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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

Pluggable database


We are now able to have multiple databases sharing a single instance and Oracle binaries. Each of the databases will be configurable to a degree and will allow some parameters to be set specifically for themselves (due that they will share the same initialization parameter file) and what is better, each database will be completely isolated from each other without either knowing that the other exists.

A CDB is a single physical database that contains a root container with the main Oracle data dictionary and at least one PDB with specific application data. A PDB is a portable container with its own data dictionary, including metadata and internal links to the system-supplied objects in the root container, and this PDB will appear to an Oracle Net client as a traditional Oracle database. The CDB also contains a PDB called SEED, which is used as a template when an empty PDB needs to be created. The following figure shows an example of a CDB with five PDBs:

When creating a database...

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