SharePlex provides the following scripts to automate the building of a configuration file to specify Oracle source objects.
Oracle
The config.sql script enables you to build a configuration that lists all of the tables, and optionally all of the sequences, in all of the schemas of a database. This script saves time when establishing a high-availability replication strategy or other scenario where you want the entire database to be replicated to an identical secondary database.
Source and target table names must be the same.
To run config.sql
Change directories to the config sub-directory of the SharePlex variable-data directory. The config.sql script puts configurations in the current working directory, and SharePlex configurations must reside in the config sub-directory.
cd /vardir/config
Run config.sql using the full path from the util sub-directory of the SharePlex product directory.
@ /proddir/util/config.sql
Refer to the following table when following the prompts.
Prompt | What to enter |
---|---|
Target machine | The name of the target machine, for example SystemB. |
Source database SID | The ORACLE_SID of the source (primary) Oracle instance, for example oraA. Do not include the o. keyword. The ORACLE_SID is case-sensitive. |
Target database SID | The ORACLE_SID of the target (destination) Oracle instance, for example oraB. Do not include the o. keyword. The ORACLE_SID is case-sensitive. |
Replicate sequences | Enter y to replicate sequences or n not to replicate sequences. |
SharePlex oracle username | The name of the SharePlex user in the source database. This entry prevents the SharePlex schema from being replicated, which would cause replication problems. If a valid name is not provided, the script fails. |
Note: The name assigned by SharePlex to the configuration is config.file. If you run the script again to create another configuration file, it overwrites the first file. To preserve the original file, rename it before you create the second one.
Next steps:
If any tables or owners are case-sensitive, open the configuration file with the edit config command in sp_ctrl, then use the text editor to enclose case-sensitive table and owner names within double-quote marks, for example “scott”.“emp”. The script does not add the quote marks required by Oracle to enforce case-sensitivity.
sp_ctrl> edit config filename
To ensure that the configuration is in the correct location, issue the list config command. If the name of the configuration is not shown, it was created in the wrong directory. Find the file and move it to the config sub-directory of the variable-data directory.
sp_ctrl> list config
The build_config.sql script enables you to build a configuration that contains multiple (or all) tables in a schema. It is an interactive script that prompts for each component of the configuration step by step. Instead of entering the information for each object and the routing individually, you can use a wildcard to select certain tables at once, or you can select all of the tables in the schema.
To run build_config.sql
Change directories to the config sub-directory of the SharePlex variable-data directory. The build_config.sql script puts configurations in the current working directory, and SharePlex configurations must reside in the config sub-directory.
cd /vardir/config
Run build_config.sql using the full path from the util sub-directory of the SharePlex product directory.
@ /proddir/util/build_config.sql
Refer to the following table when following the prompts.
Prompt | What to enter |
---|---|
Target machine | The name of the target machine, for example SystemB. |
Source database SID | The ORACLE_SID of the source (primary) Oracle instance, for example oraA. Do not include the o. keyword. The ORACLE_SID is case-sensitive. |
Target database SID | The ORACLE_SID of the target (destination) Oracle instance, for example oraB. Do not include the o. keyword. The ORACLE_SID is case-sensitive. |
Owner of the source database tables | The owner of the source tables. |
Owner of the target database tables | The owner of the target tables. |
Table name to include (blank for all) |
Do one of the following:
|
Name of the output file to create | A name for the configuration. The script gives the file a .lst suffix, for example Scott_config.lst. |
Next steps:
If any tables or owners are case-sensitive, open the configuration with the edit config command in sp_ctrl, then use the text editor to enclose case-sensitive table and owner names within double-quote marks, for example “scott”.“emp”. The script does not add the quote marks required by Oracle to enforce case-sensitivity.
sp_ctrl> edit config filename
To ensure that the configuration is in the correct location, issue the list config command. If the name of the configuration is not shown, it was created in the wrong directory. Find the file and move it to the config sub-directory of the variable-data directory.
sp_ctrl> list config
Use the cleanup.sql script to truncate all of the SharePlex internal tables except the SHAREPLEX_PARTITION table (which contains partition schemes that might be needed again).
Note: The cleanup.sql script does not remove the SharePlex Oracle user, password, or demonstration objects from the SharePlex tables.
The cleanup.sql script preserves the replication data in the SharePlex variable-data directory. Other utilities provide related options:
Contact Quest Technical Support before running cleanup.sql for the first time. Unless a procedure in the SharePlex documentation requires running clean_vardir.sh, this utility rarely is appropriate in a production environment. It deactivates the configuration, and using it improperly can result in replication problems and the need to resynchronize the data. Usually, there is another alternative.
Oracle on Unix and Windows
Log into Oracle as the SharePlex database user. The SharePlex tables belong to that user. On Unix and Linux, If you are running multiple instances of sp_cop with multiple variable-data directories, there is a SharePlex Oracle user for each one. Make certain to run this script as the correct one.
(Unix and Linux) Set the SP_SYS_VARDIR environment variable to point to the SharePlex variable-data directory.
ksh shell:
export SP_SYS_VARDIR=/full_path_of_variable-data_directory
csh shell:
setenv SP_SYS_VARDIR=/full_path_of_variable-data_directory
Run cleanup.sql as a SharePlex Administrator. The script is in the util sub-directory of the SharePlex product directory. Use the following syntax, where Oracle_version is one of the SharePlex-supported Oracle versions.
SQL> @proddir/util/cleanup.sql
Use the clean_vardir.sh script to clean out the variable-data directory to restore it to an initial state.
Important! Contact Quest Technical Support before running clean_vardir.sh for the first time. Unless a procedure in the SharePlex documentation requires running clean_vardir.sh, this utility rarely is appropriate in a production environment. It deactivates the configuration, and using it improperly can result in replication problems and the need to resynchronize the data. Usually, there is another alternative.
The clean_vardir.sh script removes the following:
The clean_vardir.sh script preserves user-created files such as configuration files, conflict-resolution files, hint files, the paramdb, and the oramsglist file.
The clean_vardir.sh script deactivates configurations. To start replication after running clean_vardir.sh, you must activate a configuration.
Oracle on Unix and Linux
To use this utility, the Korn (ksh) shell must be installed on the system. The utility calls this shell during processing.
Run this script on Unix and Linux systems only.
Set the SP_SYS_VARDIR environment variable to point to the SharePlex variable-data directory. If SP_SYS_VARDIR is not set, clean_vardir.sh affects the directory listed in the proddir/data/defaults.yaml file, where the proddir is the bin sub-directory of the SharePlex product directory.
ksh shell:
export SP_SYS_VARDIR=/full_path_of_variable-data_directory
csh shell:
setenv SP_SYS_VARDIR=/full_path_of_variable-data_directory
Run clean_vardir.sh as a SharePlex Administrator. The script is in the bin sub-directory of the SharePlex product directory. Use the following syntax, where Oracle_version is one of the SharePlex-supported Oracle versions.
proddir/bin/clean_vardir.sh Oracle_version
When the script is finished running, you are returned to the command prompt.
Note: If the script generates an error message stating that it cannot remove the save_SharePlex_version directory, you can remove that directory manually.
Use the create_ignore.sql utility script to prevent DML transactions from being replicated to the target system. This script creates a public procedure named SHAREPLEX_IGNORE_TRANS in the source database. When executed at the start of a transaction, the procedure makes the Capture process ignore DML operations that occur from the point of execution until the transaction is either committed or rolled back. Thus, the affected operations are not replicated.
Only DML operations are affected by the SHAREPLEX_IGNORE_TRANS procedure. It does not cause SharePlex to skip DDL operations, including TRUNCATE. DDL operations are implicitly committed by Oracle, so they render the procedure invalid.
Oracle on Unix and Windows
Run the create_ignore.sql script from the util sub-directory in the SharePlex product directory. Run it as the SharePlex Oracle user so that the procedure is created in the SharePlex schema.
The script executes the following PL/SQL:
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE SHAREPLEX_IGNORE_TRANS AS
TNUM NUMBER;
BEGIN
INSERT INTO SHAREPLEX_TRANS (TRANS_NUM, QUE_SEQ_NO_1, QUE_SEQ_NO_2,
COMBO, OP_TYPE) VALUES (-999,0,0,'DUMMY',0);
DELETE FROM SHAREPLEX_TRANS WHERE TRANS_NUM=-999 AND COMBO='DUMMY'
AND OP_TYPE=0;
END;
/
GRANT EXECUTE ON SHAREPLEX_IGNORE_TRANS TO PUBLIC;
/
Call SHAREPLEX_IGNORE_TRANS only at the beginning of a transaction containing operations that you do not want replicated. If it is called in the middle of a transaction, replicated operations preceding the start of the procedure will remain in the post queue indefinitely awaiting a COMMIT, because SharePlex does not release messages without one. The COMMIT will not arrive because Capture ignores all operations in the transaction after the procedure is called. The Read process will retain unwanted cache information on those records indefinitely.
Execute the SHAREPLEX_IGNORE_TRANS procedure at the beginning of the transaction that you want to skip.
execute SharePlex_schema.SHAREPLEX_IGNORE_TRANS;
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