Being possible and being supported are 2 different things. With a database
that size, I would tend to stay in a supported universe.
-joe
From: oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf
Of Ahmed Fikri
Sent: Friday, February 7, 2020 3:03 PM
To: ORACLE-L <oracle-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: RE: convert big endian to medium endian
sorry to ask again to this topic: why it is not possible to take all datafiles
from the aix with big endian and convert them using external program (maybe a c
program or even a dbms_file_transf r from other oracle instance) to the target
endian and use them to create the new DB? This is like creating a new Database
using a cold backup only with the additional step to convert the datafiles. I'm
unfortunately not convinced that we should use the TTS methode. I think that
using TTS is only good if we want to copy only a few TS of the DB. But in my
case I want to copy the whole DB.
Thanks and regards.
Am Fr., 7. Feb. 2020 um 20:41 Uhr schrieb Ahmed Fikri
<gherrami@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:gherrami@xxxxxxxxx>>:
Only some additional information about the source DB:
The db has about 4 million table/index partitions and every days will be
created about 1 Thousand Partitions (I'm not sure whether this is good design).
This could be maybe the reason why the metadata export is so slowly.
And to be honest the DBAs have already given some mos id for the datapump issue
concerning the 11.2.0.4 version related to some x$k.. view. (I can't remember
that now and I have now no access to my work email)
Ahmed Fikri <gherrami@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:gherrami@xxxxxxxxx>> schrieb am Fr., 7.
Feb. 2020, 19:26:
I write this email from an other email box(I'm in the train and the other app
doesn't work now)
Thanks a lot Lewis not only for your technical explanation but also for reading
between the lines and understanding my real problem. (Even my broken English)
Thanks and Regards
Ahmed
Jonathan Lewis
<jonathan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:jonathan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> schrieb am
Fr., 7. Feb. 2020, 19:15:
Your approach will not work because Oracle Corp. has not implemented an "in
situ" mechanism for reading and updating a system tablespace and data
dictionary that is in the wrong endian format. If they had produced such a
mechanism they would have been shouting about it because it would make it much
easier to migrate to Exadata from any alien platform.
If your dba is an expert then they might have mentioned which version of Oracle
(11g is not a version, it's a marketing term), and which bug. There are many
known bugs relating to slow metadata export and many of those bugs have
patches. If your dba is a really expert expert they may even be able to work
out WHY the export is slow (if there isn't a patch to fix their problem) and
hack the data dictionary or supply SQL Patches to speed it up.
Regards
Jonathan Lewis
________________________________________
From: oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> on behalf
of ahmed.fikri@xxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ahmed.fikri@xxxxxxxxxxx>
<ahmed.fikri@xxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ahmed.fikri@xxxxxxxxxxx>>
Sent: 07 February 2020 17:16
To: Clay.Jackson@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:Clay.Jackson@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: oracle list
Subject: AW: RE: convert big endian to medium endian
thanks for this information. But when I hear the only one way to do something,
I need to know why there is only one way. And why my approach will not work.
My problem is when using XTTS I should (from my understanding) export the
metadata using datapump and the problem this takes 3 days and 4 hours. And from
my understanding why should I export the metadata. Our DBA is an expert and he
told me the export takes long time because of known bug in 11g. In the past I
could copy databases using only cold backup, I could copy the data files in
parallel using several processes. I'm not a DBA (I am from the application
vendor installed on the db) but I read D. Kuhn book from the beginning to the
end. So I need to understand how to to do this task: upgrading 11g on aix to
12g on linux in less than one weekend without using the buggy datapump.
this should be possible or not?The db is only 16tb big.
regards
Ahmed
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--- Original-Nachricht ---
Von: Clay Jackson (cjackson)
Betreff: RE: convert big endian to medium endian
Datum: 07.02.2020, 17:55 Uhr
An: oracle list
AFAIK:
The only way this would work would be with transportable tablespaces; either
using the tablespaces, or RMAN (MOS 2013271.1).
There’s no “silver bullet” for this…
IMHO, your best choice is export/import with some sort of replication solution
to help minimize downtime.
Clay Jackson
Database Solutions Sales Engineer
clay.jackson@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:clay.jackson@xxxxxxxxx>
office 949-754-1203 mobile 425-802-9603

From: oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> On Behalf
Of ahmed.fikri@xxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ahmed.fikri@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, February 7, 2020 6:02 AM
To: oracle list <oracle-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:oracle-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>>
Subject: convert big endian to medium endian
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Hi all,
I want to test (I hope this weekend) following:
1 from 12c Db on AIX (big endian) I will create a cold backup
2 on Oracle linux (medium endian) I will create a new db using the cold backup
from point 1
3 somehow I should convert the files from point 1 in medium endian
is this possible?
I don't want to use XTTTS and exporting the metadata using data pump.
Kind Regards
Ahmed
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