Thank you Tom.
Robert, March 30, 2009 - 11:17 am UTC
Raj, June 22, 2009 - 3:33 am UTC
Hi Tom,
I multiplex but I have a problem. I have two ASM diskgroups, +DATA(tier1 SAN superfast disk) and +FRA(tier2 SAN not so fast to save money). +FRA is only used to keep backups.
I have two members in each online log group but BOTH are on +DATA and so are all controlfile copies. I dont think its wise to put one member on slower disk(+FRA) because it will affect lgwr performance.
So my questions are:
1)Am I being foolish to put both members of log groups on the same diskgroup?
2)Do I need to create another diskgroup(tier1 san) just for the sake of multiplexing my redo logs?
3)Will putting a controlfile on slower disk affect database performace significantly?
Thank you,
Raj.
June 22, 2009 - 12:20 pm UTC
depends on how protected that diskgroup is, what is the redundancy on it
could putting control files on slower devices affect performance? depends if your foregrounds are waiting on something control file related. The only answer is "it depends, it might - it might not"
Recovery Area on slower disk
Raj, July 28, 2009 - 6:50 pm UTC
Hi Tom,
Thank you for your reply. My asm diskgroups are "external" redundancy as the underlying asm disks are LUNS (on RAID). A LUN can be lost for eg. misallocation due to human error, in which case I lose the whole diskgroup and all my online redo logs along with it. I have created a separate diskgroup to remedy this and mirrored the redo logs on it.
I felt the need to comment here because DBA's might get the impression that they can use slower disk for flash recovery area, but they shouldn't. Slower disk can be used for backups but not flash recovery area (area to keep ALL files needed for recovery with space managment by oracle). Oracle/EMC docs say that we can use the "inner" cylinders for FRA and "outer" cylinders for DATA, but that is not the same thing as using disk of a completely different bandwidth.
Thank you.