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.