61 DBMS_DG
The DBMS_DG
package allows applications to notify the primary database or the fast-start failover target database in an Oracle Data Guard broker environment to initiate a fast-start failover when the application encounters a condition that warrants a failover.
This chapter contains the following topics:
See Also:
61.1 Using DBMS_DG
There are conditions detectable by applications running outside of the Oracle database that may warrant the Oracle Data Guard broker to perform a fast-start failover. Because the range of possible conditions is virtually unlimited, it is left to the applications to determine which conditions warrant a fast-start failover.
When such conditions occur, the application calls the DBMS_DG
.INITIATE_FS_FAILOVER
procedure to alert either the primary or fast-start failover target standby database that the application wants a fast-start failover to occur immediately. The database on which the procedure was called then notifies the observer, which immediately initiates a fast-start failover as long as the standby database is in a valid fast-start failover state ("observed" and either "synchronized" or "within lag") to accept a failover.If the configuration is not in a valid fast-start failover state, the INITIATE_FS_FAILOVER
subprogram returns an ORA error message (it will not signal an exception) to inform the calling application that a fast-start failover could not be performed.
Note:
If you are working in a multitenant container database (CDB), then functions within DBMS_DG
are only executed at the root level. Ensure you are connected at the root level, not at the individual pluggable database (PDB) level.
61.2 DBMS_DG Security Model
The DBMS_DG
package runs with invoker's rights and requires the SYSDBA
privilege.
61.3 Summary of the DBMS_DG Subprogram
The DBMS_DG
package contains one subprogram, the INITIATE_FS_FAILOVER
procedure.
Table 61-1 DBMS_DG Package Subprogram
Subprogram | Description |
---|---|
Enables an application to notify either the primary or fast-start failover target standby database that a fast-start failover is necessary when the application encounters conditions that warrant a failover. This procedure can only be called while connected to a primary database or a fast-start failover standby database. |
61.3.1 INITIATE_FS_FAILOVER Procedure
Use this procedure to specify a condition string that, when encountered by an application, allows the application to request that a fast-start failover be invoked.
Syntax
DBMS_DG.INITIATE_FS_FAILOVER ( condstr IN VARCHAR2) RETURN BINARY_INTEGER;
Parameters
Table 61-2 INITIATE_FS_FAILOVER Procedure Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
condstr |
Specifies the condition string for which a fast-start failover should be requested. If no condition string argument is supplied, the default string of "Application Failover Requested" will be logged in the broker log file and in the database alert log of the database on which the procedure was called. |
Usage Notes
-
This procedure returns a binary integer.
-
Query the
V$FS_FAILOVER_STATS
view to see the time of the last fast-start failover and the reason it was performed. -
This procedure can only be called while connected to a primary database or a fast-start failover standby database.
Errors
Table 61-3 INITIATE_FS_FAILOVER Procedure Errors
Error | Description |
---|---|
|
The request to initiate a fast-start failover has been posted to the observer. |
|
Either a broker configuration does not exist or fast-start failover has not been enabled. |
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Example
In this example, the program attempts to initiate a fast-start failover when fast-start failover is disabled. To use this example, connect as user SYS
with SYDDBA
privileges.
set serveroutput on declare status integer; begin status := dbms_dg.initiate_fs_failover(''Failover Requested''); dbms_output.put_line(''Fast-Start Failover is disabled: Expected status = ORA-16646''); dbms_output.put_line('' Actual Status = ORA-'' || status); end; / exit;