rac important concepts
TRANSCRIPT
Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC)
The following documentation is a guide on how to install, configure and administer Oracle 10g Real Application Clusters (RAC). Some of the topics that I will be discussing have already been covered in my Oracle topic.
The site has been comprised of reading the following books and real world experience, if you are new to Oracle RAC I highly recommend that you should purchase these books as it contains far more information than this web site contains and of course the Official Oracle web site contains all the documentation you will ever need.
Please feel free to email me any constructive criticism you have with the site as any additional knowledge or mistakes that I have made would be most welcomed.
1. HA, Clustering and OPS..................................................................................................3High Availability and Clustering.....................................................................................3Clustering.........................................................................................................................5Oracle RAC History........................................................................................................6Oracle Parallel Server Architecture.................................................................................7
2. RAC Architecture..........................................................................................................10RAC Architecture Introduction.....................................................................................10RAC Components..........................................................................................................11Disk architecture............................................................................................................13Oracle Clusterware........................................................................................................14Oracle Kernel Components............................................................................................17RAC Background Processes..........................................................................................18
3. RAC Installation, Configuration and Storage................................................................20RAC Installation............................................................................................................20
4. RAC Administration and Management.........................................................................22RAC Parameters............................................................................................................22Starting and Stopping Instances.....................................................................................23Undo Management.........................................................................................................24Temporary Tablespace...................................................................................................24Redologs........................................................................................................................24Flashback.......................................................................................................................25SRVCTL command.......................................................................................................25Services..........................................................................................................................27Cluster Ready Services (CRS).......................................................................................29Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR)......................................................................................31Voting Disk....................................................................................................................33
5. RAC Backups and Recovery.........................................................................................34Introduction....................................................................................................................34Backup Basics................................................................................................................34Instance Recovery..........................................................................................................35Crash Recovery..............................................................................................................35Cache Fusion Recovery.................................................................................................37
6. RAC Performance..........................................................................................................41RAC Performance..........................................................................................................41Partitioning Workload...................................................................................................42RAC Wait Events..........................................................................................................42Enqueue Tuning.............................................................................................................44AWR and RAC..............................................................................................................45Cluster Interconnect.......................................................................................................47
7. Global Resource Directory (GRD)................................................................................48GRD introduction..........................................................................................................48Cache Coherency...........................................................................................................48Resources and Enqueues................................................................................................49Global Enqueue Services (GES)....................................................................................50Global Locks..................................................................................................................50Messaging......................................................................................................................51Global Cache Services (GCS).......................................................................................53
8. Cache Fusion.................................................................................................................58Introduction....................................................................................................................58Ping................................................................................................................................58Past Image Blocks (PI)..................................................................................................59Cache Fusion I...............................................................................................................59Cache Fusion in Operation............................................................................................63
9. RAC Troubleshooting....................................................................................................73Troubleshooting.............................................................................................................73Lamport Algorithm........................................................................................................75Disable/Enable Oracle RAC..........................................................................................76Performance Issues........................................................................................................76Debugging Node Eviction.............................................................................................78Debugging CRS and GSD.............................................................................................79
10. Adding and Removing nodes.......................................................................................81Adding and removing nodes..........................................................................................81
Pre-Install Checking..................................................................................................81Install CRS.................................................................................................................81Installing Oracle DB Software...................................................................................82Configuring the Listener............................................................................................83Create the Database Instance.....................................................................................83Removing a Node......................................................................................................83
11. RAC Cheat sheet..........................................................................................................86Cheatsheet......................................................................................................................86
Useful Views/Tables..................................................................................................88Useful Parameters......................................................................................................89Processes....................................................................................................................90General Administration.............................................................................................91CRS Administration...................................................................................................94Voting Disk................................................................................................................96
1. HA, Clustering and OPS
High Availability and Clustering
When you have very critical systems that require to be online 24x7 then you need a HA solution (High Availability), you have to weigh up the risk associated with downtime against the cost of a solution. HA solutions are not cheap and they are not easy to manage. HA solutions need to be thoroughly tested as it may not be tested in the real world for months. I had a solution that run for almost a year before a hardware failure caused a failover, this is when your testing before hand comes into play.
As I said before HA comes with a price, and there are a number of HA technologies
Fault Tolerance - this technology protects you from hardware failures for example redundant PSU, etc
Disaster Recovery - this technology protects from operational issues such as a Data Center becoming unavailable
Disaster Tolerance - this technology is used to prepare for the above two, the most important of the three technologies.
Every company should plan for unplanned outages, this costs virtually nothing, knowing what to do in a DR situation is half the battle, in many companies people make excuses not to design a DR plan (it costs to much, we don't have the redundant hardware,etc). You cannot make these assumptions until you design a DR plan, the plan will highlight the risks and the costs that go with that risk, then you can make the decision on what you can and cannot afford, there is no excuse not to create DR plan.
Sometimes in large corporations you will hear the phrase five nines, this phrases means the availability of a system and what downtime (approx) is allowed, the table below highlights the uptime a system requires in order to achieve the five nines
% uptime % Downtime Downtime per year Downtime per week
98 2 7.3 days 3 hours 22 minutes
99 1 3.65 days 1 hour 41 minutes
99.8 0.2 17 hours 30 minutes 20 minutes
99.9 0.1 8 hours 45 minutes 10 minutes
99.99 0.01 52.5 minutes 1 minute
99.999 (five nines) 0.001 5.25 minutes 6 seconds
To achieve the five nines your system is only allowed 5.25 minutes per year or 6 seconds per week, in some HA designs it may take 6 seconds to failover.
When looking for a solution you should try and build redundancy into your plan, this is the first step to a HA solution, for example
Make sure computer cabinets have dual power Make sure servers have dual power supplies, dual network cards, redundant hard
disks that can be mirrored Make sure you use multipathing to the data disk which are usually on a SAN or
NAS Make sure that the server is connected to two different network switches
You are trying to eliminate as many Single Point Of Failures (SPOF's) as you can without increasing the costs. Most hardware today will have these redundancy features built in, but its up to you to make use of them.
HA comes in three/four favors
No-failover
This option usually uses the already built-in redundancy, failed disks and PSU can be replaced online, but if a major hardware was to fail then a system outage is unavoidable, the system will remain down until it is fixed.
This solution can be perfectly acceptable in some environments but at what price to the business, even in today's market QA/DEV systems cost money when not running, i am sure that your developers are quite happy to take the day off paid while you fix the system
Cluster
This is the jewel in the HA world, a cluster can be configure in a variety of favors, from minimal downtime while services are moved to a good nodes, to virtual zero downtime.
However a cluster solution does come with a heavy price tag, hardware, configuration and maintaining a cluster is expensive but if you business loses vast amounts of money if you system is down, then its worth it.
Cold failover
Many smaller companies use this solution, basically you have a additional server ready to take over a number of servers if one where to fail. I have used this technique myself, i create a number of scripts that can turn a cold standby server into any number of servers, if the original server is going to have a prolonged outage.
The problem with this solution is there is going to be downtime, especially if it takes a long time to get the standby server up to the same point in time as the failed server.
The advantage of this solution is that one additional server could cover a number of servers, even if it slight under powered to the original server, as long as it keeps the service running.
Hot Many applications offer hot-standby servers, these servers are running along
failover
side the live system, data is applied to the hot-standby server periodically to keep it up to date, thus in a failover situation the server is almost ready to go.
The problem with this system is costs and manageability, also one server is usually dedicated to one application, thus you may have to have many hot-standby servers.
The advantage is that downtime is kept to a minimum, but there will be some downtime, generally the time it take to get the hot-standby server up todate, for example applying the last set of logs to a database.
Here is a summary table that shows the most command aspects of cold failover versus hot failover
Aspects Cold Failover Hot Failover
Scalability/number of nodes
Scalable limited to the capacity of a single node
As nodes can be added on demand, it provides infinite scalability. High number of nodes supported.
User interruption
Required up to a minimal extent. The failover operation can be scripted or automated to a certain extent
Not required, failover is automatic
Transparent failover of applications
Not Possible
Transparent application failover will be available where sessions can be transferred to another node without user interruption
Load Balancing Not possible, only one server will be used
Incoming load can be balanced between both nodes
Usage of resources Only one server at a time, the other server will be kept idle
Both the servers will be used
Failover time More than minutes as the other system must be cold started
Less than a minute, typically in a few seconds.
Clustering
I have discussed clustering in my Tomcat and JBoss topics, so I will only touch on the subject lightly here. A cluster is a group of two or more interconnected nodes, that provide a service. The cluster provides a high level of fault tolerance, if a node were to become unavailable within the cluster the services are moved/restored to another working node, thus the end user should never know that a fault occurred.
Clusters can be setup to use a single node in the cluster or to load balance between the nodes, but the main object is to keep the service running, hence why you pay top dollar for this. One advantage of a cluster is that it is very scalable because additional nodes can be added or taken away (a node may need to be patched) without interrupting the service.
Clustering has come a long way, there are now three types of clustering architecture
Shared nothing
each node within the cluster is independent, they share nothing. An example of this may be web servers, you a have number of nodes within the cluster supplying the same web service. The content will be static thus there is no need to share disks, etc.
Shared disk only
each node will be attached or have access to the same set of disks. These disks will contain the data that is required by the service. One node will control the application and the disk and in the event of a that node fails, the other node will take control of both the application and the data. This means that one node will have to be on standby setting idle waiting to take over if required to do so.
A typical traditional Veritas Cluster and Sun Cluster would fit the bill here.
Shared everything
again all nodes will be attached or have access to the same set of disks, but this time each node can read/write to the disks concurrently. Normally there will be a piece of software that controls the reading and writing to the disks ensuring data integrity. To achieve this a cluster-wide filesystem is introduced, so that all nodes view the filesystem identically, the software then coordinates the sharing and updating of files, records and databases.
Oracle RAC and IBM HACMP would be good examples of this type of cluster
Oracle RAC History
The first Oracle cluster database was release with Oracle 6 for the digital VAX, this was the first cluster database on the market. With Oracle 6.2 Oracle Parallel Server (OPS) was born, which used Oracle's own DLM (Distributed Lock Manager). Oracle 7 used vendor-supplied clusterware but this was complex to setup and manage, Oracle 8 introduce a general lock manager and this was a direction for Oracle to create its own clusterware product. Oracle's lock manager is integrated with Oracle code with an additional layer called OSD (Operating System Dependent), this was soon integrated within the kernel and become known as IDLM (Integrated Distributed Lock Manager) in later Oracle versions. Oracle Real Application Clusters 9i (Oracle RAC) used the same IDLM and relied on external clusterware software (Sun Cluster, Veritas Cluster, etc).
Oracle Parallel Server Architecture
A Oracle parallel database consists of two or more nodes that own Oracle instances and share a disk array. Each node has its own SGA and its own redo logs, but the data files and control files are all shared to all instances. All data and controls are concurrently read and written by all instances, redo logs files on the other hand can be read by any instance but only written by the owning instance. Each instance has its own set of background processes.
The components of a OPS database are
Cluster Manager - OS Vendor specific Distributed Lock Manager (DLM) Cluster Interconnect Shared Disk Array
The Cluster Group Services (CGS) has some OSD components (node monitor interface) and the rest is built in the kernel. CGS has a key repository used by the DLM for communication and network related activities. This layer provides the following
Internode messaging
Group member consistency Cluster synchronization Process grouping, registration and deregistration
The DLM is a integral part of OPS and the RAC stack. In older versions the DLM API module had to rely on external OS routines to check the status of a lock, this was done using UNIX sockets and pipes. With the new IDLM the data is in the SGA of each instance and requires only a serialized lookup using latches and/or enqueues and may require global coordination, the algorithm for which was built directly into the Oracle kernel. The IDLM job is to track every lock granted to a resource, memory structures required by the DLM are allocated out of the shared pool. The design of the DLM is such it can survive nodes failures in all but one node of the cluster.
A user must require a lock before it can operate on any resource, the Parallel Cache Management (PCM) coordinates and maintains data blocks exists within each data buffer cache (of an instance) so that data viewed or requested by users is never inconsistent or incoherent. The PCM ensures that only one instance in a cluster can modify a block at any given time, other instances have to wait until the lock is released.
DLM maintains information about all locks on a given resource, the DLM nominates one node to manage all relevant lock information for a resource, this node is referred to as the master node, lock mastering is distributed among all nodes. Using the IPC layer the DLM permits it to share the load of mastering resources, which means that a user can lock a resource on one node but actually end up communicating with the processes on another node.
In OPS 8i Oracle introduced Cache Fusion Stage 1, this introduced a new background process called the Block Server Process (BSP). The BSP main roles was to ship consistent read (CR) version(s) of a block(s) across an instance in a read/write contention scenario, this shipping is performed over a high speed interconnect. Cache Fusion Stage 2 in Oracle 9i and 10g, addresses some of the issues with Stage 1, in which both types of blocks (CR and CUR) can be transferred using the interconnect. Since 8i the introduction of the GV$ views meant that a DBA could view cluster-wide database and other statistics sitting on any node/instance of the cluster.
The limitations of OPS are
scalability is limited to the capacity of the node you cannot easily add additional nodes to a OPS OPS requires third-party clustering software adding to the expense and
complexity. OPS requires RAW partitions and these can be difficult to manage.
Oracle RAC addresses the limitation in OPS by extending Cache Fusion, and the dynamic lock mastering. Oracle 10g RAC also comes with its own integrated clusterware
and storage management framework, removing all dependencies of a third-party clusterware product. The latest Oracle RAC offers
Availability - can be configured to have no SPOF even when running on low spec'ed hardware
Scalability - multiple servers in a cluster to manage a single database transparently (scale out), basically means adding additional server is easy.
Reliability - improved code and monitoring RAC has become very reliable Affordability - you can use low cost hardware, however RAC is not going to
come cheap. Transparency - RAC looks and feels like a standard Oracle database to an
application
2. RAC Architecture
RAC Architecture Introduction
Oracle Real Application clusters allows multiple instances to access a single database, the instances will be running on multiple nodes. In an standard Oracle configuration a database can only be mounted by one instance but in a RAC environment many instances can access a single database.
Oracle's RAC is heavy dependent on a efficient, high reliable high speed private network called the interconnect, make sure when designing a RAC system that you get the best that you can afford.
The table below describes the difference of a standard oracle database (single instance) an a RAC environment
ComponentSingle Instance Environment
RAC Environment
SGA Instance has its own Each instance has its own SGA
SGA
Background processes
Instance has its own set of background processes
Each instance has its own set of background processes
DatafilesAccessed by only one instance
Shared by all instances (shared storage)
Control Files Accessed by only one instance
Shared by all instances (shared storage)
Online Redo Logfile
Dedicated for write/read to only one instance
Only one instance can write but other instances can read during recovery and archiving. If an instance is shutdown, log switches by other instances can force the idle instance redo logs to be archived
Archived Redo Logfile
Dedicated to the instance
Private to the instance but other instances will need access to all required archive logs during media recovery
Flash Recovery Log
Accessed by only one instance
Shared by all instances (shared storage)
Alert Log and Trace Files
Dedicated to the instance
Private to each instance, other instances never read or write to those files.
ORACLE_HOME
Multiple instances on the same server accessing different databases ca use the same executable files
Same as single instance plus can be placed on shared file system allowing a common ORACLE_HOME for all instances in a RAC environment.
RAC Components
The major components of a Oracle RAC system are
Shared disk system Oracle Clusterware Cluster Interconnects Oracle Kernel Components
The below diagram describes the basic architecture of the Oracle RAC environment
Here are the list of processes running on a freshly installed RAC
Disk architecture
With today's SAN and NAS disk storage systems, sharing storage is fairly easy and is required for a RAC environment, you can use the below storage setups
SAN (Storage Area Networks) - generally using fibre to connect to the SAN NAS ( Network Attached Storage) - generally using a network to connect to the
NAS using either NFS, ISCSI JBOD - direct attached storage, the old traditional way and still used by many
companies as a cheap option
All of the above solutions can offer multi-pathing to reduce SPOFs within the RAC environment, there is no reason not to configure multi-pathing as the cost is cheap when adding additional paths to the disk because most of the expense is paid when out when configuring the first path, so an additional controller card and network/fibre cables is all that is need.
The last thing to think about is how to setup the underlining disk structure this is known as a raid level, there are about 12 different raid levels that I know off, here are the most common ones
raid 0 (Striping)
A number of disks are concatenated together to give the appearance of one very large disk.
Advantages Improved performance Can Create very large Volumes
Disadvantages Not highly available (if one disk fails, the volume fails)
raid 1 (Mirroring)
A single disk is mirrored by another disk, if one disk fails the system is unaffected as it can use its mirror.
Advantages Improved performance Highly Available (if one disk fails the mirror takes over)
Disadvantages Expensive (requires double the number of disks)
raid 5 Raid stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks, the disks are striped with parity across 3 or more disks, the parity is used in the event that one of the disks fails, the data on the failed disk is reconstructed by using the parity bit.
Advantages
Improved performance (read only) Not expensive
Disadvantages Slow write operations (caused by having to create the parity bit)
There are many other raid levels that can be used with a particular hardware environment for example EMC storage uses the RAID-S, HP storage uses Auto RAID, so check with the manufacture for the best solution that will provide you with the best performance and resilience.
Once you have you storage attached to the servers, you have three choices on how to setup the disks
Raw Volumes - normally used for performance benefits, however they are hard to manage and backup
Cluster FileSystem - used to hold all the Oracle datafiles can be used by windows and linux, its not used widely
Automatic Storage Management (ASM) - Oracle choice of storage management, its a portable, dedicated and optimized cluster filesystem
I will only be discussing ASM, which i have already have a topic on called Automatic Storage Management.
Oracle Clusterware
Oracle Clusterware software is designed to run Oracle in a cluster mode, it can support you to 64 nodes, it can even be used with a vendor cluster like Sun Cluster.
The Clusterware software allows nodes to communicate with each other and forms the cluster that makes the nodes work as a single logical server. The software is run by the Cluster Ready Services (CRS) using the Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) that records and maintains the cluster and node membership information and the voting disk which acts as a tiebreaker during communication failures. Consistent heartbeat information travels across the interconnect to the voting disk when the cluster is running.
The CRS has four components
OPROCd - Process Monitor Daemon CRSd - CRS daemon, the failure of this daemon results in a node being reboot to
avoid data corruption OCSSd - Oracle Cluster Synchronization Service Daemon (updates the registry) EVMd - Event Volume Manager Daemon
The OPROCd daemon provides the I/O fencing for the Oracle cluster, it uses the hangcheck timer or watchdog timer for the cluster integrity. It is locked into memory and runs as a realtime processes, failure of this daemon results in the node being rebooted. Fencing is used to protect the data, if a node were to have problems fencing presumes the worst and protects the data thus restarts the node in question, its better to be save than sorry.
The CRSd process manages resources such as starting and stopping the services and failover of the application resources, it also spawns separate processes to manage application resources. CRS manages the OCR and stores the current know state of the cluster, it requires a public, private and VIP interface in order to run. OCSSd provides synchronization services among nodes, it provides access to the node membership and enables basic cluster services, including cluster group services and locking, failure of this daemon causes the node to be rebooted to avoid split-brain situations.
The below functions are covered by the OCSSd
CSS provides basic Group Services Support; it is a distributed group membership system that allows applications to coordinate activities to archive a common result.
Group services use vendor clusterware group services when it is available. Lock services provide the basic cluster-wide serialization locking functions, it
uses the First In, First Out (FIFO) mechanism to manage locking Node services uses OCR to store data and updates the information during
reconfiguration, it also manages the OCR data which is static otherwise.
The last component is the Event Management Logger, which runs the EVMd process. The daemon spawns a processes called evmlogger and generates the events when things happen. The evmlogger spawns new children processes on demand and scans the callout directory to invoke callouts. Death of the EVMd daemon will not halt the instance and will be restarted.
Quick recap
CRS Process Functionality Failure of the Process Run AS
OPROCd - Process Monitor
provides basic cluster integrity services
Node Restart root
EVMd - Event Management
spawns a child process event logger and generates callouts
Daemon automatically restarted, no node restart
oracle
OCSSd - Cluster Synchronization Services
basic node membership, group services, basic locking
Node Restart oracle
CRSd - Cluster Ready Services
resource monitoring, failover and node recovery
Daemon restarted automatically, no node
root
restart
The cluster-ready services (CRS) is a new component in 10g RAC, its is installed in a separate home directory called ORACLE_CRS_HOME. It is a mandatory component but can be used with a third party cluster (Veritas, Sun Cluster), by default it manages the node membership functionality along with managing regular RAC-related resources and services
RAC uses a membership scheme, thus any node wanting to join the cluster as to become a member. RAC can evict any member that it seems as a problem, its primary concern is protecting the data. You can add and remove nodes from the cluster and the membership increases or decrease, when network problems occur membership becomes the deciding factor on which part stays as the cluster and what nodes get evicted, the use of a voting disk is used which I will talk about later.
The resource management framework manage the resources to the cluster (disks, volumes), thus you can have only have one resource management framework per resource. Multiple frameworks are not supported as it can lead to undesirable affects.
The Oracle Cluster Ready Services (CRS) uses the registry to keep the cluster configuration, it should reside on a shared storage and accessible to all nodes within the cluster. This shared storage is known as the Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) and its a major part of the cluster, it is automatically backed up (every 4 hours) the daemons plus you can manually back it up. The OCSSd uses the OCR extensively and writes the changes to the registry
The OCR keeps details of all resources and services, it stores name and value pairs of information such as resources that are used to manage the resource equivalents by the CRS stack. Resources with the CRS stack are components that are managed by CRS and have the information on the good/bad state and the callout scripts. The OCR is also used to supply bootstrap information ports, nodes, etc, it is a binary file.
The OCR is loaded as cache on each node, each node will update the cache then only one node is allowed to write the cache to the OCR file, the node is called the master. The Enterprise manager also uses the OCR cache, it should be at least 100MB in size. The CRS daemon will update the OCR about status of the nodes in the cluster during reconfigurations and failures.
The voting disk (or quorum disk) is shared by all nodes within the cluster, information about the cluster is constantly being written to the disk, this is know as the heartbeat. If for any reason a node cannot access the voting disk it is immediately evicted from the cluster, this protects the cluster from split-brains (the Instance Membership Recovery algorithm IMR is used to detect and resolve split-brains) as the voting disk decides what part is the really cluster. The voting disk manages the cluster membership and arbitrates the cluster ownership during communication failures between nodes. Voting is often confused with quorum the are similar but distinct, below details what each means
VotingA vote is usually a formal expression of opinion or will in response to a proposed decision
Quorumis defined as the number, usually a majority of members of a body, that, when assembled is legally competent to transact business
The only vote that counts is the quorum member vote, the quorum member vote defines the cluster. If a node or group of nodes cannot archive a quorum, they should not start any services because they risk conflicting with an established quorum.
The voting disk has to reside on shared storage, it is a a small file (20MB) that can be accessed by all nodes in the cluster. In Oracle 10g R1 you can have only one voting disk, but in R2 you can have upto 32 voting disks allowing you to eliminate any SPOF's.
The original Virtual IP in Oracle was Transparent Application Failover (TAF), this had limitations, this has now been replaced with cluster VIPs. The cluster VIPs will failover to working nodes if a node should fail, these public IPs are configured in DNS so that users can access them. The cluster VIPs are different from the cluster interconnect IP address and are only used to access the database.
The cluster interconnect is used to synchronize the resources of the RAC cluster, and also used to transfer some data from one instance to another. This interconnect should be private, highly available and fast with low latency, ideally they should be on a minimum private 1GB network. What ever hardware you are using the NIC should use multi-pathing (Linux - bonding, Solaris - IPMP). You can use crossover cables in a QA/DEV environment but it is not supported in a production environment, also crossover cables limit you to a two node cluster.
Oracle Kernel Components
The kernel components relate to the background processes, buffer cache and shared pool and managing the resources without conflicts and corruptions requires special handling.
In RAC as more than one instance is accessing the resource, the instances require better coordination at the resource management level. Each node will have its own set of buffers but will be able to request and receive data blocks currently held in another instance's cache. The management of data sharing and exchange is done by the Global Cache Services (GCS).
All the resources in the cluster group form a central repository called the Global Resource Directory (GRD), which is distributed. Each instance masters some set of resources and together all instances form the GRD. The resources are equally distributed among the nodes based on their weight. The GRD is managed by two services called Global Caches Services (GCS) and Global Enqueue Services (GES), together they form and manage the GRD. When a node leaves the cluster, the GRD portion of that instance needs to be redistributed to the surviving nodes, a similar action is performed when a new node joins.
RAC Background Processes
Each node has its own background processes and memory structures, there are additional processes than the norm to manage the shared resources, theses additional processes maintain cache coherency across the nodes.
Cache coherency is the technique of keeping multiple copies of a buffer consistent between different Oracle instances on different nodes. Global cache management ensures that access to a master copy of a data block in one buffer cache is coordinated with the copy of the block in another buffer cache.
The sequence of a operation would go as below
1. When instance A needs a block of data to modify, it reads the bock from disk, before reading it must inform the GCS (DLM). GCS keeps track of the lock status of the data block by keeping an exclusive lock on it on behalf of instance A
2. Now instance B wants to modify that same data block, it to must inform GCS, GCS will then request instance A to release the lock, thus GCS ensures that instance B gets the latest version of the data block (including instance A modifications) and then exclusively locks it on instance B behalf.
3. At any one point in time, only one instance has the current copy of the block, thus keeping the integrity of the block.
GCS maintains data coherency and coordination by keeping track of all lock status of each block that can be read/written to by any nodes in the RAC. GCS is an in memory database that contains information about current locks on blocks and instances waiting to acquire locks. This is known as Parallel Cache Management (PCM). The Global Resource Manager (GRM) helps to coordinate and communicate the lock requests from Oracle processes between instances in the RAC. Each instance has a buffer cache in its SGA, to ensure that each RAC instance obtains the block that it needs to satisfy a query or transaction. RAC uses two processes the GCS and GES which maintain records of lock status of each data file and each cached block using a GRD.
So what is a resource, it is an identifiable entity, it basically has a name or a reference, it can be a area in memory, a disk file or an abstract entity. A resource can be owned or locked in various states (exclusive or shared). Any shared resource is lockable and if it is not shared no access conflict will occur.
A global resource is a resource that is visible to all the nodes within the cluster. Data buffer cache blocks are the most obvious and most heavily global resource, transaction enqueue's and database data structures are other examples. GCS handle data buffer cache blocks and GES handle all the non-data block resources.
All caches in the SGA are either global or local, dictionary and buffer caches are global, large and java pool buffer caches are local. Cache fusion is used to read the data buffer cache from another instance instead of getting the block from disk, thus cache fusion
moves current copies of data blocks between instances (hence why you need a fast private network), GCS manages the block transfers between the instances.
Finally we get to the processes
Oracle RAC Daemons and Processes
LMSn
Lock Manager Server process - GCS
this is the cache fusion part and the most active process, it handles the consistent copies of blocks that are transferred between instances. It receives requests from LMD to perform lock requests. I rolls back any uncommitted transactions. There can be up to ten LMS processes running and can be started dynamically if demand requires it.
they manage lock manager service requests for GCS resources and send them to a service queue to be handled by the LMSn process. It also handles global deadlock detection and monitors for lock conversion timeouts.
as a performance gain you can increase this process priority to make sure CPU starvation does not occur
you can see the statistics of this daemon by looking at the view X$KJMSDP
LMON
Lock Monitor Process - GES
this process manages the GES, it maintains consistency of GCS memory structure in case of process death. It is also responsible for cluster reconfiguration and locks reconfiguration (node joining or leaving), it checks for instance deaths and listens for local messaging.
A detailed log file is created that tracks any reconfigurations that have happened.
LMD
Lock Manager Daemon - GES
this manages the enqueue manager service requests for the GCS. It also handles deadlock detention and remote resource requests from other instances.
you can see the statistics of this daemon by looking at the view X$KJMDDP
LCK0Lock Process - GES
manages instance resource requests and cross-instance call operations for shared resources. It builds a list of invalid lock elements and validates lock elements during recovery.
DIAGDiagnostic Daemon
This is a lightweight process, it uses the DIAG framework to monitor the health of the cluster. It captures information for later diagnosis in the event of failures. It will perform any necessary recovery if an operational hang is detected.
3. RAC Installation, Configuration and Storage
RAC Installation
I am not going to show you a step by step guide on how to install Oracle RAC there are many documents on the internet that explain it better then I could. However I will point to the one I am fond of and it works very will if you want to build a cheap Oracle RAC environment to play around with, the instructions are simple and I have had no problems setting up, installing and configuring it.
To configure a Oracle RAC environment follow the instructions in the document Build your own Oracle RAC cluster on Oracle Enterprise Linux and ISCSI, there is also a newer version out using 11g. As I said the document is excellent, I used the hardware below and it cost me a little over £400 from EBay, alot cheaper than an Oracle course.
I did try and setup a RAC environment on VMWare on my laptop (I do have an old laptop) but it did not work very well, hence why I took the route above.
Hardware Description
Instance Node 1, 2 and 3
3 X Compaq Evo D510 PC's
specs:CPU - 2.4GHz (P4) RAM - 2GBHD - 40GB
Note: picked these up for £50 each, had to buy additional memory to max it out. The third node I use to add, remove and break to see what happens to the cluster, definitely worth getting a third node.
Openfiler Server
Compaq Evo D510 PC
specs:CPU - 2.4GHz (P4) RAM - 2GBHD - 40GBHD - 250GB (brought additional disk for ISCSI storage, more than enough for me)
Router/Switch
2 x Netgear GS608 8 port Gigabit switches (one for the private RAC network, one for the ISCSI network (data))
Note: I could have connect it all to one switch and saved a bit of money
Miscellaneous
1GB Network cards - support jumbo frames (may or may not be required any more) and TOE (TCP offload engine)Network cables - cat5eKVM switch - cheap one
Make sure you give yourself a couple of days to setup, install and configure the RAC, take your time and make notes, I have now setup and reinstalled so many times that I can do in a day.
Make use of that third node, don't install it with the original configuration, add it afterwards, use this node to remove a node from the cluster and also to simulate node failures, this is the only way to learn, keep repeating certain situations until you fully understand how RAC works.
Good Luck!!!!!
4. RAC Administration and Management
RAC Parameters
I am only going to talk about RAC administration, if you need Oracle administration then see my Oracle section.
It is recommended that the spfile (binary parameter file) is shared between all nodes within the cluster, but it is possible that each instance can have its own spfile. The parameters can be grouped into three categories
Unique parameters These parameters are unique to each instance, examples would be instance_name, thread and undo_tablespace
Identical parameters
Parameters in this category must be the same for each instance, examples would be db_name and control_file
Neither unique or identical parameters
parameters that are not in any of the above, examples would be db_cache_size, large_pool_size, local_listener and gcs_servers_processes
The main unique parameters that you should know about are
instance_name - defines the name of the Oracle instance (default is the value of the oracle_sid variable)
instance_number - a unique number for each instance must be greater than 0 but smaller than the max_instance parameter
thread - specifies the set of redolog files to be used by the instance undo_tablespace - specifies the name of the undo tablespace to be used by the
instance rollback_segments - you should use Automatic Undo Management cluster_interconnects - use if only if Oracle has trouble not picking the correct
interconnects
The identical unique parameters that you should know about are below you can use the below query to view all of them
select name, isinstance_modifiable from v$parameter where isinstance_modifiable = 'false' order by name;
cluster_database - options are true or false, mounts the control file in either share (cluster) or exclusive mode, use false in the below cases
o Converting from no archive log mode to archive log mode and vice versao Enabling the flashback database featureo Performing a media recovery on a system table
o Maintenance of a node active_instance_count - used for primary/secondary RAC environments cluster_database_instances - specifies the number of instances that will be
accessing the database (set to maximum # of nodes) dml_locks - specifies the number of DML locks for a particular instance (only
change if you get ORA-00055 errors) gc_files_to_locks - specify the number of global locks to a data file, changing this
disables the Cache Fusion. max_commit_propagation_delay - influences the mechanism Oracle uses to
synchronize the SCN among all instances instance_groups - specify multiple parallel query execution groups and assigns
the current instance to those groups parallel_instance_group - specifies the group of instances to be used for parallel
query execution gcs_server_processes - specify the number of lock manager server (LMS)
background processes used by the instance for Cache Fusion remote_listener - register the instance with listeners on remote nodes.
syntax for parameter file
<instance_name>.<parameter_name>=<parameter_value>
inst1.db_cache_size = 1000000*.undo_management=auto
examplealter system set db_2k_cache_size=10m scope=spfile sid='inst1';
Note: use the sid option to specify a particular instance
Starting and Stopping Instances
The srvctl command is used to start/stop an instance, you can also use sqlplus to start and stop the instance
start all instances
srvctl start database -d <database> -o <option>
Note: starts listeners if not already running, you can use the -o option to specify startup/shutdown options, see below for options
forceopenmountnomount
stop all instances srvctl stop database -d <database> -o <option>
Note: the listeners are not stopped, you can use the -o option to specify startup/shutdown options, see below for options
immediateabort normaltransactional
start/stop particular instance
srvctl [start|stop] database -d <database> -i <instance>,<instance>
Undo Management
To recap on undo management you can see my undo section, instances in a RAC do not share undo, they each have a dedicated undo tablespace. Using the undo_tablespace parameter each instance can point to its own undo tablespace
undo tablespace
instance1.undo_tablespace=undo_tbs1instance2.undo_tablespace=undo_tbs2
With todays Oracle you should be using automatic undo management, again I have a detailed discussion on AUM in my undo section.
Temporary Tablespace
I have already discussed temporary tablespace's, in a RAC environment you should setup a temporary tablespace group, this group is then used by all instances of the RAC. Each instance creates a temporary segment in the temporary tablespace it is using. If an instance is running a large sort, temporary segments can be reclaimed from segments from other instances in that tablespace.
useful views
gv$sort_segment - explore current and maximum sort segment usage statistics (check columns freed_extents, free_requests ,if they grow increase tablespace size) gv$tempseg_usage - explore temporary segment usage details such as name, SQL, etc v$tempfile - identify - temporary datafiles being used for the temporary tablespace
Redologs
I have already discussed redologs, in a RAC environment every instance has its own set of redologs. Each instance has exclusive write access to its own redologs, but each instance can read each others redologs, this is used for recovery. Redologs are located on the shared storage so that all instances can have access to each others redologs. The process is a little different to the standard Oracle when changing the archive mode
archive mode (RAC)
SQL> alter system set cluster_database=false scope=spfile sid='prod1';srvctl stop database -d <database>SQL> startup mountSQL> alter database archivelog;SQL> alter system set cluster_database=true scope=spfile sid='prod1';SQL> shutdown;srvctl start database -d prod
Flashback
Again I have already talked about flashback, there is no difference in RAC environment apart from the setting up
flashback (RAC)
## Make sure that the database is running in archive log mode SQL> archive log list
## Setup the flashbackSQL> alter system set cluster_database=false scope=spfile sid='prod1';SQL> alter system set DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST_SIZE=200M scope=spfile;SQL> alter system set DB_RECOVERY_FILE_DEST='/ocfs2/flashback' scope=spfile;srvctl stop database -p prod1SQL> startup mountSQL> alter database flashback on;SQL> shutdown;srvctl start database -p prod1
SRVCTL command
We have already come across the srvctl above, this command is called the server control utility. It can divided into two categories
Database configuration tasks Database instance control tasks
Oracle stores database configuration in a repository, the configuration is stored in the Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) that was created when RAC was installed, it will be located on the shared storage. Srvctl uses CRS to communicate and perform startup and shutdown commands on other nodes.
I suggest that you lookup the command but I will provide a few examples
display the registered databases
srvctl config database
status
srvctl status database -d <databasesrvctl status instance -d <database> -i <instance> srvctl status nodeapps -n <node>srvctl status service -d <database> srvctl status asm -n <node>
stopping/starting
srvctl stop database -d <database>srvctl stop instance -d <database> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl stop service -d <database> [-s <service><service>] [-i <instance>,<instance>]srvctl stop nodeapps -n <node>srvctl stop asm -n <node>
srvctl start database -d <database>srvctl start instance -d <database> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl start service -d <database> -s <service><service> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl start nodeapps -n <node>srvctl start asm -n <node>
adding/removing srvctl add database -d <database> -o <oracle_home>srvctl add instance -d <database> -i <instance> -n <node>srvctl add service -d <database> -s <service> -r <preferred_list>srvctl add nodeapps -n <node> -o <oracle_home> -A <name|ip>/network
srvctl add asm -n <node> -i <asm_instance> -o <oracle_home>
srvctl remove database -d <database> -o <oracle_home>srvctl remove instance -d <database> -i <instance> -n <node>srvctl remove service -d <database> -s <service> -r <preferred_list>srvctl remove nodeapps -n <node> -o <oracle_home> -A <name|ip>/networksrvctl asm remove -n <node>
Services
Services are used to manage the workload in Oracle RAC, the important features of services are
used to distribute the workload can be configured to provide high availability provide a transparent way to direct workload
The view v$services contains information about services that have been started on that instance, here is a list from a fresh RAC installation
The table above is described below
Goal - allows you to define a service goal using service time, throughput or none Connect Time Load Balancing Goal - listeners and mid-tier servers contain
current information about service performance Distributed Transaction Processing - used for distributed transactions AQ_HA_Notifications - information about nodes being up or down will be sent
to mid-tier servers via the advance queuing mechanism Preferred and Available Instances - the preferred instances for a service,
available ones are the backup instances
You can administer services using the following tools
DBCA EM (Enterprise Manager)
DBMS_SERVICES Server Control (srvctl)
Two services are created when the database is first installed, these services are running all the time and cannot be disabled.
sys$background - used by an instance's background processes only sys$users - when users connect to the database without specifying a service they
use this service
add
srvctl add service -d D01 -s BATCH_SERVICE -r node1,node2 -a node3
Note: the options are describe below
-d - database-s - the service-r - the service will running on the these nodes-a - if nodes in the -r list are not running then run on this node
remove srvctl remove service -d D01 -s BATCH_SERVICE
start srvctl start service -d D01 -s BATCH_SERVICE
stop srvctl stop service -d D01 -s BATCH_SERVICE
status srvctl status service -d D10 -s BATCH_SERVICE
service (example)
## create the JOB class BEGIN DBMS_SCHEDULER.create_job_class( job_class_name => 'BATCH_JOB_CLASS', service => 'BATCH_SERVICE');END;/
## Grant the privileges to execute the job grant execute on sys.batch_job_class to vallep;
## create a job associated with a job class BEGIN DBMS_SCHDULER.create_job( job_name => 'my_user.batch_job_test', job_type => 'PLSQL_BLOCK', job_action => SYSTIMESTAMP' repeat_interval => 'FREQ=DAILY;', job_class => 'SYS.BATCH_JOB_CLASS', end_date => NULL, enabled => TRUE, comments => 'Test batch job to show RAC services');
END;/
## assign a job class to an existing job exec dbms_scheduler.set_attribute('MY_BATCH_JOB', 'JOB_CLASS', 'BATCH_JOB_CLASS');
Cluster Ready Services (CRS)
CRS is Oracle's clusterware software, you can use it with other third-party clusterware software, though it is not required (apart from HP True64).
CRS is start automatically when the server starts, you should only stop this service in the following situations
Applying a patch set to $ORA_CRS_HOME O/S maintenance Debugging CRS problems
CRS Administration
starting
## Starting CRS using Oracle 10g R1not possible
## Starting CRS using Oracle 10g R2$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl start crs
stopping
## Stopping CRS using Oracle 10g R1 srvctl stop -d database <database>srvctl stop asm -n <node>srvctl stop nodeapps -n <node>/etc/init.d/init.crs stop
## Stopping CRS using Oracle 10g R2 $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl stop crs
disabling/enabling
## stop CRS restarting after a reboot, basically permanent over reboots
## Oracle 10g R1 /etc/init.d/init.crs [disable|enable]
## Oracle 10g R2$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl [disable|enable] crs
checking
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check crs$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check evmd$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check cssd$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check crsd$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check install -wait 600
Resource Applications (CRS Utilities)
status
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat -t $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat -ls $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat -p
Note:-t more readable display -ls permission listing-p parameters
create profile $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_profile
register/unregister application
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_register$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_unregister
Start/Stop an application $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_start$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stop
Resource permissions $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_getparam$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_setparam
Relocate a resource $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_relocate
Nodes
member number/name
olsnodes -n
Note: the olsnodes command is located in $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin
local node name olsnodes -l
activates logging olsnodes -g
Oracle Interfaces
display oifcfg getif
delete oicfg delig -global
setoicfg setif -global <interface name>/<subnet>:publicoicfg setif -global <interface name>/<subnet>:cluster_interconnect
Global Services Daemon Control
starting gsdctl start
stopping gsdctl stop
status gsdctl status
Cluster Configuration (clscfg is used during installation)
create a new configuration
clscfg -install
Note: the clscfg command is located in $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin
upgrade or downgrade and existing configuration
clscfg -upgradeclscfg –downgrade
add or delete a node from the configuration
clscfg -addclscfg –delete
create a special single-node configuration for ASM
clscfg –local
brief listing of terminology used in the other nodes
clscfg –concepts
used for tracing clscfg –trace
help clscfg -h
Cluster Name Check
print cluster name
cemutlo -n
Note: in Oracle 9i the ulity was called "cemutls", the command is located in $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin
print the clusterware version
cemutlo -w
Note: in Oracle 9i the ulity was called "cemutls"
Node Scripts
Add Node addnode.sh
Note: see adding and deleting nodes
Delete Node deletenode.sh
Note: see adding and deleting nodes
Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR)
As you already know the OCR is the registry that contains information
Node list Node membership mapping Database instance, node and other mapping information Characteristics of any third-party applications controlled by CRS
The file location is specified during the installation, the file pointer indicating the OCR device location is the ocr.loc, this can be in either of the following
linux - /etc/oracle solaris - /var/opt/oracle
The file contents look something like below, this was taken from my installation
orc.lococrconfig_loc=/u02/oradata/racdb/OCRFileocrmirrorconfig_loc=/u02/oradata/racdb/OCRFile_mirrorlocal_only=FALSE
OCR is import to the RAC environment and any problems must be immediately actioned, the command can be found in located in $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin
OCR Utilities
log file $ORA_HOME/log/<hostname>/client/ocrconfig_<pid>.log
checking
ocrcheck
Note: will return the OCR version, total space allocated, space used, free space, location of each device and the result of the integrity check
dump contents
ocrdump
Note: by default it dumps the contents into a file named OCRDUMPFILE in the current directory
export/importocrconfig -export <file>
ocrconfig -restore <file>
backup/restore # show backupsocrconfig -showbackup
# to change the location of the backup, you can even specify a ASM disk ocrconfig -backuploc <path|+asm>
# perform a backup, will use the location specified by the -backuploc location ocrconfig -manualbackup
# perform a restoreocrconfig -restore <file>
# delete a backup
orcconfig -delete <file>
Note: there are many more option so see the ocrconfig man page
add/remove/replace
## add/relocate the ocrmirror file to the specified location ocrconfig -replace ocrmirror '/ocfs2/ocr2.dbf'
## relocate an existing OCR file ocrconfig -replace ocr '/ocfs1/ocr_new.dbf'
## remove the OCR or OCRMirror fileocrconfig -replace ocrocrconfig -replace ocrmirror
Voting Disk
The voting disk as I mentioned in the architecture is used to resolve membership issues in the event of a partitioned cluster, the voting disk protects data integrity.
querying crsctl query css votedisk
adding crsctl add css votedisk <file>
deleting crsctl delete css votedisk <file>
5. RAC Backups and Recovery
Introduction
Backups and recovery is very similar to a single instance database. This article covers only the specific issues that surround RAC backups and recovery, I have already written a article on standard Oracle backups and recovery.
Backups can be different depending on the the size of the company
small company - may use tools such as tar, cpio, rsync medium/large company - Veritas Netbackup, RMAN Enterprise company - SAN mirroring with a backup option like Netbackup or
RMAN
Oracle RAC can use all the above backup technologies, but Oracle prefers you to use RMAN oracle own backup solution.
Backup Basics
Oracle backups can be taken hot or cold, a backup will comprise of the following
Datafiles Control Files Archive redolog files Parameter files (init.ora or SPFILE)
Databases have now grown to very large sizes well over a terabyte in size in some cases, thus tapes backups are not used in these cases but sophisticated disk mirroring have taken their place. RMAN can be used in either a tape or disk solution, it can even work with third-party solutions such as Veritas Netbackup.
In a Oracle RAC environment it is critical to make sure that all archive redolog files are located on shared storage, this is required when trying to recover the database, as you need access to all archive redologs. RMAN can use parallelism when recovering, the node that performs the recovery must have access to all archived redologs, however,
during recovery only one node applies the archived logs as in a standard single instance configuration.
Oracle RAC also supports Oracle Data Guard, thus you can have a primary database configured as a RAC and a standby database also configured as a RAC.
Instance Recovery
In a RAC environment there are two types of recovery
Crash Recovery - means that all instances have failed, thus they all need to be recovered
Instance Recovery - means that one or more instances have failed. this instance can then be recovered by the surviving instances
Redo information generated by an instance is called a thread of redo. All log files for that instance belong to this thread, an online redolog file belongs to a group and the group belongs to a thread. Details about log group file and thread association details are stored in the control file. RAC databases have multiple threads of redo, each instance has one active thread, the threads are parallel timelines and together form a stream. A stream consists of all the threads of redo information ever recorded, the streams form the timeline of changes performed to the database.
Oracle records the changes made to a database, these are called change vectors. Each vector is a description of a single change, usually a single block. A redo record contains one or more change vectors and is located by its Redo Byte Address (RBA) and points to a specific location in the redolog file (or thread). It will consist of three components
log sequence number block number within the log byte number within the block
Checkpoints are the same in a RAC environment and a single instance environment, I have already discussed checkpoints, when a checkpoint needs to be triggered, Oracle will look for the thread checkpoint that has the lowest checkpoint SCN, all blocks in memory that contain changes made prior to this SCN across all instances must be written out to disk. I have discussed how to control recovery in my Oracle section and this applies to RAC as well.
Crash Recovery
Crash recovery is basically the same for a single instance and a RAC environment, I have a complete recovery section in my Oracle section, here is a note detailing the difference
For a single instance the following is the recovery process
1. The on-disk block is the starting point for the recovery, Oracle will only consider the block on the disk so the recovery is simple. Crash recovery will automatically happen using the online redo logs that are current or active
2. The starting point is the last full checkpoint. The starting point is provided by the control file and compared against the same information in the data file headers, only the changes need to be applied
3. The block specified in the redolog is read into cache, if the block has the same timestamp as the redo record (SCN match) the redo is applied.
For a RAC instance the following is the recovery process
1. A foreground process in a surviving instance detects an "invalid block lock" condition when a attempt is made to read a block into the buffer cache. This is an indication that an instance has failed (died)
2. The foreground process sends a notification to instance system monitor (SMON) which begin to search for dead instances. SMON maintains a list of all the dead instances and invalid block locks. Once the recovery and cleanup has finished this list is updated.
3. The death of another instance is detected if the current instance is able to acquire that instance's redo thread locks, which is usually held by an open and active instance.
Oracle RAC uses a two-pass recovery, because a data block could have been modified in any of the instances (dead or alive), so it needs to obtain the latest version of the dirty block and it uses PI (Past Image) and Block Written Record (BWR) to archive this in a quick and timely fashion.
Block Written Record (BRW)
The cache aging and incremental checkpoint system would write a number of blocks to disk, when the DBWR completes a data block write operation, it also adds a redo record that states the block has been written (data block address and SCN). DBWn can write block written records (BWRs) in batches, though in a lazy fashion. In RAC a BWR is written when an instance writes a block covered by a global resource or when it is told that its past image (PI) buffer it is holding is no longer necessary.
Past Image (PI)
This is was makes RAC cache fusion work, it eliminates the write/write contention problem that existed in the OPS database. A PI is a copy of a globally dirty block and is maintained in the database buffer cache, it can be created and saved when a dirty block is shipped across to another instance after setting the resource role to global. The GCS is responsible for informing an instance that its PI is no longer needed after another instance writes a newer (current) version of the same block. PI's are discarded when GCS posts all the holding instances that a new and consistent version of that particular block is now on disk.
I go into more details about PI's in my cache fusion section.
The first pass does not perform the actual recovery but merges and reads redo threads to create a hash table of the blocks that need recovery and that are not known to have been written back to the datafiles. The checkpoint SCN is need as a starting point for the recovery, all modified blocks are added to the recovery set (a organized hash table). A block will not be recovered if its BWR version is greater than the latest PI in any of the buffer caches.
The second pass SMON rereads the merged redo stream (by SCN) from all threads needing recovery, the redolog entries are then compared against a recovery set built in the first pass and any matches are applied to the in-memory buffers as in a single pass recovery. The buffer cache is flushed and the checkpoint SCN for each thread is updated upon successful completion.
Cache Fusion Recovery
I have a detailed section on cache fusion, this section covers the recovery, cache fusion is only used in RAC environments, as additional steps are required, such as GRD reconfiguration, internode communication, etc. There are two types of recovery
Crash Recovery - all instances have failed Instance Recovery - one instance has failed
In both cases the threads from failed instances need to be merged, in a instance recovery SMON will perform the recovery where as in a crash recovery a foreground process performs the recovery.
The main features (advantages) of cache fusion recovery are
Recovery cost is proportional to the number of failures, not the total number of nodes
It eliminates disk reads of blocks that are present in a surviving instance's cache It prunes recovery set based on the global resource lock state The cluster is available after an initial log scan, even before recovery reads are
complete
In cache fusion the starting point for recovery of a block is its most current PI version, this could be located on any of the surviving instances and multiple PI blocks of a particular buffer can exist.
Remastering is the term used that describes the operation whereby a node attempting recovery tries to own or master the resource(s) that were once mastered by another
instance prior to the failure. When one instance leaves the cluster, the GRD of that instance needs to be redistributed to the surviving nodes. RAC uses an algorithm called lazy remastering to remaster only a minimal number of resources during a reconfiguration. The entire Parallel Cache Management (PCM) lock space remains invalid while the DLM and SMON complete the below steps
1. IDLM master node discards locks that are held by dead instances, the space is reclaimed by this operation is used to remaster locks that are held by the surviving instance for which a dead instance was remastered
2. SMON issues a message saying that it has acquired the necessary buffer locks to perform recovery
Lets look at an example on what happens during a remastering, lets presume the following
Instance A masters resources 1, 3, 5 and 7 Instance B masters resources 2, 4, 6, and 8 Instance C masters resources 9, 10, 11 and 12
Instance B is removed from the cluster, only the resources from instance B are evenly remastered across the surviving nodes (no resources on instances A and C are affected), this reduces the amount of work the RAC has to perform, likewise when a instance joins a cluster only minimum amount of resources are remastered to the new instance.
Before Remastering
After Remastering
You can control the remastering process with a number of parameters
_gcs_fast_config enables fast reconfiguration for gcs locks (true|false)
_lm_master_weightcontrols which instance will hold or (re)master more resources than others
_gcs_resources controls the number of resources an instance will master at a time
you can also force a dynamic remastering (DRM) of an object using oradebug
force dynamic remastering (DRM)
## Obtain the OBJECT_ID form the below table SQL> select * from v$gcspfmaster_info;
## Determine who masters itSQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug lkdebug -a <OBJECT_ID>
## Now remaster the resource SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug lkdebug -m pkey <OBJECT_ID>
The steps of a GRD reconfiguration is as follows
Instance death is detected by the cluster manager Request for PCM locks are frozen Enqueues are reconfigured and made available DLM recovery GCS (PCM lock) is remastered Pending writes and notifications are processed I Pass recovery
o The instance recovery (IR) lock is acquired by SMONo The recovery set is prepared and built, memory space is allocated in the
SMON PGAo SMON acquires locks on buffers that need recovery
II Pass recovery o II pass recovery is initiated, database is partially availableo Blocks are made available as they are recoveredo The IR lock is released by SMON, recovery is then completeo The system is available
Graphically it looks like below
6. RAC Performance
RAC Performance
I have already discussed basic Oracle tuning, in this section I will mainly dicuss Oracle RAC tuning. First lets review the best pratices of a Oracle design regarding the application and database
Optimize connection management, ensure that the middle tier and programs that connect to the database are efficent in connection management and do not log on or off repeatedly
Tune the SQL using the available tools such as ADDM and SQL Tuning Advisor Ensure that applications use bind variables, cursor_sharing was introduced to
solve this problem Use packages and procedures (because they are compiled) in place of anonymous
PL/SQL blocks and big SQL statements Use locally managed tablespaces and automatic segment space management to
help performance and simplify database administration Use automatic undo management and temporary tablespace to simplify
administration and increase performance Ensure you use large caching when using sequences, unless you cannot afford to
lose sequence during a crash Avoid using DDL in production, it increases invalidations of the already parsed
SQL statements and they need to be recompiled Partion tables and indexes to reduce index leaf contention (buffer busy global cr
problems) Optimize contention on data blocks (hot spots) by avoiding small tables with too
many rows in a block
Now we can review RAC specific best practices
Consider using application partitioning (see below) Consider restricting DML-intensive users to using one instance, thus reducing
cache contention Keep read-only tablespaces away from DML-intensive tablespaces, they only
require minimum resources thus optimizing Cache Fusion performance Avoid auditing in RAC, this causes more shared library cache locks Use full tables scans sparingly, it causes the GCS to service lots of block requests,
see table v$sysstat column "table scans (long tables)" if the application uses lots of logins, increase the value of sys.audsess$ sequence
Partitioning Workload
Workload partitioning is a certian type of workload that is executed on an instance, that is partitioning allows users who access the same set of data to log on to the same instance. This limits the amount of data that is shared between instances thus saving resources used for messaging and Cache Fusion data block transfer.
You should consider the following when deciding to implement partitioning
If the CPU and private interconnects are of high performance then there is no need to to partition
Partitioning does add complexity, thus if you can increase CPU and the interconnect performance the better
Only partition if performance is betting impacted Test both partitioning and non-partitioning to what difference it makes, then
decide if partitioning is worth it
RAC Wait Events
An event is an operation or particular function that the Oracle kernel performs on behalf of a user or a Oracle background process, events have specific names like database event. Whenever a session has to wait for something, the wait time is tracked and charged to the event that was associated with that wait. Events that are associated with all such waits are known as wait events. The are a number of wait classes
Commit Scheduler Application Configuration User I/O System I/O Concurrency Network Administrative
Cluster Idle Other
There are over 800 different events spread across the above list, however you probably will only deal with about 50 or so that can improve performance.
When a session requests access to a data block it sends a request to the lock master for proper authorization, the request does not know if it will receive the block via Cache Fusion or a permission to read from the disk. Two placeholder events
global cache cr request (consistent read - cr) global cache curr request (current - curr)
keep track of the time a session spends in this state. There are number of types of wait events regarding access to a data block
Wait Event
Contention type
Description
gc current block 2-way
write/write
an instance requests authorization for a block to be accessed in current mode to modify a block, the instance mastering the resource receives the request. The master has the current version of the block and sends the current copy of the block to the requestor via Cache Fusion and keeps a Past Image (.PI)
If you get this then do the following
Analyze the contention, segments in the "current blocks received" section of AWR
Use application partitioning scheme Make sure the system has enough CPU power Make sure the interconnect is as fast as possible
Ensure that socket send and receive buffers are configured correctly
gc current block 3-way
write/write
an instance requests authorization for a block to be accessed in current mode to modify a block, the instance mastering the resource receives the request and forwards it to the current holder of the block, asking it to relinquish ownership. The holding instance sends a copy of the current version of the block to the requestor via Cache Fusion and transfers the exclusive lock to the requesting instance. It also keeps a past Image (PI).
Use the above actions to increase the performance
gc current block 2-way
write/read The difference with the one above is that this sends a copy of the block thus keeping the current copy.
gc current block 3-way
write/readThe difference with the one above is that this sends a copy of the block thus keeping the current copy.
gc current block busy
write/write
The requestor will eventually get the block via cache fusion but it is delayed due to one of the following
The block was being used by another session on another session
was delayed as the holding instance could not write the corresponding redo record immediately
If you get this then do the following
Ensure the log writer is tuned
gc current buffer busy
localThis is the same as above (gc current block busy), the difference is that another session on the same instance also has requested the block (hence local contention)
gc current block congested
noneThis is caused if heavy congestion on the GCS, thus CPU resources are stretched
Enqueue Tuning
Oracle RAC uses a queuing mechanism to ensure proper use of shared resources, it is called Global Enqueue Services (GES). Enqueue wait is the time spent by a session waiting for a shared resource, here are some examples of enqueues:
updating the control file (CF enqueue) updating an individual row (TX enqueue) exclusive lock on a table (TM enqueue)
Enqueues can be managed by the instance itself others are used globally, GES is responsible for coordinating the global resources. The formula used to calculate the number of enqueue resources is as below
GES Resources = DB_FILES + DML_LOCKS + ENQUEUE_RESOURCES + PROCESS + TRANSACTION x (1 + (N - 1)/N)
N = number of RAC instances
displaying enqueues stats
SQL> column current_utilization heading currentSQL> column max_utilization heading max_usageSQL> column initial_allocation heading initialSQL> column resource_limit format a23;
SQL> select * from v$resource_limit;
AWR and RAC
I have already discussed AWR in a single instance environment, so for a quick refresh take a look and come back here to see how you can use it in a RAC environment.
From a RAC point of view there are a number of RAC-specific sections that you need to look at in the AWR, in the report section is a AWR of my home RAC environment, you can view the whole report here.
RAC AWR Section
Report Description
Number of Instances
instanceslists the number of instances from the beginning and end of the AWR report
Instance global cache load profile
global cache
information about the interinstance cache fusion data block and messaging traffic, because my AWR report is lightweight here is a more heavy used RAC example
Global Cache Load Profile~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Per Second Per Transaction --------------- ---------------Global Cache blocks received: 315.37 12.82Global Cache blocks served: 240.30 9.67GCS/GES messages received: 525.16 20.81GCS/GES messages sent: 765.32 30.91
The first two statistics indicate the number of blocks transferred to or from this instance, thus if you are using a 8K block size
Sent: 240 x 8,192 = 1966080 bytes/sec = 2.0
MB/sec Received: 315 x 8,192 = 2580480 bytes/sec = 2.6 MB/sec
to determine the amount of network traffic generated due to messaging you first need to find the average message size (this was 193 on my system)
select sum(kjxmsize * (kjxmrcv + kjxmsnt + kjxmqsnt)) / sum((kjxmrcv + kjxmsnt + kjxmqsnt)) "avg Message size" from x$kjxm where kjxmrcv > 0 or kjxmsnt > 0 or kjxmqsnt > 0;
then calculate the amount of messaging traffic on this network
193 (765 + 525) = 387000 = 0.4 MB
to calculate the total network traffic generated by cache fusion
= 2.0 + 2.6 + 0.4 = 5 MBytes/sec = 5 x 8 = 40 Mbits/sec
The DBWR Fusion writes statistic indicates the number of times the local DBWR was forced to write a block to disk due to remote instances, this number should be low.
Glocal cache efficiency percentage
global cache
efficiency
this section shows how the instance is getting all the data blocks it needs. The best order is the following
Local cache Remote cache Disk
The first two give the cache hit ratio for the instance, you are looking for a value less than 10%, if you are getting higher values then you may consider application partitioning.
GCS and GES - workload characteristics
GCS and GES
workload
this section contains timing statistics for global enqueue and global cache. As a general rule you are looking for
All timings related to CR (Consistent Read) processing block should be less than 10 msec
All timings related to CURRENT block processing
should be less than 20 msec
Messaging statistics
messaging
The first section relates to sending a message and should be less than 1 second.
The second section details the breakup of direct and indirect messages, direct messages are sent by a instance foreground or the user processes to remote instances, indirect are messages that are not urgent and are pooled and sent.
Service statistics
Service stats
shows the resources used by all the service instance supports
Service wait class statistics
Service wait class
summarizes waits in different categories for each service
Top 5 CR and current block segements
Top 5 CR and
current blocks
conatns the names of the top 5 contentious segments (table or index). If a table or index has a very high percentage of CR and Current block transfers you need to investigate. This is pretty much like a normal single instance.
Cluster Interconnect
As I stated above the interconnect it a critical part of the RAC, you must make sure that this is on the best hardware you can buy. You can confirm that the interconnect is being used in Oracle 9i and 10g by using the command oradebug to dump information out to a trace file, in Oracle 10g R2 the cluster interconnect is also contained in the alert.log file, you can view my information from here.
interconnect
SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug ipc
Note: look in the user_dump_dest directory, the trace will be there
7. Global Resource Directory (GRD)
GRD introduction
The RAC environment includes many resources such as multiple versions of data block buffers in buffer caches in different modes, Oracle uses locking and queuing mechanisms to coordinate lock resources, data and interinstance data requests. Resources such as data blocks and locks must be synchronized between nodes as nodes within a cluster acquire and release ownership of them. The synchronization provided by the Global Resource Directory (GRD) maintains a cluster wide concurrency of the resources and in turn ensures the integrity of the shared data. Synchronization is also required for buffer cache management as it is divided into multiple caches, and each instance is responsible for managing its own local version of the buffer cache. Copies of data are exchanged between nodes, this sometimes is referred to as the global cache but in reality each nodes buffer cache is separate and copies of blocks are exchanged through traditional distributed locking mechanism.
Global Cache Services (GCS) maintain the cache coherency across buffer cache resources and Global Enqueue Services (GES) controls the resource management across the clusters non-buffer cache resources.
Cache Coherency
Cache coherency identifies the most up-to-date copy of a resource, also called the master copy, it uses a mechanism by which multiple copies of an object are keep consistent between Oracle instances. Parallel Cache Management (PCM) ensures that the master copy of a data block is stored in one buffer cache and consistent copies of the data block are stored in other buffer caches, the process LCKx is responsible for this task.
The lock and resource structures for instance locks reside in the GRD (also called the DLM), its a dedicated area within the shared pool. Details about the data blocks resources
and cached versions are maintained by GCS. Additional details such as the location of the most current version, state of the buffer, role of the data block (local or global) and ownership are maintained by GES. Global cache together with GES form the GRD. Each instance maintains a part of the GRD in its SGA. The GCS and GES nominate one instance, this will become the resource master, to manage all information about a particular resource. Each instance knows which instance master is with which resource.
Resources and Enqueues
A resource is an identifiable entity, it has a name or reference. The referenced entity is usually a memory region, a disk file, a data block or an abstract entity. A resource can be owned or locked in various states (exclusive or shared), all resources are lockable. A global resource is visible throughout the cluster, thus a local resource can only be used by the instance at it is local too. Each resource can have a list of locks called the grant queue, that are currently granted to users. A convert queue is a queue of locks that are waiting to be converted to particular mode, this is the process of changing a lock from one mode to another, even a NULL is a lock. A resource has a lock value block (LVB). The Global Resource Manager (GRM) keeps the lock information valid and correct across the cluster.
Locks are placed on a resource grant or a convert queue, if the lock changes it moves between the queues. A lock leaves the convert queue under the following conditions
The process requests the lock termination (it remove the lock) The process cancels the conversion, the lock is moved back to the grant queue in
the previous mode The requested mode is compatible with the most restrictive lock in the grant
queue and with all the previous modes of the convert queue, and the lock is at the head of the convert queue
Convert requests are processed on a FIFO basis, the grant queue and convert queue are associated with each and every resource that is managed by the GES.
Enqueues are basically locks that support queuing mechanisms and that can be acquired in different modes. An enqueue can be held in exclusive mode by one process and others can hold a non-exclusive mode depending on the type. Enqueues are the same in RAC as they are in a single instance.
Global Enqueue Services (GES)
GES coordinates the requests of all global enqueues, it also deals with deadlocks and timeouts. There are two types of local locks, latches and enqueues, latches do not affect the cluster only the local instance, enqueues can affect both the cluster and the instance.
Enqueues are shared structures that serialize access to database resources, they support multiple modes and are held longer than latches, they protect persistent objects such as tables or library cache objects. Enqueues can use any of the following modes
Mode Summary Description
NULL NULLno access rights, a lock is held at this level to indicate that a process is interested in a resource
SS SubSharedthe resource can be read in an unprotected fashion other processes can read and write to the resource, the lock is also known as a row share lock
SXShared
Exclusive the resource can be read and written to in an unprotected fashion, this is also known as a RX (row exclusive) lock
S Shareda process cannot write to the resource but multiple processes can read it. This is the traditional share lock.
SSX SubShared Only one process can hold a lock at this level, this makes sure that
Exclusiveonly processes can modify it at a time. Other processes can perform unprotected reads. This is also know as a SRX (shared row exclusive) table lock.
X Exclusivegrants the holding process exclusive access to the resource, other processes cannot read or write to the resource. This is also the traditional exclusive lock.
Global Locks
Each node has information for a set of resources, Oracle uses a hashing algorithm to determine which nodes hold the directory tree information for the resource. Global locks are mainly of two types
Locks used by the GCS for buffer cache management, these are called PCM locks Global locks (global enqueue) that Oracle synchronizes within a cluster to
coordinate non-PCM resources, they protect the enqueue structures
An instance owns a global lock that protects a resource (i.e. data block or data dictionary entry) when the resource enters the instance's SGA.
GES locks control access to data files (not the data blocks) and control files and also serialize interinstance communication. They also control library caches and the dictionary cache. Examples of this are DDL, DML enqueue table locks, transaction enqueues and DDL locks or dictionary locks. The SCN and mount lock are global locks.
Transaction and row locks are the same as in a single instance database, the only difference is that the enqueues are global enqueues, take a look in locking for an in depth view on how Oracle locking works.
Messaging
The difference between RAC and a single instance messaging is that RAC uses the high speed interconnect and a single instance uses shared memory and semaphores, interrupts are used when one or more process want to use the processor in a multiple CPU architecture. GES uses messaging for interinstance communication, this is done by messages and asynchronous traps (ASTs). Both LMON and LMD use messages to communicate to other instances, the GRD is updated when locks are required. The messaging traffic can be viewed using the view V$GES_MISC.
A three-way lock message involves up to a maximum of three instances, Master instance (M), Holding instance (H) and the Requesting instance (R), the sequence is detailed
below where requesting instance R is interested in block B1 from holding instance H. The resource is mastered in master instance M
1. Instance R gets the ownership information about a resource from the GRD, instance R then sends the message to the master instance M requesting access to the resource. This message is sent by a direct send as it is critical
2. Instance M receives the message and forwards it to the holding instance H. This is also sent directly, this is known as a blocking asynchronous trap (BAST).
3. Instance H sends the resource to instance R, using the interconnect, the resource is copied in instance R memory
4. Once the lock handle is obtained on the resource instance R sends an acknowledgment to instance M. This message is queued as it is not critical, this is called acquisition asynchronous trap (AAST).
Because GES heavily rely's on messaging the interconnect must be of high quality (high performance , low latency), also the messages are kept small (128 bytes) to increase performance. The Traffic Controller (TRFC) is used to control the DLM traffic between the instances in the cluster, it uses buffering to accommodate large volumes of traffic.
The TRFC keeps track of everything by using tickets (sequence numbers), there is a predefined pool of tickets this is dependent on the network send buffer size. A ticket is obtained before sending any messages, once sent the ticket is returned to the pool, LMS or LMD perform this. If there are no tickets then the message has to wait until a ticket is available. You can control the number of tickets and view them
system parameter
_lm_tickets_lm_ticket_active_sendback (used for aggressive messaging)
ticket usageselect local_nid local, remote_nid remote, tckt_avail avail, tckt_limit limit, snd_q_len send_queue, tckt_wait waiting from v$ges_traffic_controller;
dump ticket information
SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug unlimitSQL> oradebug lkdebug -t
Note: the output can be viewed here
Global Cache Services (GCS)
GCS locks only protect data blocks in the global cache (also know as PCM locks), it can be acquired in share or exclusive mode. Each lock element can have the lock role set to either local (same as single instance) or global. When in global role three lock modes are possible, shared, exclusive and null. In global role mode you can read or write to the data block only as directed by the master instance of that resource. The lock and state information is held in the SGA and is maintained by GCS, these are called lock elements. It also holds a chain of cache buffer chains that are covered by the corresponding lock elements. These can be view via v$lock_element, the parameter _db_block_hash_buckets controls the number of hash buffer chain buckets.
GCS locks uses the following modes as stated above
Exclusive (X)
used during update or any DML operation, if another instance requires the block that has a exclusive lock it asks GES to request that he second instance disown the global lock
Shared (S) used for select operations, reading of data does not require a instance to disown a global lock.
Null (N) allows instances to keep a lock without any permission on the block(s). This mode is used so that locks need not be created and destroyed all the time, it just converts from one lock to another.
Lock roles are used by Cache Fusion, it can be either local or global, the resource is local if the block is dirty only in the local cache, it is global if the block is dirty in a remote cache or in several remote caches. A Past Image (PI) is kept by the instance when a block
is shipped to another instance, the role is then changed to a global role, thus the PI represents the state of a dirty buffer. A node must keep a PI until it receives notification from the master that a write to disk has completed covering that version, the node will then log a block written record (BWR). I have already discussed PI and BWR in my backup section.
When a new current block arrives, the previous PI remains untouched in case another node requires it. If there are a number of PI's that exist, they may or may not merge into a single PI, the master will determine this based on if the older PI's are required, a indeterminate number of PI's can exist.
In the local role only S and X modes are permitted, when requested by the master instance the holding instance serves a copy of the block to others. If the block is globally clean this instance lock role remains local. If the block is modified (dirty), a PI is retained and the lock becomes global. In the global lock role lock modes can be N, S and X, the block is global and it may even by dirty in any of the instances and the disk version may be obsolete. Interested parties can only modify the block using X mode, an instance cannot read from the disk as it may not be current, the holding instance can send copies to other instances when instructed by the master.
I have a complete detailed walkthough in my cache_fusion section, which will help you better to understand.
A lock element holds lock state information (converting, granting, etc). LEs are managed by the lock process to determine the mode of the locks, they also old a chain of cache buffers that are covered by the LE and allow the Oracle database to keep track of cache buffers that must be written to disk in a case a LE (mode) needs to be downgraded (X > N).
LEs protect all the data blocks in the buffer cache, the list below describes the classes of the data block which are managed by the LEs using GCS locks (x$bh.class).
0 FREE
1 EXLCUR
2 SHRCUR
3 CR
4 READING
5 MRECOVERY
6 IRCOVERY
7 WRITING
8 PI
So putting this altogether you get the following, GCS manages PCM locks in the GRD, PCM locks manage the data blocks in the global cache. Data blocks are can be kept in any of the instances buffer cache (which is global), if not found then it can be read from disk by the requesting instance. The GCS monitors and maintains the list and mode of the blocks in all the instances. Each instance will master a number of resources, but a
resource can only be mastered by one instance. GCS ensures cache coherency by requiring that instances acquire a lock before modifying or reading a database block. GCS locks are not row-level locks, row-level locks are used in conjunction with PCM locks. GCS lock ensures that they block is accessed by one instances then row-level locks manage the blocks at the row-level. If a block is modified all Past Images (PI) are no longer current and new copies are required to obtained.
Consistent read processing means that readers never block writers, as the same in a single instance. One parameter that can help is _db_block_max_cr_dba which limits the number of CR copies per DBA on the buffer cache. If too many CR requests arrive for a particular buffer, the holder can disown the lock on the buffer and write the buffer to the disk, thus the requestor can then read it from disk, especially if the requested block has a older SCN and needs to reconstruct it (known as CR fabrication). This is technically known as fairness downconvert, and the parameter _fairness_threshold can used to configure it.
The lightwork rule is involved when CR construction involves too much work and no current block or PI block is available in the cache for block cleanouts. The below can be used to view the number of times a downconvert occurs
downconvert
select cr_requests, light_works, data_requests, fairness_down_converts from v$cr_block_server;
Note: lower the _fairness_threshold if the ratio goes above 40%, set to 0 if the instance is a query only instance.
The GRD is a central repository for locks and resources, it is distributed across all nodes (not a single node), but only one instance masters a resource. The process of maintaining information about resources is called lock mastering or resource mastering. I spoke about lock remastering in my backup section.
Resource affinity allows the resource mastering of the frequently used resources on its local node, it uses dynamic resource mastering to move the location of the resource masters. Normally resource mastering only happens when a instance joins or leaves the RAC environment, as of Oracle 10g R2 mastering occurs at the object level which helps fine-grained object remastering. There are a number of parameters that can be used to dynamically remaster an object
_gc_affinity_time specifies interval minutes for remastering
_gc_affinity_limitdefines the number of times a instance access the resource before remastering, setting to 0 disable remastering
_gc_affinity_minimumdefines the minimum number of times a instance access the resource before remastering
_lm_file_affinity disables dynamic remastering for the objects belonging to
those files
_lm_dynamic_remastering enable or disable remastering
You should consult Oracle before changing any of the above parameters.
8. Cache Fusion
Introduction
I mentioned above Cache Fusion in my GRD section, here I go into great detail on how it works; I will also provide a number of walk through examples on my RAC system.
Cache Fusion uses the most efficient communications as possible to limit the amount of traffic used on the interconnect, now you don't need this level of detail to administer a RAC environment but it sure helps to understand how RAC works when trying to diagnose problems. RAC appears to have one large buffer but this is not the case, in reality the buffer caches of each node remain separate, data blocks are shared through distributed locking and messagingoperations. RAC copies data blocks across the interconnect to other instances as it is more efficient than reading the disk, yes memory and networking together are faster than disk I/O.
Ping
The transfer of a data block from instances buffer cache to another instances buffer cache is know as a ping. As mentioned already when an instance requires a data block it sends the request to the lock master to obtain a lock in the desired mode, this process is known as blocking asynchronous trap (BAST). When an instance receives a BAST it downgrades the lock ASAP, however it might have to write the corresponding block to disk, this operation is known as disk ping or hard ping. Disk pings have been reduce in the later versions of RAC, thus relaying on block transfers more, however there will always be a small amount of disk pinging. In the newer versions of RAC when a BAST is received sending the block or downgrading the lock may be deferred by tens of milliseconds, this extra time allows the holding instance to complete an active transaction and mark the block header appropriately, this will eliminate any need for the receiving instance to check the status of the transaction immediately after receiving/reading a block. Checking the status of a transaction is an expensive operation that may require access (and pinging) to the related undo segment header and undo data blocks as well. The parameter _gc_defer_time can be used to define the duration by which an instance deferred downgrading a lock.
Past Image Blocks (PI)
In the GRD section I mentioned Past Images (PIs), basically they are copies of data blocks in the local buffer cache of an instance. When an instance sends a block it has recently modified to another instance, it preserves a copy of that block, marking as a PI. The PI is kept until that block is written to disk by the current owner of the block. When the block is written to disk and is known to have a global role, indicating the presents of PIs in other instances buffer caches, GCS informs the instance holding the PIs to discard the PIs. When a checkpoint is required it informs GCS of the write requirement, GCS is responsible for finding the most current block image and informing the instance holding that image to perform a block write. GCS then informs all holders of the global resource that they can release the buffers holding the PI copies of the block, allowing the global resource to be released. You can view the past image blocks present in the fixed table X$BH
PIs
select state, count(state) from X$BH group by state;
Note: the state column with 8 is the past images.
Cache Fusion I
Cache Fusion I is also know as consistent read server and was introduced in Oracle 8.1.5, it keeps a list of recent transactions that have changed a block.the original data contained in the block is preserved in the undo segment, which can be used to provide consistent read versions of the block.
In a single instance the following happens when reading a block
When a reader reads a recently modified block, it might find an active transaction in the block
The reader will need to read the undo segment header to decide whether the transaction has been committed or not
If the transaction is not committed, the process creates a consistent read (CR) version of the block in the buffer cache using the data in the block and the data stored in the undo segment
If the undo segment shows the transaction is committed, the process has to revisit the block and clean out the block (delay block cleanout) and generate the redo for the changes.
In an RAC environment if the process of reading the block is on an instance other than the one that modified the block, the reader will have to read the following blocks from the disk
data block to get the data and/or transaction ID and Undo Byte Address (UBA) undo segment header block to find the last undo block used for the entire
transaction undo data block to get the actual record to construct a CR image
Before these blocks can be read the instance modifying the block will have to write those's blocks to disk, resulting in 6 I/O operations. In RAC the instance can construct a CR copy by hopefully using the above blocks that are still in memory and then sending the CR over the interconnect thus reducing 6 I/O operations.
As from Oracle 8 introduced a new background process called the Block Server Process makes the CR fabrication at the holders cache and ships the CR version of the block across the interconnect, the sequence is detailed in the table below
1. An instance sends a message to the lock manager requesting a shared lock on the block
2. Following are the possibilities in the global cache
o If there is no current user for the block, the lock manager grants the shared lock to the requesting instance
o if the other instance has an exclusive lock on the block, the lock manager asks the owning instance to build a CR copy and ship it to the requesting instance.
3. Based on the result, either of the following can happeno if the lock is granted, the requesting instance reads the block from disko The owning instance creates a CR version of the buffer in its own buffer
cache and ships it to the requesting instance over the interconnect 4. The owning instance also informs the lock manager and requesting instance that
it has shipped the block
5. The requesting instance has the locked granted, the lock manager updates the IDLM with the new holders of that resource
While making a CR copy, the holding instance may refuse to do so if
it does not find any of the blocks needed in its buffer cache, it will not perform a disk read to make a CR copy for another instance
It is repeatedly asked to send a CR copy of the same block, after sending the CR copies four times it will voluntarily relinquish the lock, write the block to the disk and let other instances get the block from the disk. The number of copies it will serve before doing so is governed by the parameter _fairness_threshold
Cache Fusion II
Read/Write contention was addressed in cache fusion I, cache fusion II addresses the write/write contention
1. An instance sends a message to the lock manager requesting an exclusive lock on the block
2. Following are the possibilities in the global cacheo If there is no current user for the block, the lock manager grants the
exclusive lock to the requesting instanceo if the other instance has an exclusive lock on the block, the lock manager
asks the owning instance to release the lock 3. Based on the result, either of the following can happen
o if the lock is granted, the requesting instance reads the block from disko The owning instance sends the current block to the requesting instance via
the interconnect, to guarantee recovery in the event of instance death, the owning instance writes all the redo records generated for the block to the online redolog file. It will keep a past image of the block and inform the master instance that it has sent the current block to the requesting instance
4. The lock manager updates the resource directory (GRD) with the current holder of the block
Cache Fusion in Operation
A quick recap of GCS, a GCS resource can be local or global, if it is local it can be acted upon without consulting other instances, if it is global it cannot be acted upon without consulting or informing remote instances. GCS is used as a messaging agent to coordinate manipulation of a global resource. By default all resources are in NULL mode (remember null mode is used to convert from one type to another (share or exclusive)).
The table below denotes the different states of a resource
Mode/Role Local Global
Null (N) NL NG
Shared (S) SL SG
Exclusive (X) XL XG
States
SLit can serve a copy of the block to other instances and it can read the block from disk, since the block is not modified there is no need to write to disk
XL
it has sole ownership and interest in that resource, it has exclusive right to modify the block, all changes to the blocks are in the local buffer cache and it can write the block to the disk. If another instance wants the block it can to come via the GCS
NLused to protect consistent read block, if an instance wants it in X mode, the current instance will send the block to the requesting instance and downgrades its role to NL
SGa block is present in one or more instances, an instance can read the read from disk and serve it to other instances
XG
a block can have one or more PIs, the instance with the XG role has the latest copy of the block and is the most likely candidate to write the block to the disk. GCS can ask the instance to write the block and serve it to other instances
NGafter discarding PIs when instructed to by GCS, the block is kept in the buffer cache with NG role, this serves only as the CR copy of the block.
Below are a number of common scenarios to help understand the following
reading from disk reading from cache getting the block from cache for update performing an update on a block performing an update on the same block reading a block that was globally dirty performing a rollback on a previously updated block
reading the block after commit
We will assume the following
Four RAC environment (Instances A, B, C and D) Instance D is the master of the lock resource for the data block BL We will only use one block and it will reside at SCN 987654 We will use a three-letter code for the lock states
o first letter will indicate the lock mode - N = Null, S = Shared and X = Exclusive
o second latter will indicate lock role - G = Global, L = Localo The third letter will indicate the PIs - 0 = no PIs, 1 = a PI of the bloc
for example a code of SL0 means a global shared lock with no past images (PIs)
Reading a block from disk
instance C want to read the block it will request a lock in share mode from the master instance
1. Instance C requests the block by sending a shared lock request to master D2. The block has never been read into the buffer cache of any instance and it is not
locked. Master D grants the lock to instance C. The lock granted is SL0 (see above to work out three-letter code)
3. Instance C reads the block from the shared disk into its buffer cache
4. Instance C has the block in shard mode, the lock manager updates the resource directory.
Reading a block from the cache
Carrying on from the above example, Instance B wants to read the same block that is cached in instance C buffer.
1. Instance B sends a shared lock request to master instance D2. The lock master knows that the block may be available at instance C and sends a
ping message to instance C3. Instance C sends the block to instance B via the interconnect, along with the
block instance C indicates that instance B should take the current lock mode and role from instance C, instance C keeps a copy of the block
4. Instance B sends a message to instance D that it has assumed the SL lock for the block. This message is not critical for the lock manager, thus the message is sent asynchronously
Getting a (Cached) clean block for update
Carrying on from the above example, instance A wants to modify the same block that is already cached in instance B and C (block 987654)
1. Instance A sends an exclusive lock request to master D2. The lock master knows that the block may be available at instance B in SCUR
mode and at instance C in CR mode. it also sends a ping message to the shared lock holders. The most recent access was at instance B and instance D sends a BAST message to instance B
3. Instance B sends the block to instance A via the interconnect and closes it shared lock. The block may still be in its buffer to be as CR, but all locks are released
4. Instance A now has the exclusive lock on the block and sends an assume message to instance D, the lock is in XL0
5. Instance A modifies the block in its buffer cache, the changes are not committed and thus the block has not been written to disk, thus the SCN remains at 987654
Getting a (Cached) modified block for update and commit
Carrying on from the above example, instance C now wants to modify the block, if it tries to modify the same row it will have to wait until instance A either commits or rolls back. However in this case instance C wants to modify a different row in the same block.
1. Instance C sends an exclusive lock request to master D2. The lock master knows that instance A holds an exclusive lock on the block and
hence sends a ping message to instance A3. Instance A sends the dirty buffer to instance C via the interconnect, it downgrades
the lock from XCR to NULL, it keeps a PI version of the block and disowns any lock on that buffer. Before shipping the block, Instance A has to create a PI image and flush any pending redo for the block change, the block mode on instance A is now NG1
4. Instance C sends a message to instance D indicating it has the block in exclusive mode. The block role G indicates that the block is in global mode and if it needs to write the block to disk it must coordinate it with other instances that have past images (PIs) of that block. Instance C modifies the block and issues a commit, the SCN is now 987660.
Commit the previously modified block and select the data
Carrying on from the above example, instance A now issues a commit to release the row level locks held by the transaction and flush the redo information to the redologs
1. Instance A wants to commit the changes, commit operations do not require any synchronous modifications to the block
2. The lock status remains the same as the previous state and change vectors for the commits are written to the redologs.
Write the dirty buffers to disk due to a checkpoint
Carrying on from the above example, instance B writes the dirty blocks from the buffer cache due to a checkpoint (this is were it gets interesting and very clever)
1. Instance B sends a write request to master D with the necessary SCN2. The master knows that the most recent copy of the block may be available at
instance C and hence sends a message to instance C asking to write3. Instance C initiates a disk write and writes a BWR into the redolog file4. Instance C get the write notification that the write is complete5. Instance C notifies the master that the write is completed6. On receipt of the notification, instance D tells all PI holders to discard their PIs,
and the lock at instance C writes the modified block to the disk
7. All instances that have previously modified this block will also have to write a BWR. The write request by instance C has now been satisfied and instance C can now proceed with its checkpoint as usual
Master instance crashes
Carrying on from the above example
1. the master instance D crashes
2. The Global Resource Directory is frozen momentarily and the resources held by master instance D will be equally distributed in the surviving nodes, also know as remastering (see remastering for more details).
Select the rows from Instance A
Carrying on from the above example, now instance A queries the rows from that table to get the most recent data
1. Instance A sends a shared lock to now the new master instance C2. Master C knows the most recent copy of the block may be in instance C and asks
the holder to ship the CR block to instance A
Instance C ships the CR block to instance A via the interconnect
The above sequence of events can be seen in the table below
ExampleOperation on Node Buffer Status
A B C D A B C D
1read block from disk
SCUR
2read the block
from cache CR SCUR
3update the
blockXCUR CR CR
4update the same block
PI CR XCUR
5 commit the
PI CR XCUR
changes
6trigger
checkpoint CR XCUR
7instance
crash
8select the
rows CR XCUR
9. RAC Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting
This is the one section what will be updated frequently as my experience with RAC grows, as RAC has been around for a while most problems can be resolve with a simple google lookup, but a basic understanding on where to look for the problem is required. In this section I will point you where to look for problems, every instance in the cluster has its own alert logs, which is where you would start to look. Alert logs contain startup and shutdown information, nodes joining and leaving the cluster, etc.
Here is my complete alert log file of my two node RAC starting up.
The cluster itself has a number of log files that can be examined to gain any insight of occurring problems, the table below describes the information that you may need of the CRS components
$ORA_CRS_HOME/crs/log contains trace files for the CRS resources
$ORA_CRS_HOME/crs/initcontains trace files for the CRS daemon during startup, a good place to start
$ORA_CRS_HOME/css/logcontains cluster reconfigurations, missed check-ins, connects and disconnects from the client CSS listener. Look here to obtain when reboots occur
$ORA_CRS_HOME/css/initcontains core dumps from the cluster synchronization service daemon (OCSd)
$ORA_CRS_HOME/evm/loglog files for the event volume manager and eventlogger daemon
$ORA_CRS_HOME/evm/init pid and lock files for EVM
$ORA_CRS_HOME/srvm/log log files for Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR)
$ORA_CRS_HOME/loglog files for Oracle clusterware which contains diagnostic messages at the Oracle cluster level
As in a normal Oracle single instance environment, a RAC environment contains the standard RDBMS log files, these files are located by the parameter background_dest_dump. The most important of these are
$ORACLE_BASE/admin/udump contains any trace file generated by a user process
$ORACLE_BASE/admin/cdumpcontains core files that are generated due to a core dump in a user process
Now lets look at a two node startup and the sequence of events
First you must check that the RAC environment is using the connect interconnect, this can be done by either of the following
logfile## The location of my alert log, yours may be different /u01/app/oracle/admin/racdb/bdump/alert_racdb1.log
ifcfg command oifcfg getif
table check select inst_id, pub_ksxpia, picked_ksxpia, ip_ksxpia from x$ksxpia;
oradebug
SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug ipc
Note: check the trace file which can be located by the parameter user_dump_dest
system parameter cluster_interconnects
Note: used to specify which address to use
When the instance starts up the Lock Monitor's (LMON) job is to register with the Node Monitor (NM) (see below table). Remember when a node joins or leaves the cluster the GRD undergoes a reconfiguration event, as seen in the logfile it is a seven step process (see below for more details on the seven step process).
The LMON trace file also has details about reconfigurations it also details the reason for the event
reconfiguation reason
description
1means that the NM initiated the reconfiguration event, typical when a node joins or leaves a cluster
2
means that an instance has died
How does the RAC detect an instance death, every instance updates the control file with a heartbeat through its checkpoint (CKPT), if the heartbeat information is missing for x amount of time, the instance is considered to be dead and the Instance Membership Recovery (IMR) process initiates reconfiguration.
3
means communication failure of a node/s. Messages are sent across the interconnect if a message is not received in an amount of time then a communication failure is assumed by default UDP is used and can be unreliable so keep an eye on the logs if too many reconfigurations happen for reason 3.
Example of a reconfiguration, taken from the alert log.
Sat Mar 20 11:35:53 2010Reconfiguration started (old inc 2, new inc 4)List of nodes: 0 1 Global Resource Directory frozen * allocate domain 0, invalid = TRUE
Communication channels reestablished Master broadcasted resource hash value bitmaps Non-local Process blocks cleaned outSat Mar 20 11:35:53 2010 LMS 0: 0 GCS shadows cancelled, 0 closed Set master node info Submitted all remote-enqueue requests Dwn-cvts replayed, VALBLKs dubious All grantable enqueues granted Post SMON to start 1st pass IRSat Mar 20 11:35:53 2010 LMS 0: 0 GCS shadows traversed, 3291 replayedSat Mar 20 11:35:53 2010 Submitted all GCS remote-cache requests Post SMON to start 1st pass IR Fix write in gcs resourcesReconfiguration complete
Note: when a reconfiguration happens the GRD is frozen until the reconfiguration is completed
Confirm that the database has been started in cluster mode, the log file will state the following
cluster mode Sat Mar 20 11:36:02 2010Database mounted in Shared Mode (CLUSTER_DATABASE=TRUE)Completed: ALTER DATABASE MOUNT
Staring with 10g the SCN is broadcast across all nodes, the system will have to wait until all nodes have seen the commit SCN. You can change the board cast method using the system parameter _lgwr_async_broadcasts.
Lamport Algorithm
The lamport algorithm generates SCNs in parallel and they are assigned to transaction on a first come first served basis, this is different than a single instance environment, a broadcast method is used after a commit operation, this method is more CPU intensive as it has to broadcast the SCN for every commit, but he other nodes can see the committed SCN immediately.
The initialization parameter max_commit_propagation_delay limits the maximum delay allow for SCN propagation, by default it is 7 seconds. When set to less than 100 the broadcast on commit algorithm is used.
Disable/Enable Oracle RAC
There are times when you may wish to disable RAC, this feature can only be used in a Unix environment (no windows option).
Disable Oracle RAC (Unix only)
1. Log in as Oracle in all nodes2. shutdown all instances using either normal or immediate option3. change to the working directory $ORACLE_HOME/lib4. run the below make command to relink the Oracle binaries without the RAC
option (should take a few minutes)
make -f ins_rdbms.mk rac_off
5. Now relink the Oracle binaries
make -f ins_rdbms.mk ioracle
Enable Oracle RAC (Unix only)
1. Log in as Oracle in all nodes2. shutdown all instances using either normal or immediate option3. change to the working directory $ORACLE_HOME/lib4. run the below make command to relink the Oracle binaries without the RAC
option (should take a few minutes)
make -f ins_rdbms.mk rac_on
5. Now relink the Oracle binaries
make -f ins_rdbms.mk ioracle
Performance Issues
Oracle can suffer a number of different performance problems and can be categorized by the following
Hung Database Hung Session(s) Overall instance/database performance Query Performance
A hung database is basically an internal deadlock between to processes, usually Oracle will detect the deadlock and rollback one of the processes, however if the situation occurs with the internal kernel-level resources (latches or pins), it is unable to automatically
detect and resolve the deadlock, thus hanging the database. When this event occurs you must obtain dumps from each of the instances (3 dumps per instance in regular times), the trace files will be very large.
capture information
## Using alter session SQL> alter session set max_dump_file_size = unlimited;SQL> alter session set events 'immediate trace name systemstate level 10';
# using oradebugSQL> select * from dual;SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> unlimitSQL> oradebug dump systemstate 10
# using oradebug from another instanceSQL> select * from dual;SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> unlimitSQL> oradebug -g all dump systemstate 10
Note: the select statement above is to avoid problems on pre 8 Oracle
SQLPlus - problems connecting
## If you get problems connecting with SQLPLUS use the command below$ sqlplus -prelimEnter user-name: / as sysdba
A severe performance problem can be mistaken for a hang, this usually happen because of contention problems, a systemstate dump is normally used to analyze this problem, however a systemstate dump taken a long time to complete, it also has a number of limitations
Reads the SGA in a dirty manner, so it may be inconsistent Usually dumps a lot of information does not identify interesting processes on which to perform additional dumps can be a very expensive operation if you have a large SGA.
To overcome these limitations a new utility command was released with 8i called hanganalyze which provides clusterwide information in a RAC environment on a single shot.
sql method alter session set events 'immediate trace hanganalyze level <level>';
oradebug SQL> oradebug hanganalyze <level>
## Another way using oradebugSQL> setmypidSQL> setinst allSQL> oradebug -g def hanganalyze <level>
Note: you will be told where the output will be dumped to
hanganalyze levels
1-2only hanganalyze output, no process dump at all, click here for an example level 1 dump
3 Level 2 + Dump only processes thought to be in a hang (IN_HANG state)
4Level 3 + Dump leaf nodes (blockers) in wait chains (LEAF, LEAF_NW, IGN_DMP state)
5 Level 4 + Dump all processes involved in wait chains (NLEAF state)
10 Dump all processes (IGN state)
The hanganalyze command uses internal kernel calls to determine whether a session is waiting for a resource and reports the relationship between blockers and waiters, systemdump is better but if you over whelmed try hanganalyze first.
Debugging Node Eviction
A node is evicted from the cluster after it kills itself because it is not able to service the application, this generally happens when you have communication problems. For eviction node problems look for ora-29740 errors in the alert log file and LMON trace files.
To understand eviction problems you need to now the basics of node membership and instance membership recovery (IMR) works. When a communication failure happens the heartbeat information in the control cannot happen, thus data corruption can happen. IMR will remove any nodes from the cluster that it deems as a problem, IMR will ensure that the larger part of the cluster will survive and kills any remaining nodes. IMR is part of the service offered by Cluster Group Services (CGS). LMON handles many of the CGS functionalities, this works at the cluster level and can work with 3rd party software (Sun Cluster, Veritas Cluster). The Node Monitor (NM) provides information about nodes and their health by registering and communicating with the Cluster Manager (CM). Node membership is represented as a bitmap in the GRD. LMON will let other nodes know of any changes in membership, for example if a node joins or leaves the cluster, the bitmap is rebuilt and communicated to all nodes.
Node registering (alert log)
lmon registered with NM - instance id 1 (internal mem no 0)
One thing to remember is that all nodes must be able to read from and write to the controlfile. CGS makes sure that members are valid, it uses a voting mechanism to check the validity of each member. I have already discussed the voting disk in my architecture section, as stated above memberships is held in a bitmap in the GRD, the CKPT process updates the controlfile every 3 seconds in an operation known as a heartbeat. It writes into a single block that is unique for each instance, thus intra-instance coordination is not required, this block is called the checkpoint progress record. You can see the controlfile records using the gv$controlfile_record_section view, all members attempt to obtain a lock on the controlfile record for updating, the instance that obtains the lock tallies the votes from all members, the group membership must conform to the decided (voted) membership before allowing the GCS/GES reconfiguration to proceed, the controlfile vote result is stored in the same block as the heartbeat in the control file checkpoint progress record.
A cluster reconfiguration is performed using 7 steps
1. Name service is frozen, the CGS contains an internal database of all the members/instances in the cluster with all their configurations and servicing details.
2. Lock database (IDLM) is frozen, this prevents processes from obtaining locks on resources that were mastered by the departing/dead instance
3. Determination of membership and validation and IMR4. Bitmap rebuild takes place, instance name and uniqueness verification, GCS must
synchronize the cluster to be sure that all members get the reconfiguration event and that they all see the same bitmap.
5. Delete all dead instance entries and republish all names newly configured6. Unfreeze and release name service for use7. Hand over reconfiguration to GES/GCS
Debugging CRS and GSD
Oracle server management configuration tools include a diagnostic and tracing facility for verbose output for SRVCTL, GSD, GSDCTL or SRVCONFIG.
To capture diagnose following the below
1. use vi to edit the gsd.sh/srvctl/srvconfig file in the $ORACLE_HOME/bin directory
2. At the end of the file look for the below line
exec $JRE -classpath $CLASSPATH oracle.ops.mgmt.daemon.OPSMDaemon $MY_OHOME
3. Add the following just before the -classpath in the exec $JRE line
-DTRACING.ENABLED=true -DTRACING.LEVEL=24. the string should look like this
exec $JRE -DTRACING.ENABLED=true -DTRACING.LEVEL=2 -classpath...........
In Oracle database 10g setting the below variable accomplishes the same thing, set it to blank to remove the debugging
Enable tracing $ export SRVM_TRACE=true
Disable tracing $ export SRVM_TRACE=""
10. Adding and Removing nodes
Adding and removing nodes
One of the jobs of a DBA is adding and removing nodes from a RAC environment when capacity demands, although you should add a node of a similar spec it is possible to add a node of a higher or lower spec.
The first stage is to configure the operating system and make sure any necessary drivers are installed, also make sure that the node can see the shared disks available to the existing RAC.
I am going to presume we have a two RAC environment already setup, and we are going to add a third node.
Pre-Install Checking
You used the Cluster Verification utility when installing the RAC environment, the tools check that the node has been properly prepared for a RAC deployment. You can run the command either from the new node or from any of the existing nodes in the cluster
pre-install check run from new node
runcluvfy.sh stage -pre crsinst -n rac1,rac2,rac3 -r 10gr2
pre-install check run from existing node
cluvfy stage -pre crsinst -n rac1,rac2,rac3 -r 10g2
Make sure that you fix any highlighted problems before continuing.
Install CRS
Cluster Ready Services (CRS) should be installed first, this allows the node to become part of the cluster. Adding the new node can be started from any of the existing nodes
1. Log into any of the existing nodes as user oracle then run the below command, the script below starts the OUI GUI tool, hopefully the tool will already see the existing cluster and will fill in the details for you
$ORA_RS_HOME/oui/bin/addnode.sh2. In the specify cluster nodes to add to installation screen, enter the new names
for the public, private and virtual hosts3. Click next to see a summary page
4. Click install, the installer will copy the files from the existing node to the new node. Once copied you will be asked to run orainstRoot.sh and root.sh as user root
5. Run orainstRoot.sh and root.sh in the new and rootaddnode.sh in the node that you are running the installation from.
orainstRoot.shsets the Oracle inventory in the new node and set ownerships and permissions to the inventory
root.sh
checks whether the Oracle CRS stack is already configured in the new node, creates /etc/oracle directory and adds the relevant OCR keys to the cluster registry and it adds the daemon to CRS and starts CRS in the new node.
rootaddnode.shconfigures the OCR registry to include the new nodes as part of the cluster
6.7. Click next to complete the installation. Now you need to configure Oracle
Notification Services (ONS). The port can be identified by the below command
cat $ORA_CRS_HOME/opmn/conf/ons.config8. Now run the ONS utility by supplying the <remote_port> number obtained above
racgons add_config rac3:<remote_port>
Installing Oracle DB Software
Once the CRS has been installed and the new node is in the cluster, it is time to install the Oracle DB software. Again you can use any of the existing nodes to install the software.
1. Log into any of the existing nodes as user oracle then run the below command, the script below starts the OUI GUI tool, hopefully the tool will already see the existing cluster and fill in the details for you
$ORA_RS_HOME/oui/bin/addnode.sh2. Click next on the welcome screen to open the specify cluster nodes to add to
installation screen, you should have a list of all the existing nodes in the cluster, select the new node and click next
3. Check the summary page then click install to start the installation4. The files will be copied to the new node, the script will ask you to run run.sh on
the new node, then click OK to finish off the installation
Configuring the Listener
Now its time to configure the listener in the new node
1. Login as user oracle, and set your DISPLAY environment variable, then start the Network Configuration Assistant
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/netca2. Choose cluster management3. Choose listener4. Choose add 5. Choose the the name as LISTENER
These steps will add a listener on rac3 as LISTENER_rac3
Create the Database Instance
Run the below to create the database instance on the new node
1. Login as oracle on the new node, set the environment to database home and then run the database creation assistant (DBCA)
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/dbca2. In the welcome screen choose oracle real application clusters database to
create the instance and click next3. Choose instance management and click next4. Choose add instance and click next5. Select RACDB (or whatever name you gave you RAC environment) as the
database and enter the SYSDBA and password, click next6. You should see a list of existing instances, click next and on the following screen
enter ORARAC3 as the instance and choose RAC3 as the node name (substitute any of the above names for your environment naming convention)
7. The database instance will now created, click next in the database storage screen., choose yes when asked to extend ASM
Removing a Node
Removing a node is similar to above but in reverse order
1. Delete the instance on the node to be removed2. Clean up ASM3. Remove the listener from the node to be removed4. Remove the node from the database5. Remove the node from the clusterware
You can delete the instance by using the database creation assistant (DBCA), invoke the program choose the RAC database, choose instance management and then choose delete instance, enter the sysdba user and password then choose the instance to delete.
To clean up ASM follow the below steps
1. From node 1 run the below command to stop ASM on the node to be removed
srvctl stop asm -n rac3 srvctl remove asm -n rac3
2. Now run the following on the node to be removed
cd $ORACLE_HOME/admin rm -rf +ASM cd $ORACLE_HOME/dbs rm -f *ASM*
3. Check that /etc/oratab file has no ASM entries, if so remove them
Now remove the listener for the node to be removed
1. Login as user oracle, and set your DISPLAY environment variable, then start the Network Configuration Assistant
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/netca2. Choose cluster management3. Choose listener4. Choose Remove5. Choose the the name as LISTENER
Next we remove the node from the database
1. Run the below script from the node to be removed
cd $ORACLE_HOME/bin./runInstaller -updateNodeList ORACLE_HOME=$ORACLE_HOME "CLUSTER_NODES={rac3}" -local./runInstaller
2. Choose to deinstall products and select the dbhome3. Run the following from node 1
cd $ORACLE_HOME/oui/bin ./runInstaller -updateNodeList ORACLE_HOME=$ORACLE_HOME "CLUSTER_NODES={rac1,rac2,rac3}"
Lastly we remove the clusterware software
1. Run the following from node 1, you obtain the port number from remoteport section in the ons.config file in $ORA_CRS_HOME/opmn/conf
$CRS_HOME/bin/racgons remove_config rac3:62002. Run the following from the node to be removed as user root
cd $CRS_HOME/install ./rootdelete.sh
3. Now run the following from node 1 as user root, obtain the node number first
$CRS_HOME/bin/olsnodes -n cd $CRS_HOME/install ./rootdeletenode.sh rac3,3
4. Now run the below from the node to be removed as user oracle
cd $CRS_HOME/oui/bin ./runInstaller -updateNodeList ORACLE_HOME=$ORACLE_HOME "CLUSTER_NODES={rac3}" CRS=TRUE -local ./runInstaller
5. Choose to deinstall software and remove the CRS_HOME6. Run the following from node as user oracle
cd $CRS_HOME/oui/bin ./runInstaller -updateNodeList ORACLE_HOME=$ORACLE_HOME "CLUSTER_NODES={rac1,rac2,rac3}" CRS=TRUE
7. Check that the node has been removed, the first should report "invalid node", the second you should not see any output and the last command you should only see nodes rac1 and rac2
srvctl status nodeapps -n rac3 crs_stat |grep -i rac3 olsnodes -n
11. RAC Cheat sheet
Cheatsheet
This is a quick and dirty cheatsheet on Oracle RAC 10g, as my experience with RAC grows I will update this section, below is a beginners guide on the commands and information that you will require to administer Oracle RAC.
Acronyms
Acronyms
GCSGlobal Cache Services
in memory database containing current locks and awaiting locks, also known as PCM
GESGlobal Enqueue Services
coordinates the requests of all global enqueues uses the GCS, also known as non-PCM
GRDGlobal Resource Directory
all resources available to the cluster (formed and managed by GCS and GES), see GRD for more details
GRMGlobal Resource Manager
helps to coordinate and communicate the locks requests between Oracle processes
GSDGlobal Services Daemon
runs on each node with one GSD process per node. The GSD coordinates with the cluster manager to receive requests from clients such as the DBCA, EM, and the SRVCTL utility to execute administrative job tasks such as instance startup or shutdown. The GSD is not an Oracle instance background process and is therefore not started with the Oracle instance
PCM (IDLM)
Parallel Cache Management
formly know as (integrated) Distributed Lock Manager, its another name for GCS
Resource n/ait is a identifiable entity it basically has a name or a reference, it can be a area in memory, a disk file or an abstract entity
Resource (Global)
n/a
a resource that can be accessed by all the nodes within the cluster examples would be the following
Data Buffer Cache Block Transaction Enqueue
Database Data Structures
LVBLock Value Block
contains a small amount of data regarding the lock
TRFCTraffic Controller
controls the DLM traffic between instances (messaging tickets)
Files and Directories
Files and Directories
$ORA_CRS_HOME/cdata/<cluster_name>OCR backups (default location)
$ORA_HOME/log/<hostname>/client/ocrconfig_<pid>.log
OCR command log file
$ORA_CRS_HOME/crs/logcontains trace files for the CRS resources
$ORA_CRS_HOME/crs/init
contains trace files for the CRS daemon during startup, a good place to start
$ORA_CRS_HOME/css/log
contains cluster reconfigurations, missed check-ins, connects and disconnects from the client CSS listener. Look here to obtain when reboots occur
$ORA_CRS_HOME/css/initcontains core dumps from the cluster synchronization service daemon (OCSd)
$ORA_CRS_HOME/evm/loglogfiles for the event volume manager and eventlogger daemon
$ORA_CRS_HOME/evm/init pid and lock files for EVM
$ORA_CRS_HOME/srvm/loglogfiles for Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR)
$ORA_CRS_HOME/log
log fles for Oracle clusterware which contains diagnostic messages at the Oracle cluster level
Useful Views/Tables
GCS and Cache Fusion Diagnostics
v$cachecontains information about every cached block in the buffer cache
v$cache_transfercontains information from the block headers in SGA that have been pinged at least once
v$instance_cache_transfercontains information about the transfer of cache blocks through the interconnect
v$cr_block_servercontains statistics about CR block transfer across the instances
v$current_block_servercontains statistics about current block transfer across the instances
v$gc_elementcontains one-to-one information for each global cache resource used by the buffer cache
GES diagnostics
v$lockcontains information about locks held within a database and outstanding requests for locks and latches
v$ges_blocking_enqueuecontains information about locks that are being blocked or blocking others and locks that are known to the lock manager
v$enqueue_statistics contains details about enqueue statistics in the instance
v$resource_limits display enqueue statistics
v$locked_objectcontains information about DML locks acquired by different transactions in databases with their mode held
v$ges_statistics contains miscellaneous statistics for GES
v$ges_enqueuecontains information about all locks known to the lock manager
v$ges_convert_local contains information about all local GES operations
v$ges_convert_remote contains information about all remote GES operations
v$ges_resourcecontains information about all resources known to the lock manager
v$ges_misc contains information about messaging traffic information
v$ges_traffic_controller contains information about the message ticket usage
Dynamic Resource Remastering
v$hvmaster_infocontains information about current and previous master instances of GES resources in relation to hash value ID of resource
v$gcshvmaster_info the same as above but globally
v$gcspfmaster_info conatins information about current and previous masters about GCS resources belonging to files mapped to a particular master, including the number of times the
resource has remastered
Cluster Interconnect
v$cluster_interconnectscontains information about interconnects that are being used for cluster communication
v$configured_interconnectssame as above but also contains interconnects that AC is aware off that are not being used
Miscellanous
v$service services running on an instance
x$kjmsdp display LMS daemon statistics
x$kjmddp display LMD daemon statistics
Useful Parameters
Parameters
cluster_interconnects specify a specific IP address to use for the inetrconnect
_gcs_fast_config enables fast reconfiguration for gcs locks (true|false)
_lm_master_weightcontrols which instance will hold or (re)master more resources than others
_gcs_resourcescontrols the number of resources an instance will master at a time
_lm_tickets controls the number of message tickets
_lm_ticket_active_sendbackcontrols the number of message tickets (aggressive messaging)
_db_block_max_cr_dbalimits the number of CR copies per DBA on the buffer cache (see grd)
_fairness_thresholdused when too many CR requested arrive for a particular buffer and the block becomes disowned (see grd)
_gc_affinity_time specifies interval minutes for reamstering
_gc_affinity_limitdefines the number of times a instance access the resource before remastering
_gc_affinity_minimumdefines the minimum number of times a instance access the resource before remastering
_lm_file_affinitydisables dynamic remastering for the objects belonging to those files
_lm_dynamic_remastering enable or disable remastering
_gc_defer_timedefine the time by which an instance deferred downgrading a lock (see Cache Fusion)
_lgwr_async_broadcast change the SCN boardcast method (see troubleshooting)
Processes
Oracle RAC Daemons and Processes
OPROCd Process Monitor provides basic cluster integrity services
EVMdEvent Management
spawns a child process event logger and generates callouts
OCSSd Cluster Synchronization Services
basic node membership, group services, basic locking
CRSd Cluster Ready Services
resource monitoring, failover and node recovery
LMSnLock Manager Server process - GCS
this is the cache fusion part, it handles the consistent copies of blocks that are tranferred between instances. It receives requests from LMD to perform lock requests. I rools back any uncommitted transactions. There can be upto ten LMS processes running and can be started dynamically if demand requires it.
they manage lock manager service requests for GCS resources and send them to a service queue to be handled by the LMSn process. It also handles global deadlock detection and monitors for lock conversion timeouts.
LMON Lock Monitor this process manages the GES, it maintains consistency of
Process - GES
GCS memory in case of process death. It is also responsible for cluster reconfiguration and locks reconfiguration (node joining or leaving), it checks for instance deaths and listens for local messaging.
A detailed log file is created that tracks any reconfigurations that have happened.
LMDLock Manager Daemon - GES
this manages the enqueue manager service requests for the GCS. It also handles deadlock detention and remote resource requests from other instances.
LCK0Lock Process - GES
manages instance resource requests and cross-instance call operations for shared resources. It builds a list of invalid lock elements and validates lock elements during recovery.
DIAGDiagnostic Daemon
This is a lightweight process, it uses the DIAG framework to monitor the healt of the cluster. It captures information for later diagnosis in the event of failures. It will perform any neccessary recovery if an operational hang is detected.
General Administration
Managing the Cluster
starting/etc/init.d/init.crs start
crsctl start crs
stopping/etc/init.d/init.crs stop
crsctl stop crs
enable/disable at boot time
/etc/init.d/init.crs enable/etc/init.d/init.crs disable
crsctl enable crscrsctl disable crs
Managing the database configuration with SRVCTL
start all instances
srvctl start database -d <database> -o <option>
Note: starts listeners if not already running, you can use the -o option to specify startup/shutdown options
forceopenmountnomount
stop all instances
srvctl stop database -d <database> -o <option>
Note: the listeners are not stopped, you can use the -o option to specify startup/shutdown options
immediateabort normaltransactional
start/stop particular instance
srvctl [start|stop] database -d <database> -i <instance>,<instance>
display the registered databases
srvctl config database
status
srvctl status database -d <database>srvctl status instance -d <database> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl status service -d <database> srvctl status nodeapps -n <node>srvctl status asm -n <node>
stopping/starting
srvctl stop database -d <database>srvctl stop instance -d <database> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl stop service -d <database> -s <service>,<service> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl stop nodeapps -n <node>srvctl stop asm -n <node>
srvctl start database -d <database>srvctl start instance -d <database> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl start service -d <database> -s <service>,<service> -i <instance>,<instance>srvctl start nodeapps -n <node>srvctl start asm -n <node>
adding/removing srvctl add database -d <database> -o <oracle_home>srvctl add instance -d <database> -i <instance> -n <node>srvctl add service -d <database> -s <service> -r <preferred_list>srvctl add nodeapps -n <node> -o <oracle_home> -A <name|ip>/networksrvctl add asm -n <node> -i <asm_instance> -o <oracle_home>
srvctl remove database -d <database> -o <oracle_home>srvctl remove instance -d <database> -i <instance> -n <node>srvctl remove service -d <database> -s <service> -r <preferred_list>srvctl remove nodeapps -n <node> -o <oracle_home> -A <name|
ip>/networksrvctl asm remove -n <node>
OCR utilities
log file $ORA_HOME/log/<hostname>/client/ocrconfig_<pid>.log
checking
ocrcheck
Note: will return the OCR version, total space allocated, space used, free space, location of each device and the result of the integrity check
dump contents
ocrdump -backupfile <file>
Note: by default it dumps the contents into a file named OCRDUMP in the current directory
export/importocrconfig -export <file>
ocrconfig -restore <file>
backup/restore
# show backupsocrconfig -showbackup
# to change the location of the backup, you can even specify a ASM disk ocrconfig -backuploc <path|+asm>
# perform a backup, will use the location specified by the -backuploc location ocrconfig -manualbackup
# perform a restoreocrconfig -restore <file>
# delete a backuporcconfig -delete <file>
Note: there are many more option so see the ocrconfig man page
add/remove/replace
## add/relocate the ocrmirror file to the specified location ocrconfig -replace ocrmirror '/ocfs2/ocr2.dbf'
## relocate an existing OCR file ocrconfig -replace ocr '/ocfs1/ocr_new.dbf'
## remove the OCR or OCRMirror fileocrconfig -replace ocrocrconfig -replace ocrmirror
CRS Administration
CRS Administration
starting
## Starting CRS using Oracle 10g R1not possible
## Starting CRS using Oracle 10g R2$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl start crs
stopping
## Stopping CRS using Oracle 10g R1 srvctl stop -d database <database>srvctl stop asm -n <node>srvctl stop nodeapps -n <node>/etc/init.d/init.crs stop
## Stopping CRS using Oracle 10g R2 $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl stop crs
disabling/enabling
## use to stop CRS restarting after a reboot
## Oracle 10g R1 /etc/init.d/init.crs [disable|enable]
## Oracle 10g R2$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl [disable|enable] crs
checking
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check crs$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check evmd$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check cssd$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check crsd$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crsctl check install -wait 600
Resource Applications (CRS Utilities)
status $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stat
create profile $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_profile
register/unregister application
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_register$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_unregister
Start/Stop an application
$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_start$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_stop
Resource permissions $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_getparam$ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_setparam
Relocate a resource $ORA_CRS_HOME/bin/crs_relocate
Nodes
member number/name olsnodes -n
local node name olsnodes -l
activates logging olsnodes -g
Oracle Interfaces
display oifcfg getif
delete oicfg delig -global
setoicfg setif -global <interface name>/<subnet>:publicoicfg setif -global <interface name>/<subnet>:cluster_interconnect
Global Services Daemon Control
starting gsdctl start
stopping gsdctl stop
status gsdctl status
Cluster Configuration (clscfg is used during installation)
create a new configuration
clscfg -install
upgrade or downgrade and existing configuration
clscfg -upgradeclscfg -downgrade
add or delete a node from the configuration
clscfg -addclscfg -delete
create a special single-node configuration for ASM
clscfg -local
brief listing of terminology used in the other nodes
clscfg -concepts
used for tracing clscfg -trace
help clscfg -h
Cluster Name Check
print cluster name cemulto -n
Note: in Oracle 9i the ulity was called "cemutls"
print the clusterware version
cemulto -w
Note: in Oracle 9i the ulity was called "cemutls"
Node Scripts
Add Node addnode.sh
Note: see adding and deleting nodes
Delete Node deletenode.sh
Note: see adding and deleting nodes
Enqueues
displaying statistics
SQL> column current_utilization heading currentSQL> column max_utilization heading max_usageSQL> column initial_allocation heading initialSQL> column resource_limit format a23;
SQL> select * from v$resource_limit;
Messaging (tickets)
ticket usageselect local_nid local, remote_nid remote, tckt_avail avail, tckt_limit limit, snd_q_len send_queue, tckt_wait waiting from v$ges_traffic_controller;
dump ticket information
SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug unlimitSQL> oradebug lkdebug -t
Lighwork Rule and Fairness Threshold
downconvert
select cr_requests, light_works, data_requests, fairness_down_converts from v$cr_block_server;
Note: lower the _fairness_threshold if the ratio goes above 40%, set to 0 if the instance is a query only instance.
Remastering
force dynamic remastering (DRM)
## Obtain the OBJECT_ID form the below table SQL> select * from v$gcspfmaster_info;
## Determine who masters itSQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug lkdebug -a <OBJECT_ID>
## Now remaster the resource SQL> oradebug setmypidSQL> oradebug lkdebug -m pkey <OBJECT_ID>
GRD, SRVCTL, GSD and SRVCONFIG Tracing
Enable tracing $ export SRVM_TRACE=true
Disable tracing $ export SRVM_TRACE=""
Voting Disk
adding crsctl add css votedisk <file>
deleting crsctl delete css votedisk <file>
querying crsctl query css votedisk
Books
Oracle RAC Books
Oracle 10g Real Application Clusters Handbook
Although this book is lightweight compared to other Oracle books, it has enough detail to give you what you need to manage RAC, however i did have to consult the web in order to obtain more detailed information and to clarify certain points.
Oracle 10g High Availability with Rac, Flashback and Data Guard
This book had small section on RAC and helped clarify some of the points in the above book