Performing common log-related tasks for Oracle DB instances - Amazon Relational Database Service
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Performing common log-related tasks for Oracle DB instances

Following, you can find how to perform certain common DBA tasks related to logging on your Amazon RDS DB instances running Oracle. To deliver a managed service experience, Amazon RDS doesn't provide shell access to DB instances, and restricts access to certain system procedures and tables that require advanced privileges.

For more information, see Oracle database log files.

Setting force logging

In force logging mode, Oracle logs all changes to the database except changes in temporary tablespaces and temporary segments (NOLOGGING clauses are ignored). For more information, see Specifying FORCE LOGGING mode in the Oracle documentation.

To set force logging, use the Amazon RDS procedure rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.force_logging. The force_logging procedure has the following parameters.

Parameter name Data type Default Yes Description

p_enable

boolean

true

No

Set to true to put the database in force logging mode, false to remove the database from force logging mode.

The following example puts the database in force logging mode.

EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.force_logging(p_enable => true);

Setting supplemental logging

If you enable supplemental logging, LogMiner has the necessary information to support chained rows and clustered tables. For more information, see Supplemental logging in the Oracle documentation.

Oracle Database doesn't enable supplemental logging by default. To enable and disable supplemental logging, use the Amazon RDS procedure rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.alter_supplemental_logging. For more information about how Amazon RDS manages the retention of archived redo logs for Oracle DB instances, see Retaining archived redo logs.

The alter_supplemental_logging procedure has the following parameters.

Parameter name Data type Default Required Description

p_action

varchar2

Yes

'ADD' to add supplemental logging, 'DROP' to drop supplemental logging.

p_type

varchar2

null

No

The type of supplemental logging. Valid values are 'ALL', 'FOREIGN KEY', 'PRIMARY KEY', 'UNIQUE', or PROCEDURAL.

The following example enables supplemental logging.

begin rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.alter_supplemental_logging( p_action => 'ADD'); end; /

The following example enables supplemental logging for all fixed-length maximum size columns.

begin rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.alter_supplemental_logging( p_action => 'ADD', p_type => 'ALL'); end; /

The following example enables supplemental logging for primary key columns.

begin rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.alter_supplemental_logging( p_action => 'ADD', p_type => 'PRIMARY KEY'); end; /

Switching online log files

To switch log files, use the Amazon RDS procedure rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.switch_logfile. The switch_logfile procedure has no parameters.

The following example switches log files.

EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.switch_logfile;

Adding online redo logs

An Amazon RDS DB instance running Oracle starts with four online redo logs, 128 MB each. To add additional redo logs, use the Amazon RDS procedure rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.add_logfile.

The add_logfile procedure has the following parameters.

Note

The parameters are mutually exclusive.

Parameter name Data type Default Required Description

bytes

positive

null

No

The size of the log file in bytes.

p_size

varchar2

Yes

The size of the log file. You can specify the size in kilobytes (K), megabytes (M), or gigabytes (G).

The following command adds a 100 MB log file.

EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.add_logfile(p_size => '100M');

Dropping online redo logs

To drop redo logs, use the Amazon RDS procedure rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.drop_logfile. The drop_logfile procedure has the following parameters.

Parameter name Data type Default Required Description

grp

positive

Yes

The group number of the log.

The following example drops the log with group number 3.

EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.drop_logfile(grp => 3);

You can only drop logs that have a status of unused or inactive. The following example gets the statuses of the logs.

SELECT GROUP#, STATUS FROM V$LOG; GROUP# STATUS ---------- ---------------- 1 CURRENT 2 INACTIVE 3 INACTIVE 4 UNUSED

Resizing online redo logs

An Amazon RDS DB instance running Oracle starts with four online redo logs, 128 MB each. The following example shows how you can use Amazon RDS procedures to resize your logs from 128 MB each to 512 MB each.

/* Query V$LOG to see the logs. */ /* You start with 4 logs of 128 MB each. */ SELECT GROUP#, BYTES, STATUS FROM V$LOG; GROUP# BYTES STATUS ---------- ---------- ---------------- 1 134217728 INACTIVE 2 134217728 CURRENT 3 134217728 INACTIVE 4 134217728 INACTIVE /* Add four new logs that are each 512 MB */ EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.add_logfile(bytes => 536870912); EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.add_logfile(bytes => 536870912); EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.add_logfile(bytes => 536870912); EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.add_logfile(bytes => 536870912); /* Query V$LOG to see the logs. */ /* Now there are 8 logs. */ SELECT GROUP#, BYTES, STATUS FROM V$LOG; GROUP# BYTES STATUS ---------- ---------- ---------------- 1 134217728 INACTIVE 2 134217728 CURRENT 3 134217728 INACTIVE 4 134217728 INACTIVE 5 536870912 UNUSED 6 536870912 UNUSED 7 536870912 UNUSED 8 536870912 UNUSED /* Drop each inactive log using the group number. */ EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.drop_logfile(grp => 1); EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.drop_logfile(grp => 3); EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.drop_logfile(grp => 4); /* Query V$LOG to see the logs. */ /* Now there are 5 logs. */ select GROUP#, BYTES, STATUS from V$LOG; GROUP# BYTES STATUS ---------- ---------- ---------------- 2 134217728 CURRENT 5 536870912 UNUSED 6 536870912 UNUSED 7 536870912 UNUSED 8 536870912 UNUSED /* Switch logs so that group 2 is no longer current. */ EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.switch_logfile; /* Query V$LOG to see the logs. */ /* Now one of the new logs is current. */ SQL>SELECT GROUP#, BYTES, STATUS FROM V$LOG; GROUP# BYTES STATUS ---------- ---------- ---------------- 2 134217728 ACTIVE 5 536870912 CURRENT 6 536870912 UNUSED 7 536870912 UNUSED 8 536870912 UNUSED /* If the status of log 2 is still "ACTIVE", issue a checkpoint to clear it to "INACTIVE". */ EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.checkpoint; /* Query V$LOG to see the logs. */ /* Now the final original log is inactive. */ select GROUP#, BYTES, STATUS from V$LOG; GROUP# BYTES STATUS ---------- ---------- ---------------- 2 134217728 INACTIVE 5 536870912 CURRENT 6 536870912 UNUSED 7 536870912 UNUSED 8 536870912 UNUSED # Drop the final inactive log. EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.drop_logfile(grp => 2); /* Query V$LOG to see the logs. */ /* Now there are four 512 MB logs. */ SELECT GROUP#, BYTES, STATUS FROM V$LOG; GROUP# BYTES STATUS ---------- ---------- ---------------- 5 536870912 CURRENT 6 536870912 UNUSED 7 536870912 UNUSED 8 536870912 UNUSED

Retaining archived redo logs

You can retain archived redo logs locally on your DB instance for use with products like Oracle LogMiner (DBMS_LOGMNR). After you have retained the redo logs, you can use LogMiner to analyze the logs. For more information, see Using LogMiner to analyze redo log files in the Oracle documentation.

To retain archived redo logs, use the Amazon RDS procedure rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.set_configuration. The set_configuration procedure has the following parameters.

Parameter name Data type Default Required Description

name

varchar

Yes

The name of the configuration to update.

value

varchar

Yes

The value for the configuration.

The following example retains 24 hours of redo logs.

begin rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.set_configuration( name => 'archivelog retention hours', value => '24'); end; / commit;
Note

The commit is required for the change to take effect.

To view how long archived redo logs are kept for your DB instance, use the Amazon RDS procedure rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.show_configuration.

The following example shows the log retention time.

set serveroutput on EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_util.show_configuration;

The output shows the current setting for archivelog retention hours. The following output shows that archived redo logs are kept for 48 hours.

NAME:archivelog retention hours VALUE:48 DESCRIPTION:ArchiveLog expiration specifies the duration in hours before archive/redo log files are automatically deleted.

Because the archived redo logs are retained on your DB instance, ensure that your DB instance has enough allocated storage for the retained logs. To determine how much space your DB instance has used in the last X hours, you can run the following query, replacing X with the number of hours.

SELECT SUM(BLOCKS * BLOCK_SIZE) bytes FROM V$ARCHIVED_LOG WHERE FIRST_TIME >= SYSDATE-(X/24) AND DEST_ID=1;

RDS for Oracle only generates archived redo logs when the backup retention period of your DB instance is greater than zero. By default the backup retention period is greater than zero.

When the archived log retention period expires, RDS for Oracle removes the archived redo logs from your DB instance. To support restoring your DB instance to a point in time, Amazon RDS retains the archived redo logs outside of your DB instance based on the backup retention period. To modify the backup retention period, see Modifying an Amazon RDS DB instance.

Note

In some cases, you might be using JDBC on Linux to download archived redo logs and experience long latency times and connection resets. In such cases, the issues might be caused by the default random number generator setting on your Java client. We recommend setting your JDBC drivers to use a nonblocking random number generator.

Accessing online and archived redo logs

You might want to access your online and archived redo log files for mining with external tools such as GoldenGate, Attunity, Informatica, and others. To access these files, do the following:

  1. Create directory objects that provide read-only access to the physical file paths.

    Use rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.create_archivelog_dir and rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.create_onlinelog_dir.

  2. Read the files using PL/SQL.

    You can read the files by using PL/SQL. For more information about reading files from directory objects, see Listing files in a DB instance directory and Reading files in a DB instance directory.

Accessing transaction logs is supported for the following releases:

  • Oracle Database 21c

  • Oracle Database 19c

  • Oracle Database 12c Release 2 (12.2.0.1)

  • Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1)

The following code creates directories that provide read-only access to your online and archived redo log files:

Important

This code also revokes the DROP ANY DIRECTORY privilege.

EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.create_archivelog_dir; EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.create_onlinelog_dir;

The following code drops the directories for your online and archived redo log files.

EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.drop_archivelog_dir; EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.drop_onlinelog_dir;

The following code grants and revokes the DROP ANY DIRECTORY privilege.

EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.revoke_drop_any_directory; EXEC rdsadmin.rdsadmin_master_util.grant_drop_any_directory;

Downloading archived redo logs from Amazon S3

You can download archived redo logs on your DB instance using the rdsadmin.rdsadmin_archive_log_download package. If archived redo logs are no longer on your DB instance, you might want to download them again from Amazon S3. Then you can mine the logs or use them to recover or replicate your database.

Note

You can't download archived redo logs on read replica instances.

Downloading archived redo logs: basic steps

The availability of your archived redo logs depends on the following retention policies:

  • Backup retention policy – Logs inside of this policy are available in Amazon S3. Logs outside of this policy are removed.

  • Archived log retention policy – Logs inside of this policy are available on your DB instance. Logs outside of this policy are removed.

If logs aren't on your instance but are protected by your backup retention period, use rdsadmin.rdsadmin_archive_log_download to download them again. RDS for Oracle saves the logs to the /rdsdbdata/log/arch directory on your DB instance.

To download archived redo logs from Amazon S3
  1. Configure your retention period to ensure your downloaded archived redo logs are retained for the duration you need them. Make sure to COMMIT your change.

    RDS retains your downloaded logs according to the archived log retention policy, starting from the time the logs were downloaded. To learn how to set the retention policy, see Retaining archived redo logs.

  2. Wait up to 5 minutes for the archived log retention policy change to take effect.

  3. Download the archived redo logs from Amazon S3 using rdsadmin.rdsadmin_archive_log_download.

    For more information, see Downloading a single archived redo log and Downloading a series of archived redo logs.

    Note

    RDS automatically checks the available storage before downloading. If the requested logs consume a high percentage of space, you receive an alert.

  4. Confirm that the logs were downloaded from Amazon S3 successfully.

    You can view the status of your download task in a bdump file. The bdump files have the path name /rdsdbdata/log/trace/dbtask-task-id.log. In the preceding download step, you run a SELECT statement that returns the task ID in a VARCHAR2 data type. For more information, see similar examples in Monitoring the status of a file transfer.

Downloading a single archived redo log

To download a single archived redo log to the /rdsdbdata/log/arch directory, use rdsadmin.rdsadmin_archive_log_download.download_log_with_seqnum. This procedure has the following parameter.

Parameter name Data type Default Required Description

seqnum

number

Yes

The sequence number of the archived redo log.

The following example downloads the log with sequence number 20.

SELECT rdsadmin.rdsadmin_archive_log_download.download_log_with_seqnum(seqnum => 20) AS TASK_ID FROM DUAL;

Downloading a series of archived redo logs

To download a series of archived redo logs to the /rdsdbdata/log/arch directory, use download_logs_in_seqnum_range. Your download is limited to 300 logs per request. The download_logs_in_seqnum_range procedure has the following parameters.

Parameter name Data type Default Required Description

start_seq

number

Yes

The starting sequence number for the series.

end_seq

number

Yes

The ending sequence number for the series.

The following example downloads the logs from sequence 50 to 100.

SELECT rdsadmin.rdsadmin_archive_log_download.download_logs_in_seqnum_range(start_seq => 50, end_seq => 100) AS TASK_ID FROM DUAL;