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Oracle® Database 2 Day + Real Application Clusters Guide
11g Release 1 (11.1)

Part Number B28252-01
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1 Introduction to Oracle Database 2 Day + Real Application Clusters Guide

This chapter provides an overview of Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) environments. This chapter includes the following sections:

About This Guide

This is an Oracle RAC database administration, task-oriented guide that shows you how to configure and manage the environment for Oracle Clusterware and Oracle RAC. This guide also explains how to create an Oracle RAC database and how to perform routine Oracle RAC database administrative tasks.

The goal of this guide is to help you understand the basic steps required to install and maintain an Oracle RAC environment, including how to perform basic troubleshooting, performance monitoring, and backup and recovery activities. This guide is based on Red Hat Linux, but you do not need to be a Linux expert to use this guide.

What This Guide Is Not

This guide is not a comprehensive description of Oracle RAC. It describes concepts only when necessary for completing a particular task.

Related Materials

This guide is part of a comprehensive set of learning materials for administering Oracle Databases, which includes a 2 Day DBA Oracle By Example (OBE) series (available on the Web) and Oracle University instructor-led classes.

Some of the chapters in this guide have an associated OBE lesson. The OBE lesson guides you through some of the tasks in the guide, or related tasks, and includes annotated screenshots. In some cases, the OBE lesson provides additional information to help you complete a task.

At the end of a section, you might find a link to that chapter's associated OBE lesson. The home page for the 2 Day + Real Application Clusters Oracle By Example series is

http://www.oracle.com/technology/obe/admin/db10gr2.html

Oracle Real Application Clusters Documentation Overview

This guide describes how to install, configure, and manage Oracle RAC and Oracle Clusterware, and provides examples for how you could do this on a two-node cluster, using the Red Hat Linux operating system. This guide is for DBAs who have experience with single-instance Oracle environments and have read Oracle Database 2 Day DBA.

Useful Oracle RAC Guides

The following is a list of other useful Oracle RAC or related documentation:

Note:

Additional information for this release may be available in the Oracle Database 11g Release 1 (11.1) README or Release Notes. You can locate these documents on your Oracle product installation media.

About Oracle Clusterware and Oracle Real Application Clusters

Oracle RAC extends Oracle Database so that you can store, update, and efficiently retrieve data using multiple database instances on different servers at the same time. Oracle RAC provides the software that facilitates servers working together in what is called a cluster. The data files that make up the database must reside on shared storage that is accessible from all servers that are part of the cluster. Each server in the cluster runs the Oracle RAC software.

An Oracle Database database has a one-to-one relationship between datafiles and the instance. An Oracle RAC database, however, has a one-to-many relationship between datafiles and instances. In an Oracle RAC database, multiple instances access a single set of database files. The instances can be on different servers, referred to as hosts or nodes. The combined processing power of the multiple servers provides greater availability, throughput, and scalability than is available from a single server.

Each database instance in an Oracle RAC database uses its own memory structures and background processes. Oracle RAC uses Cache Fusion to synchronize the data stored in the buffer cache of each database instance. Cache Fusion moves current data blocks (which reside in memory) between database instances, rather than having one database instance write the data blocks to disk and requiring another database instance to reread the data blocks from disk. When a data block located in the buffer cache of one instance is required by another instance, Cache Fusion transfers the data block directly between the instances using the interconnect, enabling the Oracle RAC database to access and modify data as if the data resided in a single buffer cache.

Oracle RAC is also a key component for implementing the Oracle enterprise grid computing architecture. Having multiple database instances accessing a single set of datafiles prevents the server from being a single point of failure. Any packaged or custom application that ran well on a Oracle Database will perform well on Oracle RAC without requiring code changes.

You will learn more about the operation of the Oracle RAC database in a cluster, how to build the cluster, and the structure of an Oracle RAC database in other sections of this guide.

About Automatic Storage Management

With Oracle RAC, each instance must have access to the datafiles and recovery files for the Oracle RAC database. Using Automatic Storage Management (ASM) is an easy way to satisfy this requirement.

ASM is an integrated, high-performance database file system and disk manager. ASM is based on the principle that the database should manage storage instead of requiring an administrator to do it. ASM eliminates the need for you to directly manage potentially thousands of Oracle database files.

ASM groups the disks in your storage system into one or more disk groups. You manage a small set of disk groups and ASM automates the placement of the database files within those disk groups.

ASM provides the following benefits:

ASM is implemented as a special kind of Oracle instance, with its own System Global Area and background processes. The ASM instance is tightly integrated with the database instance. Every server running one or more database instances that use ASM for storage has an ASM instance. In an Oracle RAC environment, there is one ASM instance for each node, and the ASM instances communicate with each other on a peer-to-peer basis. Only one ASM instance is required for each node regardless of the number of database instances on the node.

Oracle recommends that you use ASM for your database file storage, instead of raw devices or the operating system file system. However, databases can have a mixture of ASM files and non-ASM files.

Tools for Installing, Configuring, and Managing Oracle RAC

The following is a description of the tools used for installing, configuring, and managing an Oracle RAC database:

Installing Oracle RAC on Different Operating Systems

If you plan to install and configure Oracle RAC on an operating system other than Red Hat Linux, you can still use this guide to obtain a general understanding about how to deploy Oracle RAC. You can also use this guide for deploying Oracle RAC on clusters with more than two nodes. For all environments that do not match the environment that this guide describes, modify the examples accordingly.

When installing Oracle RAC on a different platform or different operating system version than Red Hat Linux, refer to the installation and configuration guides for that platform. For example, if you are installing Oracle RAC on the Solaris operating system, then you would use the following guides:

  • Oracle Clusterware Installation Guide for Solaris Operating System

  • Oracle Real Application Clusters Installation Guide for Solaris Operating System

Oracle Clusterware and Oracle RAC do not support heterogeneous platforms in the same cluster. For example, you cannot have one node in the cluster running Red Hat Linux and another node in the same cluster running Solaris UNIX. All nodes must run the same operating system, that is, they must be binary compatible. Oracle RAC does not support machines having different chip architectures in the same cluster. However, you can have machines of different speeds and sizes in the same cluster.