Data Guard 9i Creating a Logical Standby Database
(Doc ID 186150.1)
Last updated on AUGUST 03, 2023
Applies to:
Oracle Database - Enterprise Edition - Version 9.2.0.1 to 9.2.0.8 [Release 9.2]Oracle Database Cloud Schema Service - Version N/A and later
Oracle Database Exadata Express Cloud Service - Version N/A and later
Gen 1 Exadata Cloud at Customer (Oracle Exadata Database Cloud Machine) - Version N/A and later
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure - Database Service - Version N/A and later
Information in this document applies to any platform.
Purpose
The procedures below contain information about creating a logical standby.
NOTE: In the images and/or the document content below, the user information and environment data used
represents fictitious data from the Oracle sample schema(s),Public Documentation delivered with an Oracle
database product or other training material. Any similarity to actual environments, actual persons, living or
dead, is purely coincidental and not intended in any manner.
For the purposes of this document, the following fictitious environment is used as an example to describe
the procedure:
sid=LGSTBY
database names=DB1, DB2
tablespace_name = logical_tblsp
host=<host name 1>,<host name 2>
Service Name = DB1,DB2
directory = /u01/oradata and all subdirectories
Scope
These procedures are to be used in conjunction with those contained within
the Oracle9i Data Guard Concepts and Administration Release 2 (9.2) manual,
Chapter 4 Creating a Logical Standby Database. This document compliments and
supplements the existing Oracle9i Data Guard Concepts and Administration
documentation; it does not replace the current documentation.
If you are creating a logical standby on a system that has Real Application
Clusters installed, then most of the actions described should be performed on
only one node of the system. You should perform the actions described on only
one node unless instructed otherwise in a particular step.
Details
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