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Course Overview Oracle 11g is designed to handle the ever-increasing data needs of modern organisations. Effective management of Oracle 11g capabilities can help organisations ensure the integrity and security of data. In this hands-on course, you maximise the features of Oracle 11g to build and maintain databases, configure memory and storage for optimal performance, and manage large amounts of data. Audience Database administrators, developers with data management responsibilities and others involved in the management or deployment of Oracle 11g databases. Course 926, " Oracle Database 11g Comprehensive Introduction, " or equivalent experience is assumed. Skills Gained - Create, maintain and support Oracle 11g databases and instances
- Automate database administration tasks with Oracle Enterprise Manager 11g Database Control
- Provide transaction support and flashback capability with UNDO tablespaces
- Control user access and ensure database security through privileges and roles
- Employ effective storage management to maximise space usage
- Partition large tables and indexes to ease administration and improve performance
Course Outline Introduction to Oracle Database 11g Administration Your responsibilities as an Oracle 11g DBA - Configuring the instance and database
- Maintaining security
- Balancing user requirements and resources
- Ensuring database availability
The Oracle 11g architecture - Processing transactions with the server
- Identifying types of Oracle 11 g processes and memory structures
- Determining database file structure
- Archiving redo log information
- Sizing the Result Cache for optimizing repeated queries
Building an Oracle 11g Database Creating the database - Setting the initialisation parameters
- Simplifying memory allocation with memory targets
- Establishing network connectivity
- Converting from text-based to server parameter files
- Configuring control files and redo log files
Starting and stopping the database - Mounting and opening the database with SQL*Plus
- Authenticating connections having SYSDBA privilege
- Closing the database and shutting down the instance
Automating Database Management The Oracle Enterprise Manager architecture - Navigating the graphical interface
- Comparing command-line and graphical techniques
Administering with Database Control - Equipping Database Control to manage additional databases
- Setting thresholds and generating alerts
- Verifying changes in the data dictionary
- Performing privilege management
Performing Flashback Operations Managing space for rollback and read consistency - Configuring UNDO tablespaces
- Monitoring expansion of rollback segments
- Swapping to an alternative UNDO tablespace
Resetting data to recent points in time with flashback - Tracking changes to data values with row history
- Obtaining transaction history with Flashback Transaction
- Performing efficient recovery of data with Flashback Table
- Retrieving dropped tables and dependent objects from the recycle bin
Securing the Database Establishing user accounts - Authenticating users with sophisticated password checking
- Allocating space quotas for user schemas
- Limiting resource usage through profiles
Enforcing security - Granting and revoking system and object privileges
- Simplifying privilege management with roles
- Preventing changes to read-only tables
Controlling Database Storage Defining logical and physical structures - Creating, altering, and dropping tablespaces
- Handling sort data efficiently with temporary tablespaces
- Comparing traditionally managed and Oracle-managed files
Configuring storage patterns for database objects - Structuring data and index segments
- Sizing database objects by defining extents and block occupancy
- Eliminating row migration with PCTFREE and Data Pump
- Compressing table data to conserve storage
- Shrinking tables and indexes online to regain space
Partitioning to Support Administration and Availability Creating table partitions and subpartitions - Selecting partitioning methods: range, list, hash, interval
- Partitioning tables based on virtual columns
- Setting up automatic partition allocation
- Referencing the partitioning method in child tables
- Administering partitions with merge, split, add and drop
Maintaining index partitions - Maximising performance with local and global indexes
- Monitoring index partition usage
- Rebuilding unusable indexes
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