Veritas InfoScale™ 8.0.2 Storage and Availability Management for Oracle Databases - AIX, Linux, Solaris
- Section I. Storage Foundation High Availability (SFHA) management solutions for Oracle databases
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Databases
- About Veritas File System
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Databases
- Section II. Deploying Oracle with Veritas InfoScale products
- Deployment options for Oracle in a Storage Foundation environment
- Deploying Oracle with Storage Foundation
- Setting up disk group for deploying Oracle
- Creating volumes for deploying Oracle
- Creating VxFS file system for deploying Oracle
- Deploying Oracle in an off-host configuration with Storage Foundation
- Deploying Oracle with High Availability
- Deploying Oracle with Volume Replicator (VVR) for disaster recovery
- Deployment options for Oracle in a Storage Foundation environment
- Section III. Configuring Storage Foundation for Database (SFDB) tools
- Configuring and managing the Storage Foundation for Databases repository database
- Configuring the Storage Foundation for Databases (SFDB) tools repository
- Configuring authentication for Storage Foundation for Databases (SFDB) tools
- Configuring and managing the Storage Foundation for Databases repository database
- Section IV. Improving Oracle database performance
- About database accelerators
- Improving database performance with Veritas Extension for Oracle Disk Manager
- About Oracle Disk Manager in the Veritas InfoScale products environment
- Improving database performance with Veritas Cached Oracle Disk Manager
- About Cached ODM in SFHA environment
- Configuring Cached ODM in SFHA environment
- Administering Cached ODM settings with Cached ODM Advisor in SFHA environment
- Generating reports of candidate datafiles by using Cached ODM Advisor in SFHA environment
- Generating summary reports of historical activity by using Cached ODM Advisor in SFHA environment
- Generating reports of candidate datafiles by using Cached ODM Advisor in SFHA environment
- Improving database performance with Quick I/O
- About Quick I/O
- Improving database performance with Cached Quick I/O
- Section V. Using point-in-time copies
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Volume-level snapshots
- About Reverse Resynchronization in volume-level snapshots (FlashSnap)
- Storage Checkpoints
- About FileSnaps
- Considerations for Oracle point-in-time copies
- Administering third-mirror break-off snapshots
- Administering space-optimized snapshots
- Creating a clone of an Oracle database by using space-optimized snapshots
- Administering Storage Checkpoints
- Database Storage Checkpoints for recovery
- Administering FileSnap snapshots
- Backing up and restoring with Netbackup in an SFHA environment
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Section VI. Optimizing storage costs for Oracle
- Understanding storage tiering with SmartTier
- Configuring and administering SmartTier
- Configuring SmartTier for Oracle
- Optimizing database storage using SmartTier for Oracle
- Extent balancing in a database environment using SmartTier for Oracle
- Configuring SmartTier for Oracle
- SmartTier use cases for Oracle
- Compressing files and databases to optimize storage costs
- Using the Compression Advisor tool
- Section VII. Managing Oracle disaster recovery
- Section VIII. Storage Foundation for Databases administrative reference
- Storage Foundation for Databases command reference
- Tuning for Storage Foundation for Databases
- About tuning Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM)
- About tuning VxFS
- About tuning Oracle databases
- About tuning Solaris for Oracle
- Troubleshooting SFDB tools
- About troubleshooting Storage Foundation for Databases (SFDB) tools
- About the vxdbd daemon
- Resources for troubleshooting SFDB tools
- Manual recovery of Oracle database
- Storage Foundation for Databases command reference for the releases prior to 6.0
- Preparing storage for Database FlashSnap
- About creating database snapshots
- FlashSnap commands
- Creating a snapplan (dbed_vmchecksnap)
- Validating a snapplan (dbed_vmchecksnap)
- Displaying, copying, and removing a snapplan (dbed_vmchecksnap)
- Creating a snapshot (dbed_vmsnap)
- Backing up the database from snapshot volumes (dbed_vmclonedb)
- Cloning a database (dbed_vmclonedb)
- Guidelines for Oracle recovery
- Database Storage Checkpoint Commands
- Section IX. Reference
- Appendix A. VCS Oracle agents
- Appendix B. Sample configuration files for clustered deployments
- Appendix C. Database FlashSnap status information
- Appendix D. Using third party software to back up files
Enabling and disabling Cached ODM on data files by using Cached ODM Advisor in SFHA environment
Using the Cached ODM Advisor to manage the Cached ODM settings of datafiles provides a greater degree of control and ease of use than manually adding each file to the odmadm configuration file. Cached ODM Advisor makes the Cached ODM settings persistent by making an entry for each datafile that gets configured with the tool in the mountpoint/lost+found/odmadm configuration file, creating it the first time if necessary.
If you are using Cached ODM Advisor to manage the Cached ODM settings of datafiles, the odmadm configuration file should not be edited manually. The settings applied with Cached ODM Advisor for a data file take precedence over any configuration for the same file specified in the /etc/vx/odmadm configuration file.
You can use Cached ODM Advisor to enable and disable Cached ODM settings on database datafiles.
dbed_codm_adm -S ORACLE_SID -H ORACLE_HOME -o [ on | off ] datafile | \ -f list_file
For enabling or disabling Cached ODM on database data files:
Values for datafile and list_file should contain absolute pathnames.
The dbed_codm_adm command only turns on Cached ODM on a file level.
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To enable Cached ODM
- To enable Cached ODM on the datafile /oradata/tb1.dbf, run:
$ dbed_codm_adm -S prod -H /orahome -o on /oradata/tb1.dbf
To disable Cached ODM on a list of datafiles
- To disable Cached ODM on a list of datafiles where /tmp/list_file contains a list of datafiles name, run
$ dbed_codm_adm -S prod -H /orahome -o off -f /tmp/list_file
If user wants to turn on Cache ODM on a file and the per file system flag odm_cache_enable is not set, dbed_codm_adm will automatically turn it on for the filesystem. This flag needs to be turned on first so that file level caching can be turned on. Since this requires root access, it will be done through the DBED daemon.
Flow of control for enabling/disabling caching examples:
If you want to enable Cached ODM for file abc:
The Cached ODM Advisor will enable filesystem odm_cache_enable flag if it has not been enabled yet.
The Cached ODM Advisor will execute the odmadm setcachefile abc=on command and also add or update the entry into the configuration file.
If you want to disable caching for abc:
The Cached ODM Advisor will only execute the command odmadm setcachefile abc=off and also update the entry in the configuration file.
Cached ODM Advisor will not disable filesystem odm_cache_enable flag, since there may be other files that is still cached ODM enabled. The SFDB tools do not provide the command to disable filesystem odm_cache_enable flag. If the filesystem odm_cache_enableflag is disabled by other means, the per file caching will still be there just that caching will not be in effect.