Difference between revisions of "Flashback"

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(Enable flashback on Standby database)
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===Enable Flashback while database is open (11g+)===
 +
<pre>
 +
SYS@EUDSTGP2> show parameter recover
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 +
NAME                                TYPE        VALUE
 +
------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------
 +
db_recovery_file_dest                string      /oracle/EUDSTGP2/fra
 +
db_recovery_file_dest_size          big integer 4122M
 +
db_unrecoverable_scn_tracking        boolean    TRUE
 +
recovery_parallelism                integer    0
 +
 +
SYS@EUDSTGP2> show parameter flash
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 +
NAME                                TYPE        VALUE
 +
------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------
 +
db_flash_cache_file                  string
 +
db_flash_cache_size                  big integer 0
 +
db_flashback_retention_target        integer    1440
 +
 +
SYS@EUDSTGP2> select flashback_on, status from v$database, v$instance;
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 +
FLASHBACK_ON      STATUS
 +
------------------ ------------
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NO                OPEN
 +
 +
SYS@EUDSTGP2> alter database flashback on;
 +
 +
Database altered.
 +
 +
SYS@EUDSTGP2> select flashback_on, status from v$database, v$instance;
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 +
FLASHBACK_ON      STATUS
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------------------ ------------
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YES                OPEN
 +
 +
SYS@EUDSTGP2>
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</pre>
 
===Enable flashback===
 
===Enable flashback===
 
  exec dbms_flashback.enable;
 
  exec dbms_flashback.enable;

Revision as of 15:36, 7 February 2013

Enable Flashback while database is open (11g+)

SYS@EUDSTGP2> show parameter recover

NAME                                 TYPE        VALUE
------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------
db_recovery_file_dest                string      /oracle/EUDSTGP2/fra
db_recovery_file_dest_size           big integer 4122M
db_unrecoverable_scn_tracking        boolean     TRUE
recovery_parallelism                 integer     0

SYS@EUDSTGP2> show parameter flash

NAME                                 TYPE        VALUE
------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------
db_flash_cache_file                  string
db_flash_cache_size                  big integer 0
db_flashback_retention_target        integer     1440

SYS@EUDSTGP2> select flashback_on, status from v$database, v$instance;

FLASHBACK_ON       STATUS
------------------ ------------
NO                 OPEN

SYS@EUDSTGP2> alter database flashback on;

Database altered.

SYS@EUDSTGP2> select flashback_on, status from v$database, v$instance;

FLASHBACK_ON       STATUS
------------------ ------------
YES                OPEN

SYS@EUDSTGP2> 

Enable flashback

exec dbms_flashback.enable;

Disable flashback

exec dbms_flashback.disable;

Put a session back in time

Note: undo_management must be auto
Note: Take a look at undo_retention to get an idea of how far back you might be able to go.

exec dbms_flashback.enable_at_time(to_date('24-AUG-2012 12:00:00', 'DD-MON-YYYY HH24:MI:SS'));

Set the database recovery directory and size

alter system set db_recovery_file_dest='<path>' scope=both;
alter system set db_recovery_file_dest_size=<size> scope=both;

Copy old data into a new table

  • Create an empty copy of the source table
create table old_table_data
tablespace ts_data
as select *
from ruined_table
where rownum < 1;
  • Insert the flashback data into it
insert into old_table_data
select * from ruined_table
as of timestamp to_timestamp ( '24-AUG-12 12:00:00', 'DD-MON-YY HH24:MI:SS' );

Enable flashback on Standby database

select flashback_on from v$database;
alter system set db_recovery_file_dest_size=50G scope=both;
alter system set db_recovery_file_dest=’/<directory>/’
shutdown immediate;
startup mount;
alter database flashback on;
show parameter db_flashback_retention_target;
alter system set db_flashback_retention_target=2880 scope=both;
alter database recover managed standby database cancel;

How far back can we flashback the database?

select	oldest_flashback_scn scn
,	to_char(oldest_flashback_time, 'hh24:mi:ss dd/mm/yyyy') oldest_time
from	v$flashback_database_log
/