7.3 About the Grid Infrastructure Management Repository

The Grid Infrastructure Management Repository (GIMR) is a multitenant database with a pluggable database (PDB) for the GIMR of each cluster.

Every Oracle Domain Services Cluster contains a Grid Infrastructure Management Repository (GIMR). However, GIMR configuration is optional for Oracle Standalone Cluster. The GIMR stores the following information about the cluster:

  • Real time performance data that Cluster Health Monitor collects

  • Fault, diagnosis, and metric data that Cluster Health Advisor collects

  • Cluster-wide events about all resources that Oracle Clusterware collects

  • Workload performance and CPU architecture data that Quality of Service Management (QoSM) collects

Starting with Oracle Grid Infrastructure 19c, configuring GIMR is optional for Oracle Standalone Cluster deployments. The Oracle Standalone Cluster locally hosts the GIMR on an Oracle ASM disk group or a shared file system; this GIMR is a multitenant database with a single pluggable database (PDB).

Note:

Configuring GIMR is optional for only new installations and does not apply to existing installations.

If you have a GIMR in your current deployment, then the GIMR will be upgraded with Oracle Grid Infrastructure 19c. However, if you do not have a GIMR in your current deployment, then you cannot add the GIMR as part of upgrade to Oracle Grid Infrastructure 19c.

For deployments where there is no GIMR, you can add a GIMR after installing Oracle Grid Infrastructure 19c or after upgrading to Oracle Grid Infrastructure 19c.

The global GIMR runs in an Oracle Domain Services Cluster. Oracle Domain Services Cluster locally hosts the GIMR in a separate Oracle ASM disk group. Oracle Member Cluster for Database uses the remote GIMR located on the Oracle Domain Services Cluster. Hosting the GIMR on a remote cluster reduces the overhead of running an extra infrastructure repository on a cluster. The GIMR for an Oracle Domain Services Cluster is a multitenant database with one PDB, and additional PDB for each member cluster that is added.

When you configure an Oracle Domain Services Cluster, the installer prompts to configure a separate Oracle ASM disk group for the GIMR, with the default name as MGMT.