There are three RMU Backup commands, as follows: o An RMU Backup command without the After_Journal qualifier creates a database backup file. o An RMU Backup command with the After_Journal qualifier creates a backup of the after-image journal (.aij) file. The .aij can reside on disk or on tape. The RMU Backup command with the After_Journal qualifier supports a two-stage journaling technique that saves disk space and creates a backup journal on tape. o An RMU Backup command with the Plan qualifier allows you to execute a List_Plan previously created with a parallel backup operation. This form of the Backup command does not accept a database name as a parameter. Instead, it requires the name of a list plan.
1 – Database
Creates a backup copy of the database and places it in a file. If necessary, you can later use the RMU Restore command to restore the database to the condition it was in at the time of the backup operation.
1.1 – Description
The RMU Backup command copies information contained in a database to a file. It provides a number of options that allow you to determine the following: o Whether to perform a parallel backup operation. When you specify a parallel backup operation, you must back up to tape or multiple disks. The Parallel Backup Monitor allows you to monitor the progress of a parallel backup operation. o Whether to back up the database to disk or tape. o The extent (how much of the database) to back up. The backup operation uses a multithreaded process to optimize the performance of the backup operation. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for a complete description of how multithreading works. A parallel backup operation, in addition to using multithreaded processes, uses a coordinator executor and multiple worker executors (subprocesses) to enhance the speed of the backup operation. You can also direct each worker executor to run on a different node within a cluster to further enhance the speed of the operation. You must have Oracle SQL/Services installed and running to perform a parallel backup operation. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for information on when a parallel backup operation is most useful. Use the Parallel qualifier to indicate to Oracle RMU that you want to perform a parallel backup operation. Use the Noexecute and List_Plan qualifiers to generate a Backup plan file. A Backup plan file records the backup options and specifications you enter on the command line in a text file. You can edit this text file to fine-tune your parallel backup operation and execute it, as needed, with the RMU Backup Plan command. Use the Statistics option to the Parallel qualifier if you want to monitor the progress of the parallel backup operation with the Parallel Backup Monitor. See the description of the Parallel, List_Plan, and Noexecute qualifiers, and the RMU Backup Plan command for details. You cannot use the Parallel Backup Monitor to monitor the progress of a non-parallel backup operation. However, you can achieve a close approximation of this by specifying the Executor_ Count=1 and the Statistics options with the Parallel qualifier. This results in a parallel backup operation with one executor and one controller that you can monitor with the Parallel Backup Monitor. Both parallel and non-parallel backup operations allow you to perform different types of backup operations with respect to the portions of the database to be backed up, as described in RMU Backup Options. Table 4 RMU Backup Options Storage Area Selection Database Page Complete By-Area Selection (All Areas) (Selected Areas) Full Copies the database root Copies the database (.rdb) file and all the root (.rdb) file and database pages in all backs up only the the storage areas in the database pages in the database. This is the storage areas that you default backup operation. specify on the backup Note that you must use command line. All the this type of backup prior storage areas in the to upgrading to a newer database are backed version of Oracle Rdb. up only if you specify Because this is the them all (or perform default operation, no a full and complete qualifiers are needed to backup operation). Use specify a full backup. the Include or Exclude qualifiers to specify the storage areas for a full by-area backup operation. Incremental Copies all database pages Copies the database that have been updated root (.rdb) file and since the latest full only the database backup operation and pages for the the database root file. specified storage Use the Incremental (or areas that have Incremental=Complete) changed since the qualifier to specify an latest full backup incremental and complete operation. Use the backup operation. Include or Exclude qualifier along with the Incremental=By_ Area qualifier to specify an incremental, by-area, backup operation. Oracle Corporation recommends that you use a full backup operation to back up a database if you have made changes in the physical or logical design. Performing an incremental backup operation under these circumstances can lead to the inability to recover the database properly. If you choose to perform a by-area backup operation, your database can be fully recovered after a system failure only if after-image journaling is enabled on the database. If your database has both read/write and read-only storage areas but does not have after-image journaling enabled, you should do complete backup operations (backup operations on all the storage areas in the database) at all times. Doing complete backup operations when after-image journaling is not enabled ensures that you can recover the entire database to its condition at the time of the previous backup operation. When a full backup file is created for one or more storage areas, the date and time of the last full backup file created for those storage areas (as recorded in the backup (.rbf) file) is updated. You can display the date and time of the last full backup operation on each of the storage areas in a database by executing an RMU Dump command with the Header qualifier on the latest backup (.rbf) file for the database. The date and time displayed by this command is the date and time of the last full backup operation performed for the area. Note that an incremental backup operation on a storage area does not update the date and time for the last full backup operation performed on the storage area that is recorded in the backup file. In the event of subsequent damage to the database, you can specify backup files in an RMU Restore command to restore the database to the condition it was in when you backed it up. The RMU Backup command writes backup files in compressed format to save space. Available or free space in the database root (.rdb) file and on each database page in a storage area (.rda) file is not written to the backup file. NOTE Use only the RMU Backup command to back up all Oracle Rdb databases. Do not back up a database by using any other method (such as the DCL BACKUP command). The database root of a database is updated only when the RMU Backup command is used. For detailed information on backing up a database to tape, see the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance.
1.2 – Format
(B)0[mRMU/Backup root-file-spec backup-file-spec [4mCommand[m [4mQualifiers[m x [4mDefaults[m /[No]Accept_Label x /Noaccept_Label /[No]Acl x /Acl /Active_IO=max-writes x /Active_IO=3 /Allocation=blocks x None /Block_Size=integer x See description /[No]Checksum_Verification x /Checksum_Verification /[No]Compression[=options] x /Nocompression /Crc[=Autodin_II] x See description /Crc=Checksum x See description /Nocrc x See description /[No]Database_Verification x /Database_Verification /Density=(density-value,[No]Compaction) x See description /Disk_File[=options] x None /Encrypt=({Value=|Name=}[,Algorithm=]) x See description /Exclude[=storage-area[,...] ] x See description /[No]Execute x See description /Extend_Quantity=number-blocks x /Extend_Quantity=2048 /[No]Group_Size=interval x See description /Include[=storage-area[,...] ] x See description (B)0[m/[No]Incremental x /Noincremental /Incremental={By_area|Complete} x None /Journal=file-name x See description /Label=(label-name-list) x See description /Librarian[=options] x None /List_Plan=output-file x See description /Loader_Synchronization[=Fixed] x See description /Lock_Timeout=seconds x See description /[No]Log[=Brief|Full] x Current DCL verify switch /Master x See description /[No]Media_Loader x See description /No_Read_Only x See description /[No]Record x Record /[No]Online x /Noonline /Owner=user-id x See description /Page_Buffers=number-buffers x /Page_Buffers=2 /Parallel=(Executor_Count=n[,options]) x See description /Prompt={Automatic|Operator|Client} x See description /Protection[=file-protection] x See description /[No]Quiet_Point x /Quiet_Point (B)0[m/Reader_Thread_Ratio=integer x See description /Restore_Options=file-name x None /[No]Rewind x /Norewind /[No]Scan_Optimization x See description /Tape_Expiration=date-time x The current time /Threads=n x See description
1.3 – Parameters
1.3.1 – root-file-spec
The name of the database root file. The root file name is also the name of the database. The default file extension is .rdb.
1.3.2 – backup-file-spec
The file specification for the backup file. The default file extension is .rbf. Depending on whether you are performing a backup operation to magnetic tape, disk, or multiple disks, the backup file specification should be specified as follows: o If you are backing up to magnetic tape - Oracle Corporation recommends that you supply a backup file name that is 17 or fewer characters in length. File names longer than 17 characters might be truncated. See the Usage_Notes help entry under this command for more information about backup file names that are longer than 17 characters. - If you use multiple tape drives, the backup-file-spec parameter must be provided with (and only with) the first tape drive name. Additional tape drive names must be separated from the first and subsequent tape drive names with commas. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for more information about using multiple tape drives. o If you are backing up to multiple or single disk files - It is good practice to write backup files to a device other than the devices where the database root, storage area, and snapshot files of the database are located. This way, if there is a problem with the database disks, you can still restore the database from a backup file. - If you use multiple disk files, the backup-file-spec parameter must be provided with (and only with) the first disk device name. Additional disk device names must be separated from the first and subsequent disk device names with commas. You must include the Disk_File qualifier. For example: $ RMU/BACKUP/DISK_FILE MF_PERSONNEL.RDB - _$ DEVICE1:[DIRECTORY1]MFP.RBF,DEVICE2:[DIRECTORY2] As an alternative to listing the disk device names on the command line (which, if you use several devices, can exceed the line-limit length for a command line), you can specify an options file in place of the backup-file-spec. For example: $ RMU/BACKUP/DISK_FILE LARGE_DB "@DEVICES.OPT" The contents of devices.opt might appear as follows: DEVICE1:[DIRECTORY1]LARGE_DB.RBF DEVICE2:[DIRECTORY2] The resulting backup files created from such an options file would be: DISK1:[DIRECTORY1]LARGE_DB.RBF DISK2:[DIRECTORY2]LARGE_DB01.RBF Note that the same directory must exist on each device before you issue the command. Also, if you forget to specify the Disk_File qualifier, you receive an error message similar to the following: $ RMU/BACKUP MF_PERSONNEL DEVICE1:[DIRECTORY1]MFP.RBF, - _$ DEVICE2:[DIRECTORY2] %RMU-F-NOTBACFIL, DEVICE1:[DIRECTORY1]MFP.RBF; is not a valid backup file %RMU-F-FTL_BCK,Fatal error for BACKUP operation at 2-MAY-2001 09:44:57.04
1.4 – Command Qualifiers
1.4.1 – Accept Label
Accept_Label Specifies that RMU Backup should keep the current tape label it finds on a tape during a backup operation even if that label does not match the default label or that specified with the Label qualifier. Operator notification does not occur unless the tape's protection, owner, or expiration date prohibit writing to the tape. However, a message is logged (assuming logging is enabled) and written to the backup journal file (assuming you have specified the Journal qualifier) to indicate that a label is being preserved and which drive currently holds that tape. This qualifier is particularly useful when your backup operation employs numerous previously used (and thus labeled) tapes and you want to preserve the labels currently on the tapes. However, you are responsible for remembering the order in which tapes were written. For this reason, it is a good idea to use the Journal qualifier when you use the Accept_Label qualifier. If you do not specify this qualifier, the default behavior of RMU Backup is to notify the operator each time it finds a mismatch between the current label on the tape and the default label (or the label you specify with the Label qualifier). See the description of the Labels qualifier under this command for information on default labels. See How Tapes are Relabeled During a Backup Operation in the Usage_Notes help entry under this command for a summary of which labels are applied under a variety of circumstances.
1.4.2 – Acl
Acl Noacl Specifies whether to back up the root file access control list (ACL) for a database when you back up the database. The root file ACL controls users privileges to issue Oracle RMU commands. If you specify the Acl qualifier, the root file ACL will be backed up with the database. If you specify the Noacl qualifier, the root file ACL will not be backed up with the database. The Noacl qualifier can be useful if you plan to restore the database on a system where the identifiers in the current root file ACL will not be valid. The default is the Acl qualifier.
1.4.3 – Active IO
Active_IO=max-writes Specifies the maximum number of write operations to a backup device that the RMU Backup command will attempt simultaneously. This is not the maximum number of write operations in progress; that value is the product of active system I/O operations and the number of devices being written to simultaneously. The value of the Active_IO qualifier can range from 1 to 5. The default value is 3. Values larger than 3 can improve performance with some tape drives.
1.4.4 – Allocation
Allocation=blocks Specifies the size, in blocks, which the backup file is initially allocated. The minimum value for the number-blocks parameter is 1; the maximum value allowed is 2147483647. If you do not specify the Allocation_Quantity qualifier, the Extend_Quantity value effectively controls the file's initial allocation. This qualifier cannot be used with backup operations to tape.
1.4.5 – Block Size
Block_Size=integer Specifies the maximum record size for the backup file. The size can vary between 2048 and 65,024 bytes. The default value is device dependent. The appropriate block size is a compromise between tape capacity and error rate. The block size you specify must be larger than the largest page length in the database.
1.4.6 – Checksum Verification
Checksum_Verification Nochecksum_Verification The Checksum_Verification qualifier requests that the RMU Backup command verify the checksum stored on each database page before the backup operation is applied, thereby providing end-to-end error detection on the database I/O. The default value is Checksum_Verification. Oracle Corporation recommends that you accept this default behavior for your applications. The default behavior prevents you from including corrupt database pages in backup files and optimized .aij files. Without the checksum verifications, corrupt data pages in these files are not detected when the files are restored. The corruptions on the restored page may not be detected until weeks or months after the backup file is created, or it is possible the corruption may not be detected at all. The Checksum_Verification qualifier uses additional CPU resources but provides an extra measure of confidence in the quality of the data that is backed up. Note that if you specify the Nochecksum qualifier, and undetected corruptions exist in your database, the corruptions are included in your backup file and are restored when you restore the backup file. Such a corruption might be difficult to recover from, especially if it is not detected until long after the restore operation is performed.
1.4.7 – Compression
Compression=LZSS Compression=Huffman Compression=ZLIB=level Nocompression Allows you to specify the compression method to use before writing data to the backup file. This reduces performance, but may be justified when the backup file is a disk file, or is being backed up over a busy network, or is being backed up to a tape drive that does not do its own compression. You probably do not want to specify the Compression qualifier when you are backing up a database to a tape drive that does its own compression; in some cases doing so can actually result in a larger file. If you specify the Compression qualifier without a value, the default is COMPRESSION=ZLIB=6. The level value (ZLIB=level) is an integer between 1 and 9 specifying the relative compression level with one being the least amount of compression and nine being the greatest amount of compression. Higher levels of the compression use increased CPU time while generally providing better compression. The default compression level of 6 is a balance between compression effectiveness and CPU consumption. OLDER ORACLE RDB 7.2 RELEASES AND COMPRESSED RBF FILES Prior releases of Oracle Rdb are unable to read RBF files compressed with the ZLIB algorithm. In order to read compressed backups with Oracle Rdb 7.2 Releases prior to V7.2.1, they must be made with /COMPRESSION=LZSS or /COMPRESSION=HUFFMAN explicitly specified (because the default compression algorithm has been changed from LZSS to ZLIB). Oracle Rdb Version 7.2.1 is able to read compressed backups using the LZSS or HUFFMAN algorithms made with prior releases.
1.4.8 – Crc[=Autodin II]
CRC[=AUTODIN_II] Uses the AUTODIN-II polynomial for the 32-bit cyclic redundancy check (CRC) calculation and provides the most reliable end-to-end error detection. This is the default for NRZ/PE (800/1600 bits/inch) tape drives. If you enter only Crc as the qualifier, RMU Backup assumes you are specifying Crc=Autodin_II.
1.4.9 – Crc=Checksum
Crc=Checksum Uses one's complement addition, which is the same computation used to do a checksum of the database pages on disk. This is the default for GCR (6250 bits/inch) tape drives and for TA78, TA79, and TA81 tape drives. The Crc=Checksum qualifier allows detection of data errors.
1.4.10 – Nocrc
Nocrc Disables end-to-end error detection. This is the default for TA90 (IBM 3480 class) drives. NOTE The overall effect of the Crc=Autodin_II, Crc=Checksum, and Nocrc qualifier defaults is to make tape reliability equal to that of a disk. If you retain your tapes longer than 1 year, the Nocrc default might not be adequate. For tapes retained longer than 1 year, use the Crc=Checksum qualifier. If you retain your tapes longer than 3 years, you should always use the Crc=Autodin_II qualifier. Tapes retained longer than 5 years could be deteriorating and should be copied to fresh media. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for details on using the Crc qualifiers to avoid underrun errors.
1.4.11 – Database Verification
Database_Verification Nodatabase_Verification The RMU /BACKUP command performs a limited database root file verification at the start of the backup operation. This verification is intended to help prevent backing up a database with various detectable corruptions or inconsistancies of the root file or associated database structures. However, in some limited cases, it can be desirable to avoid these checks. The qualifier /NODATABASE_VERIFICATION may be specified to avoid the database root file verification at the start of the backup. The default behavior is /DATABASE_VERIFICATION. Oracle strongly recommends accepting the default of /DATABASE_VERIFICATION.
1.4.12 – Density
Density=(density-value,[No]Compaction) Specifies the density at which the output volume is to be written. The default value is the format of the first volume (the first tape you mount). You do not need to specify this qualifier unless your tape drives support data compression or more than one recording density. The Density qualifier is applicable only to tape drives. RMU Backup returns an error message if this qualifier is used and the target device is not a tape drive. If you specify a density value, RMU Backup assumes that all tape drives can accept that value. If your systems are running OpenVMS versions prior to 7.2-1, specify the Density qualifier as follows: o For TA90E, TA91, and TA92 tape drives, specify the number in bits per inch as follows: - Density = 70000 to initialize and write tapes in the compacted format. - Density = 39872 or Density = 40000 for the noncompacted format. o For SCSI (Small Computer System Interface) tape drives, specify Density = 1 to initialize and write tapes by using the drive's hardware data compression scheme. o For other types of tape drives you can specify a supported density value between 800 and 160000 bits per inch. o For all tape drives, specify Density = 0 to initialize and write tapes at the drive's standard density. Do not use the Compaction or NoCompaction keyword for systems running OpenVMS versions prior to 7.2-1. On these systems, compression is determined by the density value and cannot be specified. Oracle RMU supports the OpenVMS tape density and compression values introduced in OpenVMS Version 7.2-1. The following table lists the added density values supported by Oracle RMU. DEFAULT 800 833 1600 6250 3480 3490E TK50 TK70 TK85 TK86 TK87 TK88 TK89 QIC 8200 8500 8900 DLT8000 SDLT SDLT320 SDLT600 DDS1 DDS2 DDS3 DDS4 AIT1 AIT2 AIT3 AIT4 LTO2 LTO3 COMPACTION NOCOMPACTION If the OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 density values and the previous density values are the same (for example, 800, 833, 1600, 6250), the specified value is interpreted as an OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 value if the tape device driver accepts them, and as a previous value if the tape device driver accepts previous values only. For the OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 values that accept tape compression you can use the following syntax: /DENSITY = (new_density_value,[No]Compaction) In order to use the Compaction or NoCompaction keyword, you must use one of the following density values that accepts compression: DEFAULT 3480 3490E 8200 8500 8900 TK87 TK88 TK89 DLT8000 SDLT SDLT320 AIT1 AIT2 AIT3 AIT4 DDS1 DDS2 DDS3 DDS4 SDLT600 LTO2 LTO3 Refer to the OpenVMS documentation for more information about density values.
1.4.13 – Disk File
Disk_File[=(options)] Specifies that you want to perform a multithreaded backup operation to disk files, floppy disks, or other disks external to the PC. You can use the following keywords with the Disk_File qualifier: o Writer_Threads Specifies the number of threads that Oracle RMU should use when performing a multithreaded backup operation to disk files. You can specify no more than one writer thread per device specified on the command line (or in the command parameter options file). By default, one writer thread is used. This qualifier and all qualifiers that control tape operations (Accept_Label, Density, Label, Loader_Synchronization, Master, Media_Loader, Rewind, and Tape_Expiration) are mutually exclusive.
1.4.14 – Encrypt
Encrypt=({Value=|Name=}[,Algorithm=]) The Encrypt qualifier encrypts the save set file of a database backup. Specify a key value as a string or, the name of a predefined key. If no algorithm name is specified the default is DESCBC. For details on the Value, Name and Algorithm parameters see HELP ENCRYPT. This feature requires the OpenVMS Encrypt product to be installed and licensed on this system.
1.4.15 – Exclude
Exclude[=storage-area[,...]] Specifies the storage areas that you want to exclude from the backup file. If you specify neither the Exclude nor the Include qualifier with the RMU Backup command, or if you specify the Exclude qualifier but do not specify a list of storage area names, a full and complete backup operation is performed on the database. This is the default behavior. If you specify a list of storage area names with the Exclude qualifier, RMU Backup excludes those storage areas from the backup file and includes all of the other storage areas. If you specify more than one database storage area in the Exclude qualifier, place a comma between each storage area name and enclose the list of names within parentheses. Use the Exclude=* qualifier to indicate that you want only the database root file to be backed up. Note that a backup file created with the Exclude=* qualifier can be restored only with the RMU Restore Only_Root command. You can use an indirect command file as shown in the following example: $ RMU/BACKUP/EXCLUDE="@EXCLUDE_AREAS.OPT" - _$ MF_PERSONNEL.RDB PARTIAL_MF_PERS.RBF %RMU-I-NOTALLARE, Not all areas will be included in this backup file See the Indirect-Command-Files help entry for more information on indirect command files. If you use the Exclude qualifier with a list of storage area names, your backup file will be a by-area backup file because the Exclude qualifier causes database storage areas to be excluded from the backup file. The following example shows the informational message you receive if you do not back up all of the areas in the database: %RMU-I-NOTALLARE, Not all areas will be included in this backup file By using the RMU Backup and RMU Restore commands, you can back up and restore selected storage areas of your database. This Oracle RMU backup and restore by-area feature is designed to: o Speed recovery when corruption occurs in some (not all) of the storage areas of your database o Reduce the time needed to perform backup operations because some data (data in read-only storage areas, for example) does not need to be backed up with every backup operation performed on the database If you plan to use the RMU Backup and RMU Restore commands to back up and restore only selected storage areas for a database, you should perform full and complete backup operations on the database at regular intervals. If you plan to back up and restore only selected storage areas of a database, Oracle Corporation also strongly recommends that you enable after-image journaling for the database. This ensures that you can recover all of the storage areas in your database if a system failure occurs. If you do not have after-image journaling enabled and one or more of the areas restored with the RMU Restore command are not consistent with the unrestored storage areas, Oracle Rdb does not allow any transaction to use the storage areas that are not consistent in the restored database. In this situation, you can return to a working database by restoring the database, using the backup file from the last full and complete backup operation of the database storage areas. However, any changes made to the database since the last full and complete backup operation are not recoverable. If you do have after-image journaling enabled, use the RMU Recover command (or the Restore command with the Recover qualifier) to apply transactions from the .aij file to storage areas that are not consistent after the RMU Restore command completes; that is, storage areas that are not in the same state as the rest of the restored database. You cannot use these areas until you recover the database. When the RMU Recover command completes, your database will be consistent and usable. Using the Exclude or Include qualifier gives you greater flexibility for your backup operations, along with increased file management and recovery complexity. Users of large databases might find the greater flexibility of the backup operation to be worth the cost of increased file management and recovery complexity. You cannot specify the Exclude=area-list and Include=area-list qualifiers in the same RMU Backup command.
1.4.16 – Execute
Execute Noexecute Use the Execute and Noexecute qualifiers with the Parallel and List_Plan qualifiers to specify whether or not the backup plan file is to be executed. The following list describes the effects of using the Execute and Noexecute qualifier: o Execute Creates, verifies, and executes a backup list plan o Noexecute Creates and verifies, but does not execute a backup list plan. The verification determines such things as whether the storage areas listed in the plan file exist in the database. The Execute and Noexecute qualifiers are only valid when the Parallel and List_Plan qualifiers are also specified. If you specify the Execute or Noexecute qualifier without the List_Plan and Parallel qualifiers, RMU Backup generates and verifies a temporary backup list plan, but then deletes the backup list plan and returns a fatal error message. By default, the backup plan file is executed when you issue an RMU Backup command with the Parallel and List_Plan qualifiers.
1.4.17 – Extend Quantity
Extend_Quantity=number-blocks Sets the size, in blocks, by which the backup file can be extended. The minimum value for the number-blocks parameter is 1; the maximum value is 65535. If you do not specify the Extend_ Quantity qualifier, the default number of blocks by which an on-disk backup file can be extended is 2048 blocks. This qualifier cannot be used with backup operations to tape.
1.4.18 – Group Size
Group_Size=interval Nogroup_Size Specifies the frequency at which XOR recovery blocks are written to tape. The group size can vary from 0 to 100. Specifying a group size of zero or specifying the Nogroup_Size qualifier results in no XOR recovery blocks being written. The Group_Size qualifier is only applicable to tape, and its default value is 10. RMU Backup returns an error message if this qualifier is used and the target device is not a tape device.
1.4.19 – Include
Include[=storage-area[,...]] Specifies storage areas that you want to include in the backup file. If you specify neither the Include nor the Exclude qualifier with the RMU Backup command, a full and complete backup operation is performed on the database by default. You can specify the Include=* qualifier to indicate that you want all storage areas included in the backup file, but this is unnecessary because this is the default behavior. The default behavior is performed also when you specify the Include qualifier without specifying a list of storage area names. If you specify a list of storage area names with the Include qualifier, Oracle RMU includes those storage areas in the backup operation and excludes all of the other storage areas. If you specify more than one database storage area in the Include qualifier, place a comma between each storage area name and enclose the list of names within parentheses. You cannot specify the Exclude=area-list and Include=area-list qualifiers in the same RMU Backup command. If you use the Include qualifier, your backup operation will be a by-area backup operation because the areas not specified with the Include qualifier are excluded from the backup file. If you do not back up all of the areas in the database, you receive the following informational message: %RMU-I-NOTALLARE, Not all areas will be included in this backup file By using the RMU Backup and RMU Restore commands, you can back up and restore selected storage areas of your database. This Oracle RMU backup and restore by area feature is designed to: o Speed recovery when corruption occurs in some (not all) of the storage areas of your database o Reduce the time needed to perform backup operations because some data (data in read-only storage areas, for example) does not need to be backed up with every backup operation performed on the database See the description of the Exclude qualifier for information on the implications of using these commands to back up and restore selected areas of your database. The Include qualifier can be used with indirect file references. See the Indirect-Command-Files help entry for more information.
1.4.20 – Incremental
Incremental[=By_Area or Complete] Noincremental Determines the extent of the backup operation to be performed. The four possible options are: o Noincremental If you do not specify any of the possible Incremental qualifier options, the default is the Noincremental qualifier. With the Noincremental qualifier, a full backup operation is performed on the database. o Incremental If you specify the Incremental qualifier, an incremental backup of all the storage areas that have changed since the last full and complete backup operation on the database is performed. o Incremental=By_Area If you specify the Incremental=By_Area qualifier, an incremental backup operation is performed. The Incremental=By_ Area qualifier backs up those database pages that have changed in each selected storage area since the last full backup operation was performed on the area. The last full backup operation performed on the area is the later of the following: - The last full and complete backup operation performed on the database - The last full by-area backup operation performed on the area With an incremental by-area backup operation, each storage area backed up might contain changes for a different time interval, which can make restoring multiple storage areas more complex. o Incremental=Complete If you specify the Incremental=Complete qualifier, an incremental backup operation on all of the storage areas that have changed since the last full and complete backup operation on the database is performed. Selecting the Incremental=Complete qualifier is the same as selecting the Incremental qualifier. Following a full database backup operation, each subsequent incremental backup operation replaces all previous incremental backup operations. The following two messages are meant to provide an aid for designing more effective backup strategies. They are printed as part of the per-area summary statistics, and they provide a guide to the incremental benefit of the incremental operation: o "Est. cost to backup relative to a full backup is x.yy" o "Est. cost to restore relative to a full restore is x.yy" These estimates are only approximate and reflect the disk input/output (I/O) cost for the backup or restore operations of that area. Tape I/O, CPU, and all other costs are ignored. The disk I/O costs take into account the number of I/O operations needed and the requirement for a disk head seek to perform the I/O. Each disk type has its own relative costs-transfer rate, latency, seek time-and the cost of a given sequence of I/Os is also affected by competition for the disk by other processes. Consequently, the estimates do not translate directly into "clock time." But they should nevertheless be useful for determining the point at which the incremental operation is becoming less productive. The relative costs can vary widely, and can be much higher than 1.00. The actual cost depends on the number and location of the pages backed up. An incremental restore operation must always follow a full restore operation, so the actual estimate of restoring the area is actually 1.00 higher than reported when that full restore operation is accounted for. The guideline that Oracle Corporation recommends is, "Perform full backup operations when the estimated cost of a restore operation approaches 2.00."
1.4.21 – Journal
Journal=file-name Allows you to specify a journal file to be used to improve tape performance during a restore operation. (This is not to be confused with an after-image journal file.) As the backup operation progresses, RMU Backup creates the journal file and writes to it a description of the backup operation containing identification of the tape drive names and the tape volumes and their contents. The default file extension is .jnl. The journal file must be written to disk; it cannot be written to tape along with the backup file. (Although you can copy the disk file to tape after it is written, if desired.) This journal file is used with the RMU Restore and the RMU Dump Backup commands to optimize their tape utilization.
1.4.22 – Label
Label=(label-name-list) Specifies the 1- to 6-character string with which the volumes of the backup file are to be labeled. The Label qualifier is applicable only to tape volumes. You must specify one or more label names when you use the Label qualifier. If you do not specify the Label (or Accept_Label) qualifier, RMU Backup labels the first tape used for a backup operation with the first 6 characters of the backup file name. Subsequent default labels are the first 4 characters of the backup file name appended with a sequential number. For example, if your backup file is my_backup.rbf, the default tape labels are my_bac, my_ b01, my_b02, and so on. When you reuse tapes, RMU Backup compares the label currently on the tape to the label or labels you specify with the Label qualifier. If there is a mismatch between the existing label and a label you specify, RMU Backup sends a message to the operator asking if the mismatch is acceptable (unless you also specify the Accept_Labels qualifier). If desired, you can explicitly specify the list of tape labels for multiple tapes. If you list multiple tape label names, separate the names with commas and enclose the list of names within parentheses. If you are reusing tapes be certain that you load the tapes so that the label RMU Backup expects and the label on each tape will match, or be prepared for a high level of operator intervention. Alternatively, you can specify the Accept_Label qualifier. In this case, the labels you specify with the Label qualifier are ignored if they do not match the labels currently on the tapes and no operator intervention occurs. If you specify fewer labels than are needed, RMU Backup generates labels based on the format you have specified. For example, if you specify Label=TAPE01, RMU Backup labels subsequent tapes as TAPE02, TAPE03, and so on up to TAPE99. Thus, many volumes can be preloaded in the cartridge stacker of a tape drive. The order is not important because RMU Backup relabels the volumes. An unattended backup operation is more likely to be successful if all the tapes used do not have to be mounted in a specific order. Once the backup operation is complete, externally mark the tapes with the appropriate label so that the order can be maintained for the restore operation. Be particularly careful if you are allowing RMU Backup to implicitly label second and subsequent tapes and you are performing an unattended backup operation. Remove the tapes from the drives in the order in which they were written. Apply labels to the volumes following the logic of implicit labeling (for example, TAPE02, TAPE03, and so on). Oracle recommends you use the Journal qualifier when you employ implicit labeling in a multidrive, unattended backup operation. The journal file records the volume labels that were written to each tape drive. The order in which the labels were written is preserved in the journal. Use the RMU Dump Backup command to display a listing of the volumes written by each tape drive. You can use an indirect file reference with the Label qualifier. See the Indirect-command-files help entry for more information. See How Tapes are Relabeled During a Backup Operation in the Usage_Notes help entry under this command for a summary of which labels are applied under a variety of circumstances.
1.4.23 – Librarian
Librarian=options Use the Librarian qualifier to back up files to data archiving software applications that support the Oracle Media Management interface. The backup file name specified on the command line identifies the stream of data to be stored in the Librarian utility. If you supply a device specification or a version number it will be ignored. You can use the Librarian qualifier for parallel backup operations. The Librarian utility should be installed and available on all nodes on which the parallel backup operation executes. The Librarian qualifier accepts the following options: o Writer_Threads=n Use the Writer_Threads option to specify the number of backup data streams to write to the Librarian utility. The value of n can be from 1 to 99. The default is one writer thread. Each writer thread for a backup operation manages its own stream of data. Therefore, each thread uses a unique backup file name. The unique names are generated by incrementing the number added to the end of the backup file name. For example, if you specify the following Oracle RMU Backup command: $RMU/ BACKUP /LIBRARIAN=(WRITER_THREADS=3) /LOG DB FILENAM.RBF The following backup file data stream names are generated: FILENAME.RBF FILENAME.RBF02 FILENAME.RBF03 Because each data stream must contain at least one database storage area, and a single storage area must be completely contained in one data stream, if the number of writer threads specified is greater than the number of storage areas, it is set equal to the number of storage areas. o Trace_file=file-specification The Librarian utility writes trace data to the specified file. o Level_Trace=n Use this option as a debugging tool to specify the level of trace data written by the Librarian utility. You can use a pre-determined value of 0, 1, or 2, or a higher value defined by the Librarian utility. The pre-determined values are : - Level 0 traces all error conditions. This is the default. - Level 1 traces the entry and exit from each Librarian function. - Level 2 traces the entry and exit from each Librarian function, the value of all function parameters, and the first 32 bytes of each read/write buffer, in hexadecimal. o Logical_Names=(logical_name=equivalence-value,...) You can use this option to specify a list of process logical names that the Librarian utility can use to specify catalogs or archives where Oracle Rdb backup files are stored, Librarian debug logical names, and so on. See the specific Librarian documentation for the definition of logical names. The list of process logical names is defined by Oracle RMU prior to the start of any Oracle RMU command that accesses the Librarian utility. The following OpenVMS logical names must be defined for use with a Librarian utility before you execute an Oracle RMU backup or restore operation. Do not use the Logical_Names option provided with the Librarian qualifier to define these logical names. o RMU$LIBRARIAN_PATH This logical name must be defined so that the shareable Librarian image can be loaded and called by Oracle RMU backup and restore operations. The translation must include the file type (for example, .exe), and must not include a version number. The shareable Librarian image must be an installed (known) image. See the Librarian utility documentation for the name and location of this image and how it should be installed. For a parallel RMU backup, define RMU$LIBRARIAN_ PATH as a system-wide logical name so that the multiple processes created by a parallel backup can all translate the logical. $ DEFINE /SYSTEM /EXECUTIVE_MODE - _$ RMU$LIBRARIAN_PATH librarian_shareable_image.exe o RMU$DEBUG_SBT This logical name is not required. If it is defined, Oracle RMU will display debug tracing information messages from modules that make calls to the Librarian shareable image. For a parallel RMU backup, the RMU$DEBUG_SBT logical should be defined as a system logical so that the multiple processes created by a parallel backup can all translate the logical. The following lines are from a backup plan file created by the RMU Backup/Parallel/Librarian command: Backup File = MF_PERSONNEL.RBF Style = Librarian Librarian_trace_level = # Librarian_logical_names = (- logical_name_1=equivalence_value_1, - logical_name_2=equivalence_value_2) Writer_threads = # The "Style = Librarian" entry specifies that the backup is going to a Librarian utility. The "Librarian_logical_names" entry is a list of logical names and their equivalence values. This is an optional parameter provided so that any logical names used by a particular Librarian utility can be defined as process logical names before the backup or restore operation begins. For example, some Librarian utilities provide support for logical names for specifying catalogs or debugging. You cannot use device specific qualifiers such as Rewind, Density, or Label with the Librarian qualifier because the Librarian utility handles the storage meda, not Oracle RMU.
1.4.24 – List Plan
List_Plan=output-file Specifies that RMU Backup should generate a backup plan file for a parallel backup operation and write it to the specified output file. A backup plan file is a text file that contains qualifiers that can be specified on the RMU Backup command line. Qualifiers that you do not specify on the command line appear as comments in the backup list plan file. In addition, the backup plan file specifies the worker executor names along with the system node, storage areas, and tape drives assigned to each worker executor. You can use the generated backup plan file as a starting point for building a parallel backup operation to tape that is tuned for your particular configuration. The output file can be customized and then used with the RMU Backup Plan command. See Backup Plan for details. If you specify the Execute qualifier with the List_Plan qualifier, the backup plan file is generated, verified, and executed. If you specify the Noexecute qualifier with the List_ Plan qualifier, the backup plan file is generated and verified, but not executed. By default, the backup plan file is executed. The List_Plan qualifier is only valid when the Parallel qualifier is also specified.
1.4.25 – Loader Synchronization
Loader_Synchronization[=Fixed] Allows you to preload tapes and preserve tape order to minimize the need for operator support. When you specify the Loader_ Synchronization qualifier and specify multiple tape drives, the backup operation writes to the first set of tape volumes concurrently then waits until each tape in the set is finished before assigning the next set of tape volumes. This ensures that the tape order can be preserved in the event that a restore operation from these tapes becomes necessary. One disadvantage with using the Loader_Synchronization qualifier with the Label qualifier is that because not all tape threads back up equal volumes of data, some threads may not need a subsequent tape to back up the assigned volume of data. In order to preserve the tape order, operator intervention may be needed to load the tapes in stages as backup threads become inactive. Use the keyword Fixed to force the assignment of tape labels to the drives regardless of how many tapes each drive actually uses. The Loader_Synchronization qualifier does result in reduced performance. For maximum performance, no drive should remain idle, and the next identified volume should be placed on the first drive that becomes idle. However, because the order in which the drives become idle depends on many uncontrollable factors and cannot be predetermined, without the Loader_ Synchronization qualifier, the drives cannot be preloaded with tapes. (If you do not want to relabel tapes, you might find that the Accept_Label qualifier is a good alternative to using the Loader_Synchronization qualifier. See the description of the Accept_Label qualifier for details.) Because the cost of using the Loader_Synchronization qualifier is dependent on the hardware configuration and the system load, the cost is unpredictable. A 5% to 20% additional elapsed time for the operation is typical. You must determine whether the benefit of a lower level of operator support compensates for the loss of performance. The Loader_Synchronization qualifier is most useful for large backup operations. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for more information on using the Loader_Synchronization qualifier, including information on when this qualifier might lead to unexpected results, and details on how this qualifier interacts with other RMU Backup command qualifiers. For very large backup operations requiring many tape volumes, managing the physical marking of tape volumes can be difficult. In such a case, you might consider using a library or archiving to automatically manage tape labeling for you.
1.4.26 – Lock Timeout
Lock_Timeout=seconds Determines the maximum time the backup operation will wait for the quiet-point lock and any other locks needed during online backup operations. When you specify the Lock_Timeout=seconds qualifier, you must specify the number of seconds to wait for the quiet-point lock. If the time limit expires, an error is signaled and the backup operation fails. When the Lock_Timeout=seconds qualifier is not specified, the backup operation will wait indefinitely for the quiet-point lock and any other locks needed during an online backup operation. The Lock_Timeout=seconds qualifier is ignored for offline backup operations.
1.4.27 – Log
Log Log=Brief Log=Full Nolog Specifies whether the processing of the command is reported to SYS$OUTPUT. Specify the Log qualifier to request that the progress of the restore operation be written to SYS$OUTPUT, or the Nolog qualifier to suppress this report. If you specify the Log=Brief option, which is the default if you use the Log option without a qualifier, the log contains the start and completion time of each storage area. If you specify the Log=Full option, the log also contains thread assignment and storage area statistics messages. If you do not specify the Log or the Nolog qualifier, the default is the current setting of the DCL verify switch. (The DCL SET VERIFY command controls the DCL verify switch.)
1.4.28 – Master
Master Controls the assignment of tape drives to output threads by allowing you to specify a tape drive as a master tape drive. This is a positional qualifier specified with a tape drive. When the Master qualifier is used, it must be used on the first tape drive specified. When the Master qualifier is specified, all additional tape drives become slaves for that tape drive until the end of the command line, or until the next Master qualifier, whichever comes first. If you specify the Master qualifier (without also specifying the Loader_Synchronization qualifier) on sets of tape drives, each master/slave set of tape drives will operate independently of other master/slave sets. If the Master qualifier is used on a tape drive that is not physically a master tape drive, the output performance of the backup operation will decrease. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for complete details on the behavior of the master qualifier.
1.4.29 – Media Loader
Media_Loader Nomedia_Loader Use the Media_Loader qualifier to specify that the tape device receiving the backup file has a loader or stacker. Use the Nomedia_Loader qualifier to specify that the tape device does not have a loader or stacker. By default, if a tape device has a loader or stacker, RMU Backup should recognize this fact. However, occasionally RMU Backup does not recognize that a tape device has a loader or stacker. Therefore, when the first backup tape fills, RMU Backup issues a request to the operator for the next tape, instead of requesting the next tape from the loader or stacker. Similarly, sometimes RMU Backup behaves as though a tape device has a loader or stacker when actually it does not. If you find that RMU Backup is not recognizing that your tape device has a loader or stacker, specify the Media_Loader qualifier. If you find that RMU Backup expects a loader or stacker when it should not, specify the Nomedia_Loader qualifier.
1.4.30 – No Read Only
No_Read_Only Allows you to specify that you do not want any of the read-only storage areas in your database to be backed up when you back up the database. If you do not specify the No_Read_Only qualifier, any read-only storage area not specified with the Exclude qualifier will be included in the backup file. The No_Read_Only qualifier allows you to back up a database with many read-only storage areas without having to type a long list of read-only storage area names with the Exclude qualifier. If you specify the No_Read_Only qualifier, read-only storage areas are not backed up even if they are explicitly listed by the Include qualifier. There is no Read_Only qualifier.
1.4.31 – Record
Record Norecord The Record qualifier is set by default. Using the Norecord qualifier allows you to avoid the modification of the database with recent backup information. Hence the database appears as if it had not been backed up at this time. The main purpose of this qualifier is to allow a backup of a Hot Standby database without modifying the database files. The Norecord qualifier can be negated with the Record qualifier.
1.4.32 – Online
Online Noonline Specifying the Online qualifier permits users running active transactions at the time the command is entered to continue without interruption (unless the Noquiet_Point qualifier is also specified). Any subsequent transactions that start during the online backup operation are permitted as long as the transactions do not require exclusive access to the database, a table, or any index structure currently being backed up. To perform an online database backup operation, snapshots (either immediate or deferred) must be enabled. You can use the Online qualifier with the Incremental or Noincremental qualifiers. If you use the default, the Noonline qualifier, users cannot be attached to the database. If a user has invoked the database and the RMU Backup command is entered with the Noonline qualifier (or without the Online qualifier), an Oracle RMU error results. For example: %RMU-I-FILACCERR, error opening database root file DB_DISK:MF_PERSONNEL.RDB;1 -SYSTEM-W-ACCONFLICT, file access conflict The offline backup process (specified with the Noonline qualifier) has exclusive access to the database and does not require snapshot (.snp) files in order to work. The snapshot files can be disabled when the Noonline qualifier is used. Oracle Corporation recommends that you close the database (with the RMU Close command) when you perform the offline backup operation on a large database. If the database was opened with the SQL OPEN IS MANUAL statement, the RMU Backup command will fail unless the RMU Close command is used. If the database was opened with the SQL OPEN IS AUTOMATIC statement, the RMU Backup command might fail if the activity level is high (that is, users might access the database before the database is taken off line). Issuing the RMU Close command can force the users out of the database and give the RMU Backup command a chance to start; however, although recommended, issuing the RMU Close command is not required in this case. Synonymous with the Owner qualifier. See the description of the Owner qualifier.
1.4.33 – Owner
Owner=user-id Specifies the owner of the tape volume set. The owner is the user who will be permitted to restore the database. The user-id parameter must be one of the following types of identifier: o A user identification code (UIC) in [group-name,member-name] alphanumeric format o A user identification code (UIC) in [group-number,member- number] numeric format o A general identifier, such as SECRETARIES o A system-defined identifier, such as DIALUP The Owner qualifier cannot be used with a backup operation to disk. When used with tapes, the Owner qualifier applies to all continuation volumes. The Owner qualifier applies to the first volume only if the Rewind qualifier is also specified. If the Rewind qualifier is not specified, the backup operation appends the file to a previously labeled tape, so the first volume can have a protection different from the continuation volumes. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for information on tape label processing.
1.4.34 – Page Buffers
Page_Buffers=number-buffers Specifies the number of disk buffers assigned to each storage area thread. The range is 2 to 5 with a default of 2. The higher values speed up scans for changed pages during an incremental backup operation, but they exact a cost in memory usage and larger working set requirements.
1.4.35 – Parallel
Parallel=(Executor_Count=n[,options]) Specifies that you want to perform a parallel backup operation. When you issue an RMU Backup command with the parallel qualifier, RMU Backup generates a plan file. This plan file describes how the parallel backup operation should be executed. If you specify the Noexecute qualifier, the plan file is generated, but not executed. If you specify the Execute qualifier (or accept the default), the plan file is executed immediately after RMU Backup creates it. The Executor_Count specifies the number of worker executors you want to use for the parallel backup operation. The number of worker executors must be equal to or less than the number of tape drives you intend to use. If you specify Executor_Count=1, the result is a non-parallel backup operation that is executed using the parallel backup procedure, including creation of the plan file and a dbserver process. You can specify one, both, or none of the following options: o Node=(node-list) The Node=(node-list) option specifies the names of the nodes in the cluster where the worker executors are to run. If more than one node is specified, all nodes must be in the same cluster and the database must be accessible from all nodes in the cluster. In addition, for a backup operation across nodes in a cluster to be successful, whoever starts SQL/Services must have proxy access among all nodes involved in the backup operation (assuming you are using DECnet). For example, if you specify the Nodes=(NODE1, NODE2, NODE3) as an option to the Parallel qualifier, whomever started SQL/Services must have access from NODE1 to NODE2, NODE1 to NODE3, NODE2 to NODE1, NODE2 to NODE3, NODE3 to NODE1, and NODE3 to NODE2. Separate node names in the node-list with commas. If you do not specify the Nodes option, all worker executors run on the node from which the parallel backup plan file is executed. o Server_Transport=(DECnet|TCP) To execute a parallel backup operation, SQL/Services must be installed on your system. By default, the RMU Backup command uses DECnet to access SQL/Services; if DECnet is not available, RMU Backup tries to use TCP/IP. Use the Server_Transport option to set the default behavior such that RMU Backup tries TCP/IP first. You can also use the SQL_NETWORK_TRANSPORT_TYPE configuration parameter to modify the default behavior. See the Oracle Rdb Installation and Configuration Guide for details on setting the SQL_NETWORK_ TRANSPORT_TYPE configuration parameter. o Statistics Specifies that you want RMU Backup to gather statistics on the parallel backup operation for use with the Parallel Backup Monitor. You must invoke the Parallel Backup Monitor, a Windowing interface, to view these statistics. To execute a parallel backup operation, SQL/Services must be installed on your system. By default, the RMU Backup command uses DECnet to access SQL/Services; if DECnet is not available, RMU Backup tries to use TCP/IP. You can use the SQL_NETWORK_ TRANSPORT_TYPE configuration parameter to set the default behavior such that RMU Backup tries TCP/IP first. See the Oracle Rdb Installation and Configuration Guide for details on setting the SQL_NETWORK_TRANSPORT_TYPE configuration parameter. Note that during a parallel backup operation, all tape requests are sent to the Operator; the parallel backup operation does not send tape requests to the user who issues the Backup command. Therefore, you should issue the DCL REPLY/ENABLE=TAPES command from the terminal that serves the operator before issuing the RMU Backup command.
1.4.36 – Prompt
Prompt=Automatic Prompt=Operator Prompt=Client Specifies where server prompts are to be sent. When you specify Prompt=Automatic, prompts are sent to the standard input device, and when you specify Prompt=Operator, prompts are sent to the server console. When you specify Prompt=Client, prompts are sent to the client system.
1.4.37 – Protection
Protection[=file-protection] Specifies the system file protection for the backup file produced by the RMU Backup command. The default file protection varies, depending on whether you backup the file to disk or tape. This is because tapes do not allow delete or execute access and the SYSTEM account always has both read and write access to tapes. In addition, a more restrictive class accumulates the access rights of the less restrictive classes. If you do not specify the Protection qualifier, the default protection is as follows: o S:RWED,O:RE,G,W if the backup is to disk o S:RW,O:R,G,W if the backup is to tape If you specify the Protection qualifier explicitly, the differences in protection applied for backups to tape or disk as noted in the preceding paragraph are applied. Thus, if you specify Protection=(S,O,G:W,W:R), that protection on tape becomes (S:RW,O:RW,G:RW,W:R).
1.4.38 – Quiet Point
Quiet_Point Noquiet_Point Allows you to specify that the database backup operation is to occur either immediately or when a quiet point for database activity occurs. A quiet point is defined as a point where no active update transactions are in progress in the database. Therefore, this qualifier is used with the Online qualifier. When you specify the Noquiet_Point qualifier, RMU Backup proceeds with the backup operation as soon as the RMU Backup command is issued, regardless of any update transaction activity in progress in the database. Because RMU Backup must acquire concurrent- read locks on all physical and logical areas, the backup operation will fail if there are any active transactions with exclusive locks on a storage area. However, once RMU Backup has successfully acquired all concurrent-read storage area locks it should not encounter any further lock conflicts. If a transaction that causes Oracle Rdb to request exclusive locks is started while the backup operation is proceeding, that transaction will either wait or receive a lock conflict error, but the RMU Backup command will continue unaffected. See the Usage_Notes help entry under this command for recommendations on using the Quiet_Point and Noquiet_Point qualifiers. The default is the Quiet_Point qualifier.
1.4.39 – Reader Thread Ratio
Reader_Thread_Ratio=integer This qualifier has been deprecated. Use the /Threads qualifier instead.
1.4.40 – Restore Options
Restore_Options=file-name Generates an options file designed to be used with the Options qualifier of the RMU Restore command. If you specify a full backup operation, all the storage areas will be represented in the options file. If you specify a by-area backup operation, only those areas included in the backup will be represented in the options file. The Restore_Options file is created at the end of the backup operation. By default, a Restore_Options file is not created. If you specify the Restore_Options qualifier and a file, but not a file extension, RMU Backup uses an extension of .opt by default.
1.4.41 – Rewind
Rewind Norewind Specifies that the magnetic tape that contains the backup file will be rewound before processing begins. The tape will be initialized according to the Label and Density qualifiers. The Norewind qualifier is the default and causes the backup file to be created starting at the current logical end-of-tape (EOT). The Rewind and Norewind qualifiers are applicable only to tape devices. RMU Backup returns an error message if these qualifiers are used and the target device is not a tape device.
1.4.42 – Scan Optimization
Scan_Optimization Noscan_Optimization Specifies whether or not RMU Backup should employ scan optimizations during incremental backup operations. By default, RMU Backup optimizes incremental backup operations by scanning regions of the database that have been updated since the last full backup operation. The identity of these regions is stored in the database. Only these regions need to be scanned for updates during an incremental backup operation. This provides a substantial performance improvement when database activity is sufficiently low. However, there is a cost in recording this information in the database. In some circumstances the cost might be too high, particularly if you do not intend to use incremental backup operations. The Scan_Optimization qualifier has different effects, depending on the type of backup operation you perform. In brief, you can enable or disable the scan optimization setting only when you issue a full offline backup command, and you can specify whether to use the data produced by a scan optimization only when you issue an incremental backup command. The following list describes this behavior in more detail: o During an offline full backup operation, you can enable or disable the scan optimization setting. Specify the Scan_Optimization qualifier to enable recording of the identities of areas that change after this backup operation completes. Specify the Noscan_Optimization qualifier to disable recording of the identities of areas that change after this backup operation completes. By default, the recording state remains unchanged (from the state it was in prior to execution of the Backup command) during a full backup operation. Note that specifying the Scan_Optimization or Noscan_ Optimization qualifier with an offline full backup operation has no effect on the backup operation itself, it merely allows you to change the recording state for scan optimization. o During an online full backup operation, the qualifier is ignored. The recording state for scan optimization remains unchanged (from the state it was in prior to execution of the Backup command). If you execute an online full backup operation and specify the Scan_Optimization or Noscan_Optimization qualifier, RMU Backup returns an informational message to indicate that the qualifier is being ignored. o During an incremental backup operation, the qualifier directs whether the scan optimization data (if recorded previously) will be used during the operation. If you specify the Scan_Optimization qualifier, RMU Backup uses the optimization if Oracle Rdb has been recording the regions updated since the last full backup operation. If you specify the Noscan_Optimization qualifier, RMU Backup does not use the optimization, regardless of whether Oracle Rdb has been recording the identity of the regions updated since the last full backup operation. You cannot enable or disable the setting for scan optimizations during an incremental backup operation. By default, the Scan_Optimization qualifier is used during incremental backup operations.
1.4.43 – Tape Expiration
Tape_Expiration=date-time Specifies the expiration date of the backup (.rbf) file. Note that when RMU Backup reads a tape, it looks at the expiration date in the file header of the first file on the tape and assumes the date it finds in that file header is the expiration date for the entire tape. Therefore, if you are backing up an .rbf file to tape, specifying the Tape_Expiration qualifier only has meaning if the .rbf is the first file on the tape. You can guarantee that the .rbf file will be the first file on the tape by specifying the Rewind qualifier and overwriting any existing files on the tape. When the first file on the tape contains an expiration date in the file header, you cannot overwrite the tape before the expiration date unless you have the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege. Similarly, when you attempt to restore a .rbf file from tape, you cannot perform the restore operation after the expiration date recorded in the first file on the tape unless you have the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege By default, no expiration date is written to the .rbf file header. In this case, if the .rbf file is the first file on the tape, the tape can be overwritten immediately. If the .rbf file is not the first file on the tape, the ability to overwrite the tape is determined by the expiration date in the file header of the first file on the tape. You cannot explicitly set a tape expiration date for an entire volume. The volume expiration date is always determined by the expiration date of the first file on the tape. The Tape_Expiration qualifier cannot be used with a backup file written to disk. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for information on tape label processing.
1.4.44 – Threads=number
Threads=number Specifies the number of reader threads to be used by the backup process. RMU creates so called internal 'threads' of execution to read data from one specific storage area. Threads run quasi-parallel within the process executing the RMU image. Each thread generates its own I/O load and consumes resources like virtual address space and process quotas (e.g. FILLM, BYTLM). The more threads, the more I/Os can be generated at one point in time and the more resources are needed to accomplish the same task. Performance increases with more threads due to parallel activities which keeps disk drives busier. However, at a certain number of threads, performance suffers because the disk I/O subsystem is saturated and I/O queues build up for the disk drives. Also the extra CPU time for additional thread scheduling overhead reduces the overall performance. Typically 2-5 threads per input disk drive are sufficient to drive the disk I/O susbsystem at its optimum. However, some controllers may be able to handle the I/O load of more threads, for example disk controllers with RAID sets and extra cache memory. In a backup operation, one writer thread is created per output stream. An output stream can be either a tape drive, a disk file or, a media library manager stream. In addition, RMU creates a number of reader threads and their number can be specified. RMU assigns a subset of reader threads to writer threads. RMU calculates the assignment so that roughly the same amount of data is assigned to each output stream. By default, five reader threads are created for each writer thread. If the user has specified the number of threads, then this number is used to create the reader thread pool. RMU always limits the number of reader threads to the number of storage areas. A threads number of 0 causes RMU to create one thread per storage area which start to run all in parallel immediately. Even though this may sound like a good idea to improve performance, this approach suffers performance for databases with a larger number (>10) of storage areas. For a very large number of storage areas (>800), this fails due to hard limitations in system resources like virtual address space. For a backup operation, the smallest threads number you can specify is the number of output streams. This guarantees that each writer thread has at least one reader thread assigned to it and does not produce an empty save set. Using a threads number equal to the number of output streams generates the smallest system load in terms of working set usage and disk I/O load. Disk I/O subsystems most likely can handle higher I/O loads. Using a slightly larger value than the number of output streams (for example, assigning more reader threads to a writer thread) typically results in faster execution time.
1.5 – Usage Notes
o To use the RMU Backup command for a database, you must have the RMU$BACKUP privilege in the root file access control list (ACL) for the database or the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege. o If you attempt to back up an area with detected corruptions (or which has corrupt pages logged to the CPT), the backup operation fails immediately. If you attempt to back up an area that contains an undetected corruptions (a corruption that has not been logged to the CPT), the backup operation proceeds until a corruption is found. These undetected corruptions are found only if you specify the Checksum qualifier with the Backup command. o The following list provides usage information for parallel backup operations: - When performing a parallel backup operation, do not allocate or mount any tapes manually; this is done automatically by RMU Backup. - You can monitor the progress of a backup operation to tape on your Windows system using the Parallel Backup Monitor. - You can use the Parallel Backup Monitor to monitor the progress of a parallel backup operation to tape. Specify your backup operation using the Parallel qualifier with the Executor_Count=1 option to approximate a non- parallel backup operation. Non-parallel backup operations (backup commands without the Parallel qualifier) cannot be monitored with the Parallel Backup Monitor. - If a parallel backup operation is issued from a server node, then RMU Backup communicates with SQL/Services to start the Coordinator. SQL/Services creates a Coordinator process. - If a parallel backup operation is issued from a client node (for example, using RMUwin), then the same SQL/Services process that is created to execute client/server RMU Backup commands is used as the Coordinator process. - You cannot use the Storage Library System (SLS) for OpenVMS with an RMU parallel backup. o Logical area threshold information for storage areas with uniform page format is recorded in the backup file. See the Oracle Rdb SQL Reference Manual for more information on logical area threshold information. o See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for information on determining the working set requirements for a non-parallel backup operation. o The following list provides usage information for the Quiet_ Point and Noquiet_Point qualifiers - If the operation stalls when you attempt a quiet-point Oracle RMU backup operation, it may be because another user is holding the quiet-point lock. In some cases, there is no way to avoid this stall. In other cases you may find the stall is caused by a user who has previously issued and completed a read/write transaction, and is currently running a read-only transaction. When this user started the read/write transaction, the process acquired the quiet- point lock. Ordinarily, such a process retains this lock until it detaches from the database. You can set the RDM$BIND_SNAP_QUIET_POINT logical name to control whether or not such a process retains the quiet- point lock. Set the value of the logical name to "1" so that all transactions hold the quiet point lock until a backup process requests it. Read-only transactions will not obtain the quiet point lock; only read/write transactions will obtain the quiet point lock. Set the value of the logical name to "0" so that read-only transactions always release the quiet point lock at the beginning of the transaction, regardless of the existence of a backup process. All modified buffers in the buffer pool have to be written to disk before the transaction proceeds. Applications that utilize the fast commit feature and often switch between read-only and read/write transactions within a single attach may experience performance degradation if the logical is defined to "0". Oracle recommends that you do not define the RDB$BIND_SNAP_ QUIET_POINT logical for most applications. - If you intend to use the Noquiet_Point qualifier with a backup procedure that previously specified the Quiet_ Point qualifier (or did not specify either the Quiet_ Point or Noquiet_Point qualifier), you should examine any applications that execute concurrently with the backup operation. You might need to modify your applications or your backup procedure to handle the lock conflicts that might occur when you specify Noquiet_Point. When you specify the Quiet_Point qualifier, the backup operation begins when a quiet point is reached. Other update transactions that are started after the database backup operation begins are prevented from executing until after the root file for the database has been backed up (the backup operation on the database storage areas begins after the root file is backed up). - When devising your backup strategy for both the database and the after-image journal files, keep in mind the trade- offs between performing quiet-point backup operations and noquiet-point backup operations. A noquiet-point backup operation is quicker than a quiet-point backup operation, but usually results in a longer recovery operation. Because transactions can span .aij files when you perform noquiet- point .aij backup operations, you might have to apply numerous .aij files to recover the database. In a worst- case scenario, this could extend back to your last quiet- point .aij or database backup operation. If you rarely perform quiet-point backup operations, recovery time could be excessive. One method you can use to balance these trade-offs is to perform regularly scheduled quiet-point .aij backup operations followed by noquiet-point database backup operations. (You could do the converse, but a quiet- point backup of the .aij file improves the performance of the recovery operation should such an operation become necessary.) Periodically performing a quiet-point .aij backup operation helps to ensure that your recovery time will not be excessive. o Do not add new logical areas in the context of an exclusive transaction during an online backup operation. When new logical areas are added during an online backup operation such that new records are physically placed in a location that the backup operation has not processed yet, Oracle Rdb returns the following error: %RMU-F-CANTREADDBS, error reading pages !UL:!UL-!UL Logical areas that cause this problem are created when you do either of the following: - Create a new table, start a transaction that reserves the new table in exclusive mode, and load the table with rows. - Create a new table, start a transaction that reserves the new table in exclusive mode, and create an index for the table. Creating new tables and populating them, or creating new indexes do not pose a problem if the table is not reserved in exclusive mode. o If you back up a database without its root file ACL (using the Noacl qualifier of the RMU Backup command, for example), a user who wants to restore the database must have the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege. o You might receive the RMU-I-WAITOFF informational message when you try to back up your database if the database was manually opened with the RMU Open command and has not been manually closed with the RMU Close command. You also receive this message when you issue an RMU Close command with the Nowait qualifier and users are still attached to the database. To back up your database, you must have exclusive access to the database root file. This error message usually indicates that you do not have exclusive access to the database root file because the operating system still has access to it. If your database was manually opened with the RMU Open command, you should be able to gain exclusive access to the database root file by manually closing the database with an RMU Close command. You can also receive this error message when you attempt other operations for which you must have exclusive access to the database root file. The solution in those cases is to attempt the operation again, later. Until you have exclusive access to the database root file, meaning that no other user gained access to the database between the time you issued the command and the time the command takes effect, you cannot complete those operations. o Backup files are typically smaller in size than the actual database. They exclude free space and redundant structural information that can be reconstructed with a restore operation. However, backup files also contain some overhead to support the backup format. Compression factors range from approximately 1.2 to 3 depending on the organization and fullness of the database. The compression factor achieved for a given database is generally quite stable and usually only changes with structural or logical reorganization. Do not use the size of the backup file as an indication of the size of the database files. Use the RMU Analyze command to determine the actual data content. o Backup performance is strongly affected by the job priority of the process running it. For best performance, a backup operation should execute at interactive priority, even when it is operating as a batch job. o The following list contains information of interest if you are performing a backup operation to tape: - If you back up the database to tape, and you do not specify the Parallel qualifier, you must mount the backup media by using the DCL MOUNT command before you issue the RMU Backup command. The tape must be mounted as a FOREIGN volume. Like the OpenVMS Backup utility (BACKUP), the RMU Backup command performs its own tape label processing. This does not prohibit backing up an Oracle Rdb database to an RMS file on a Files-11 disk. When you specify the Parallel qualifier, you need not mount the backup media because the parallel executors allocate and mount the drive and labels for you. - When RMU Backup creates a multivolume backup file, you can only append data to the end of the last volume. You cannot append data to the end of the first or any intermediate volumes. - The RMU Backup command uses asynchronous I/O. Tape support provided includes support for multifile volumes, multivolume files, and multithreaded concurrent tape processing. - If you allow RMU Backup to implicitly label tapes and you are using a tape drive that has a display (for example, a TA91 tape drive), the label displayed is the original label on the tape, not the label generated by RMU Backup. - Oracle Corporation recommends that you supply a name for the backup file that is 17 or fewer characters in length. File names longer than 17 characters can be truncated. The system supports four file-header labels: HDR1, HDR2, HDR3, and HDR4. In HDR1 labels, the file identifier field contains the first 17 characters of the file name you supply. The remainder of the file name is written into the HDR4 label, provided that this label is allowed. If no HDR4 label is supported, a file name longer than 17 characters will be truncated. The following Oracle RMU commands are valid. The terminating period for the backup file name is not counted as a character, and the default file type of .rbf is assumed. Therefore, the system interprets the file name as wednesdays_backup, which is 17 characters in length: $ RMU/BACKUP/REWIND/LABEL=TAPE MF_PERSONNEL MUA0:WEDNESDAYS_BACKUP. $ RMU/RESTORE/REWIND/LABEL=TAPE MUA0:WEDNESDAYS_BACKUP. The following Oracle RMU commands create a backup file that cannot be restored. Because no terminating period is supplied, the system supplies a period and a file type of .rbf, and interprets the backup file name as wednesdays_ backup.rbf, which is 20 characters in length. RMU truncates the backup file name to wednesdays_backup. When you attempt to restore the backed up file, RMU assumes the default extension of .rbf and returns an error when it cannot find the file wednesdays_backup.rbf on tape. $ RMU/BACKUP/REWIND/LABEL=TAPE MF_PERSONNEL MUA0:WEDNESDAYS_BACKUP $ RMU/RESTORE/REWIND/LABEL=TAPE MUA0:WEDNESDAYS_BACKUP - See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for information on the steps RMU Backup follows in tape label checking for the RMU Backup command. - The RMU Backup command works correctly with unlabeled or nonstandard formatted tapes when the Rewind qualifier is specified. However, tapes that have never been used or initialized, and nonstandard tapes sometimes produce errors that make OpenVMS mount attempts fail repeatedly. In this situation, RMU Backup cannot continue until you use the DCL INITIALIZE command to correct the error. - How Tapes are Relabeled During a Backup Operation summarizes the tape labeling behavior of RMU Backup under a variety of circumstances. For example, the last row of the table describes what labels are applied when you specify both the Label=back qualifier and the Accept_Label qualifier and all the tapes (except the second) are already labeled and used in the following order: aaaa, no label, bbbb, dddd, cccc. The table shows that these tapes will be relabeled in the following order, with no operator notification occurring: aaaa, back02, bbbb, dddd, eeee. How Tapes are Relabeled During a Backup Operation assumes the backup file name is mf_personnel.rbf: Table 5 How Tapes are Relabeled During a Backup Operation Qualifiers Current Resulting Specified Labels Labels Operator Notification Neither None Label mf_ mf_ nor per per Accept_ mf_ mf_ Label p05 p05 mf_ mf_ p06 p06 mf_ mf_ p02 p02 mf_ mf_ p03 p03 Neither All tapes except second tape Label aaaa mf_ nor no per Accept_ label mf_ Label bbbb p02 dddd mf_ cccc p03 mf_ p04 mf_ p05 Label=back All tapes except second aaaa back no back02 label back03 bbbb back04 dddd back05 cccc Label=(back01, All tapes except second back02) aaaa back01 no back02 label back03 bbbb back04 dddd back05 cccc Accept_ None Label aaaa aaaa no mf_ label p02 bbbb bbbb dddd dddd cccc cccc Accept_ Label, None Label=back aaaa aaaa no back02 label bbbb bbbb dddd dddd cccc cccc o When you use more than one tape drive for a backup operation, ensure that all of the tape drives are the same type (for example, all of the tape drives must be TA90s or TZ87s or TK50s). Using different tape drive types (for example, one TK50 and one TA90) for a single database backup operation may make database restoration difficult or impossible. Oracle RMU attempts to prevent you from using different tape drive densities during a backup operation but is not able to detect all invalid cases and expects that all tape drives for a backup are of the same type. As long as all of the tapes used during a backup operation can be read by the same type of tape drive during a restore operation, the backup is likely to be valid. This may be the case, for example, when you use a TA90 and a TA90E. Oracle Corporation recommends that, on a regular basis, you test your backup and recovery procedures and environment using a test system. You should restore the database and then recover using after-image journals (AIJs) to simulate failure recovery of the production system. Consult the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance and the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Design and Definition for additional information about Oracle Rdb backup and restore operations. o You should use the density values added in OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 for OpenVMS tape device drivers that accept them because previously supported values may not work as expected. If previously supported values are specified for drivers that support the OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 density values, the older values are translated to the Version 7.2-1 density values if possible. If the value cannot be translated, a warning message is generated, and the specified value is used. If you use density values added in OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 for tape device drivers that do not support them, the values are translated to acceptable values if possible. If the value cannot be translated, a warning message is generated and the density value is translated to the existing default internal density value (MT$K_DEFAULT). One of the following density-related errors is generated if there is a mismatch between the specified density value and the values that the tape device driver accepts: %RMU-E-DENSITY, TAPE_DEVICE:[000000]DATABASE.BCK; does not support specified density %RMU-E-POSITERR, error positioning TAPE_DEVICE: %RMU-E-BADDENSITY, The specified tape density is invalid for this device o If you want to use an unsupported density value, use the VMS INITIALIZE and MOUNT commands to set the tape density. Do not use the Density qualifier. o The density syntax used on the command can also be used in the plan file for the Parallel RMU backup to tape process. o Oracle Rdb cannot continue a single .rda file across multiple disks. This means that, during a multidisk backup operation, each device must have enough free space to hold the largest storage area in the database. If the storage areas are on stripe sets and are larger than any actual single disk, then the devices specified for the backup file must be striped also. It is not possible to indicate which storage area should be backed up to a given device. o Because data stream names representing the database are generated based on the backup file name specified for the Oracle RMU backup command, you must either use a different backup file name to store the next backup of the database to the Librarian utility or first delete the existing data streams generated from the backup file name before the same backup file name can be reused. To delete the existing data streams stored in the Librarian utility, you can use a Librarian management utility or the Oracle RMU Librarian/Remove command. o If you are backing up to multiple disk devices using thread pools, the following algorithm to assign threads is used by the backup operation: - The size of each area is calculated as the product of the page length in bytes multiplied by the highest page number used (maximum page number) for that area. - The area sizes are sorted by descending size and ascending device name. For internal processing reasons, the system area is placed as the first area in the first thread. - Each of the remaining areas is added to the thread that has the lowest byte count. The same algorithm is used for tape devices, but the areas are partitioned among writer threads, not disk devices. o The partitioning for backup to multiple disk devices is done by disk device, not by output thread, because there will typically be more disk devices than output threads, and an area cannot span a device.
1.6 – Examples
Example 1 The following command performs a full backup operation on the mf_ personnel database and displays a log of the session: $ RMU/BACKUP MF_PERSONNEL - _$ DISK2[USER1]MF_PERS_FULL_BU.RBF /LOG Example 2 To perform an incremental backup operation, include the Incremental qualifier. Assume a full backup operation was done late Monday night. The following command performs an incremental backup operation on the database updates only for the following day: $ RMU/BACKUP/INCREMENTAL MF_PERSONNEL.RDB - _$ $222$DUA20:[BCK]TUESDAY_PERS_BKUP/LOG Example 3 To back up the database while there are active users, specify the Online qualifier: $ RMU/BACKUP/ONLINE MF_PERSONNEL.RDB - _$ $222$DUA20:[BACKUPS]PERS_BU.RBF /LOG Example 4 The following RMU Backup command includes only the EMPIDS_ LOW and EMPIDS_MID storage areas in the backup file of the mf_personnel database. All the other storage areas in the mf_ personnel database are excluded from the backup file: $ RMU/BACKUP/INCLUDE=(EMPIDS_LOW,EMPIDS_MID) - _$ MF_PERSONNEL.RDB $222$DUA20:[BACKUPS]MF_PERS_BU.RBF Example 5 The following command backs up the mf_personnel database but not the root file ACL for the database: $ RMU/BACKUP/NOACL MF_PERSONNEL MF_PERS_NOACL Example 6 The following command backs up the mf_personnel database without waiting for a quiet point in the database: $ RMU/BACKUP/NOQUIET_POINT MF_PERSONNEL MF_PERS_NQP Example 7 The following command creates a journal file, pers_journal.jnl, and a backup file, pers_backup.rbf. $ RMU/BACKUP/JOURNAL=PERS_JOURNAL MF_PERSONNEL PERS_BACKUP Example 8 The following example backs up all the storage areas in the mf_ personnel database except for the read-only storage areas. $ RMU/BACKUP/NO_READ_ONLY MF_PERSONNEL MF_PERSONNEL_BU Example 9 The following example assumes that you are using multiple tape drives to do a large backup operation. By specifying the Loader_ Synchronization qualifier, this command does not require you to load tapes as each becomes full. Instead, you can load tapes on a loader or stacker and RMU Backup will wait until all concurrent tape operations have concluded for one set of tape volumes before assigning the next set of tape volumes. Using this example, you: 1. Verify the database. 2. Allocate each tape drive. 3. Manually place tapes BACK01 and BACK05 on the $111$MUA0: drive. 4. Manually place tapes BACK02 and BACK06 on the $222$MUA1: drive. 5. Manually place tapes BACK03 and BACK07 on the $333$MUA2: drive. 6. Manually place tapes BACK04 and BACK08 on the $444$MUA3: drive. 7. Mount the first volume. 8. Perform the backup operation. 9. Dismount the last tape mounted. (This example assumes it is on the $444$MUA3: drive.) 10. Deallocate each tape drive. $ RMU/VERIFY DB_DISK:[DATABASE]MF_PERSONNEL.RDB $ $ ALLOCATE $111$MUA0: $ ALLOCATE $222$MUA1: $ ALLOCATE $333$MUA2: $ ALLOCATE $444$MUA3: $ $ MOUNT/FOREIGN $111$MUA0: $ $ RMU/BACKUP /LOG/REWIND/LOADER_SYNCHRONIZATION - _$ /LABEL=(BACK01, BACK02, BACK03, BACK04, BACK05, - _$ BACK06, BACK07, BACK08) - _$ DB_DISK:[MFPERS]MF_PERSONNEL.RDB - _$ $111$MUA0:PERS_FULL_MAR30.RBF/Master, $222$MUA1: - _$ $333$MUA1:/MASTER, $444$MUA3 $ $ DISMOUNT $444$MUA3: $ $ DEALLOCATE $111$MUA0: $ DEALLOCATE $222$MUA1: $ DEALLOCATE $333$MUA2: $ DEALLOCATE $444$MUA4: Example 10 The following example generates a parallel backup plan file, but does not execute it. The result is a backup plan file. See the next example for a description of the plan file. $ RMU/BACKUP/PARALLEL=(EXEC=4, NODE=(NODE1, NODE2)) - _$ /LIST_PLAN=(PARTIAL.PLAN)/NOEXECUTE/INCLUDE=(RDB$SYSTEM, EMPIDS_LOW, - _$ EMPIDS_MID, EMPIDS_OVER, SALARY_HISTORY, EMP_INFO) - _$ /LABEL=(001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009) - _$ /CHECKSUM_VERIFICATION - _$ MF_PERSONNEL TAPE1:MF_PARTIAL.RBF, TAPE2:, TAPE3:, TAPE4: Example 11 The following display shows the contents of the plan file, PARTIAL.PLAN created in the preceding example. The following callouts are keyed to this display: 1 The Plan Parameters include all the parameters specified on the RMU BACKUP command line and all possible command qualifiers. 2 Command qualifiers that are not specified on the command line are represented as comments in the plan file. This allows you to edit and adjust the plan file for future use. 3 Command qualifiers that are explicitly specified on the command line are represented in the plan file as specified. 4 Executor parameters are listed for each executor involved in the backup operation. ! Plan created on 28-JUN-1996 by RMU/BACKUP. Plan Name = PARTIAL Plan Type = BACKUP Plan Parameters: 1 Database Root File = DISK1:[DB]MF_PERSONNEL;1 Backup File = PARTIAL.RBF ! Journal = specification for journal file 2 ! Tape_Expiration = dd-mmm-yyyy ! Active_IO = number of buffers for each tape ! Protection = file system protection for backup file ! Block_Size = bytes per tape block ! Density = tape density ![No]Group_Size = number of blocks between XOR blocks ! Lock_Timeout = number of second to wait for locks ! Owner = identifier of owner of the backup file !Page_Buffers = number of buffers to use for each storage area Checksum_Verification 3 CRC = AUTODIN_II NoIncremental ! Accept_labels preserves all tape labels Log ! Loader_synchronization labels tapes in order across drives ! Media_loader forces support of a tape media loader NoOnline Quiet_Point NoRewind Statistics ACL ![No]Scan_Optimization Labels = (- 001 - 002 - 003 - 004 - 005 - 006 - 007 - 008 - 009 ) End Plan Parameters Executor Parameters : Executor Name = COORDINATOR Executor Type = Coordinator End Executor Parameters Executor Parameters : 4 Executor Name = WORKER_001 Executor Type = Worker Executor Node = NODE1 Start Storage Area List EMPIDS_LOW, SALARY_HISTORY End Storage Area List Tape Drive List Tape Drive = TAPE1: MASTER End Tape Drive List End Executor Parameters Executor Parameters : Executor Name = WORKER_002 Executor Type = Worker Executor Node = NODE2 Start Storage Area List EMPIDS_MID, RDB$SYSTEM End Storage Area List Tape Drive List Tape Drive = TAPE2: MASTER End Tape Drive List End Executor Parameters Executor Parameters : Executor Name = WORKER_003 Executor Type = Worker Executor Node = NODE1 Start Storage Area List EMPIDS_OVER End Storage Area List Tape Drive List Tape Drive = TAPE3 MASTER End Tape Drive List End Executor Parameters Executor Parameters : Executor Name = WORKER_004 Executor Type = Worker Executor Node = NODE2 Start Storage Area List EMP_INFO End Storage Area List Tape Drive List Tape Drive = TAPE4 MASTER End Tape Drive List End Executor Parameters Example 12 The following example demonstrates the use of the Restore_Options qualifier. The first command backs up selected areas of the mf_personnel database and creates an options file. The second command shows the contents of the options file. The last command demonstrates the use of the options file with the RMU Restore command. $ RMU/BACKUP MF_PERSONNEL.RDB MF_EMPIDS.RBF/INCLUDE=(EMPIDS_LOW, - _$ EMPIDS_MID, EMPIDS_OVER) /RESTORE_OPTIONS=MF_EMPIDS.OPT %RMU-I-NOTALLARE, Not all areas will be included in this backup file $ ! $ ! $ TYPE MF_EMPIDS.OPT ! Options file for database USER1:[MFDB]MF_PERSONNEL.RDB;1 ! Created 18-JUL-1995 10:31:08.82 ! Created by BACKUP command EMPIDS_LOW - /file=USER2:[STOA]EMPIDS_LOW.RDA;1 - /blocks_per_page=2 - /extension=ENABLED - /read_write - /spams - /thresholds=(70,85,95) - /snapshot=(allocation=100, - file=USER2:[SNP]EMPIDS_LOW.SNP;1) EMPIDS_MID - /file=USER3:[STOA]EMPIDS_MID.RDA;1 - /blocks_per_page=2 - /extension=ENABLED - /read_write - /spams - /thresholds=(70,85,95) - /snapshot=(allocation=100, - file=USER3:[SNP]EMPIDS_MID.SNP;1) EMPIDS_OVER - /file=USER4:[STOA]EMPIDS_OVER.RDA;1 - /blocks_per_page=2 - /extension=ENABLED - /read_write - /spams - /thresholds=(70,85,95) - /snapshot=(allocation=100, - file=USER4:[SNP]EMPIDS_OVER.SNP;1) $ ! $ ! $ ! $ RMU/RESTORE MF_EMPIDS.RBF /AREA/OPTIONS=MF_EMPIDS.OPT Example 13 The following example uses a density value with compression: $RMU/BACKUP/DENSITY=(TK89,COMPACTION)/REWIND/LABEL=(LABEL1,LABEL2) - _$ MF_PERSONNEL TAPE1:MFP.BCK, TAPE2: Example 14 The following example shows how to perform a multidisk backup operation. $ RMU/BACKUP/DISK MF_PERSONNEL DEVICE1:[DIRECTORY1]MFP.RBF, - _$ DEVICE2:[DIRECTORY2] . . . %RMU-I-COMPLETED, BACKUP operation completed at 1-MAY-2001 17:40:53.81 Example 15 The following example shows the use of the Librarian qualifier with a plan file. $RMU/BACKUP/PARALLEL=EXECUTOR=3/LIBRARIAN=WRITER_THREADS=3 - _$ /LIST_PLAN=FILENAME.PLAN/NOEXECUTE/LOG DATABASE FILENAM.RBF $RMU/BACKUP/PLAN FILENAME.PLAN $RMU/RESTORE/LIBRARIAN=(READER_THREADS=9)/LOG FILENAME.RBF The first backup command creates the plan file for a parallel backup, but does not execute it. The second backup command executes the parallel backup using the plan file. Three worker processes are used; each process uses the three writer threads specified with the Librarian qualifier. Each writer thread in each process writes one stream of backup data to the Librarian utility; a total of nine streams is written. Example 16 This example shows the use of the Compression qualifier ZLIB. $ RMU /BACKUP /COMPRESS=ZLIB:9 /LOG=FULL FOO BCK . . . BACKUP summary statistics: Data compressed by 53% (9791 KB in/4650 KB out) Example 17 The following example shows the use of the Norecord qualifier. This would be used to backup a Hot Standby database without modifying the database files. $ RMU /BACKUP /NORECORD FOO BCK
2 – After Journal
Creates a backup file of the database after-image journal (.aij) file or files. Oracle Rdb supports two types of after-image journaling mechanisms: one that employs a single, extensible .aij file and another that employs multiple, fixed-size .aij files. The type of journaling mechanism being used at the time the backup operation starts can affect how you should specify the backup command. Further information on how these two journaling mechanisms affect the backup operation appears in the Description help entry under this command. The backup .aij file is an actual, usable .aij file that can be applied to the appropriate Oracle Rdb database in a recovery operation. The RMU Backup After_Journal command can be used while users are attached to the database.
2.1 – Description
The backup .aij file you create can be used with the RMU Recover command to recover (roll forward) journaled transactions. In some cases, you might have to issue additional Recover commands: one for the backup .aij file and a second for the more recent .aij files. Oracle Rdb supports the following two types of .aij file configurations: o A configuration that uses a single, extensible .aij file This is the method always used prior to Version 6.0 and is also the default (for compatibility with versions of Oracle Rdb prior to Version 6.0). When an extensible .aij file is used, one .aij file is written to and extended, as needed, by the number of blocks specified when the .aij file was created. The .aij file continues to be extended until it is backed up (or the device on which it resides is full). The RMU Backup After_Journal command copies transactions recorded in the current .aij file (always on a disk device) to the backup .aij file (which might be on a tape or disk device). On completion, the current .aij file is truncated and used again. During periods of high update activity, the truncation of the active .aij file might not be performed because of conflicting access to the .aij file by other users, but the storage allocated to the active .aij file is still used again when the backup operation completes. o A configuration that uses two or more fixed-size .aij files When fixed-size .aij files are used, the database maintains multiple .aij files; however, only one .aij file is written to at a time. This .aij file is considered the current journal. When this .aij file is filled, a switchover occurs to allow journaling to continue in another available .aij file. The RMU Backup After_Journal command works as follows with fixed-size .aij files: - Backs up any full .aij files The backup operation first backs up the .aij file with the lowest AIJ sequence number (that needs backing up), the operation continues to back up .aij files in ascending AIJ sequence number. If a lot of .aij files need to be backed up when the RMU Backup After_Journal command is issued, one backup file might contain the contents of all the .aij files being backed up. - Backs up the current .aij file Even if there are active transactions at the time of the backup operation, the RMU Backup After_Journal command will start to backup the current active .aij file. If you have specified the Quiet_Point qualifier, the backup operation stalls at some point waiting for all the current transactions to complete. - Switches to the next available .aij file An available .aij file is one for which both of the following are true: * It is not currently being used to record transactions. * It is not needed for a redo operation. Such an .aij file might be one that has never been used, or one that has already been backed up. Once a specified .aij file has been completely backed up, it is initialized and marked as available for reuse. NOTE The method employed, fixed-size .aij files or an extensible .aij file, cannot be set explicitly by the user. Any event that reduces the number of .aij files to one results in an extensible .aij file being used. Any event that increases the number .aij files to two or more results in fixed-size .aij files being used. An inaccessible .aij file is counted in these equations. Therefore, if you have one accessible .aij file and one inaccessible .aij file (perhaps because it has been suppressed), fixed-size .aij journaling is still used. Because some of the RMU Backup After_Journal qualifiers are valid only when one or the other journaling mechanism is employed, you might need to issue an RMU Dump command to determine which journaling mechanism is currently being employed before you issue an RMU Backup After_Journal command. Also note that once a backup operation begins, .aij file modification is not allowed until the backup operation is complete. However, if the type of journaling changes between the time you issue an RMU Dump command and the time you issue the RMU Backup After_Journal command, you receive an error message if you have specified qualifiers that are only valid with a particular type of journaling mechanism. (The Threshold qualifier, for example, is valid only when the extensible journaling mechanism is being used.) If you back up the .aij file or files to tape, you must mount the backup media by using the DCL MOUNT command before you issue the RMU Backup After_Journal command. If you specify the default, Format=Old_File, the RMU Backup After_Journal command uses RMS to write to the tape and the tape must be mounted as an OpenVMS volume. (That is, do not specify the FOREIGN qualifier with the MOUNT command.) If you specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier, the RMU Backup After_Journal command writes backup files in a format similar to that used by the RMU Backup command, and you must mount the tape as a FOREIGN volume. If you back up an .aij file to disk, you can then use the OpenVMS Backup utility (BACKUP) to archive the .aij backup file. The RMU Backup After_Journal command can be used in a batch job to avoid occupying an interactive terminal for long periods of time. The Continuous, Interval, Threshold, and Until qualifiers control the duration and frequency of the backup process. When you use the Continuous qualifier, the command can occupy a terminal indefinitely. Therefore, it is good practice to issue the command through a batch process when executing a continuous .aij file backup operation. However, remember that the portion of the command procedure that follows the RMU Backup After_Journal command is not executed until after the time specified by the Until qualifier. When the RMU Backup After_Journal command completes, it records information about the state of the backup files in the global process symbols presented in the following list. You can use these symbols in DCL command procedures to help automate the backup operation. These symbols are not set, however, if you have issued a DCL SET SYMBOL/SCOPE=(NOLOCAL, NOGLOBAL) command. o RDM$AIJ_SEQNO Contains the sequence number of the last .aij backup file written to tape. This symbol has a value identical to RDM$AIJ_ BACKUP_SEQNO. RDM$AIJ_SEQNO was created prior to Oracle Rdb Version 6.0 and is maintained for compatibility with earlier versions of Oracle Rdb. o RDM$AIJ_CURRENT_SEQNO Contains the sequence number of the currently active .aij file. A value of -1 indicates that after-image journaling is disabled. o RDM$AIJ_NEXT_SEQNO Contains the sequence number of the next .aij file that needs to be backed up. This symbol always contains a positive integer value (which can be 0). o RDM$AIJ_LAST_SEQNO Contains the sequence number of the last .aij file ready for a backup operation, which is different from the current sequence number if fixed-size journaling is being used. A value of -1 indicates that no journal has ever been backed up. If the value of the RDM$AIJ_NEXT_SEQNO symbol is greater than the value of the RDM$AIJ_LAST_SEQNO symbol, no more .aij files are currently available for the backup operation. o RDM$AIJ_BACKUP_SEQNO Contains the sequence number of the last .aij file backed up by the backup operation. This symbol is set at the completion of an .aij backup operation. A value of -1 indicates that this process has not yet backed up an .aij file. The RMU Backup After_Journal command provides an informational message that describes the exact sequence number for each .aij backup file operation. o RDM$AIJ_COUNT Contains the number of available .aij files. o RDM$AIJ_ENDOFFILE Contains the end of file block number for the current AIJ journal. o RDM$AIJ_FULLNESS Contains the percent fullness of the current AIJ journal. Note that these are string symbols, not integer symbols, even though their equivalence values are numbers. Therefore performing arithmetic operations with them produces unexpected results. If you need to perform arithmetic operations with these symbols, first convert the string symbol values to numeric symbol values using the OpenVMS F$INTEGER lexical function. For example: $ SEQNO_RANGE = F$INTEGER(RDB$AIJ_LAST_SEQNO) - F$INTEGER(RDB$AIJ_NEXT_SEQNO)
2.2 – Format
(B)0[m RMU/Backup/After_Journal root-file-spec {backup-file-spec | ""} [4mCommand[m [4mQualifiers[m x [4mDefaults[m /[No]Accept_Label x /Accept_Label /Active_IO=max-writes x /Active_IO=3 /Block_Size=integer x See description /[No]Compression[=options] x /Nocompression /[No]Continuous=(n) x /Nocontinuous /[No]Crc x See description /Crc[=Autodin_II] x See description /Crc=Checksum x See description /Density=(density-value, [No]Compaction) x See description /[No]Edit_Filename=(options) x /Noedit_Filename /Encrypt=({Value=|Name=}[,Algorithm=]) x See description /Format={Old_File|New_Tape} x /Format=Old_File /[No]Group_Size[=interval] x See description /[No]Interval=number-seconds x /Nointerval /Label=(label-name-list) x See description /Librarian[=options] x None /Lock_Timeout=seconds x See description /[No]Log x Current DCL verify value (B)0[m /[No]Media_Loader x See description /Owner=user-id x See description /Prompt={Automatic|Operator|Client} x See description /Protection=openvms-file-protection x See description /[No]Quiet_Point x /Quiet_Point /[No]Rename x /Norename /[No]Rewind x /Norewind /[No]Sequence=(n,m) x /Nosequence /Tape_Expiration=date-time x The current time /[No]Threshold=disk-blocks x /Nothreshold /Until=time x See description /[No]Wait=n x See description
2.3 – Parameters
2.3.1 – root-file-spec
The name of the database root file. The root file name is also the name of the database. An error results if you specify a database that does not have after-image journaling enabled. The default file extension is .rdb.
2.3.2 – backup-file-spec
A file specification for the .aij backup file. The default file extension is .aij unless you specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier. In this case, the default file extension is .aij_rbf.
2.3.3 – ""
Double quotes indicate to Oracle RMU that you want the default .aij backup file specification to be used. The default .aij backup file specification is defined with the SQL ALTER DATABASE statement or the RMU Set After_Journal command.
2.4 – Command Qualifiers
2.4.1 – Accept Label
Accept_Label Specifies that Oracle RMU should keep the current tape label it finds on a tape during a backup operation even if that label does not match the default label or that specified with the Label qualifier. Operator notification does not occur unless the tape's protection, owner, or expiration date prohibit writing to the tape. However, a message is logged (assuming logging is enabled) and written to the backup journal file (assuming you have specified the Journal qualifier) to indicate that a label is being preserved and which drive currently holds that tape. This qualifier is particularly useful when your backup operation employs numerous previously used (and thus labeled) tapes and you want to preserve the labels currently on the tapes. If you do not specify this qualifier, the default behavior of Oracle RMU is to notify the operator each time it finds a mismatch between the current label on the tape and the default label (or the label you specify with the Label qualifier). See the description of the Labels qualifier under this command for information on default labels. See How Tapes are Relabeled During a Backup Operation in the Usage_Notes help entry under the Backup Database help entry for a summary of which labels are applied under a variety of circumstances.
2.4.2 – Active IO
Active_IO=max-writes Specifies the maximum number of write operations to a backup device that the RMU Backup After_Journal command attempts simultaneously. This is not the maximum number of write operations in progress; that value is the product of active system I/O operations and the number of devices being written to simultaneously. The value of the Active_IO qualifier can range from 1 to 5. The default value is 3. Values larger than 3 can improve performance with some tape drives.
2.4.3 – Block Size
Block_Size=integer Specifies the maximum record size for the backup file. The size can vary between 2048 and 65,024 bytes. The default value is device dependent. The appropriate block size is a compromise between tape capacity and error rate.
2.4.4 – Compression
Compression=LZSS Compression=Huffman Compression=ZLIB=level Nocompression Allows you to specify the compression method to use before writing data to the AIJ backup file. This reduces performance, but may be justified when the AIJ backup file is a disk file, or is being backed up over a busy network, or is being backed up to a tape drive that does not do its own compression. You probably do not want to specify the Compression qualifier when you are backing up an aIJ file to a tape drive that does its own compression; in some cases doing so can actually result in a larger file. This feature only works for the new backup file format and you have to specify /FORMAT=NEW_TAPE if you also use /COMPRESSION. If you specify the Compression qualifier without a value, the default is COMPRESSION=ZLIB=6. The level value (ZLIB=level) is an integer between 1 and 9 specifying the relative compression level with one being the least amount of compression and nine being the greatest amount of compression. Higher levels of the compression use increased CPU time while generally providing better compression. The default compression level of 6 is a balance between compression effectiveness and CPU consumption. OLDER ORACLE RDB 7.2 RELEASES AND COMPRESSED RBF FILES Prior releases of Oracle Rdb are unable to read RBF files compressed with the ZLIB algorithm. In order to read compressed backups with Oracle Rdb 7.2 Releases prior to V7.2.1, they must be made with /COMPRESSION=LZSS or /COMPRESSION=HUFFMAN explicitly specified (because the default compression algorithm has been changed from LZSS to ZLIB). Oracle Rdb Version 7.2.1 is able to read compressed backups using the LZSS or HUFFMAN algorithms made with prior releases.
2.4.5 – Continuous
Continuous=(n) Nocontinuous Specifies whether the .aij backup process operates continuously. You specify termination conditions by specifying one or both of the following: o The Until qualifier Specifies the time and date to stop the continuous backup process. o The value for n Specifies the number of iterations Oracle RMU should make through the set of active .aij files before terminating the backup operation. When you use the Continuous qualifier, you must use either the Until or the Interval qualifier or provide a value for n (or both) to specify when the backup process should stop. You can also stop the backup process by using the DCL STOP command when backing up to disk. If you specify the Continuous qualifier, Oracle Rdb does not terminate the backup process after truncating the current .aij file (when an extensible journal is used) or after switching to a new journal (when fixed-size journals are used). Instead, the backup process waits for the period of time that you specify in the argument to the Interval qualifier. After that time interval, the backup process tests to determine if the threshold has been reached (for an extensible journal) or if the journal is full (for fixed-size journals). It then performs backup operations as needed and then waits again until the next interval break, unless the number of iterations or the condition specified with the Until qualifier has been reached. If you specify the Continuous qualifier, the backup process occupies the terminal (that is, no system prompt occurs) until the process terminates. Therefore, you should usually enter the command through a batch process. If you specify the default, the Nocontinuous qualifier, the backup process stops as soon as it completely backs up the .aij file or files. The default value for the number of iterations (n) is 1. If you specify both the Until qualifier and the Continuous=n qualifier, the backup operation stops after whichever completes first. If you specify the Until=12:00 qualifier and the Continuous=5 qualifier, the backup operation terminates at 12:00 even if only four iterations have completed. Likewise, if five iterations are completed prior to 12:00, the backup operation terminates after the five iterations are completed. The Continuous qualifier is not recommended when you are backing up to tape, particularly when the Format=New_Tape qualifier is used. If your tape operations complete successfully, you do not want the backup operation to continue in an infinite loop. Using the DCL STOP command to terminate a backup operation to tape might result in an incomplete or corrupt backup file. However, do not delete this backup file; it is extremely important that you preserve all .aij backup files, even those produced by failed or terminated backup processes. If the resultant .aij backup file is discarded, the next .aij backup file could contain a "gap" in transactions, so that no transactions would ever be rolled forward from that point on.
2.4.6 – Crc[=Autodin II]
Crc[=Autodin_II] Uses the AUTODIN-II polynomial for the 32-bit CRC calculation and provides the most reliable end-to-end error detection. This is the default for NRZ/PE (800/1600 bits/inch) tape drives. Typing Crc is sufficient to select the Crc=Autodin_II qualifier. It is not necessary to type the entire qualifier.
2.4.7 – Crc=Checksum
Crc=Checksum Uses one's complement addition, which is the same computation used to do a checksum of the database pages on disk. This is the default for GCR (6250 bits/inch) tape drives and for TA78, TA79, and TA81 tape drives. The Crc=Checksum qualifier allows detection of errors.
2.4.8 – Nocrc
Nocrc Disables end-to-end error detection. This is the default for TA90 (IBM 3480 class) drives. NOTE The overall effect of the Crc=Autodin_II, Crc=Checksum, and Nocrc qualifier defaults is to improve tape reliability so that it is equal to that of a disk. If you retain your tapes longer than 1 year, the Nocrc default might not be adequate. For tapes retained longer than 1 year, use the Crc=Checksum qualifier. If you retain your tapes longer than 3 years, you should always use the Crc=Autodin_II qualifier. Tapes retained longer than 5 years could be deteriorating and should be copied to fresh media. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for details on using the Crc qualifiers to avoid underrun errors.
2.4.9 – Density
Density=(density-value,[No]Compaction) Specifies the density at which the output volume is to be written. The default value is the format of the first volume (the first tape you mount). You do not need to specify this qualifier unless your tape drives support data compression or more than one recording density. The Density qualifier is applicable only to tape drives. Oracle RMU returns an error message if this qualifier is used and the target device is not a tape drive. If your systems are running OpenVMS versions prior to 7.2-1, specify the Density qualifier as follows: o For TA90E, TA91, and TA92 tape drives, specify the number in bits per inch as follows: - Density = 70000 to initialize and write tapes in the compacted format. - Density = 39872 or Density = 40000 for the noncompacted format. o For SCSI (Small Computer System Interface) tape drives, specify Density = 1 to initialize and write tapes using the drive's hardware data compression scheme. o For other types of tape drives, you can specify a supported Density value between 800 and 160000 bits per inch. o For all tape drives, specify Density = 0 to initialize and write tapes at the drive's standard density. Do not use the Compaction or NoCompaction keyword for systems running OpenVMS versions prior to 7.2-1. On these systems, compression is determined by the density value and cannot be specified. Oracle RMU supports the OpenVMS tape density and compression values introduced in OpenVMS Version 7.2-1. The following table lists the added density values supported by Oracle RMU. DEFAULT 800 833 1600 6250 3480 3490E TK50 TK70 TK85 TK86 TK87 TK88 TK89 QIC 8200 8500 8900 DLT8000 SDLT SDLT320 SDLT600 DDS1 DDS2 DDS3 DDS4 AIT1 AIT2 AIT3 AIT4 LTO2 LTO3 COMPACTION NOCOMPACTION If the OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 density values and the previous density values are the same (for example, 800, 833, 1600, 6250), the specified value is interpreted as an OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 value if the tape device driver accepts them, and as a previous value if the tape device driver accepts previous values only. For the OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 values that accept tape compression you can use the following syntax: /DENSITY = (new_density_value,[No]Compaction) In order to use the Compaction or NoCompaction keyword, you must use one of the following density values that accepts compression: DEFAULT 3480 3490E 8200 8500 8900 TK87 TK88 TK89 DLT8000 SDLT SDLT320 AIT1 AIT2 AIT3 AIT4 DDS1 DDS2 DDS3 DDS4 SDLT600 LTO2 LTO3 Refer to the OpenVMS documentation for more information about density values.
2.4.10 – Edit Filename
Edit_Filename=(Options) Noedit_Filename When the Edit_Filename=(options) qualifier is used, the specified backup file name is edited by appending any or all of the values specified by the following options to the backup file name: o Day_Of_Week The current day of the week expressed as a 1-digit integer (1 to 7). Sunday is expressed as 1; Saturday is expressed as 7. o Day_Of_Year The current day of the year expressed as a 3-digit integer (001 to 366). o Hour The current hour of the day expressed as a 2-digit integer (00 to 23). o Julian_Date The number of days passed since 17-Nov-1858. o Minute The current minute of the hour expressed as a 2-digit integer (00 to 59). o Month The current month expressed as a 2-digit integer (01 to 12). o Sequence The journal sequence number of the first journal in the backup operation. o Vno Synonymous with the Sequence option. See the description of the Sequence option. o Year The current year (A.D.) expressed as a 4-digit integer. If you specify more than one option, place a comma between each option. The edit is performed in the order specified. For example, the file backup.aij and the qualifier /EDIT_FILENAME=(HOUR, MINUTE, MONTH, DAY_OF_MONTH, SEQUENCE) creates a file with the name backup_160504233.aij when journal 3 is backed up at 4:05 P.M. on April 23rd. You can make the name more readable by inserting quoted strings between each Edit_Filename option. For example, the following qualifier adds the string "$30_0155-2" to the .aij file name if the day of the month is the 30th, the time is 1:55 and the version number is 2: /EDIT_FILENAME=("$",DAY_OF_MONTH,"_",HOUR,MINUTE,"-",SEQUENCE) This qualifier is useful for creating meaningful file names for your backup files and makes file management easier. The default is the Noedit_Filename qualifier.
2.4.11 – Encrypt
Encrypt=({Value=|Name=}[,Algorithm=]) The Encrypt qualifier encrypts the backup file of the after image journal. Specify a key value as a string or, the name of a predefined key. If no algorithm name is specified the default is DESCBC. For details on the Value, Name and Algorithm parameters see HELP ENCRYPT. This feature requires the OpenVMS Encrypt product to be installed and licensed on this system. This feature only works for a newer format backup file which has been created using /FORMAT=NEW_TAPE. Therefore you have to specify /FORMAT=NEW_TAPE with this command if you also use /ENCRYPT. Synonymous with Format=Old_File and Format=New_Tape qualifiers. See the description of those qualifiers.
2.4.12 – Format
Format=Old_File Format=New_Tape Specifies the format in which the backup file is to be written. Oracle Corporation recommends that you specify the Format=Old_ File qualifier (or accept the default) when you back up your .aij file to disk and that you specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier when you back up your .aij file to tape. If you specify the default, the Format=Old_File qualifier, the RMU Backup command writes the file in a format that is optimized for a file structured disk. If you specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier, the Oracle RMU command writes the file in a format that is optimized for tape storage, including ANSI/ISO labeling and end-to-end error detection and correction. When you specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier and back up the .aij file to tape, you must mount the backup media by using the DCL MOUNT command before you issue the RMU Backup After_Journal command. The tape must be mounted as a FOREIGN volume. If you mount the tape as an OpenVMS volume (that is, you do not mount it as a FOREIGN volume) and you specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier, you receive an RMU-F-MOUNTFOR error. When you back up your .aij file to tape and specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier you can create a backup copy of the database (using the RMU Backup command) and a backup of the .aij file (using the RMU Backup After_Journal command) without dismounting your tape. The following tape qualifiers have meaning only when used in conjunction with the Format=New_Tape qualifier: Active_IO Block_Size Crc Density Group_Size Label Owner Protection Rewind Tape_Expiration The Format=New_Tape and the Noquiet_Point qualifiers cannot be used on the same Oracle RMU command line. See the Usage Notes Help entry for an explanation. The default file specification, when you specify the Format=New_ Tape qualifier is .aij_rbf. The default file specification, when you specify the Format=Old_File qualifier is .aij. Although Oracle Corporation recommends that you specify the Format=New_Tape qualifier for .aij backup operations to tape and the Format=Old_File qualifier for .aij backup operations to disk, Oracle RMU does not enforce this recommendation. This is to provide compatibility with prior versions of Oracle Rdb. See the Usage Notes Help entry for issues and problems you can encounter when you do not follow this recommendation.
2.4.13 – Group Size
Group_Size[=interval] Nogroup_Size Specifies the frequency at which XOR recovery blocks are written to tape. The group size can vary from 0 to 100. Specifying a group size of zero or specifying the Nogroup_Size qualifier results in no XOR recovery blocks being written. The Group_Size qualifier is only applicable to tape, and its default value is device dependent. Oracle RMU returns an error message if this qualifier is used and the target device is not a tape device.
2.4.14 – Interval=n
Interval=number-seconds Nointerval Specifies the number of seconds for which the backup process waits. Use this qualifier in conjunction with the Continuous qualifier and the extensible journaling method. The interval determines how often to test the active .aij file to determine if it contains more blocks than the value of the Threshold qualifier. If you specify the Interval qualifier without specifying the number of seconds, or if you omit this qualifier, the default number of seconds is 60. Oracle Corporation recommends using the default (Interval=60) initially because the interval that you choose can affect the performance of the database. In general, you can arrive at a good interval time on a given database only by judgment and experimentation. If you specify the Nointerval qualifier, the active .aij file is tested repeatedly with no interval between finishing one cycle and beginning the next. You must specify the Continuous qualifier if you specify either the Interval or Nointerval qualifier. If you specify both the Interval and Nocontinuous qualifiers, the Interval qualifier is ignored.
2.4.15 – Label
Label=(label-name-list) Specifies the 1- to 6-character string with which the volumes of the backup file are to be labeled. The Label qualifier is applicable only to tape volumes. You must specify one or more label names when you use the Label qualifier. You can specify a list of tape labels for multiple tapes. If you list multiple tape label names, separate the names with commas and enclose the list of names within parentheses. If you do not specify the Label (or Accept_Label) qualifier, Oracle RMU labels the first tape used for a backup operation with the first 6 characters of the backup file name. Subsequent default labels are the first 4 characters of the backup file name appended with a sequential number. For example, if your backup file is my_backup.rbf, the default tape labels are my_b, my_b01, my_b02, and so on. When you reuse tapes, Oracle RMU compares the label currently on the tape to the label or labels you specify with the Label qualifier. If there is a mismatch between the existing label and a label you specify, Oracle RMU sends a message to the operator asking if the mismatch is acceptable (unless you also specify the Accept_Labels qualifier). If desired, you can explicitly specify the list of tape labels for multiple tapes. If you list multiple tape label names, separate the names with commas and enclose the list of names within parentheses. If you are reusing tapes be certain that you load the tapes so that the label Oracle RMU expects and the label on each tape will match, or be prepared for a high level of operator intervention. If you specify fewer labels than are needed, Oracle RMU generates labels based on the format you have specified. For example, if you specify Label=TAPE01, Oracle RMU labels subsequent tapes as TAPE02, TAPE03, and so on up to TAPE99. Thus, many volumes can be preloaded in the cartridge stacker of a tape drive. The order is not important because Oracle RMU relabels the volumes. An unattended backup operation is more likely to be successful if all the tapes used do not have to be mounted in a specific order. Once the backup operation is complete, externally mark the tapes with the appropriate label so that the order can be maintained for the restore operation. Be particularly careful if you are allowing Oracle RMU to implicitly label second and subsequent tapes and you are performing an unattended backup operation. Remove the tapes from the drives in the order in which they were written. Apply labels to the volumes following the logic of implicit labeling (for example, TAPE02, TAPE03, and so on). Oracle Corporation recommends you use the Journal qualifier when you employ implicit labeling in a multidrive, unattended backup operation. The journal file records the volume labels that were written to each tape drive. The order in which the labels were written is preserved in the journal. Use the RMU Dump Backup command to display a listing of the volumes written by each tape drive. You can use an indirect file reference with the Label qualifier. See the Indirect-command-files help entry for more information. See How Tapes are Relabeled During a Backup Operation in the Usage_Notes help entry under this command for a summary of which labels are applied under a variety of circumstances.
2.4.16 – Librarian
Librarian=options Use the Librarian qualifier to back up files to data archiving software applications that support the Oracle Media Management interface. The backup file name specified on the command line identifies the stream of data to be stored in the Librarian utility. If you supply a device specification or a version number it will be ignored. The Librarian qualifier accepts the following options: o Trace_file=file-specification The Librarian utility writes trace data to the specified file. o Level_Trace=n Use this option as a debugging tool to specify the level of trace data written by the Librarian utility. You can use a pre-determined value of 0, 1, or 2, or a higher value defined by the Librarian utility. The pre-determined values are : - Level 0 traces all error conditions. This is the default. - Level 1 traces the entry and exit from each Librarian function. - Level 2 traces the entry and exit from each Librarian function, the value of all function parameters, and the first 32 bytes of each read/write buffer, in hexadecimal. o Logical_Names=(logical_name=equivalence-value,...) You can use this option to specify a list of process logical names that the Librarian utility can use to specify catalogs or archives where Oracle Rdb backup files are stored, Librarian debug logical names, and so on. See the specific Librarian documentation for the definition of logical names. The list of process logical names is defined by Oracle RMU prior to the start of any Oracle RMU command that accesses the Librarian utility. The following OpenVMS logical names must be defined for use with a Librarian utility before you execute an Oracle RMU backup or restore operation. Do not use the Logical_Names option provided with the Librarian qualifier to define these logical names. o RMU$LIBRARIAN_PATH This logical name must be defined so that the shareable Librarian image can be loaded and called by Oracle RMU backup and restore operations. The translation must include the file type (for example, .exe), and must not include a version number. The shareable Librarian image must be an installed (known) image. See the Librarian utility documentation for the name and location of this image and how it should be installed. o RMU$DEBUG_SBT This logical name is not required. If it is defined, Oracle RMU will display debug tracing information messages from modules that make calls to the Librarian shareable image. You cannot use device specific qualifiers such as Rewind, Density, or Label with the Librarian qualifier because the Librarian utility handles the storage meda, not Oracle RMU.
2.4.17 – Lock Timeout
Lock_Timeout=seconds Determines the maximum time the .aij file backup operation will wait for the quiet-point lock and any other locks needed during online backup operations. When you specify the Lock_ Timeout=seconds qualifier, you must specify the number of seconds to wait for the quiet-point lock. If the time limit expires, an error is signaled and the backup operation fails. When the Lock_Timeout=seconds qualifier is not specified, or if the value specified is 0, the .aij file backup operation waits indefinitely for the quiet-point lock and any other locks needed during an online operation. The Lock_Timeout=seconds qualifier is ignored if the Noquiet_ Point qualifier is specified.
2.4.18 – Log
Log Nolog Specifies whether the processing of the command is reported to SYS$OUTPUT. Specify the Log qualifier to request log output and the Nolog qualifier to prevent it. If you specify neither, the default is the current setting of the DCL verify switch. (The DCL SET VERIFY command controls the DCL verify switch.)
2.4.19 – Media Loader
Media_Loader Nomedia_Loader Use the Media_Loader qualifier to specify that the tape device receiving the backup file has a loader or stacker. Use the Nomedia_Loader qualifier to specify that the tape device does not have a loader or stacker. By default, if a tape device has a loader or stacker, Oracle RMU should recognize this fact. However, occasionally Oracle RMU does not recognize that a tape device has a loader or stacker. Therefore, when the first backup tape fills, Oracle RMU issues a request to the operator for the next tape, instead of requesting the next tape from the loader or stacker. Similarly, sometimes Oracle RMU behaves as though a tape device has a loader or stacker when actually it does not. If you find that Oracle RMU is not recognizing that your tape device has a loader or stacker, specify the Media_Loader qualifier. If you find that Oracle RMU expects a loader or stacker when it should not, specify the Nomedia_Loader qualifier. Synonymous with Owner qualifier. See the description of the Owner qualifier.
2.4.20 – Owner
Owner=user-id Specifies the owner of the tape volume set. The owner is the user who will be permitted to restore the database. The user- id parameter must be one of the following types of OpenVMS identifier: o A user identification code (UIC) in [group-name,member-name] alphanumeric format o A UIC in [group-number,member-number] numeric format o A general identifier, such as SECRETARIES o A system-defined identifier, such as DIALUP The Owner qualifier cannot be used with a backup operation to disk. When used with tapes, the Owner qualifier applies to all continuation volumes. Unless the Rewind qualifier is also specified, the Owner qualifier is not applied to the first volume. If the Rewind qualifier is not specified, the backup operation appends the file to a previously labeled tape, so the first volume can have a protection different from the continuation volumes.
2.4.21 – Prompt
Prompt=Automatic Prompt=Operator Prompt=Client Specifies where server prompts are to be sent. When you specify Prompt=Automatic, prompts are sent to the standard input device, and when you specify Prompt=Operator, prompts are sent to the server console. When you specify Prompt=Client, prompts are sent to the client system.
2.4.22 – Protection
Protection=file-protection Specifies the system file protection for the backup file produced by the RMU Backup After_Journal command. The default file protection varies, depending on whether you backup the file to disk or tape. This is because tapes do not allow delete or execute access and the SYSTEM account always has both read and write access to tapes. In addition, a more restrictive class accumulates the access rights of the less restrictive classes. If you do not specify the Protection qualifier, the default protection is as follows: o S:RWED,O:RE,G,W if the backup is to disk o S:RW,O:R,G,W if the backup is to tape If you specify the Protection qualifier explicitly, the differences in protection applied for backups to tape or disk as noted in the preceding paragraph are applied. Thus, if you specify Protection=(S,O,G:W,W:R), that protection on tape becomes (S:RW,O:RW,G:RW,W:R).
2.4.23 – Quiet Point
Quiet_Point Noquiet_Point Specifies whether the quiet-point lock will be acquired when an .aij backup operation is performed. The default is the Quiet_ Point qualifier. Use of the Quiet_Point qualifier is meaningful only for a full backup operation; that is, a backup operation that makes a complete pass through all .aij files ready for backup as opposed to one which is done by-sequence (specified with the Sequence qualifier). A full .aij backup operation can be performed regardless of whether an extensible or a fixed-size .aij journaling mechanism is being employed. Each .aij backup operation is assigned an .aij sequence number. This labeling distinguishes each .aij backup file from previous .aij backup files. During a recovery operation, it is important to apply the .aij backup files in the proper sequence. The RMU Recover command checks the database root file structure and displays a message telling you the .aij sequence number with which to begin the recovery operation. The quiet point is a state where all write transactions have either been committed or rolled back and no read/write transactions are in progress. This ensures that the recording of transactions do not extend into a subsequent .aij backup file. This backup file can then be used to produce a recovered database that is in the same state as when the quiet point was reached. When fixed-size journaling is employed, the Quiet_Point qualifier is only relevant when the active .aij file is being backed up. In this case, a quiet point is acquired only once, regardless of the number of .aij files being backed up. There is no natural quiet point if someone is writing or waiting to write to the database at any given time. (A natural quiet point is one that is not instigated by the use of the QP (quiet point) Lock.) The .aij backup operation may never be able to capture a state that does not have uncommitted data in the database. As a result, the Noquiet_Point qualifier creates .aij backup files that are not independent of one another. If you apply one .aij backup file to the database without applying the next .aij backup file in sequence, the recovery operation will not be applied completely. See the Usage_Notes help entry under this command for recommendations on using the Quiet_Point and Noquiet_Point qualifiers. The following combination of qualifiers on the same command line are invalid: o Quiet_Point and Sequence o Quiet_Point and Wait o Noquiet_Point and Format=New
2.4.24 – Rename
Rename Norename The Rename qualifier creates and initializes a new .aij file and creates the backup file by renaming the original .aij file. The effect is that the original .aij file has a new name and the new .aij file has the same name as the original .aij file. The Rename qualifier sets the protection on the renamed backup file so that you can work with it as you would any backup file. You can specify the new name by using the Edit_Filename qualifier. When the Rename qualifier is used, the backup operation is faster (than when Norename, the default, is specified) because the duration of the backup operation is the total time required to rename and initialize the .aij file; the data copy portion of the backup (reading and writing) is eliminated. However, the disk containing the .aij file must have sufficient space for both the new and original .aij files. Note also that the .aij backup file name must not include a device specification. NOTE If there is insufficient space for both the new and original .aij files when the Rename qualifier is specified, after- image journaling shutdown is invoked, resulting in a complete database shutdown. The Rename qualifier can be used with both fixed-size and extensible journaling files. The Norename qualifier copies the contents of the .aij file on tape or disk and initializes the original .aij file for reuse. The Norename qualifier results in a slower backup operation (than when Rename is specified), but it does not require space on the journal disk for both new and original .aij files. The default is Norename.
2.4.25 – Rewind
Rewind Norewind Specifies that the magnetic tape that contains the backup file will be rewound before processing begins. The tape is initialized according to the Label and Density qualifiers. The Norewind qualifier is the default and causes the backup file to be created starting at the current logical end-of-tape (EOT). These qualifiers are applicable only to tape devices.
2.4.26 – Sequence
Sequence=(n,m) Nosequence Specifies that the journals with sequence numbers from n to m inclusive are to be backed up. The values n and m are interpreted or interpolated as follows: o If Sequence = (33, 35) is specified, then the .aij files with sequence numbers 33, 34, and 35 are backed up. o If Sequence = (53, 53) is specified, then the .aij file with sequence number 53 is backed up. o If Sequence = (53) is specified, then the .aij files with sequence numbers 53 and lower are backed up, if they have not been backed up already. For example, if .aij files with sequence numbers 51, 52, and 53 have not been backed up, then Sequence = (53) results in these three .aij files being backed up. o If Sequence = (55, 53) is specified, then .aij files with sequence numbers 53, 54, and 55 are backed up. o If the Sequence qualifier is specified without a value list, both n and m are set to the sequence number of the next journal that needs to be backed up. The default is the Nosequence qualifier. When the default is accepted, the backup operation starts with the next journal that needs to be backed up and stops when the termination condition you have specified is reached. The following qualifiers cannot be used or have no effect when used with the Sequence qualifier: Continuous Format=New_Tape Interval Quiet_Point Threshold Until Furthermore, fixed-size after-image journals must be in use when this qualifier is specified.
2.4.27 – Tape Expiration
Tape_Expiration=date-time Specifies the expiration date of the .aij backup file. Note that when Oracle RMU reads a tape, it looks at the expiration date in the file header of the first file on the tape and assumes the date it finds in that file header is the expiration date for the entire tape. Therefore, if you are backing up an .aij file to tape, specifying the Tape_Expiration qualifier only has meaning if the .aij file is the first file on the tape. You can guarantee that the .aij file will be the first file on the tape by specifying the Rewind qualifier and overwriting any existing files on the tape. When the first file on the tape contains an expiration date in the file header, you cannot overwrite the tape before the expiration date unless you have the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege. Similarly, when you attempt to perform a recover operation with an .aij file on tape, you cannot perform the recover operation after the expiration date recorded in the first file on the tape unless you have the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege By default, no expiration date is written to the .aij file header. In this case, if the .aij file is the first file on the tape, the tape can be overwritten immediately. If the .aij file is not the first file on the tape, the ability to overwrite the tape is determined by the expiration date in the file header of the first file on the tape. You cannot explicitly set a tape expiration date for an entire volume. The volume expiration date is always determined by the expiration date of the first file on the tape. The Tape_ Expiration qualifier cannot be used with a backup operation to disk. See the Oracle Rdb Guide to Database Maintenance for information on tape label processing.
2.4.28 – Threshold
Threshold=disk-blocks Nothreshold This qualifier can be used only when extensible journaling is enabled. It cannot be used with fixed-size journaling. The Threshold qualifier sets an approximate limit on the size of the active .aij file. When the size of the active .aij file exceeds the threshold, you cannot initiate new transactions until the backup process finishes backing up and truncating (resetting) the active .aij file. During the backup operation, existing transactions can continue to write to the .aij file. Before new transactions can start, all activity issuing from existing transactions (including activity occurring after the threshold is exceeded) must be moved from the active .aij disk file to the .aij backup file. At that time, the active .aij file will be completely truncated. If you use the default, the Nothreshold qualifier, each backup cycle will completely back up the active .aij file. Oracle Corporation recommends using the Nothreshold qualifier. An appropriate value for the Threshold qualifier depends on the activity of your database, how much disk space you want to use, whether backup operations will be continuous, and how long you are willing to wait for a backup operation to complete. See the Oracle Rdb7 Guide to Database Performance and Tuning for more information on setting SPAM thresholds.
2.4.29 – Until
Until=time Specifies the approximate future time and date to stop the continuous backup process. There is no default.
2.4.30 – Wait
Wait=n Nowait Specifies whether the backup operation should wait (the Wait qualifier) or terminate (the Nowait qualifier) when it encounters a journal that is not ready to be backed up. The value specified for the Wait qualifier is the time interval in seconds between attempts to back up the journal that was not ready. The Wait or Nowait qualifier can only be specified if the Sequence qualifier is also specified. When the Wait qualifier is specified, the default value for the time interval is 60 seconds. The default is the Nowait qualifier.
2.5 – Usage Notes
o To use the RMU Backup After_Journal command for a database, you must have the RMU$BACKUP privilege in the root file access control list (ACL) for the database or the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege. o See the Oracle Rdb7 Guide to Database Performance and Tuning for information on how to enhance the performance of the RMU Backup After_Journal command. NOTE When fast commit is enabled and an extensible .aij file configuration is used, the after-image journal backup process compresses and retains some fraction of the original .aij file (in a new version of the current .aij file). This fraction can approach 100% of the original size. Therefore, be sure to reserve enough space to duplicate the maximum size .aij file before backing it up. Oracle Corporation recommends that you schedule .aij backup operations with sufficient frequency and check the free space and journal file size periodically; you need to know when you are approaching a critical situation in terms of free space. (This is good practice whether or not you have fast commit enabled.) However, if you issue the RMU Backup After_Journal command with fast commit enabled and find that you have insufficient space for the .aij file, you have the following options: o Delete unneeded files to create sufficient space on the disk where the .aij file is located. o Temporarily disable fast commit and back up the .aij file. o Close the database, disable after-image journaling, enable a new after-image journal file, and perform a backup operation. (The database can be opened either before or after the backup operation.) o Close the database. Create a bound volume set or stripe set that is large enough for the .aij file and copy the .aij file there. Use the RMU Set After_ Journal command to change the .aij file name (or redefine the logical name if one was used to locate the journal), and then open the database again. o Note the following issues and problems you can encounter when you specify the Format=Old_File qualifier for an .aij backup operation to tape or the Format=New_Tape qualifier for an .aij backup operation to disk: - If you use the Format=Old_File qualifier for an .aij backup operation to tape and the tape is mounted as a FOREIGN volume, the result is an unlabeled tape that can be difficult to use for recovery operations. Therefore, if you use the Format=Old_File qualifier with an .aij backup operation to tape, you must mount the tape as an OpenVMS volume (that is, do not specify the /FOREIGN qualifier with the DCL MOUNT command). - You must remember (or record) the format you use when you back up your .aij file and specify that same format when you issue an RMU Dump After_Journal, RMU Optimize After_ Journal, or RMU Recover command for the .aij backup file. If you always follow the guidelines of specifying Format=New_Tape for tape backups and Format=Old_File for disk backups, you do not need to track the format you specified for the .aij backup operation for future use with the other Oracle RMU .aij commands. - If you specify Format=Old_File for a backup operation to tape and the .aij spans tape volumes, you might have problems recovering the .aij file. o You can use the RMU Backup After_Journal command to save disk space by spooling the .aij file to tape. o When you use extensible .aij files, note that although a new version of the .aij file might be created when the after-image backup operation begins, the old .aij file continues to be active and growing. Until the switch occurs (which could be several hours after the creation of the new version of the .aij file), the old .aij file is still being accessed. For this and other reasons, you should never use the DCL DELETE or DCL PURGE on .aij files (or any database files). o The following list provides usage information for the Quiet_ Point and Noquiet_Point qualifiers: - If the backup operation stalls when you attempt a quiet- point Oracle RMU backup operation, it may be because another user is holding the quiet-point lock. In some cases, there is no way to avoid this stall. However, you may find the stall is caused by a user who has previously issued and completed a read-write transaction, and is currently running a read-only transaction. When this user started the read-write transaction his or her process acquired the quiet-point lock. Ordinarily, such a process retains this lock until it detaches from the database. You can set the RDM$BIND_SNAP_QUIET_POINT logical name to control whether or not such a process retains the quiet- point lock. Set the value of the logical name to "1" to allow such a process to hold the quiet-point lock until they detach from the database. Set the value of the logical name to "0", to ensure that the process releases the quiet- point lock prior to starting a read-only transaction. - When devising your backup strategy for both the database and the after-image journal files, keep in mind the trade- offs between performing quiet-point backup operations and noquiet-point backup operations. A noquiet-point backup operation is quicker than a quiet-point backup operation, but usually results in a longer recovery operation. Because transactions can span .aij files when you perform noquiet- point .aij backup operations, you might have to apply numerous .aij files to recover the database. In a worst- case scenario, this could extend back to your last quiet- point .aij or database backup operation. If you rarely perform quiet-point backup operations, recovery time could be excessive. One method you can use to balance these trade-offs is to perform regularly scheduled quiet-point .aij backup operations followed by noquiet-point database backup operations. (You could do the converse, but a quiet- point backup of the .aij file improves the performance of the recovery operation should such an operation become necessary.) Periodically performing a quiet-point .aij backup operation helps to ensure that your recovery time will not be excessive. - You cannot specify the Noquiet_Point qualifier with the Format=New_Tape qualifier because an .aij file created with the Noquiet_Point qualifier does not end on a quiet point. Some transactions can bridge several backup files. When you recover from these backup files you frequently must apply several backup files in the same RMU Recover command. However, the RMU Recover command with the Format=New_Tape qualifier can only process one backup file at a time, so it cannot support backup files created with the Noquiet_Point qualifier. o Oracle RMU tape operations do not automatically allocate the tape drives used. In an environment where many users compete for a few tape drives, it is possible for another user to seize a drive while Oracle RMU is waiting for you to load the next tape volume. To prevent this, issue a DCL ALLOCATE command for the drives you will be using before you issue the Oracle RMU command, and then issue a DCL DEALLOCATE command after you complete the Oracle RMU command. o The Label qualifier can be used with indirect file reference. See the Indirect-Command-Files help entry for more information. o If an .aij backup process fails or is terminated prematurely, the user might discard the resultant .aij backup file because the backup operation was not completed. However, all .aij backup files, including those produced by a failed backup process, are necessary to recover a database. If an .aij backup file of a failed backup process is discarded, the database is not recoverable from that point forward. This is especially important if you use magnetic tapes as the .aij backup media; in this case, preserve this magnetic tape and do not reuse it. o When an .aij backup process, especially one running in continuous (Continuous) mode, writes to the .aij backup file, it is possible for the transferred data to be deleted from the database .aij file. If the backup process subsequently fails or is prematurely terminated (for example with Ctrl/Y or the DCL STOP command), it might not be possible to retransfer the data to the subsequent .aij backup file because the data was deleted from the active database .aij file. Therefore, it is extremely important that you preserve all .aij backup files, even those produced by failed or terminated backup processes. If the resultant .aij backup file is discarded, the next .aij backup file could contain a "gap" in transactions, so that no transactions would ever be rolled forward from that point on. This problem is more severe when backing up directly to tape. Therefore, when backing up to tape, you should back up one journal at a time, rather than using an open-ended or long- duration backup operation. NOTE If this problem occurs, the database is not inconsistent or corrupt. Rather, the database cannot be rolled forward past the discarded .aij backup file. The solution to this problem is to preserve all .aij backup files to ensure that a database can be completely recovered. If you have discarded an .aij backup file, perform a full and complete database backup operation immediately to ensure that the database can be restored up to the current transaction. o When an AIJ backup operation completes, the after-image journal files are initialized with a pattern of -1 (hex FF) bytes. This initialization is designed to be as fast as possible. It fully utilizes the I/O subsystem by performing many large asynchronous I/O operations at once. However, this speed can come at the cost of a high load on I/O components during the initialization. This load could slow down other I/O operations on the system. You can use two logical names to control the relative I/O load that the AIJ initialization operation places on the system. If you define these logical names in the system logical name table, they are translated each time an AIJ file is initialized. The RDM$BIND_AIJ_INITIALIZE_IO_COUNT logical name specifies the number of asynchronous I/O operations that are queued at once to the AIJ file. If the logical name is not defined, the default value is 15, the minimum value is 1, and the maximum value is 32. The RDM$BIND_AIJ_INITIALIZE_IO_SIZE logical name controls the number of 512-byte disk blocks to be written per I/O operation. If the logical name is not defined, the default value is 127, the minimum value is 4, and the maximum value is 127. Reducing the value of either logical will probably increase the amount of time needed to initialize the AIJ file after a backup. However, it may also reduce load on the I/O subsystem. o You should use the density values added in OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 for OpenVMS tape device drivers that accept them because previously supported values may not work as expected. If previously supported values are specified for drivers that support the OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 density values, the older values are translated to the Version 7.2-1 density values if possible. If the value cannot be translated, a warning message is generated, and the specified value is used. If you use density values added in OpenVMS Version 7.2-1 for tape device drivers that do not support them, the values are translated to acceptable values if possible. If the value cannot be translated, a warning message is generated and the density value is translated to the existing default internal density value (MT$K_DEFAULT). One of the following density-related errors is generated if there is a mismatch between the specified density value and the values that the tape device driver accepts: %DBO-E-DENSITY, TAPE_DEVICE:[000000]DATABASE.BCK; does not support specified density %DBO-E-POSITERR, error positioning TAPE_DEVICE: %DBO-E-BADDENSITY, The specified tape density is invalid for this device o If you want to use an unsupported density value, use the VMS INITIALIZE and MOUNT commands to set the tape density. Do not use the Density qualifier. o When you use the RMU Backup After_Journal command with the Log qualifier, the DCL global symbol RDM$AIJ_LAST_OUTPUT_FILE is automatically created. The value of the symbol is the full output backup AIJ file specification. o Because data stream names representing the database are generated based on the backup file name specified for the Oracle RMU backup command, you must either use a different backup file name to store the next backup of the database to the Librarian utility or first delete the existing data streams generated from the backup file name before the same backup file name can be reused. To delete the existing data streams stored in the Librarian utility, you can use a Librarian management utility or the Oracle RMU Librarian/Remove command. o The system logical RDM$BIND_AIJBCK_CHECKPOINT_TIMEOUT can be configured to control the checkpoint stall duration independent of the AIJ shutdown parameter. This logical works for both the AIJ backup and Automatic Backup Server (ABS) utilities.
2.6 – Examples
Example 1 Assuming that you have enabled after-image journaling for the MF_ PERSONNEL database, the following command causes extensible .aij entries to be backed up continuously until the time specified. $ RMU/BACKUP/AFTER_JOURNAL/CONTINUOUS/THRESHOLD=500 - _$ /INTERVAL=300/UNTIL="01-JUL-1996 16:15:00.00" - _$ MF_PERSONNEL.RDB DISK12:[PERS_AIJ]BU_PERSONNEL.AIJ Every 300 seconds, the backup process tests to determine if the active .aij file on disk has reached the threshold size of 500 blocks. If not, transaction processing continues normally for one or more 300-second intervals until the threshold test indicates that the active .aij file has reached a size of at least 500 blocks. When the .aij file reaches that file size, Oracle RMU allows existing transactions to continue to write to the active .aij file but does not allow new transactions to start. Assuming that the active .aij file contains 550 blocks, Oracle Rdb moves those 550 blocks to the backup journal file and deletes them from the active journal file. Then, the backup process determines if the transactions already in progress have written more journal records to the active journal file during the backup operation. If so, Oracle RMU moves those journal records to the backup file. After Oracle Rdb completely moves the active journal file, it truncates the journal file to 0 blocks. Oracle Rdb then allows new transactions to start and the backup process resumes threshold testing at 300-second intervals. The backup process continues until the time and date specified by the Until qualifier. Example 2 The following examples show backing up .aij files in sequence. Note that a number of transactions were committed to the database between backup operations. $ RMU/BACKUP/AFTER_JOURNAL/LOG MF_PERSONNEL MFPERS_BKUP_AIJ1.AIJ %RMU-I-AIJBCKBEG, beginning after-image journal backup operation %RMU-I-OPERNOTIFY, system operator notification: Oracle Rdb V7.2 Database DISK1:[DB]MF_PERSONNEL.RDB;1 Event Notification AIJ backup operation started %RMU-I-AIJBCKSEQ, backing up after-image journal sequence number 0 %RMU-I-LOGBCKAIJ, backing up after-image journal AIJ1 at 16:35:53.41 %RMU-I-LOGCREBCK, created backup file DISK1:[DB]MFPERS_BKUP_AIJ1.AIJ;1 %RMU-I-AIJBCKSEQ, backing up after-image journal sequence number 1 %RMU-I-LOGBCKAIJ, backing up after-image journal AIJ2 at 16:35:54.58 %RMU-I-QUIETPT, waiting for database quiet point %RMU-I-OPERNOTIFY, system operator notification: Oracle Rdb V7.2 Database DISK1:[DB]MF_PERSONNEL.RDB;1 Event Notification AIJ backup operation completed %RMU-I-AIJBCKEND, after-image journal backup operation completed successfully %RMU-I-LOGAIJJRN, backed up 2 after-image journals at 16:35:56.40 %RMU-I-LOGAIJBLK, backed up 508 after-image journal blocks at 16:35:56.41 . . . $ More transactions committed to the database . . . $ RMU/BACKUP/AFTER_JOURNAL/LOG MF_PERSONNEL MFPERS_BKUP_AIJ2.AIJ %RMU-I-AIJBCKBEG, beginning after-image journal backup operation %RMU-I-OPERNOTIFY, system operator notification: Oracle Rdb V7.2 Database DISK1:[DB]MF_PERSONNEL.RDB;1 Event Notification AIJ backup operation started %RMU-I-AIJBCKSEQ, backing up after-image journal sequence number 2 %RMU-I-LOGBCKAIJ, backing up after-image journal AIJ1 at 16:47:44.66 %RMU-I-LOGCREBCK, created backup file DISK2:[AIJ]MFPERS_BKUP_AIJ2.AIJ;1 %RMU-I-OPERNOTIFY, system operator notification: Oracle Rdb V7.2 Database DISK1:[DB]MF_PERSONNEL.RDB;1 Event Notification AIJ backup operation completed %RMU-I-AIJBCKEND, after-image journal backup operation completed successfully %RMU-I-LOGAIJJRN, backed up 1 after-image journal at 16:47:46.57 %RMU-I-LOGAIJBLK, backed up 254 after-image journal blocks at 16:47:46.57 Example 3 The following example uses the Edit_Filename qualifier to give the .aij backup file a meaningful file name. The Rename qualifier specifies that Oracle RMU should create the backup file by renaming the current .aij file and by creating a new .aij file with the same name as the original .aij file. $ RMU/BACKUP/AFTER_JOURNAL MF_PERSONNEL - _$ /EDIT_FILENAME=(SEQUENCE,"_",HOUR,"_",MINUTE,"_",MONTH,"_", - _$ DAY_OF_MONTH) AIJ2/RENAME $ DIR DISK1:[DB.AIJ2]*.AIJ Directory DISK1:[DB.AIJ_TWO] AIJ23_15_46_07_09.AIJ;1 Example 4 The following example shows the syntax to use when you want the .aij backup file name to default to that previously specified with the RMU Set After_Journal command. Note that the .aij backup file name used is that which corresponds to the first .aij file included in the backup operation. $ RMU/SET AFTER_JOURNAL MF_PERSONNEL /ENABLE/RESERVE=5 - _$ /ADD=(NAME=AIJ1, FILE=DISK1:[AIJ]AIJ_ONE, - _$ BACKUP_FILE=DISK4:[AIJBCK]AIJ1BCK) - _$ /ADD=(NAME=AIJ2, FILE=DISK2:[AIJ]AIJ_TWO, - _$ BACKUP_FILE=DISK4:[AIJBCK]AIJ2BCK) - _$ /ADD=(NAME=AIJ3, FILE=DISK3:[AIJ]AIJ_THREE, - _$ BACKUP_FILE=DISK4:[AIJBCK]AIJ3BCK) %RMU-W-DOFULLBCK, full database backup should be done to ensure future recovery $ ! $ !Assume backup operation was performed and other database activity occurs. $ !Then back up the .aij files: $ ! $ RMU/BACKUP/AFTER_JOURNAL MF_PERSONNEL.RDB "" $ ! $ DIR DISK4:[AIJBCK] Directory DISK4:[AIJBCK] AIJ1BCK.AIJ;1 Example 5 The following example uses a density value with compression: RMU/BACKUP/AFTER_JOURNAL /DENSITY=(TK89,COMPACTION)/REWIND - /LABEL=(LABEL1,LABEL2) MF_PERSONNEL TAPE1:MFP.AIJ, TAPE2:
3 – Plan
Executes a backup plan file previously created with the RMU Backup command (or created manually by the user).
3.1 – Description
A backup plan file is created when you execute an RMU Backup command with the Parallel and List_Plan qualifiers. See Backup Database for details on creating a plan file and the format of a plan file.
3.2 – Format
(B)0[mRMU/Backup/Plan plan-file [4mCommand[m [4mQualifiers[m x [4mDefaults[m x /[No]Execute x Execute /List_Plan=output-file x None
3.3 – Parameters
3.3.1 – plan-file-spec
The file specification for the backup plan file. The default file extension is .plan.
3.4 – Command Qualifiers
3.4.1 – Execute
Execute Noexecute The Execute qualifier specifies that Oracle RMU is to execute the plan file. The Noexecute qualifier specifies that Oracle RMU should not execute the plan file, but instead perform a validity check on the contents of the plan file. The validity check determines such things as whether the storage areas names assigned to each worker executor exist. By default, Oracle RMU executes the backup plan file when the RMU Backup Plan command is issued.
3.4.2 – List Plan
List_Plan=output-file Specifies that Oracle RMU should generate a new plan file and write it to the specified output file. This new plan file is identical to the plan file you specified on the command line (the "original" plan file) with the following exceptions: o Any user-added comments in the original plan file do not appear in the new plan file. o The new plan file is formatted to match the standard format for RMU Backup plan files.
3.5 – Usage Notes
o To use the RMU Backup Plan command for a database, you must have the RMU$BACKUP privilege in the root file access control list (ACL) for the database or the OpenVMS SYSPRV or BYPASS privilege. o To execute the RMU Backup Plan command, Oracle SQL/Services must be installed on your system.
3.6 – Examples
Example 1 The following example first creates a plan file by issuing an RMU Backup command with the Parallel and List_Plan qualifiers. Oracle RMU does not execute the plan file because the Noexecute qualifier is specified. The second command issues the RMU Backup Plan command to execute the plan file created with the RMU Backup command. $ ! Create the Backup plan file: $ ! $ RMU/BACKUP/PARALLEL=(EXEC=4, NODE=(NODE1, NODE2)) - _$ /LIST_PLAN=(PARTIAL.PLAN)/NOEXECUTE/INCLUDE=(RDB$SYSTEM, - _$ EMPIDS_LOW, EMPIDS_MID, EMPIDS_OVER, SALARY_HISTORY, EMP_INFO) - _$ /LABEL=(001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009) - _$ /CHECKSUM_VERIFICATION - _$ MF_PERSONNEL TAPE1:MF_PARTIAL.RBF, TAPE2:, TAPE3, TAPE4 $ ! $ ! Execute the plan file created with the previous command: $ ! $ RMU/BACKUP/PLAN partial.plan