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The Oracle Zero Data Loss Recovery Appliance [1] (Recovery Appliance or ZDLRA) is a computing platform that includes Oracle Corporation (Oracle) Engineered Systems hardware and software built for backup and recovery of the Oracle Database.
As the platform has been around since 2008, Oracle has published information related to the end-of-support for older Exadata generations. In Oracle's published document titled Oracle Hardware and Systems Support Policies, [8] they mention "After five years from last ship date, replacement parts may not be available and/or the response times for sending replacement parts may be delayed."
Oracle Database 12c Release 2 12.2.0.1 March 2017 August 2016 (cloud) March 2017 (on-premises) 12.2.0.1 March 2017 Native Sharding, Zero Data Loss Recovery Appliance, Exadata Cloud Service, Cloud at Customer Oracle Database 12c Release 1 12.1.0.1 July 2013 [21] 12.1.0.2 July 2014
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RMAN (Recovery Manager) is a backup and recovery manager supplied for Oracle databases (from version 8) created by the Oracle Corporation. [1] It provides database backup, restore, and recovery capabilities addressing high availability and disaster recovery concerns.
Oracle provides a deployment tool called the appliance manager to simplify deployment and make it less time-consuming. [ 12 ] [ failed verification ] The vendor also provides special patch bundles for the database appliance, consisting of patches for firmware, the Linux OS, clustering, storage management, and database which have been tested ...
Oracle provides both graphical user interface (GUI) and command-line (CLI) tools for managing Data Guard configurations. Data Guard supports both physical standby and logical standby sites. Oracle Corporation makes Data Guard available only as a bundled feature included within its "Enterprise Edition" of the Oracle RDBMS .
The most common data recovery scenarios involve an operating system failure, malfunction of a storage device, logical failure of storage devices, accidental damage or deletion, etc. (typically, on a single-drive, single-partition, single-OS system), in which case the ultimate goal is simply to copy all important files from the damaged media to another new drive.