and recover datafile 7: RMAN> SQL 'ALTER DATABASE DATAFILE 7 OFFLINE'; RMAN> RESTORE DATAFILE 7; RMAN> RECOVER DATAFILE 7; RMAN> SQL 'ALTER DATABASE DATAFILE 7 ONLINE'; Recovering Individual Data Blocks RMAN can recover individual corrupted datafile blocks. When RMAN performs a complete scan of a file for a backup, any corrupted blocks are listed in V$DATABASE_BLOCK_ CORRUPTION. Corruption is usually reported in alert logs, trace files or results of SQL queries. Use BLOCKRECOVER to repair all corrupted blocks: RMAN> BLOCKRECOVER CORRUPTION LIST; You can also recover individual blocks, as shown in this example: RMAN> BLOCKRECOVER DATAFILE 7 BLOCK 233, 235 DATAFILE 4 BLOCK 101; Validating Restores You can run a RESTORE... VALIDATE operation to confirm that a restore operation can be performed successfully. RMAN decides which backup sets, datafile copies, and archived logs are needed for the operation, and scans them to verify that they are usable. For example: RMAN> RESTORE DATABASE VALIDATE; Reporting on RMAN Operations The RMAN LIST and REPORT commands, generate reports on backup activities based on the RMAN repository. Use SHOW ALL to display the current RMAN configuration. You can also query the views described in "Backup and Recovery Views" on page 25. Listing Backups Run the LIST BACKUP and LIST COPY commands to display information about backups and datafile copies listed in the repository. You can display specific objects, as in the following examples: RMAN> LIST BACKUP OF DATABASE; RMAN> LIST COPY OF DATAFILE 1, 2, 3; RMAN> LIST BACKUP OF ARCHIVELOG FROM SEQUENCE 1437; RMAN> LIST CONTROLFILECOPY "/tmp/cf.cpy"; RMAN> LIST BACKUPSET OF DATAFILE 1; For backups, you can control the format of LIST output with these options: Parameter Example Explanation BY BACKUP LIST BACKUP OF Organizes the output by backup set. DATABASE BY BACKUP This is the default mode of presentation. 11 Parameter Example Explanation BY FILE LIST BACKUP BY FILE Lists the backups according to which file was backed up. SUMMARY LIST BACKUP Displays reduced output. By default, SUMMARY the output is VERBOSE. For both backups and copies you have the following additional options: Parameter Example Explanation EXPIRED LIST EXPIRED COPY Displays files inaccessible based on the CROSSCHECK command. RECOVERABLE LIST BACKUP RECOVERABLE Specifies datafile backups or copies that are available and that can be restored and recovered in the current database incarnation. Reporting on Database Files and Backups The REPORT command performs more complex analysis than LIST. Some of the main options are: Parameter Example Explanation NEED BACKUP REPORT NEED BACKUP Shows which files need backing DATABASE up under current retention policy. Use optional REDUNDANCY and RECOVERY WINDOW parameters to specify different criteria. OBSOLETE REPORT OBSOLETE Lists backups that are obsolete under the configured retention policy. Use optional REDUNDANCY and RECOVERY WINDOW parameters to specify criteria. UNRECOVERABLE REPORT UNRECOVERABLE Lists all datafiles for which an unrecoverable operation has been performed against an object in the datafile since the last backup of the datafile. SCHEMA REPORT SCHEMA Reports the tablespaces and datafiles in the database at the current time (default) or a different time. Monitoring RMAN Through V$ Views Status information for jobs in progress and completed jobs is stored in V$RMAN_STATUS. V$RMAN_OUTPUT contains the text ouptut of all RMAN jobs. 12 To see status information on jobs in V$RMAN_STATUS use the following query: SELECT OPERATION, STATUS, MBYTES_PROCESSED, START_TIME, END_TIME from V$RMAN_STATUS; To correlate a channel with a process, run the following query in SQL*Plus while the RMAN job is executing: SQL> COLUMN CLIENT_INFO FORMAT a30 SQL> COLUMN SID FORMAT 999 SQL> COLUMN SPID FORMAT 9999 SQL> SELECT s.SID, p.SPID, s.CLIENT_INFO FROM V$PROCESS p, V$SESSION s WHERE p.ADDR = s.PADDR AND CLIENT_INFO LIKE ’rman%’; To calculate the progress of an RMAN job, run the following query in SQL*Plus while the RMAN job is executing: SQL> SELECT SID, SERIAL#, CONTEXT, SOFAR, TOTALWORK, ROUND(SOFAR/TOTALWORK*100,2) "% COMPLETE" FROM V$SESSION_LONGOPS WHERE OPNAME LIKE 'RMAN%' AND OPNAME NOT LIKE '%aggregate%' AND TOTALWORK != 0 AND SOFAR TOTALWORK; Managing the RMAN Repository RMAN repository metadata is always stored in the control file of the target database. You can also create a recovery catalog in a separate database, and RMAN will record its metadata there as well. Monitoring Control File Records If you do not use a recovery catalog, then eventually RMAN control file records are overwritten. Set this initialization parameter in the parameter file of the target database to determine how long records are kept: CONTROL_FILE_RECORD_KEEP_TIME = number_of_days_to_keep Crosschecking Backups The CROSSCHECK command checks whether RMAN backups and copies in the repository can still be accessed. Assuming that you have configured automatic channels, you can run these commands: RMAN> CROSSCHECK BACKUP; # checks RMAN backups on configured devices RMAN> CROSSCHECK COPY; # checks RMAN image copies on configured devices If backups are stored with a media manager and sbt channels are not configured, then you must allocate a maintenance channel before CROSSCHECK and DELETE commands on sbt objects: 13 RMAN> ALLOCATE CHANNEL FOR MAINTENANCE DEVICE TYPE sbt; Deleting Backups and Copies The DELETE command removes RMAN backups and copies from DISK and sbt devices, marks the objects as DELETED in the control file, and removes the records from the recovery catalog (if you use a catalog). For example: RMAN> DELETE BACKUPSET 101, 102, 103; RMAN> DELETE CONTROLFILECOPY '/tmp/cf.cpy'; RMAN> DELETE NOPROMPT ARCHIVELOG UNTIL SEQUENCE = 7300; RMAN> DELETE BACKUP OF SPFILE TABLESPACE users DEVICE TYPE sbt; RMAN> DELETE BACKUP OF DATABASE LIKE '/tmp%'; # pattern match RMAN> DELETE ARCHIVELOG ALL BACKED UP 2 TIMES TO DEVICE TYPE sbt; The following options of the DELETE command are also useful: Parameter Example Explanation EXPIRED DELETE EXPIRED Deletes the backups and copies marked as EXPIRED (that is, "not found") by the CROSSCHECK command. OBSOLETE DELETE OBSOLETE Deletes the backups and copies that are obsolete under the retention policy. REDUNDANCY and RECOVERY WINDOW parameters override the configured policy. NOPROMPT DELETE NOPROMPT Specifies that you do not want to be prompted OBSOLETE to confirm the files to be deleted. Cataloging and Uncataloging Backups and Copies The CATALOG command lets you register information about backups in the RMAN repository, so RMAN can use it in a restore and recovery operation. A backup will not be listed in the repository if it was created by an operating-system level file copy, or if it is older than the CONTROL_FILE_RECORD_KEEP_TIME and is no longer listed in the RMAN repository. For example: RMAN> CATALOG DATAFILECOPY '/backup/users01.bak'; # catalogs datafile copy made at OS level RMAN> CATALOG LIKE ’/backup’ # catalogs all files in directory The CHANGE ... UNCATALOG syntax lets you remove information about backups and copies from the RMAN repository. If you manually delete a backup using operating system commands, CHANGE...UNCATALOG updates the repository to reflect that change. For example: RMAN> CHANGE CONTROLFILECOPY '/tmp/cf.cpy' UNCATALOG; RMAN> CHANGE BACKUPSET 121,122,127,203,300 UNCATALOG; 14 Repetitive Tasks: RMAN and Scripting While the use of configured channels and other settings reduces many common RMAN operations to a single command, your backup routine may include frequently-used multi-step processes. RMAN supports the use of stored scripts (discussed in Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Advanced User's Guide) and command files to help manage these recurring tasks. The RMAN RUN command provides a degree of flow-of-control in your scripts. Using Command Files A command file is a client-side text file containing RMAN commands, exactly as you enter them at the RMAN prompt. Execute the contents of a command file using the RMAN @ command: RMAN> @/my_dir/my_command_file.txt # runs specified command file Any file extension may be used. You can also launch RMAN with a command file to run, as shown here: % rman @/my_dir/my_command_file.txt Controlling Scripts: The RUN Command The RUN command lets you issue a series of RMAN commands to be executed as a group. If one command fails, the remaining commands in the block will not be executed. Note, however, that RMAN will still try to execute as many tasks related to a failed command as possible. Here is an example of a RUN command: RUN { BACKUP ARCHIVELOG ALL DELETE ALL INPUT; BACKUP INCREMENTAL LEVEL 0 TAG mon_bkup DATABASE; } If backup of one or more of the archived logs fails, RMAN will still back up all archived logs that can be backed up, because those tasks are all caused by the one BACKUP command. However, the BACKUP INCREMENTAL command following the BACKUP ARCHIVELOG command is not executed. The SET, SWITCH DATAFILE, and ALLOCATE CHANNEL commands, used within a RUN block, override channel configurations and other backup parameters set with the CONFIGURE command for the duration of the RUN block. See Oracle Database Recovery Manager Reference for details. Use RUN blocks in command files to stop execution if one command fails. RMAN Syntax Quick Reference This section gives an overview of the most common RMAN commands and their most commonly used options. Commands documented here include: s @ 15 s BACKUP s CHANGE s CONFIGURE s CROSSCHECK s DELETE s LIST s RECOVER s REPORT s RESTORE s RUN s SET s SHOW The following subclauses are used in the parameters to several commands: s archivelogRecordSpecifier s completedTimeSpec s datafileSpec s deviceSpecifier s maintQualifier s untilClause Syntax descriptions use vertical ellipses to indicate less-frequently-used parameters and options. Refer to the Oracle Database Recovery Manager Reference for complete documentation of syntax and semantics of RMAN commands. @ Reads in a command file; executes each command in it in order. @filename archivelogRecordSpecifier This subclause specifies a range of archived redo logs. ARCHIVELOG { ALL | LIKE 'string_pattern' | archlogRange [LIKE 'string_pattern' [THREAD [=] integer]] } 16 { { { UNTIL TIME | FROM TIME } [=] 'date_string' | { TIME BETWEEN 'date_string' AND | FROM TIME [=] 'date_string' UNTIL TIME [=] } 'date_string' | UNTIL SCN [=] integer | SCN BETWEEN integer AND integer | FROM SCN [=] integer [UNTIL SCN [=] integer] } [THREAD [=] integer] | { UNTIL SEQUENCE [=] integer | FROM SEQUENCE [=] integer [UNTIL SEQUENCE [=] integer] | SEQUENCE [BETWEEN integer AND] integer } [THREAD [=] integer] } BACKUP Backs up database files, archived logs, backups, and copies. BACKUP [ ( (FULL | INCREMENTAL LEVEL [=] integer) | [ (FULL | INCREMENTAL LEVEL [=] integer) ] AS (COPY | BACKUPSET) | AS (COPY | BACKUPSET) (FULL | INCREMENTAL LEVEL [=] integer) ) ] [backupOperand [backupOperand]...] backupSpec [backupSpec]... [PLUS ARCHIVELOG [backupSpecOperand [backupSpecOperand]...]]; backupOperand::= { FORMAT [=] 'format_string' [, 'format_string']... | CHANNEL ['] channel_id ['] | CUMULATIVE | MAXSETSIZE [=] integer [ K | M | G ] | TAG [=] ['] tag_name ['] | keepOption | SKIP { OFFLINE | READONLY | INACCESSIBLE } | VALIDATE | NOT BACKED UP [SINCE TIME [=] 'date_string'] | COPIES [=] integer | DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier . . . 17 } backupSpec::= [(] { BACKUPSET { {ALL | completedTimeSpec } | primary_key) [, primary_key]... } | COPY OF { DATABASE | TABLESPACE ['] tablespace_name ['] [, ['] tablespace_name [']]... | DATAFILE datafileSpec [, datafileSpec]... } | DATAFILE datafileSpec [, datafileSpec]... | DATAFILECOPY 'filename' [, 'filename']... | DATAFILECOPY FROM TAG [=] ['] tag_name ['] [, ['] tag_name [']]... | DATAFILECOPY { ALL | LIKE 'string_pattern' } | TABLESPACE ['] tablespace_name ['] [, ['] tablespace_name [']]... | DATABASE | archivelogRecordSpecifier | CURRENT CONTROLFILE [FOR STANDBY] | CONTROLFILECOPY 'filename' | SPFILE } [backupSpecOperand [backupSpecOperand]...] backupSpecOperand::= { FORMAT [=] 'format_string' [, 'format_string']... | CHANNEL ['] channel_id ['] | CUMULATIVE | MAXSETSIZE [=] integer [ K | M | G ] | TAG [=] ['] tag_name ['] | keepOption | SKIP { OFFLINE | READONLY | INACCESSIBLE } | NOT BACKED UP [ SINCE TIME [=] 'date_string' | integer TIMES ] | DELETE [ALL] INPUT . . . } CHANGE Updates status of a backup or copy in the RMAN repository. CHANGE { { BACKUP | COPY } [OF listObjList] [ maintQualifier [maintQualifier]...] 18 | archivelogRecordSpecifier | recordSpec [DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier [, deviceSpecifier]...] } { AVAILABLE | UNAVAILABLE | UNCATALOG | keepOption } [DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier [, deviceSpecifier]...]; completedTimeSpec COMPLETED { AFTER [=] | BETWEEN 'date_string' AND | BEFORE [=] } 'date_string' CONFIGURE Change persistent RMAN configuration settings. CONFIGURE { deviceConf | backupConf | { AUXNAME FOR DATAFILE datafileSpec | SNAPSHOT CONTROLFILE NAME } { TO 'filename' | CLEAR } | cfauConf }; deviceCon::= { DEFAULT DEVICE TYPE { TO deviceSpecifier | CLEAR } | DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier { PARALLELISM integer | CLEAR } | [AUXILIARY] CHANNEL [integer] DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier { allocOperandList | CLEAR } } allocOperandList::= { PARMS [=] 'channel_parms' | FORMAT [=] 'format_string' [, 'format_string']... | { MAXPIECESIZE [=] integer | RATE [=] integer } [ K | M | G ] . . . }... connectStringSpec::= ['] [userid] [/ [password]] [@net_service_name] ['] backupConf::= { RETENTION POLICY { TO { RECOVERY WINDOW OF integer DAYS | REDUNDANCY [=] integer | NONE } | CLEAR 19 } | MAXSETSIZE { TO { integer [ K | M | G ] | UNLIMITED } | CLEAR } | { ARCHIVELOG | DATAFILE } BACKUP COPIES FOR DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier { TO integer | CLEAR } | BACKUP OPTIMIZATION { ON | OFF | CLEAR } | EXCLUDE FOR TABLESPACE tablespace_name [CLEAR] } cfauConf::== CONTROLFILE AUTOBACKUP { ON | OFF | CLEAR | FORMAT FOR DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier { TO 'format string' | CLEAR } } CROSSCHECK Checks whether backup pieces, proxy copies, and disk copies still exist. CROSSCHECK { { BACKUP [OF listObjList] | COPY [OF listObjList] | archivelogRecordSpecifier } [maintQualifier [maintQualifier]...] | recordSpec [DEVICE TYPE deviceSpecifier [, deviceSpecifier]...] }; listObjList::= [ DATAFILE datafileSpec [, datafileSpec]... | TABLESPACE ['] tablespace_name ['] [, ['] tablespace_name [']]... | archivelogRecordSpecifier | DATABASE [SKIP TABLESPACE ['] tablespace_name ['] [, ['] tablespace_ name [']]...] | CONTROLFILE | SPFILE ]... recordSpec::= { { BACKUPPIECE | PROXY } { 'media_handle' [, 'media_handle']... | primary_key [, primary_key]... | TAG [=] ['] tag_name ['] } 20
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