Personally, I would strongly encourage you to not use iSCSI.
Instead, look at using Oracle's NFS implementation. It is fairly easy to setup. Give it a bunch of network adapters on the host (like two or three) and point at the NetApp.
The client will use all the connections Oracle knows about and performance can really scream, especially if you can use 10GigE
--tmac
*Tim McCarthy* *Principal Consultant*
Clustered ONTAP Clustered ONTAP NCDA ID: XK7R3GEKC1QQ2LVD RHCE6 110-107-141https://www.redhat.com/wapps/training/certification/verify.html?certNumber=110-107-141&isSearch=False&verify=Verify NCSIE ID: C14QPHE21FR4YWD4 Expires: 08 November 2014 Current until Aug 02, 2016 Expires: 08 November 2014
On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 4:02 PM, Jeff Cleverley <jeff.cleverley@avagotech .com> wrote:
Greetings,
My Oracle experience with and without NetApp has largely been non-existent. Please bear with me on this. All of our current DBs are on dedicated servers with locally attached storage.
One of our groups has a 6280 cluster running 8.1.2P4 7-mode. They want to look into using iscsi to a new 11.2 Oracle server. The cluster can get pretty busy at times so I'm not sure Oracle NFS will work in this case.
The questions are largely about backups and DR. I'm curious about how most people choose to back this up and how to recover for that solution. I know there are lun copy options, snapmanager/flex clone options, etc. We're very open to manual scripting and custom solutions. Backups would most likely go to a NearStore, and the DR would be a second server connected via iscsi also.
Thanks,
Jeff
-- Jeff Cleverley Unix Systems Administrator 4380 Ziegler Road Fort Collins, Colorado 80525 970-288-4611
Toasters mailing list Toasters@teaparty.net http://www.teaparty.net/mailman/listinfo/toasters