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SharePlex 10.1.2 - Installation and Setup for Oracle Source

About this Guide Conventions used in this guide SharePlex pre-installation checklist Download the SharePlex installer Installation and setup for Oracle cluster Installation and setup for remote capture Install SharePlex on Linux and UNIX Install SharePlex on Windows Assign SharePlex users to security groups Set up an Oracle environment for replication Set up replication from Oracle to a different target type Generic SharePlex demonstration-all platforms Advanced SharePlex demonstrations for Oracle Solve Installation Problems Database Setup Utilities General SharePlex Utilities Uninstall SharePlex Advanced installer options Install SharePlex as root Run the installer in unattended mode SharePlex installed items

Configure named export queues

A named export queue is an optional, user-defined export queue that is attached to its own Export process. SharePlex creates each named Export queue and associated Export process in addition to the default export queue-process pair. When SharePlex creates a named export queue-process pair, it also creates a dedicated Import process, post queue, and Post process on the target to contain that data stream.

You direct SharePlex to create one or more named export queues when you create your configuration file. Any data that is not configured for processing through a named export queue is processed through the default export queue.

Supported sources

Oracle

Supported targets

All

Benefits of named export queues

Use named export queues to isolate the replication of:

  • Individual configurations: By default, SharePlex sends data from all active configurations through one export queue-process pair per target system, but the use of named Export queues enables you to separate each of those replication streams into its own export queue and Export process. In this way, you ensure that purge config or abort config commands that are issued for one configuration do not affect any of the others.
  • Selected database objects: You can use a named export queue to isolate certain objects such as tables that contain LOBs. Because each named export queue has its own Import process, post queue, and Post process on the target, you are able to isolate the data the entire way from source to target. For more information about the benefits of named post queues, see Configure named post queues.

Additional benefits:

  • You can stop the Export or Import process for one data stream, while allowing the others to continue processing.
  • You can set SharePlex parameters to different settings for each export queue-process pair. This enables you to tune the performance of the Export processes based on the objects replicating through each one.

Considerations when using named export queues

  • Make certain that each queue name is unique.
  • You can combine named export queues with default export queues. Tables in the configuration with a standard routing map (targetsys@database_spec without a named queue specification) are replicated through a default export queue.

  • All tables with referential integrity to one another must be in the same export queue.
  • SharePlex has a maximum number of allowed queues. For more information, see Routing specifications in a configuration file.

Note: If Post returns the error message "shs_SEMERR: an error occurred with the semaphore" on a Windows system, the number of semaphores may need to be increased to accommodate the queues that you created. For more information, see Post stopped .

Configure a named export queue

Use the following syntax to define a routing map that includes a named export queue.

source_host:export_queuename*target_host[@database]

Configuration with named export queue in routing map
Datasource: o.SID
src_owner.table tgt_owner.table

source_host:export_queue*target_host[@database_specification]

Routing component Description
source_host The name of the source system.
export_queue

The name of the export queue. Queue names are case-sensitive on all platforms. Use one word only. Underscores are permissible, for example:

sys1:export_q1*sys2@o.myora

target_host The name of the target system.
database specification

One of the following for the datasource:

o.oracle_SID

r.database_name

 

One of the following if the target is a database:

o.oracle_SID

o.tns_alias

o.PDBname

r.database_name

c.oracle_SID

NoteS:

  • Allow no spaces between any components in the syntax of the routing map.
  • For more information about the components of a configuration file, see Configure data replication.

Examples

The following configuration files show two different datasources that are being replicated to two different databases on the same target system. Each datasource is routed through a named export queue.

Datasource:o.oraA    
scott.emp scott.emp sysA:QueueA*sysB@o.oraC
scott.sales scott.sales sysA:QueueA*sysB@o.oraC

 

Datasource:o.oraB    
scott.prod scott.prod sysA:QueueB*sysB@o.oraD
scott.cust scott.cust sysA:QueueB*sysB@o.oraD

 

The following shows how to separate a table that contains LOBs from the rest of the tables by using named export queues.

Datasource:o.oraA    
scott.cust scott.cust sysA:QueueA*sysB@o.oraC
scott.sales scott.sales sysA:QueueA*sysB@o.oraC
scott.prod scott.prod sysA:QueueA*sysB@o.oraC
scott.emp_LOB scott.emp_LOB sysA:QueueB*sysB@o.oraC

 

Alternatively, you could simply define a named export queue for the LOB table and allow the remaining tables to be processed through the default export queue.

Datasource:o.oraA    
scott.cust scott.cust sysB@o.oraC
scott.sales scott.sales sysB@o.oraC
scott.prod scott.prod sysB@o.oraC
scott.emp_LOB scott.emp_LOB sysA:lobQ*sysB@o.oraC

How to identify named export queues

You can view named export queues through sp_ctrl:

  • Use the qstatus command to view all queues on a system.
  • Use the show command to view all Export processes with their queues.

See the SharePlex Reference Guide for more infomation about theses commands.

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