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Creating a 10gr1 Data Guard Physical Standby on Linux (Doc ID 248382.1)

Last updated on DECEMBER 28, 2023

Applies to:

Oracle Database - Enterprise Edition - Version 9.0.1.0 and later
Oracle Database Cloud Schema Service - Version N/A and later
Gen 1 Exadata Cloud at Customer (Oracle Exadata Database Cloud Machine) - Version N/A and later
Oracle Database Exadata Express Cloud Service - Version N/A and later
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure - Database Service - Version N/A and later
Linux x86

Purpose

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:

Primary Host: STDG2
Standby Host: STDG1
Database Name: V10g
Primary Db_unique_name: V10g_stdg2
Standby DB_unique_name: V10g_stdg1
Primary File Locations: /u01/prim/,/u02/prim/
Standby File Locations: /u01/stdby, /u02/stdby

 

This document has been created with step-by-step instructions on how
to create a Data Guard Physical Standby environment, derived from the
10G documentation. Although, this setup was tested with Linux, the
procedure would be the same for any flavor of Unix.
Note: For 10gr2 please refer:
Note 343424.1 Creating a 10gr2 Data Guard Physical Standby database with
Real-Time apply

Details

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