Data Backup and Recovery

SMO Repository Setup

rnjones509
2,605 Views

 

We are in the midst of creating several new Linux database servers for Oracle 11.2 with NetApp FAS2020 storage. NetApp has a plethora of tools for managing the storage of an Oracle environment, and they are all new to us. We have some unresolved questions about where to put the SMO Repository(ies).

I have not recognized the answers from the SnapManager for Oracle Best Practices guide.

I am an Oracle DBA, not a NetApp administrator, and our NetApp admin also has little NetApp experience or training. With that in mind, I hope my post makes sense.

Our target environment:

Two production database servers, each with two application databases.

One QA/development database server, with multiple QA/dev databases cloned from the production databases.

SMO Repository placement:

Since a SMO Repository cannot be used to manage the database that contains it, I assume you need at least two SMO Repositories if all databases are to be managed by SMO Repositories.

I am assuming it will be reasonable to place one SMO Repository within one of the application databases on production server #1 (it would manage all databases except those on production server #1), and another SMO Repository within one of the application databases on production server #2 (it would manage all databases on production server #1).

If the preferred alternative is instead to place the primary SMO Repository in its own separate database, then:

1) what server?

2) what about a second SMO Repository to manage the primary SMO Repository database?

Does a SMO Repository generate much activity in its database?  If the repository is placed within an existing production database, or in a separate database on a production server, is its activity likely to negatively impact performance of the production applications? I am assuming it will not.

What recommendations about our proposed architecture?

1 REPLY 1

thomas_glodde
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Hi there,

if you have a high-availability environment (RAC Cluster) i´d go for 2 RAC clusters, each holding the repository of the other cluster.

If you have single server instances, i´d go for a dedicated repository server (even a oracleXE on a VM). There is not much load or space involved, each backup takes 100kb data max in the repository.

Regards,

Thomas

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