The database control file is a small binary file associated with only one database. Each database has one unique control file, although it may maintain identical copies of it.
数据库控制文件是一个比较小的,并且只与一个数据库关联二进制文件。每个数据库都有一个唯一的控制文件,即使它拥有多个相同的副本。
The control file is the root file that Oracle Database uses to find database files and to manage the state of the database generally. A control file contains information such as the following:
The database name and database unique identifier (DBID)
The time stamp of database creation
Information about data files, online redo log files, and archived redo log files
一般来说,控制文件是oracle数据库用来查找数据库文件、管理数据库状态的根文件。一个控制文件包含一下信息:
数据库名和数据库唯一标识符(DBID)
创建数据库的时间戳
包含数据文件、联机日志文件和归档重做日志文件的信息
The control file serves the following purposes:
It contains information about data files, online redo log files, and so on that are required to open the database.
The control file tracks structural changes to the database. For example, when an administrator adds, renames, or drops a data file or online redo log file, the database updates the control file to reflect this change.
It contains metadata that must be accessible when the database is not open.
For example, the control file contains information required to recover the database, including checkpoints. A checkpoint indicates the SCN in the redo stream where instance recovery would be required to begin (see "Overview of Instance Recovery"). Every committed change before a checkpoint SCN is guaranteed to be saved on disk in the data files. At least every three seconds the checkpoint process records information in the control file about the checkpoint position in the online redo log.
Oracle Database reads and writes to the control file continuously during database use and must be available for writing whenever the database is open. For example, recovering a database involves reading from the control file the names of all the data files contained in the database. Other operations, such as adding a data file, update the information stored in the control file.
Oracle Database enables multiple, identical control files to be open concurrently and written for the same database. By multiplexing a control file on different disks, the database can achieve redundancy and thereby avoid a single point of failure.
Note:
Oracle recommends that you maintain multiple control file copies, each on a different disk.If a control file becomes unusable, then the database instance fails when it attempts to access the damaged control file. When other current control file copies exist, the database can be remounted and opened without media recovery. If all control files of a database are lost, however, then the instance fails and media recovery is required. Media recovery is not straightforward if an older backup of a control file must be used because a current copy is not available.
Information about the database is stored in different sections of the control file. Each section is a set of records about an aspect of the database. For example, one section in the control file tracks data files and contains a set of records, one for each data file. Each section is stored in multiple logical control file blocks. Records can span blocks within a section.
The control file contains the following types of records:
Circular reuse records
These records contain noncritical information that is eligible to be overwritten if needed. When all available record slots are full, the database either expands the control file to make room for a new record or overwrites the oldest record. Examples include records about archived redo log files and RMAN backups.
Noncircular reuse records
These records contain critical information that does not change often and cannot be overwritten. Examples of information include tablespaces, data files, online redo log files, and redo threads. Oracle Database never reuses these records unless the corresponding object is dropped from the tablespace.
As explained in "Overview of the Dynamic Performance Views", you can query the dynamic performance views, also known as V$
views, to view the information stored in the control file. For example, you can query V$DATABASE
to obtain the database name and DBID. However, only the database can modify the information in the control file.
Reading and writing the control file blocks is different from reading and writing data blocks. For the control file, Oracle Database reads and writes directly from the disk to the program global area (PGA). Each process allocates a certain amount of its PGA memory for control file blocks.
还可以通过以下两个视图查看控制文件的内容:
V$CONTROLFILE_RECORD_SECTION
view
CONTROL_FILE_RECORD_KEEP_TIME
initialization parameter
另外,还有其他方法查看控制文件的内容,详见博客:http://blog.itpub.net/30208428/viewspace-1811811/
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