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Oracle Database 12c Backup and Recovery Survival Guide

You're reading from   Oracle Database 12c Backup and Recovery Survival Guide A comprehensive guide for every DBA to learn recovery and backup solutions

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782171201
Length 440 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Oracle Database 12c Backup and Recovery Survival Guide
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Understanding the Basics of Backup and Recovery 2. NOLOGGING Operations FREE CHAPTER 3. What is New in 12c 4. User-managed Backup and Recovery 5. Understanding RMAN and Simple Backups 6. Configuring and Recovering with RMAN 7. RMAN Reporting and Catalog Management 8. RMAN Troubleshooting and Tuning 9. Understanding Data Pump 10. Advanced Data Pump 11. OEM12c and SQL Developer Scenarios and Examples – A Hands-on Lab Index

Using RMAN compression for backups


As the databases keep growing, so does the space occupied by their backups. Fortunately, RMAN has built-in support to compress such large sized backups which can be handy rather than using an OS utility such as TAR or so on. The following are the two kinds of compression techniques used by RMAN:

  • Block Compression

  • Binary Compression

RMAN uses block compression by default and that's why you can't set it off (or on either). Two modes of block compression are available, Unused Block Compression (UBC) and Null Block Compression (NBC). In NBC, all the empty blocks which were not used are skipped. This mode is always used in level 0 and for full backups. In UBC, blocks which are not used by any object are not read or included in the backups. Even the blocks which were used in the past but are empty now (for example, blocks after a truncate table or drop table operation) are skipped. Unlike NBC, which works for all the backups, UBC only works for disk-based backups...

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