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Why everyone talks about DR
but so few have it?
By:

Francisco Munoz Alvarez
Business Development Manager Latin America
Oracle ACE Director
CLOUG (Chilean Oracle Users Group) President
LAOUC (Latin American Oracle Users Group Community) President
NZOUG (New Zealand Oracle Users Group) President
8/9/10g/11g OCP, RAC OCE, AS OCA, E-Business OCP, SQL/PLSQL OCA, Oracle 7 OCM
Oracle 7,11GR2, OVM 3 and 12cR1 Beta Tester
ITIL Certified
2010 ACE Director of the year by Oracle Magazine
Blog: www.oraclenz.org - Twitter : fcomunoz
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Ok, are you from …?

Born
here

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Grow up
here

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Got Married Here

Mature
here

Now Living
here
Today’s Agenda
•

Disaster Recovery

•

Options available?

•

Why only few use it?

•

Other Options/Solutions?

•

Q&A

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Disaster and Recovery

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As a DBA, you are the person responsible for recovering the data and guard
the business continuity of your organization. Consequently, you have the key
responsibility for developing, deploying, and managing an efficient backup
and recovery strategy for your institution or clients that will allow them to
easily recover from any possible disastrous situation. Remember, data is one
of the most important assets a company can have. Most organizations could
not survive after the loss of this important asset.

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Disaster Recovery
Disaster Recovery (DR) is seen as
• Process
• Policies
• Procedures

Established to ensure recovery and continuation of
• Infrastructure
• Applications
• Databases

All of which is critical to the Business Continuation
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Why Bother With Disaster Recovery?
• Most critical asset of companies today: Database
• Must be protected against disaster:
– Hardware Failure
– Human Error
– Natural Disasters
• To ensure business continuity
(93% of businesses that suffer significant data loss are out of business in 5 years – US Labor Department)

Best way to protect your database AND your business: Standby Database

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The traditional options

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OSE/OSEO
• For Oracle Standard Edition One/ Oracle Standard Edition
– Implement a Home build Solution using scripts
Some side effects can include a combination of:




Risk/Panic
High Maintenance Costs
High Management Costs

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Building your own DR Solution
It seems easy so what is so hard about it?

Account for the following:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Robustness, when all else fails this has to work
Completeness handle all Oracle errors and network failures
Differences in Oracle versions
Automatic continuation of log shipping when some nodes are down (RAC)
Documentation and training
Automation of creation of standby database
Complexities of ASM, OMF, RAC
Graceful switchover
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OEE
• For Oracle Enterprise Edition
– Use of Data Guard
Some side effects can include a combination of:



High Implementation Costs (Needs to have OEE on both sides – Primary and DR)
High Maintenance Costs (Will need to pay support for two OEE environments for life)

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Why only few use it?

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License Cost

Amount in US$

One Processor License Comparison
50,000
45,000
40,000
35,000
30,000
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
-

63%
88%

License
Support

SE1

SE

Oracle Database Edition
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EE
Cost Comparison
Named User Plus
License

Database Option / Edition

Per User

Support

Processor
License
Processor 1

Support

Oracle Database SE1

180.00

39.60

5,800.00

1,276.00

Oracle Database SE

350.00

77.00

17,500.00

3,850.00

Oracle Database EE

950.00

209.00

47,500.00

10,450.00

Oracle Real Application Clusters

460.00

101.20

23,000.00

5,060.00

Active Data Guard

200.00

44.00

10,000.00

2,200.00

1 For SE and SE1, one CPU socket = 1 Processor. For EE refer to the processor core factor table to establish correct processor count.
For more details on pricing, see the Oracle Price lists available at: http://www.oracle.com/us/corporate/pricing/price-lists/index.html
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Scenario 1
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 1 Quad core processors, 16 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: 1 Quad core processors, 16 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•

•
•

Production: 4 cores * 0.5= 2 cores to license
Oracle License: US$ 95,000.00 + 20,900.00

US$ 231,800.00
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Production: 4 cores * 0.5= 2 cores to license
Oracle License: US$ 95,000.00 + 20,900.00
Scenario 2
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•

•
•

Production: 8 cores * 0.5= 4 cores to license
Oracle License: US$ 190,000.00 + 41,800.00

US$ 463,600.00
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Production: 8 cores * 0.5= 4 cores to license
Oracle License: US$ 190,000.00 + 41,800.00
Scenario 3
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•

•
•

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00

US$ 85,400.00
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Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00
Scenario 4
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•

•
•

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00

US$ 28,304.00
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Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00
Scenario 5 - RAC
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition
2 Nodes RAC
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:
•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One
OS: RHEL 5.3

Production: 16 cores * 0.5= 8 cores to license
Oracle License: US$ 380,000.00 + 83,600.00
Oracle RAC License: US$ 184,000.00 + 40,480.00

•
•

US$ 919,880.00
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Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 190,000.00 + 41,800.00
Any Other Options?

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Dbvisit
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Used in 80+ Countries
Trusted by 600+ Companies
Worldwide leader in disaster recovery solutions for Oracle Standard Edition
Exceptional Product Engineers with “real world” DBA Experience
Two Oracle 11g Certified Masters
Regular presenters at Oracle events such as OOW and Collaborate
Passionate about Oracle Technology

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Product Lineup

World-leading Disaster Recovery
Solution for the
Oracle SE database
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Affordable Alternative to GoldenGate: –
Data Replication for
Oracle-sourced databases
Two Replication Types
Physical Replication
•
•
•
•
•

“One on one” copy of the primary database in permanent recovery
Use redo apply to keep up to date
100% binary copy, database are exact replicas
Referred to as a standby database
Best suited for DR

Logical Replication
•
•
•
•
•
•

Independent 2nd database in sync by replication mechanism
Uses SQL statements to keep up to date
Subset of data is replicated
Cross version, cross platform
Separate physical database structure
Best suited for information sharing, migrations, real-time reporting etc

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Dbvisit Standby
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Physical data replication
“Oracle Data Guard” for Standard Edition
Easy to install, configure, use and manage
Creates the standby database
Support for RAC, OMF and ASM
Support for Oracle 8i forwards, EE, SE, SE One and XE
Broad OS compatibility
– Oracle Linux, Oracle Solaris, Windows, AIX, HP-UX, VM
Cloud deployment on Amazon AWS
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Standby Database options
1. Data Guard (requires Oracle EE)
2. Do it yourself
– sounds easier than it is
3. Third party products such as
– Dbvisit Standby

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Standby Database using Dbvisit Standby

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Oracle RAC + Standby Database with SE
Redo%
Logs%

Archived)
Logs)
Archived)
Logs)

DATABASE

SERVER

1

DATABASE

LOG E X TRACT

SERVER

TRANSPORT

3

LOG APPLY

DATABASE

SERVER

2 Node Oracle RAC using SE

Oracle Single Instance

PRIMARY SITE (RAC IMPLEMENTATION)

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SECONDARY SITE(S)
Dbvisit Standby
Advantages
• GUI or Command line interface
• Same underlying architecture as Data Guard
• Standby database is 100% copy, offload backups
• Efficient using redo recovery
Disadvantages
• No support for cross platform, cross databases versions
• At best standby is READ-ONLY (except with Active Data Guard)
• Not selective in replication, all or nothing.
• Failover is not done lightly
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Standby Database Features
•
•
•
•
•
•

Core Function – Send and Apply Redo
Creates the standby database automatically
Reporting standby database
o Open Standby Read-Only
Internal Dbvisit Standby Reporting
o Archive / Transfer log gap reporting
20+ APIs
Resynchronize Standby Database
o Missing or Corrupt archive logs not yet applied to standby
o Nologging operations was performed on Primary

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Standby Database Features
Failover
• Activates the standby database in the event of DR
• Initiates a resetlogs (redo logs are created)
• There is no going back (unless using flashback - EE)
• Potential for dataloss
Switchover (role reversal)
• Is used for planned maintenance on primary server
• Switches database roles
• Increase availability on database
• Small outage required
• No data loss
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Favored by DBAs
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Our customers are DBAs
Our products are built specifically for DBAs
Make their life easier
Do more on a limited budget
Add real value to Oracle Standard Edition
Our support is provided by DBAs
Built by DBAs for DBAs

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Dbvisit Standby GUI Interface

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Any Other Option Now?

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Scenario 1- Using OSE
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•
•

•
•

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00
Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00

US$ 90,620.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00
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Scenario 2 – Using OSE + OVM
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•
•

•
•

Production: 1 socket to license
Oracle License: US$ 17,500.00 + 3,850.00
Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00

Production: 1 socket to license
Oracle License: US$ 17,500.00 + 3,850.00

US$ 47,920.00 vs. US$ 90,620.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00
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Scenario 3 – Using OSEO
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•
•

•
•

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00
Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00

US$ 33,524.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00
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Scenario 4 – Using OSEO + OVM
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One
OS: RHEL 5.3

Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:

•
•
•

•
•

Production: 1 socket to license
Oracle License: US$ 5,800.00 + 1,276.00
Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00

Production: 1 socket to license
Oracle License: US$ 5,800.00 + 1,276.00

US$ 19,372.00 vs. US$ 33,524.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00
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Scenario 5- Using OSE + RAC
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
2 nodes RAC
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:
•
•
•
•

Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 70,000.00 + 15,400.00
RAC License: FREE
Dbvisit Standby: US$ 9,514.00 + 2,379.00

•
•

Production: 2 sockets to license
Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00

US$ 139,993.00 vs. US$ 919,880.00
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Scenario 6 – Using OSE + OVM + RAC
Primary

Secondary

Production Environment:

DR Environment:

•
•
•
•

•
•
•

Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
2 Nodes RAC
OS: RHEL 5.3

Costs:

Costs:
•
•
•
•

Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM
Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition
OS: RHEL 5.3

Production: 2 socket to license
Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00
RAC License: FREE
Dbvisit Standby: US$ 9,514.00 + 2,379.00

•
•

Production: 1 socket to license
Oracle License: US$ 17,500.00 + 3,850.00

US$ 75,943.00 vs. US$ 139,993.00 vs. US$ 919,880.00
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Questions?

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Take a Test Drive Today!

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Other Resources
•
•
•
•
•
•

Dbvisit Web Site – http://www.dbvisit.com
Dbvisit Online Documentation - http://www.dbvisit.com/support/resources/
Case studies - http://www.dbvisit.com/customers/case_studies/
Dbvisit Forums - http://www.dbvisit.com/forums/
Dbvisit Blog - http://blog.dbvisit.com/
Dbvisit Service Desk - http://www.dbvisit.com/support/service_desk/

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Other Resources

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Why everyone speaks about DR but only few use it?

  • 1.
    © 2 0 13 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 2.
    Why everyone talksabout DR but so few have it? By: Francisco Munoz Alvarez Business Development Manager Latin America Oracle ACE Director CLOUG (Chilean Oracle Users Group) President LAOUC (Latin American Oracle Users Group Community) President NZOUG (New Zealand Oracle Users Group) President 8/9/10g/11g OCP, RAC OCE, AS OCA, E-Business OCP, SQL/PLSQL OCA, Oracle 7 OCM Oracle 7,11GR2, OVM 3 and 12cR1 Beta Tester ITIL Certified 2010 ACE Director of the year by Oracle Magazine Blog: www.oraclenz.org - Twitter : fcomunoz © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 3.
    Ok, are youfrom …? Born here © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m Grow up here | Got Married Here Mature here Now Living here
  • 4.
    Today’s Agenda • Disaster Recovery • Optionsavailable? • Why only few use it? • Other Options/Solutions? • Q&A © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 5.
    Disaster and Recovery © 20 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 6.
    As a DBA,you are the person responsible for recovering the data and guard the business continuity of your organization. Consequently, you have the key responsibility for developing, deploying, and managing an efficient backup and recovery strategy for your institution or clients that will allow them to easily recover from any possible disastrous situation. Remember, data is one of the most important assets a company can have. Most organizations could not survive after the loss of this important asset. © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 7.
    Disaster Recovery Disaster Recovery(DR) is seen as • Process • Policies • Procedures Established to ensure recovery and continuation of • Infrastructure • Applications • Databases All of which is critical to the Business Continuation © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 8.
    Why Bother WithDisaster Recovery? • Most critical asset of companies today: Database • Must be protected against disaster: – Hardware Failure – Human Error – Natural Disasters • To ensure business continuity (93% of businesses that suffer significant data loss are out of business in 5 years – US Labor Department) Best way to protect your database AND your business: Standby Database © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 9.
    The traditional options © 20 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 10.
    OSE/OSEO • For OracleStandard Edition One/ Oracle Standard Edition – Implement a Home build Solution using scripts Some side effects can include a combination of:    Risk/Panic High Maintenance Costs High Management Costs © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 11.
    Building your ownDR Solution It seems easy so what is so hard about it? Account for the following: • • • • • • • • Robustness, when all else fails this has to work Completeness handle all Oracle errors and network failures Differences in Oracle versions Automatic continuation of log shipping when some nodes are down (RAC) Documentation and training Automation of creation of standby database Complexities of ASM, OMF, RAC Graceful switchover © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 12.
    OEE • For OracleEnterprise Edition – Use of Data Guard Some side effects can include a combination of:   High Implementation Costs (Needs to have OEE on both sides – Primary and DR) High Maintenance Costs (Will need to pay support for two OEE environments for life) © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 13.
    Why only fewuse it? © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 14.
    License Cost Amount inUS$ One Processor License Comparison 50,000 45,000 40,000 35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 5,000 - 63% 88% License Support SE1 SE Oracle Database Edition © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m | EE
  • 15.
    Cost Comparison Named UserPlus License Database Option / Edition Per User Support Processor License Processor 1 Support Oracle Database SE1 180.00 39.60 5,800.00 1,276.00 Oracle Database SE 350.00 77.00 17,500.00 3,850.00 Oracle Database EE 950.00 209.00 47,500.00 10,450.00 Oracle Real Application Clusters 460.00 101.20 23,000.00 5,060.00 Active Data Guard 200.00 44.00 10,000.00 2,200.00 1 For SE and SE1, one CPU socket = 1 Processor. For EE refer to the processor core factor table to establish correct processor count. For more details on pricing, see the Oracle Price lists available at: http://www.oracle.com/us/corporate/pricing/price-lists/index.html © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 16.
    Scenario 1 Primary Secondary Production Environment: DREnvironment: • • • • • • Server: 1 Quad core processors, 16 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: 1 Quad core processors, 16 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • Production: 4 cores * 0.5= 2 cores to license Oracle License: US$ 95,000.00 + 20,900.00 US$ 231,800.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m | Production: 4 cores * 0.5= 2 cores to license Oracle License: US$ 95,000.00 + 20,900.00
  • 17.
    Scenario 2 Primary Secondary Production Environment: DREnvironment: • • • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • Production: 8 cores * 0.5= 4 cores to license Oracle License: US$ 190,000.00 + 41,800.00 US$ 463,600.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m | Production: 8 cores * 0.5= 4 cores to license Oracle License: US$ 190,000.00 + 41,800.00
  • 18.
    Scenario 3 Primary Secondary Production Environment: DREnvironment: • • • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00 US$ 85,400.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m | Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00
  • 19.
    Scenario 4 Primary Secondary Production Environment: DREnvironment: • • • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00 US$ 28,304.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m | Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00
  • 20.
    Scenario 5 -RAC Primary Secondary Production Environment: DR Environment: • • • • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Enterprise Edition 2 Nodes RAC OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One OS: RHEL 5.3 Production: 16 cores * 0.5= 8 cores to license Oracle License: US$ 380,000.00 + 83,600.00 Oracle RAC License: US$ 184,000.00 + 40,480.00 • • US$ 919,880.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m | Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 190,000.00 + 41,800.00
  • 21.
    Any Other Options? © 20 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 22.
    Dbvisit • • • • • • • Used in 80+Countries Trusted by 600+ Companies Worldwide leader in disaster recovery solutions for Oracle Standard Edition Exceptional Product Engineers with “real world” DBA Experience Two Oracle 11g Certified Masters Regular presenters at Oracle events such as OOW and Collaborate Passionate about Oracle Technology © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 23.
    © 2 0 13 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 24.
    Product Lineup World-leading DisasterRecovery Solution for the Oracle SE database © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m | Affordable Alternative to GoldenGate: – Data Replication for Oracle-sourced databases
  • 25.
    Two Replication Types PhysicalReplication • • • • • “One on one” copy of the primary database in permanent recovery Use redo apply to keep up to date 100% binary copy, database are exact replicas Referred to as a standby database Best suited for DR Logical Replication • • • • • • Independent 2nd database in sync by replication mechanism Uses SQL statements to keep up to date Subset of data is replicated Cross version, cross platform Separate physical database structure Best suited for information sharing, migrations, real-time reporting etc © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 26.
    Dbvisit Standby • • • • • • • • Physical datareplication “Oracle Data Guard” for Standard Edition Easy to install, configure, use and manage Creates the standby database Support for RAC, OMF and ASM Support for Oracle 8i forwards, EE, SE, SE One and XE Broad OS compatibility – Oracle Linux, Oracle Solaris, Windows, AIX, HP-UX, VM Cloud deployment on Amazon AWS © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 27.
    Standby Database options 1.Data Guard (requires Oracle EE) 2. Do it yourself – sounds easier than it is 3. Third party products such as – Dbvisit Standby © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 28.
    Standby Database usingDbvisit Standby © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 29.
    Oracle RAC +Standby Database with SE Redo% Logs% Archived) Logs) Archived) Logs) DATABASE SERVER 1 DATABASE LOG E X TRACT SERVER TRANSPORT 3 LOG APPLY DATABASE SERVER 2 Node Oracle RAC using SE Oracle Single Instance PRIMARY SITE (RAC IMPLEMENTATION) © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m 2 | SECONDARY SITE(S)
  • 30.
    Dbvisit Standby Advantages • GUIor Command line interface • Same underlying architecture as Data Guard • Standby database is 100% copy, offload backups • Efficient using redo recovery Disadvantages • No support for cross platform, cross databases versions • At best standby is READ-ONLY (except with Active Data Guard) • Not selective in replication, all or nothing. • Failover is not done lightly © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 31.
    Standby Database Features • • • • • • CoreFunction – Send and Apply Redo Creates the standby database automatically Reporting standby database o Open Standby Read-Only Internal Dbvisit Standby Reporting o Archive / Transfer log gap reporting 20+ APIs Resynchronize Standby Database o Missing or Corrupt archive logs not yet applied to standby o Nologging operations was performed on Primary © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 32.
    Standby Database Features Failover •Activates the standby database in the event of DR • Initiates a resetlogs (redo logs are created) • There is no going back (unless using flashback - EE) • Potential for dataloss Switchover (role reversal) • Is used for planned maintenance on primary server • Switches database roles • Increase availability on database • Small outage required • No data loss © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 33.
    Favored by DBAs • • • • • • • Ourcustomers are DBAs Our products are built specifically for DBAs Make their life easier Do more on a limited budget Add real value to Oracle Standard Edition Our support is provided by DBAs Built by DBAs for DBAs © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 34.
    Dbvisit Standby GUIInterface © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 35.
    Any Other OptionNow? © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 36.
    Scenario 1- UsingOSE Primary Secondary Production Environment: DR Environment: • • • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • • Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00 Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00 Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00 US$ 90,620.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 37.
    Scenario 2 –Using OSE + OVM Primary Secondary Production Environment: DR Environment: • • • • • • Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • • Production: 1 socket to license Oracle License: US$ 17,500.00 + 3,850.00 Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00 Production: 1 socket to license Oracle License: US$ 17,500.00 + 3,850.00 US$ 47,920.00 vs. US$ 90,620.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 38.
    Scenario 3 –Using OSEO Primary Secondary Production Environment: DR Environment: • • • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • • Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00 Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00 Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 11,600.00 + 2,552.00 US$ 33,524.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 39.
    Scenario 4 –Using OSEO + OVM Primary Secondary Production Environment: DR Environment: • • • • • • Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One OS: RHEL 5.3 Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition One OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • • Production: 1 socket to license Oracle License: US$ 5,800.00 + 1,276.00 Dbvisit Standby: US$ 4,176.00 + 1,044.00 Production: 1 socket to license Oracle License: US$ 5,800.00 + 1,276.00 US$ 19,372.00 vs. US$ 33,524.00 vs. US$ 463,600.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 40.
    Scenario 5- UsingOSE + RAC Primary Secondary Production Environment: DR Environment: • • • • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 nodes RAC OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • Server: 2 Quad core processors, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 70,000.00 + 15,400.00 RAC License: FREE Dbvisit Standby: US$ 9,514.00 + 2,379.00 • • Production: 2 sockets to license Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00 US$ 139,993.00 vs. US$ 919,880.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 41.
    Scenario 6 –Using OSE + OVM + RAC Primary Secondary Production Environment: DR Environment: • • • • • • • Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition 2 Nodes RAC OS: RHEL 5.3 Costs: Costs: • • • • Server: Guest with 8 vCPUs, 32 GB RAM Oracle: Oracle Database Standard Edition OS: RHEL 5.3 Production: 2 socket to license Oracle License: US$ 35,000.00 + 7,700.00 RAC License: FREE Dbvisit Standby: US$ 9,514.00 + 2,379.00 • • Production: 1 socket to license Oracle License: US$ 17,500.00 + 3,850.00 US$ 75,943.00 vs. US$ 139,993.00 vs. US$ 919,880.00 © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 42.
    Questions? © 2 0 13 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 43.
    Take a TestDrive Today! © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 44.
    Other Resources • • • • • • Dbvisit WebSite – http://www.dbvisit.com Dbvisit Online Documentation - http://www.dbvisit.com/support/resources/ Case studies - http://www.dbvisit.com/customers/case_studies/ Dbvisit Forums - http://www.dbvisit.com/forums/ Dbvisit Blog - http://blog.dbvisit.com/ Dbvisit Service Desk - http://www.dbvisit.com/support/service_desk/ © 2 0 1 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 45.
    Other Resources © 2 01 3 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |
  • 46.
    © 2 0 13 D b v i s i t S o f t w a r e L i m i t e d d b v i s i t . c o m |