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Oracle® Database Administrator's Guide
11g Release 2 (11.2)

Part Number E25494-02
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Tasks of a Database Administrator

The following tasks present a prioritized approach for designing, implementing, and maintaining an Oracle Database:

Task 1: Evaluate the Database Server Hardware

Task 2: Install the Oracle Database Software

Task 3: Plan the Database

Task 4: Create and Open the Database

Task 5: Back Up the Database

Task 6: Enroll System Users

Task 7: Implement the Database Design

Task 8: Back Up the Fully Functional Database

Task 9: Tune Database Performance

Task 10: Download and Install Patches

Task 11: Roll Out to Additional Hosts

These tasks are discussed in the sections that follow.

Note:

When upgrading to a new release, back up your existing production environment, both software and database, before installation. For information on preserving your existing production database, see Oracle Database Upgrade Guide.

Task 1: Evaluate the Database Server Hardware

Evaluate how Oracle Database and its applications can best use the available computer resources. This evaluation should reveal the following information:

  • How many disk drives are available to the Oracle products

  • How many, if any, dedicated tape drives are available to Oracle products

  • How much memory is available to the instances of Oracle Database you will run (see your system configuration documentation)

Task 2: Install the Oracle Database Software

As the database administrator, you install the Oracle Database server software and any front-end tools and database applications that access the database. In some distributed processing installations, the database is controlled by a central computer (database server) and the database tools and applications are executed on remote computers (clients). In this case, you must also install the Oracle Net components necessary to connect the remote systems to the computer that executes Oracle Database.

For more information on what software to install, see "Identifying Your Oracle Database Software Release".

See Also:

For specific requirements and instructions for installation, see the following documentation:
  • The Oracle documentation specific to your operating system

  • The installation guides for your front-end tools and Oracle Net drivers

Task 3: Plan the Database

As the database administrator, you must plan:

  • The logical storage structure of the database

  • The overall database design

  • A backup strategy for the database

It is important to plan how the logical storage structure of the database will affect system performance and various database management operations. For example, before creating any tablespaces for your database, you should know how many datafiles will comprise the tablespace, what type of information will be stored in each tablespace, and on which disk drives the datafiles will be physically stored. When planning the overall logical storage of the database structure, consider the effects that this structure will have when the database is actually created and running. Consider how the logical storage structure of the database will affect:

  • The performance of the computer running Oracle Database

  • The performance of the database during data access operations

  • The efficiency of backup and recovery procedures for the database

Plan the relational design of the database objects and the storage characteristics for each of these objects. By planning the relationship between each object and its physical storage before creating it, you can directly affect the performance of the database as a unit. Be sure to plan for the growth of the database.

In distributed database environments, this planning stage is extremely important. The physical location of frequently accessed data dramatically affects application performance.

During the planning stage, develop a backup strategy for the database. You can alter the logical storage structure or design of the database to improve backup efficiency.

It is beyond the scope of this book to discuss relational and distributed database design. If you are not familiar with such design issues, see accepted industry-standard documentation.

Part II, "Oracle Database Structure and Storage", and Part III, "Schema Objects", provide specific information on creating logical storage structures, objects, and integrity constraints for your database.

Task 4: Create and Open the Database

After you complete the database design, you can create the database and open it for normal use. You can create a database at installation time, using the Database Configuration Assistant, or you can supply your own scripts for creating a database.

See Chapter 2, "Creating and Configuring an Oracle Database", for information on creating a database and Chapter 3, "Starting Up and Shutting Down" for guidance in starting up the database.

Task 5: Back Up the Database

After you create the database structure, perform the backup strategy you planned for the database. Create any additional redo log files, take the first full database backup (online or offline), and schedule future database backups at regular intervals.

Task 6: Enroll System Users

After you back up the database structure, you can enroll the users of the database in accordance with your Oracle license agreement, and grant appropriate privileges and roles to these users. See Chapter 7, "Managing Users and Securing the Database" for guidance in this task.

Task 7: Implement the Database Design

After you create and start the database, and enroll the system users, you can implement the planned logical structure database by creating all necessary tablespaces. When you have finished creating tablespaces, you can create the database objects.

Part II, "Oracle Database Structure and Storage" and Part III, "Schema Objects" provide information on creating logical storage structures and objects for your database.

Task 8: Back Up the Fully Functional Database

When the database is fully implemented, again back up the database. In addition to regularly scheduled backups, you should always back up your database immediately after implementing changes to the database structure.

Task 9: Tune Database Performance

Optimizing the performance of the database is one of your ongoing responsibilities as a DBA. Oracle Database provides a database resource management feature that helps you to control the allocation of resources among various user groups. The database resource manager is described in Chapter 27, "Managing Resources with Oracle Database Resource Manager".

See Also:

Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide for information about tuning your database and applications

Task 10: Download and Install Patches

After installation and on a regular basis, download and install patches. Patches are available as single interim patches and as patchsets (or patch releases). Interim patches address individual software bugs and may or may not be needed at your installation. Patch releases are collections of bug fixes that are applicable for all customers. Patch releases have release numbers. For example, if you installed Oracle Database 11.2.0.1, the first patch release will have a release number of 11.2.0.2.

See Also:

Oracle Database Installation Guide for your platform for instructions on downloading and installing patches.

Task 11: Roll Out to Additional Hosts

After you have an Oracle Database installation properly configured, tuned, patched, and tested, you may want to roll that exact installation out to other hosts. Reasons to do this include the following:

  • You have multiple production database systems.

  • You want to create development and test systems that are identical to your production system.

Instead of installing, tuning, and patching on each additional host, you can clone your tested Oracle Database installation to other hosts, saving time and avoiding inconsistencies. There are two types of cloning available to you:

  • Cloning an Oracle home—Just the configured and patched binaries from the Oracle home directory and subdirectories are copied to the destination host and "fixed" to match the new environment. You can then start an instance with this cloned home and create a database.

    You can use the Enterprise Manager Clone Oracle Home tool to clone an Oracle home to one or more destination hosts. You can also manually clone an Oracle home using a set of provided scripts and Oracle Universal Installer.

  • Cloning a database—The tuned database, including database files, initialization parameters, and so on, are cloned to an existing Oracle home (possibly a cloned home).

    You can use the Enterprise Manager Clone Database tool to clone an Oracle database instance to an existing Oracle home.

See Also: