Oracle® Real Application Clusters Deployment and Performance Guide 10g Release 1 (10.1) Part Number B10768-02 |
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The Oracle Real Application Clusters Deployment and Performance Guide explains the deployment considerations for implementing applications on Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) 10g databases. This manual also provides post-deployment information about monitoring RAC database performance. This preface contains the following topics:
The Oracle Real Application Clusters Deployment and Performance Guide is for database administrators who perform the following tasks:
Plan and deploy applications on RAC databases
Monitor the performance of RAC databases
All single-instance Oracle database deployment and performance methodologies apply to RAC. Therefore, you should be familiar with the information in Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide, and Oracle Data Warehousing Guide.
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Accessibility of Code Examples in Documentation
JAWS, a Windows screen reader, may not always correctly read the code examples in this document. The conventions for writing code require that closing braces should appear on an otherwise empty line; however, JAWS may not always read a line of text that consists solely of a bracket or brace.
Accessibility of Links to External Web Sites in Documentation
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Chapter 1, " Introduction to Deployment and Performance"
This chapter explains the main considerations for deploying applications on RAC databases and for taking advantage of the high availability performance features of RAC.
Chapter 2, "Design and Deployment Techniques"
This chapter describes database deployment techniques for RAC environments that are in addition to those required for single-instance Oracle database deployments.
Chapter 3, " Monitoring Performance"
This chapter provides a few tips about how to monitor RAC performance.
Chapter 4, "Monitoring Performance with Oracle Enterprise Manager"
This chapter presents the RAC-specific Oracle Enterprise Manager performance monitoring features.
Chapter 5, " Application-Specific Deployment Topics"
This chapter provides a few guidelines for the deployment of online transaction processing (OLTP), data warehouse, and general purpose or hybrid applications in RAC environments.
Appendix A, " Services Deployment Example"
This appendix contains an example of configuring services for high availability and workload management.
For more information, see these Oracle resources:
Oracle Real Application Clusters Installation and Configuration Guide
Oracle Real Application Clusters Quick Installation Guide for Oracle Database Standard Edition for Windows
Note that the following documents are on the Oracle product CD-ROM:
Oracle Real Application Clusters Installation and Configuration Guide
Oracle Real Application Clusters Quick Installation Guide for Oracle Database Standard Edition for Windows
Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control Installation and Basic Configuration
Oracle Database Administrator's Reference 10g Release 1 (10.1) for UNIX Systems: AIX-Based Systems, HP-UX, hp Tru64 UNIX, Linux, and the Solaris Operating System (SPARC)
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This section describes the conventions used in the text and code examples of this documentation set. It describes:
Conventions in Text
We use various conventions in text to help you more quickly identify special terms. The following table describes those conventions and provides examples of their use.
Convention | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
Bold | Bold typeface indicates terms that are defined in the text or terms that appear in a glossary, or both. | When you specify this clause, you create an index-organized table. |
Italics | Italic typeface indicates book titles or emphasis. | Oracle Database Concepts
Ensure that the recovery catalog and target database do not reside on the same disk. |
UPPERCASE monospace (fixed-width) font |
Uppercase monospace typeface indicates elements supplied by the system. Such elements include parameters, privileges, datatypes, RMAN keywords, SQL keywords, SQL*Plus or utility commands, packages and methods, as well as system-supplied column names, database objects and structures, usernames, and roles. | You can specify this clause only for a NUMBER column.
You can back up the database by using the Query the Use the |
lowercase monospace (fixed-width) font |
Lowercase monospace typeface indicates executables, filenames, directory names, and sample user-supplied elements. Such elements include computer and database names, net service names, and connect identifiers, as well as user-supplied database objects and structures, column names, packages and classes, usernames and roles, program units, and parameter values.
Note: Some programmatic elements use a mixture of UPPERCASE and lowercase. Enter these elements as shown. |
Enter sqlplus to start SQL*Plus.
The password is specified in the Back up the datafiles and control files in the The Set the Connect as The |
lowercase italic monospace (fixed-width) font |
Lowercase italic monospace font represents placeholders or variables. | You can specify the parallel_clause .
Run |
Conventions in Code Examples
Code examples illustrate SQL, PL/SQL, SQL*Plus, or other command-line statements. They are displayed in a monospace (fixed-width) font and separated from normal text as shown in this example:
SELECT username FROM dba_users WHERE username = 'MIGRATE';
The following table describes typographic conventions used in code examples and provides examples of their use.
Convention | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
[ ] |
Brackets enclose one or more optional items. Do not enter the brackets. |
DECIMAL (digits [ , precision ]) |
{ } |
Braces enclose two or more items, one of which is required. Do not enter the braces. |
{ENABLE | DISABLE} |
| |
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. |
{ENABLE | DISABLE} [COMPRESS | NOCOMPRESS] |
... |
Horizontal ellipsis points indicate either:
|
CREATE TABLE ... AS subquery; SELECT col1, col2, ... , coln FROM employees; |
. . . |
Vertical ellipsis points indicate that we have omitted several lines of code not directly related to the example. |
SQL> SELECT NAME FROM V$DATAFILE; NAME ------------------------------------ /fsl/dbs/tbs_01.dbf /fs1/dbs/tbs_02.dbf . . . /fsl/dbs/tbs_09.dbf 9 rows selected. |
Other notation | You must enter symbols other than brackets, braces, vertical bars, and ellipsis points as shown. |
acctbal NUMBER(11,2); acct CONSTANT NUMBER(4) := 3; |
Italics |
Italicized text indicates placeholders or variables for which you must supply particular values. |
CONNECT SYSTEM/system_password DB_NAME = database_name |
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. |
SELECT last_name, employee_id FROM employees; SELECT * FROM USER_TABLES; DROP TABLE hr.employees; |
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. |
SELECT last_name, employee_id FROM employees; sqlplus hr/hr CREATE USER mjones IDENTIFIED BY ty3MU9; |