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The Oracle Database Appliance 2.4 Patch was released last
week and provides you an option of ASM normal redundancy (double mirroring) during
the initial deployment of the Database Appliance. The default deployment of the Oracle Database
Appliance is high redundancy for the +DATA and +RECO disk groups. While there is 12TB of raw shared storage
available, the Database Backup Location and Disk Group Redundancy govern how
much usable storage is presented after the initial deployment is completed.
The Database Backup Location options are Local or
External. When the Local Backup Option
is selected, this means that 60% of the available shared storage will be
allocated for the Fast Recovery Area that contains database backups and archive
logs. The External Backup Option will
allocate 20% of the available shared storage to the Fast Recovery Area.
So, let’s look at an example of High Redundancy and External
Backups.
Disk Group Redundancy – High --> Triple Mirroring to provide ~4TB of available storage
Database Backup Location – External --> 20%
of available shared storage allocated to +RECO
+DATA = 3.2TB of usable storage, +RECO = 0.8TB
of usable storage
What about Normal Redundancy with External Backups?
Disk Group Redundancy – Normal --> Double Mirroring to provide ~6TB of
available storage
Database Backup Location – External --> 20%
of available shared storage allocated to +RECO
+DATA = 4.8TB of usable storage, +RECO = 1.2TB
of usable storage
As a best practice, we would recommend using Normal
Redundancy for your test and/or development Oracle Database Appliances and High
Redundancy for production.