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By Brent Bigonger Presented by Tom Canty ServerCare, Inc.

Good Afternoon, I'm:. Tom Canty, President of ServerCare, Inc.20 years of Oracle experience, mostly as a DBAPrevious presenter at IOUG, OpenWorld, NoCoug, and othersHas been running ServerCare for 10 years, specializing in being the

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By Brent Bigonger Presented by Tom Canty ServerCare, Inc.

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    1. By Brent Bigonger Presented by Tom Canty ServerCare, Inc.

    2. Good Afternoon, I’m: Tom Canty, President of ServerCare, Inc. 20 years of Oracle experience, mostly as a DBA Previous presenter at IOUG, OpenWorld, NoCoug, and others Has been running ServerCare for 10 years, specializing in being the “safety net” for databases, servers, and staff NOT a System Administrator, but Brent was and is now a Senior Oracle DBA

    3. Outline System, Storage and Network Oracle Installation Tips and Commands Troubleshooting

    4. RAID0 Striping Implemented for performance NO REDUNDANCY for disk failure Failure chances increase as disks added

    5. RAID1 Mirroring Implemented for redundancy Can sustain one disk failure Not as “fast” as RAID0

    6. RAID5 Good performance & redundancy balance 3 disks minimum Uses “parity” bit to maintain consistency NOT ideal for intensive write applications OLTP databases!! Never put redo logs on RAID5! In the event of a disk failure, any subsequent reads can be calculated from the distributed parity so that the array does not fail and is usually unknown to the end user. Although during typical operation read performance is very good, RAID5 is not ideal for write intensive applications due to the overhead of the parity calculation that must occur on each write.In the event of a disk failure, any subsequent reads can be calculated from the distributed parity so that the array does not fail and is usually unknown to the end user. Although during typical operation read performance is very good, RAID5 is not ideal for write intensive applications due to the overhead of the parity calculation that must occur on each write.

    7. RAID0+1 Minimum 4 disks Add in even numbers No parity calculation Will survive 1 disk failure Maybe more

    8. RAID1+0 (RAID10) Characteristics similar to RAID0+1 Minimum 4 disks Add in even numbers No parity calculation Will survive 1 disk failure Maybe more

    11. Direct Attached Storage (DAS)

    12. Network Attached Storage (NAS)

    13. Storage Area Network (SAN)

    14. File Systems RAW Lack of a file system Supposedly going away on Linux “Cooked” Disk file systems ext3, NTFS, UFS, ZFS, ISO 9660 (CDFS) Network file systems NFS, SMB/CIFS (Samba) Shared (clustered) file systems OCFS/OCFS2, ASMFS (new), proprietary (Veritas, Solaris (QFS), etc.)

    15. Outline System, Storage and Network Oracle Installation Tips and Commands Troubleshooting

    16. Oracle Installation - Packages Display full package names (32bit and 64bit) rpm -q --qf "%{n}-%{v}-%{r}.%{arch}\n"  <package name> Find which package provides this file rpm -q --whatprovides libXp.so.6 List the files in this RPM packages rpm -qpl gibran/ncftp-3.2.0-3.el4.i386.rpm

    17. Oracle Installation – Swap Space Add swap: dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1024 count=524288 chmod 600 /swapfile mkswap /swapfile swapon /swapfile Another option: ./runInstaller -ignoreSysPrereqs

    18. Oracle Installation – X-Display Start local X-Server (Cygwin, XWin, Xming…) Enable X-forwarding on Server: /etc/sshd/sshd_config Make sure: X11Forwarding yes Configure Putty to ‘Enable X11 forwarding’ Test using ‘xclock’ xclock

    19. Oracle Installation – X-Display Demo

    20. Oracle Installation – Network Connectivity Check connectivity between client and server Server: nc –l –p 1521 Client: telnet oracleserver.com 1521

    21. Oracle Installation – cpio Extract a cpio (-i extract, -d make dirs, -m keep mod time, -v verbose) cpio -idmv < ship.db_Disk1.lnxx86-64.cpio

    22. Oracle Installation – Parameter Compare QA Warehouse sqlplus system@WHSQA set pages 1000 lines 130 col name format a30 col value format a70 spool params_WHSQA.txt select name, value from v$parameter order by 1; spool off

    23. Oracle Installation – Parameter Compare Prod Warehouse conn system@WHSPRD set pages 1000 lines 130 col name format a30 col value format a70 spool params_WHSPRD.txt select name, value from v$parameter order by 1; spool off !diff -bB --side-by-side --suppress-common-lines params_WHSQA.txt params_WHSPRD.txt

    24. Oracle Installation – Parameter Compare compatible   10.2.0 | compatible       10.2.0 cpu_count            4            | cpu_count            32 db_block_checking  FALSE | db_block_checking  true db_cache_size 11576279 | db_cache_size 12582912 db_writer_processes  1            | db_writer_processes  4 dml_locks            4860         | dml_locks            7280 job_queue_processes  10           | job_queue_processes  20 log_buffer           15276032     | log_buffer           30503936 open_cursors         400          | open_cursors         2000 open_links           4            | open_links           150

    25. Outline System, Storage and Network Oracle Installation Tips and Commands Troubleshooting

    26. Tips & Commands – System Info Find if CPU is 64bit capable, search for 'lm' (Long Mode) cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep lm Print out lots of kernel and system information uname –a Show free memory in megabytes (kbytes is default) free -m

    27. Tips & Commands – System Info (Cont.) top - 23:42:27 up 320 days, 16:05, 10 users, load average: 3.49, 3.68, 3.64 Tasks: 1167 total, 2 running, 1164 sleeping, 0 stopped, 1 zombie Cpu(s): 0.9% us, 0.5% sy, 0.0% ni, 97.5% id, 1.0% wa, 0.0% hi, 0.0% si Mem: 32907424k total, 32602304k used, 305120k free, 514928k buffers Swap: 8385920k total, 297012k used, 8088908k free, 17308820k cached shows about 300MB freeshows about 300MB free

    28. Tips & Commands – System Info (Cont.) free -m total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 32136 31761 374 0 495 16851 -/+ buffers/cache: 14414 17721 Swap: 8189 290 7899 Actually 17GB free. Linux always tries to use RAM to the fullest extent to speed up disk operations. Using available memory for buffers (file system metadata) and cache (pages with actual contents of files or block devices) helps the system to run faster because disk information is already in memory which saves I/O. If space is needed by programs or applications like Oracle, then Linux will free up the buffers and cache to yield memory for the applications. So if your system runs for a while you will usually see a small number under the field "free" on the first line. Actually 17GB free. Linux always tries to use RAM to the fullest extent to speed up disk operations. Using available memory for buffers (file system metadata) and cache (pages with actual contents of files or block devices) helps the system to run faster because disk information is already in memory which saves I/O. If space is needed by programs or applications like Oracle, then Linux will free up the buffers and cache to yield memory for the applications. So if your system runs for a while you will usually see a small number under the field "free" on the first line.

    29. Tips & Commands – X-Display Revisited Forward X11 traffic from server A to a local PC through intermediate server: Enable X-forwarding on both Server A and Server B in: /etc/sshd/sshd_config Make sure: X11Forwarding yes Start X server on local PC Configure Putty to ‘Enable X11 forwarding’ ssh to Server B Export DISPLAY to PC ssh with X11 forwarding (usually ssh -X) to Server A Run X Application

    30. Tips & Commands – screen Re-connect to a Linux Session!!

    31. Tips & Commands – screen Demo

    32. Tips & Commands – Mount Volumes Mount the data1 nfs volume on /mnt/temp mount nas1:/data1 /mnt/temp Mount Windows SMB shares mount -t cifs -o user=username //computer/share /mnt/mtpoint Mount a CDROM in a typical Linux environment mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom Definitions in /etc/(v)fstab will automount at boot and simplify manual mounting: mount /u01

    33. Tips & Commands – find Find and delete files more than 5 days old find /u01/oracle/oradb/arch/ -mtime +5 -exec rm -f {} \; Find & ask before deleting trace files in current dir find . -name “*.trc” –ok rm –f {}\; Find largest files and sort by size find . -size +5000000c -ls | awk '{print $7, $11}' | sort List file names with "aabbcc" & modified w/in 30 min find . -mmin -30 -exec grep -l aabbcc "{}" \;

    34. Tips & Commands – grep, sed Greps out 4 lines before & after the desired text cat uni1_lmon_13673.trc | grep -C4 -i “ORA-” Grep out blank lines (be careful of spaces or tabs) grep -v '^$' input.txt Search and replace checking each line in the file sed '1,$s/searched/replaced_with/g' error.log > error.html Caution: some *nix environments use egrep, fgrep, or lgrep, or have different syntax (esp. –e switch), and Windows uses findstr

    35. Tips & Commands – du Find the 'disk usage' (du) for several archive logs and display a total (s=summary (top directory only), h=human readable, c=show total) du -shc al_TEST1_20080304* 16M al_TEST1_20080304_15jacpfk_1_1 4.0K al_TEST1_20080304_1ajacpgv_1_1 1.9G al_TEST1_20080304_2cjaeqqg_1_1 … 1.9G al_TEST1_20080304_2qjaerj1_1_1 40G total -c for cumulative-c for cumulative

    36. Tips & Commands – sar setup (RHEL) Log in as root Enter the command yum install sysstat Systat is now scheduled: more /etc/cron.d/sysstat #run system activity accounting tool every 10 minutes */10 * * * * root /usr/lib/sa/sa1 1 1 #generate a daily summary of process accounting at 23:53 53 23 * * * root /usr/lib/sa/sa2 -A

    37. Tips & Commands – sar reporting sar -f /var/log/sa/sa05 -s 08:00:00 -e 10:00:00 Linux 2.6.9-42.0.10.ELsmp 03/05/2008 08:00:01 AM CPU %user %nice %system %iowait %idle 08:10:01 AM all 1.04 0.00 0.93 24.77 73.25 08:20:01 AM all 1.02 0.00 0.90 23.77 74.31 08:30:01 AM all 1.12 0.00 1.08 26.74 71.06 08:40:01 AM all 1.15 0.00 1.07 27.07 70.71 08:50:01 AM all 1.16 0.00 1.11 28.51 69.21 09:00:01 AM all 1.18 0.00 1.19 29.78 67.85 09:10:01 AM all 1.23 0.00 1.21 30.59 66.96 09:20:01 AM all 1.17 0.00 1.16 30.79 66.89 09:30:01 AM all 1.16 0.00 1.22 33.50 64.11 09:40:01 AM all 1.12 0.00 1.15 33.13 64.60 09:50:01 AM all 1.22 0.00 1.30 34.53 62.95 Average: all 1.14 0.00 1.12 29.38 68.36

    38. Tips & Commands – OS Watcher Keeps history of: top, vmstat, iostat, ps, netstat, mpstat, prvtnet To setup Download OSW from Metalink (osw.tar) Untar Run nohup ./startOSW.sh 60 24 & Sample vmstat file from OSW ***Fri Jan 28 12:50:00 PST 2008 procs memory page disk faults cpu r b w swap free re mf pi po fr de sr dd f0 s0 in sy cs us sy id 0 0 0 1761344 1246520 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 380 1364 900 4 1 95 0 0 0 1643920 1086776 331 1485 8 16 16 0 0 31 0 0 0 447 4966 1315 15 31 54 0 0 0 1643872 1086728 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 389 1472 932 0 0 100

    39. Tips & Commands – ps Return either apache or mysql ps -ef | egrep "apache|mysql" Print Oracle smon background process ps -ef | grep ora_smon | grep -v grep | awk '{ print $8 }‘ Caution: some *nix environments use totally different switches for ps. For example, ps –ef ? ps –aux. Some use –w or –ww to see full line. This can be important when doing a grep.

    40. Tips & Commands – Shell Prompt Add timestamp to bash prompt export PS1="\[\033[1;31m\][\$(date +%H:%M)][\u@\h:\w]$ " Here’s how the prompt looks: [13:59][oracle@shag:~]$ My prompt export SYS_HOST=`/bin/hostname -s` export PS1="[\$(date +%H:%M)]$LOGNAME@$SYS_HOST[$ORACLE_SID]$ "  My prompt looks like: [13:46]oracle@rmandb1[EMREP]$

    41. Tips & Commands – Shell Prompt (Cont.) Useful bash shell shortcuts [partial command]+<tab> - Auto command complete <ctl>+a - Go to beginning of the line <ctl>+e - Go to end of the line <ctl>+d - Delete character <ctl>+r - Recall commands

    42. Tips & Commands – Script Debugging One of the best places to start debugging a shell script is with the `-x` option. This causes bash to be more verbose in its output, including printing out expanded shell variables, and command lines before they are executed. Because of the sometimes extensive expansion of shell and enviroment variables, and obtuse quoting rules, being able to see the expanded version of the script is enough to figure out what is going on. One of the best places to start debugging a shell script is with the `-x` option. This causes bash to be more verbose in its output, including printing out expanded shell variables, and command lines before they are executed. Because of the sometimes extensive expansion of shell and enviroment variables, and obtuse quoting rules, being able to see the expanded version of the script is enough to figure out what is going on.

    43. Tips & Commands – Script Debugging Demo One of the best places to start debugging a shell script is with the `-x` option. This causes bash to be more verbose in its output, including printing out expanded shell variables, and command lines before they are executed. Because of the sometimes extensive expansion of shell and enviroment variables, and obtuse quoting rules, being able to see the expanded version of the script is enough to figure out what is going on. One of the best places to start debugging a shell script is with the `-x` option. This causes bash to be more verbose in its output, including printing out expanded shell variables, and command lines before they are executed. Because of the sometimes extensive expansion of shell and enviroment variables, and obtuse quoting rules, being able to see the expanded version of the script is enough to figure out what is going on.

    44. Tips & Commands – cron crontab –l > oracron.`date '+%Y_%m_%d_%I%M'` crontab -r crontab oracron.2008_08_27_1152 Cron time order: Minute - Minutes after the hour (0-59) Hour - 24-hour format (0-23) Day - Day of the month (1-31) Month - Month of the year (1-12) Weekday - Day of the week. (0-6, where 0 indicates Sunday)

    45. Tips & Commands – File Cleanup List file names with "aabbcc" & modified w/in 30 min find . -mmin -30 -exec grep -l aabbcc "{}" \; Move files > 10 days old with the filename *.trc find . -name "*.trc" -mtime +10 -exec mv {} /tempdir \; Deletes file older than 60 minutes in one statement find . -type f -name '*.trc' -mmin +60 -exec rm -f {} \;

    46. Tips & Commands – Miscellaneous Correctly set the backspace key Note this is the backspace character, not ^? (but it usually works. ^H is a common one as well.) stty erase ^? Rename a subset of files ls *.log | xargs -t -i mv {} {}.old Renice process value and increase by 20 make it less important NEVER do with Oracle processes or connections! renice 20 -p 22432

    47. Tips & Commands – Miscellaneous Split a 1.3GB file into smaller chunks split –bytes=500m largefile.zip largefile.zip_part_ Would produce: largefile.zip_part_aa largefile.zip_part_ab largefile.zip_part_ac Re-assemble file from smaller chunks cat largefile.zip_part_* > largefile.zip

    48. Tips & Commands – Sendmail SMART_HOST cp -p sendmail.cf sendmail.cf_orig cp -p sendmail.mc sendmail.mc_orig vi /etc/mail.sendmail.mc Uncomment the line that looks like this: dnl define(`SMART_HOST',`smtp.your.provider') Replace with your smtp provider, such as Notice the backtick `smtp.west.cox.net' m4 sendmail.mc > /etc/sendmail.cf Restart sendmail /etc/init.d/sendmail restart If you don’t have the sendmail.cf rpm installed or don’t not want to install it, you can add your SMART_HOST definition directly into the /etc/mail/sendmail.cf file yourself. Open /etc/mail/sendmail.cf and search for the DS definition. To add your SMART_HOST simply add the DNS name directly after 'DS' (without any space, i.e. DSsmtp.west.cox.net). Save and close the file and restart sendmail.If you don’t have the sendmail.cf rpm installed or don’t not want to install it, you can add your SMART_HOST definition directly into the /etc/mail/sendmail.cf file yourself. Open /etc/mail/sendmail.cf and search for the DS definition. To add your SMART_HOST simply add the DNS name directly after 'DS' (without any space, i.e. DSsmtp.west.cox.net). Save and close the file and restart sendmail.

    49. Tips & Commands – SMTP AUTH Add to /etc/mail/authinfo: AuthInfo:smtp.1and1.com "U:brent" "P:password" "M:PLAIN“ Then create the .db file: makemap hash /etc/mail/authinfo < /etc/mail/authinfo Edit the file permissions: chmod o-r /etc/mail/authinfo

    50. Tips & Commands – SMTP AUTH (cont) vi sendmail.mc define(`SMART_HOST',`smtp.west.cox.net')dnl FEATURE(`authinfo')dnl define(confDOMAIN_NAME, `soe.sony.com')dnl m4 sendmail.mc > sendmail.cf If not installed: yum install sendmail-cf /etc/init.d/sendmail restart Send a test echo "Test" | mail -s "Test1 from qaserv1" brent@cox.net

    51. Outline System, Storage and Network Oracle Installation Tips and Commands Troubleshooting

    52. Troubleshooting – OS Logs/Buffer Places to start (requires root privilege): tail -50 /var/log/messages tail -30 /var/log/secure Linux bootup messages: dmesg Sample ‘dmesg’ output: Linux version 2.6.9-42.0.3.EL (gcc version 3.4.6 2006040 4 (Red Hat 3.4.6-3)) #1 Fri Oct 6 05:59:54 CDT 2006 BIOS-provided physical RAM map: BIOS-e820: 0000000000000000 - 000000000009f800 (usable) BIOS-e820: 000000000009f800 - 00000000000a0000 (reserved) ... The program helps users to print out their bootup messages. The program helps users to print out their bootup messages.

    53. Troubleshooting – vmstat vmstat 3 5 procs -----------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- --system-- ----cpu--- r b swpd free buff cache si so bi bo in cs us sy id wa 0 1 0 2432332 67616 1475224 0 0 317 262 333 144 1 0 92 7 0 2 0 2432332 67616 1475224 0 0 1711 570 1594 1017 1 0 70 29 0 3 0 2432284 67624 1475216 0 0 1646 337 1538 911 0 0 70 29 0 4 0 2432292 67624 1475216 0 0 3001 312 1622 1107 1 1 65 34 0 0 0 2432212 67624 1475216 0 0 2078 1466 2459 2354 1 1 76 22

    54. Troubleshooting – sar -W sar –W Linux 2.6.9-67.0.1.ELsmp 07:40:02 AM pswpin/s pswpout/s 07:50:01 AM 0.76 0.01 08:00:01 AM 10.29 0.90 08:10:02 AM 13.94 7.38 08:20:01 AM 12.98 1.43 08:30:01 AM 5.85 5.03 08:40:01 AM 10.04 0.03 08:50:01 AM 5.30 1.78 09:00:01 AM 2.19 2.32 09:10:01 AM 42.42 43.59 09:20:01 AM 1.02 0.14 Average: 3.24 2.62 Swapping: swap pages brought in swap pages brought outSwapping: swap pages brought in swap pages brought out

    55. Troubleshooting – strace System calls summary strace -c -p 28192 Process 28192 attached - interrupt to quit % time seconds usecs/call calls errors syscall ------ ----------- ----------- --------- --------- ----------- 78.07 0.000997 997 1 poll 12.84 0.000164 13 13 read 6.26 0.000080 6 13 open 2.19 0.000028 2 13 close 0.62 0.000008 3 2 getrusage ------ ----------- ----------- --------- --------- ----------- 100.00 0.001277 45 total See the actual system calls strace -p 28192 Trace your own session strace sqlplus

    56. Summary System, Storage and Network Oracle Installation Tips and Commands Troubleshooting

    57. Thank You! Tom Canty I can be contacted at: tom.canty@servercare.com I will upload presentation to our website tonight Thanks!! Please fill out you speaker evaluation.

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