Yes, archiving the current log allows the standby to catch up.
DGMGRL> show configuration verbose
Configuration - itsdb_DG_CONFIG
Protection Mode: MaxPerformance
Members:
itsdb1 - Primary database
itsdb2 - Physical standby database
fitsdb1 - Physical standby database
Properties:
FastStartFailoverThreshold = '30'
OperationTimeout = '30'
TraceLevel = 'USER'
FastStartFailoverLagLimit = '30'
CommunicationTimeout = '180'
ObserverReconnect = '0'
FastStartFailoverAutoReinstate = 'TRUE'
FastStartFailoverPmyShutdown = 'TRUE'
BystandersFollowRoleChange = 'ALL'
ObserverOverride = 'FALSE'
ExternalDestination1 = ''
ExternalDestination2 = ''
PrimaryLostWriteAction = 'CONTINUE'
Fast-Start Failover: DISABLED
Configuration Status:
SUCCESS
DGMGRL> show database verbose itsdb1
Database - itsdb1
Role: PRIMARY
Intended State: TRANSPORT-ON
Instance(s):
its1
Properties:
DGConnectIdentifier = 'itsdb1'
ObserverConnectIdentifier = ''
LogXptMode = 'ASYNC'
RedoRoutes = ''
DelayMins = '0'
Binding = 'optional'
MaxFailure = '0'
MaxConnections = '1'
ReopenSecs = '300'
NetTimeout = '30'
RedoCompression = 'DISABLE'
LogShipping = 'ON'
PreferredApplyInstance = ''
ApplyInstanceTimeout = '0'
ApplyLagThreshold = '0'
TransportLagThreshold = '0'
TransportDisconnectedThreshold = '30'
ApplyParallel = 'AUTO'
StandbyFileManagement = 'AUTO'
ArchiveLagTarget = '0'
LogArchiveMaxProcesses = '30'
LogArchiveMinSucceedDest = '1'
DbFileNameConvert = '+DATA/ITSDB2/, +DATA/ITSDB1/'
LogFileNameConvert = '+DATA/ITSDB2/, +DATA/ITSDB1/'
FastStartFailoverTarget = ''
InconsistentProperties = '(monitor)'
InconsistentLogXptProps = '(monitor)'
SendQEntries = '(monitor)'
LogXptStatus = '(monitor)'
RecvQEntries = '(monitor)'
StaticConnectIdentifier =
'(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=pitsdbs01)(PORT=1521))(CONNECT_DATA=(SERVICE_NAME=itsdb1_DGMGRL)(INSTANCE_NAME=its1)(SERVER=DEDICATED)))'
StandbyArchiveLocation = '/backup/itsdb/archives'
AlternateLocation = ''
LogArchiveTrace = '0'
LogArchiveFormat = '%t_%s_%r.arc'
TopWaitEvents = '(monitor)'
Database Status:
SUCCESS
DGMGRL> show database verbose itsdb2
Database - itsdb2
Role: PHYSICAL STANDBY
Intended State: APPLY-ON
Transport Lag: 0 seconds (computed 0 seconds ago)
Apply Lag: 0 seconds (computed 0 seconds ago)
Average Apply Rate: 71.00 KByte/s
Active Apply Rate: 450.00 KByte/s
Maximum Apply Rate: 15.18 MByte/s
Real Time Query: OFF
Instance(s):
its2
Properties:
DGConnectIdentifier = 'itsdb2'
ObserverConnectIdentifier = ''
LogXptMode = 'ASYNC'
RedoRoutes = ''
DelayMins = '0'
Binding = 'optional'
MaxFailure = '0'
MaxConnections = '1'
ReopenSecs = '300'
NetTimeout = '30'
RedoCompression = 'DISABLE'
LogShipping = 'ON'
PreferredApplyInstance = ''
ApplyInstanceTimeout = '0'
ApplyLagThreshold = '0'
TransportLagThreshold = '0'
TransportDisconnectedThreshold = '30'
ApplyParallel = 'AUTO'
StandbyFileManagement = 'AUTO'
ArchiveLagTarget = '0'
LogArchiveMaxProcesses = '30'
LogArchiveMinSucceedDest = '1'
DbFileNameConvert = '+DATA/ITSDB1/, +DATA/ITSDB2/'
LogFileNameConvert = '+DATA/ITSDB1/, +DATA/ITSDB2/'
FastStartFailoverTarget = ''
InconsistentProperties = '(monitor)'
InconsistentLogXptProps = '(monitor)'
SendQEntries = '(monitor)'
LogXptStatus = '(monitor)'
RecvQEntries = '(monitor)'
StaticConnectIdentifier =
'(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=pitsdbs02)(PORT=1521))(CONNECT_DATA=(SERVICE_NAME=itsdb2_DGMGRL)(INSTANCE_NAME=its2)(SERVER=DEDICATED)))'
StandbyArchiveLocation = '/backup/itsdb/archives'
AlternateLocation = ''
LogArchiveTrace = '0'
LogArchiveFormat = '%t_%s_%r.arc'
TopWaitEvents = '(monitor)'
Database Status:
SUCCESS
*The standby below is the one that lags.*
DGMGRL> show database verbose fitsdb1
Database - fitsdb1
Role: PHYSICAL STANDBY
Intended State: APPLY-ON
Transport Lag: 12 minutes 45 seconds (computed 12 seconds ago)
Apply Lag: 12 minutes 45 seconds (computed 12 seconds ago)
Average Apply Rate: 79.00 KByte/s
Active Apply Rate: 60.79 MByte/s
Maximum Apply Rate: 61.21 MByte/s
Real Time Query: OFF
Instance(s):
fits1
Properties:
DGConnectIdentifier = 'fitsdb1'
ObserverConnectIdentifier = ''
LogXptMode = 'ASYNC'
RedoRoutes = ''
DelayMins = '0'
Binding = 'optional'
MaxFailure = '0'
MaxConnections = '1'
ReopenSecs = '300'
NetTimeout = '30'
RedoCompression = 'DISABLE'
LogShipping = 'ON'
PreferredApplyInstance = ''
ApplyInstanceTimeout = '0'
ApplyLagThreshold = '0'
TransportLagThreshold = '0'
TransportDisconnectedThreshold = '30'
ApplyParallel = 'AUTO'
StandbyFileManagement = 'AUTO'
ArchiveLagTarget = '0'
LogArchiveMaxProcesses = '30'
LogArchiveMinSucceedDest = '1'
DbFileNameConvert = '+DATA/ITSDB2/, +DATA/FITSDB1/'
LogFileNameConvert = '+DATA/ITSDB2/, +DATA/FITSDB1/'
FastStartFailoverTarget = ''
InconsistentProperties = '(monitor)'
InconsistentLogXptProps = '(monitor)'
SendQEntries = '(monitor)'
LogXptStatus = '(monitor)'
RecvQEntries = '(monitor)'
StaticConnectIdentifier =
'(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=fitsdbs1)(PORT=1521))(CONNECT_DATA=(SERVICE_NAME=fitsdb1_DGMGRL)(INSTANCE_NAME=fits1)(SERVER=DEDICATED)))'
StandbyArchiveLocation = '/backup/itsdb/archives'
AlternateLocation = ''
LogArchiveTrace = '0'
LogArchiveFormat = '%t_%s_%r.arc'
TopWaitEvents = '(monitor)'
Database Status:
SUCCESS
I may be missing something, but I didn't see any differences in the config
between the two standbys.
Sandy
On Fri, Jan 4, 2019 at 3:11 AM Neil Chandler <neil_chandler@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Sandy,
So if you do a manual "alter system archive log current" on the Primary,
it catches up?
I would look at the config parameters to compare the configuration. Could
you share the configuration info (db/server names suitably redacted):
dgmgrl> show configuration verbose
dgmgrl> show database verbose <primary|standby2|standby2>
regards
Neil Chandler
Database Guy, Knows Things.
------------------------------
*From:* Sandra Becker <sbecker6925@xxxxxxxxx>
*Sent:* 03 January 2019 22:49
*To:* John Thomas
*Cc:* Andrew Kerber; Neil Chandler; oracle-l
*Subject:* Re: One primary with two physical standbys exhibiting
different behavior with regard to lag
My understanding is the network setup is the same between the standbys.
I didn't look at the network right away. :-) I made the changes
suggested by Neil, but I'm still seeing the delay. Before I did a manual
log switch, the delay was over 30 minutes. Not good for this critical
production standby.
Sandy
On Thu, Jan 3, 2019 at 3:36 PM John Thomas <jt2354@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
There's no excessive delay between your primary and the lagging standby is
there? Smaller pipe? Lots of network retries?
Probably the second thing you checked...
Regards,
John
On Thu, 3 Jan 2019 at 22:10, Sandra Becker <sbecker6925@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Thanks, Andrew. That's one of the first things I checked. It's the same
on both standbys.
Sandy
On Thu, Jan 3, 2019 at 2:47 PM Andrew Kerber <andrew.kerber@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Neil most likely spotted the problem. But you should also check to make
sure that the protection mode is the same on both standbys.If the instance
that is behind is using the maximum performance (async) mode it can run a
ways behind the primary.
On Thu, Jan 3, 2019 at 3:36 PM Neil Chandler <neil_chandler@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Sandy,
Have you checked the Standby Redo logs? There's a slight (annoying) change
in Oracle 12.1 onwards which means that Standby Redo logs get created with
Thread 0 instead of Thread 1 by default (for a single instance database).
Redo can only use Standby Redo when the threads are the same. If this is
RAC you need Standby Redo for each thread - and you must have 1 more
Standby Redo than Online Redo for each thread.
By coincidence, I wrote a blog post about this 10 minutes ago.
https://chandlerdba.com/2019/01/03/data-guard-unexpected-lag/
regards
Neil Chandler
Database Guy. Knows Things.
------------------------------
*From:* oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on
behalf of Sandra Becker <sbecker6925@xxxxxxxxx>
*Sent:* 03 January 2019 20:29
*To:* oracle-l
*Subject:* One primary with two physical standbys exhibiting different
behavior with regard to lag
Oracle 12.1.0.2
RHEL7
To begin with, I have not worked much at all with standby databases, so my
knowledge is somewhat lacking.
For business reasons, we have a primary database with two physical
standbys. Everything is configured in dgmgrl and enabled. Monitoring with
EM13c is reporting the lag times, so all looks good for basic setup and
monitoring. We seem to have significant lag at times on one of the
standbys, as much as 20 minutes. When looking at v$managed_standby, we see
the status as "WAIT_FOR_LOG". The other standby never seems to be more
that a few seconds behind, if at all, and the status is "APPLYING_LOG".
Is this normal? I've been researching, but haven't found an answer yet.
I didn't create or start the standby databases, so I don't have any idea
what was actually done that could be causing this behavior. Any
suggestions would be appreciated.
Thank you,
--
Sandy B.
--
Andrew W. Kerber
'If at first you dont succeed, dont take up skydiving.'
--
Sandy B.
--
Sandy B.