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July 27, 2014

How to reconfigure Oracle Restart

The other day I had to reconfigure an Oracle Restart 12c environment, and I couldn't find my blog post on that. It turns out that I never published it here, as my MOS document on this topic was created back in 2010 when this blog didn't exist!

The original document was written for Oracle Restart 11gR2, but it is still valid for 12c. Here it is.

Introduction

This document is about reconfiguring the Oracle Restart. One reason for such action might be the server rename. If the server was renamed and then rebooted, the ASM instance startup would fail with ORA-29701: unable to connect to Cluster Synchronization Service.

The solution is to reconfigure Oracle Restart as follows.

1. Remove Oracle Restart configuration

This step should be performed as the privileged user (root).

# $GRID_HOME/crs/install/roothas.pl -deconfig -force

The expected result is "Successfully deconfigured Oracle Restart stack".

2. Reconfigure Oracle Restart

This step should also be performed as the privileged user (root).

# $GRID_HOME/crs/install/roothas.pl

The expected result is "Successfully configured Oracle Grid Infrastructure for a Standalone Server"

3. Add ASM back to Oracle Restart configuration

This step should be performed as the Grid Infrastructure owner (grid user).

$ srvctl add asm

The expected result is no output, just a return to the operating system prompt.

4. Start ASM instance

This step should be performed as the Grid Infrastructure owner (grid user).

$ srvctl start asm

That should start the ASM instance.

Note that at this time there will be no ASM initialization or server parameter file.

5. Recreate ASM server parameter file (SPFILE)

This step should be performed as the Grid Infrastructure owner (grid user).

Create a temporary initialization parameter file (e.g. /tmp/init+ASM.ora) with the content similar to the this (of course, with your own disk group names):

asm_diskgroups='DATA','RECO'
large_pool_size=12M
remote_login_passwordfile='EXCLUSIVE'

Mount the disk group where the new server parameter file (SPFILE) will reside (e.g. DATA) and create the SPFILE:

$ sqlplus / as sysasm

SQL> alter diskgroup DATA mount;

Diskgroup altered.

SQL> create spfile='+DATA' from pfile='/tmp/init+ASM.ora';

File created.

SQL> show parameter spfile

NAME   TYPE   VALUE
------ ------ -------------------------------------------------
spfile string +DATA/asm/asmparameterfile/registry.253.707737977

6. Restart HAS stack

This step should be performed as the Grid Infrastructure owner (grid user).

$ crsctl stop has

$ crsctl start has

7. Add components back to Oracle Restart configuration

Add the database, the listener and other components, back into the Oracle Restart configuration.

7.1. Add database

This step should be performed as RDBMS owner (oracle user).

In 11gR2 the command is:

$ srvctl add database -d db_unique_name -o oracle_home

In 12c the command is:

$ srvctl add database -db db_unique_name -oraclehome oracle_home

7.2. Add listener

This step should be performed as the Grid Infrastructure owner (grid user).

$ srvctl add listener

7.3. Add other components

For information on how to add back additional components in 11gR2 see:
Oracle® Database Administrator's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2)
Chapter 4 Configuring Automatic Restart of an Oracle Database

For 12c see:
Oracle® Database Administrator's Guide 12c Release 1 (12.1)
Chapter 4 Configuring Automatic Restart of an Oracle Database

Conclusion

As noted earlier, I have published a MOS document on this: How to Reconfigure Oracle Restart - MOS Doc ID 986740.1.

3 comments:

  1. Hi How to backup Oracle Restart voting disk ?

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  2. My spouse and I love your blog and find almost all of your posts to be just what I’m looking for. Appreciating the persistence you put into your blog and the detailed information you provide. I found another one blog like you Oracle Cloud Infrastructure .Actually I was looking for the same information on internet for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and came across your blog. I am impressed by the information that you have on this blog. Thanks once more for all the details.

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  3. Thank you. I am setting up GI 19.3 on Linux 8 and this helped a lot. You might want to not that SELinux should be "permissive"

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