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Oracle® Database Data Warehousing Guide
10g Release 1 (10.1)

Part Number B10736-01
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16 Change Data Capture

Change Data Capture efficiently identifies and captures data that has been added to, updated in, or removed from, Oracle relational tables and makes this change data available for use by applications or individuals. Change Data Capture is provided as a database component beginning with Oracle9i.

This chapter describes Change Data Capture in the following sections:

See PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for reference information about the Change Data Capture publish and subscribe PL/SQL packages.

Overview of Change Data Capture

Often, data warehousing involves the extraction and transportation of relational data from one or more production databases into a data warehouse for analysis. Change Data Capture quickly identifies and processes only the data that has changed and makes the change data available for further use.

Capturing Change Data Without Change Data Capture

Prior to the introduction of Change Data Capture, there were a number of ways that users could capture change data, including table differencing and change-value selection.

Table differencing involves transporting a copy of an entire table from the source (production) database to the staging database (where the change data is captured), where an older version of the table already exists. Using the SQL MINUS operator, you can obtain the inserted and new versions of updated rows with the following query:

SELECT * FROM new_version 
MINUS SELECT * FROM old_version;

Moreover, you can obtain the deleted rows and old versions of updated rows with the following query:

SELECT * FROM old_version 
MINUS SELECT * FROM new_version;

However, there are several problems with this method:

  • It requires that the new version of the entire table be transported to the staging database, not just the change data, thereby greatly increasing transport costs.

  • The computational cost of performing the two MINUS operations on the staging database can be very high.

  • Table differencing cannot capture data changes that have reverted to their old values. For example, suppose the price of a product changes several times between the old version and the new version of the product's table. If the price in the new version ends up being the same as the old, table differencing cannot detect that the price has fluctuated. Moreover, any intermediate price values between the old and new versions of the product's table cannot be captured using table differencing.

  • There is no way to determine which changes were made as part of the same transaction. For example, suppose a sales manager creates a special discount to close a deal. The fact that the creation of the discount and the creation of the sale occurred as part of the same transaction cannot be captured, unless the source database is specifically designed to do so.

Change-value selection involves capturing the data on the source database by selecting the new and changed data from the source tables based on the value of a specific column. For example, suppose the source table has a LAST_UPDATE_DATE column. To capture changes, you base your selection from the source table on the LAST_UPDATE_DATE column value.

However, there are also several problems with this method:

  • The overhead of capturing the change data must be borne on the source database, and you must run potentially expensive queries against the source table on the source database. The need for these queries may force you to add indexes that would otherwise be unneeded. There is no way to offload this overhead to the staging database.

  • This method is no better at capturing intermediate values than the table differencing method. If the price in the product's table fluctuates, you will not be able to capture all the intermediate values, or even tell if the price had changed, if the ending value is the same as it was the last time that you captured change data.

  • This method is also no better than the table differencing method at capturing which data changes were made together in the same transaction. If you need to capture information concerning which changes occurred together in the same transaction, you must include specific designs for this purpose in your source database.

  • The granularity of the change-value column may not be fine enough to uniquely identify the new and changed rows. For example, suppose the following:

    • You capture data changes using change-value selection on a date column such as LAST_UPDATE_DATE.

    • The capture happens at a particular instant in time, 14-FEB-2003 17:10:00.

    • Additional updates occur to the table during the same second that you performed your capture.

    When you next capture data changes, you will select rows with a LAST_UPDATE_DATE strictly after 14-FEB-2003 17:10:00, and thereby miss the changes that occurred during the remainder of that second.

    To use change-value selection, you either have to accept that anomaly, add an artificial change-value column with the granularity you need, or lock out changes to the source table during the capture process, thereby further burdening the performance of the source database.

  • You have to design your source database in advance with this capture mechanism in mind – all tables from which you wish to capture change data must have a change-value column. If you want to build a data warehouse with data sources from legacy systems, those legacy systems may not supply the necessary change-value columns you need.

Change Data Capture does not depend on expensive and cumbersome table differencing or change-value selection mechanisms. Instead, it captures the change data resulting from INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE operations made to user tables. The change data is then stored in a relational table called a change table, and the change data is made available to applications or individuals in a controlled way.

Capturing Change Data with Change Data Capture

Change Data Capture can capture and publish committed change data in either of the following modes:

  • Synchronous

    Change data is captured immediately, as each SQL statement that performs a data manipulation language (DML) operation (INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE) is made, by using triggers on the source database. In this mode, change data is captured as part of the transaction modifying the source table. Synchronous Change Data Capture is available with Oracle Standard Edition and Enterprise Edition.

  • Asynchronous

    Change data is captured after a SQL statement that performs a DML operation is committed, by taking advantage of the data sent to the redo log files. In this mode, change data is not captured as part of the transaction that is modifying the source table, and therefore has no effect on that transaction. Asynchronous Change Data Capture is available with Oracle Enterprise Edition only.

    Asynchronous Change Data Capture is built on, and provides a relational interface to, Oracle Streams. See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information on Oracle Streams.

The following list describes the advantages of capturing change data with Change Data Capture:

  • Completeness

    Change Data Capture can capture all effects of INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE operations, including data values before and after UPDATE operations.

  • Performance

    Asynchronous Change Data Capture can be configured to have minimal performance impact on the source database.

  • Interface

    Change Data Capture includes the PL/SQL DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH and DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE packages, which provide easy-to-use publish and subscribe interfaces.

  • Cost

    Change Data Capture reduces overhead cost because it simplifies the extraction of change data from the database and is part of Oracle9i and later databases.

A Change Data Capture system is based on the interaction of a publisher and subscribers to capture and distribute change data, as described in the next section.

Publish and Subscribe Model

Most Change Data Capture systems have one person who captures and publishes change data; this person is the publisher. There can be multiple applications or individuals that access the change data; these applications and individuals are the subscribers. Change Data Capture provides PL/SQL packages to accomplish the publish and subscribe tasks.

The following sections describe the roles of the publisher and subscriber in detail. Subsequent sections describe change sources, more about modes of Change Data Capture, and change tables.

Publisher

The publisher is usually a database administrator (DBA) who creates and maintains the schema objects that make up the Change Data Capture system. Typically, a publisher deals with two databases:

  • Source database

    This is the production database that contains the data of interest. Its associated tables are referred to as the source tables.

  • Staging database

    This is the database where the change data capture takes place. Depending on the capture mode that the publisher uses, the staging database can be the same as, or different from, the source database. The following Change Data Capture objects reside on the staging database:

    • Change table

      A change table is a relational table that contains change data for a single source table. To subscribers, a change table is known as a publication.

    • Change set

      A change set is a set of change data that is guaranteed to be transactionally consistent. It contains one or more change tables.

    • Change source

      The change source is a logical representation of the source database. It contains one or more change sets.

The publisher performs these tasks:

  • Determines the source databases and tables from which the subscribers are interested in viewing change data, and the mode (synchronous or asynchronous) in which to capture the change data.

  • Uses the Oracle-supplied package, DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH, to set up the system to capture change data from the source tables of interest.

  • Allows subscribers to have controlled access to the change data in the change tables by using the SQL GRANT and REVOKE statements to grant and revoke the SELECT privilege on change tables for users and roles. (Keep in mind, however, that subscribers use views, not change tables directly, to access change data.)

In Figure 16-1, the publisher determines that subscribers are interested in viewing change data from the HQ source database. In particular, subscribers are interested in change data from the SH.SALES and SH.PROMOTIONS source tables.

The publisher creates a change source HQ_SRC on the DW staging database, a change set, SH_SET, and two change tables: sales_ct and promo_ct. The sales_ct change table contains all the columns from the source table, SH.SALES. For the promo_ct change table, however, the publisher has decided to exclude the PROMO_COST column.

Figure 16-1 Publisher Components in a Change Data Capture System

Description of pub_components.gif follows
Description of the illustration pub_components.gif

Subscribers

The subscribers are consumers of the published change data. A subscriber performs the following tasks:

  • Uses the Oracle supplied package, DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE, to:

    • Create subscriptions

      A subscription controls access to the change data from one or more source tables of interest within a single change set. A subscription contains one or more subscriber views.

      A subscriber view is a view that specifies the change data from a specific publication in a subscription. The subscriber is restricted to seeing change data that the publisher has published and has granted the subscriber access to use. See "Subscribing to Change Data" for more information on choosing a method for specifying a subscriber view.

    • Notify Change Data Capture when ready to receive a set of change data

      A subscription window defines the time range of rows in a publication that the subscriber can currently see in subscriber views. The oldest row in the window is called the low boundary; the newest row in the window is called the high boundary. Each subscription has its own subscription window that applies to all of its subscriber views.

    • Notify Change Data Capture when finished with a set of change data

  • Uses SELECT statements to retrieve change data from the subscriber views.

A subscriber has the privileges of the user account under which the subscriber is running, plus any additional privileges that have been granted to the subscriber.

In Figure 16-2, the subscriber is interested in a subset of columns that the publisher (in Figure 16-1) has published. Note that the publications shown in Figure 16-2, are represented as change tables in Figure 16-1; this reflects the different terminology used by subscribers and publishers, respectively.

The subscriber creates a subscription, sales_promos_list and two subscriber views (spl_sales and spl_promos) on the SH_SET change set on the DW staging database. Within each subscriber view, the subscriber includes a subset of the columns that were made available by the publisher. Note that because the publisher did not create a change table that includes the PROMO_COST column, there is no way for the subscriber to view change data for that column.

Figure 16-2 Subscriber Components in a Change Data Capture System

Description of sub_components.gif follows
Description of the illustration sub_components.gif

Change Data Capture provides the following benefits for subscribers:

  • Guarantees that each subscriber sees all the changes

  • Keeps track of multiple subscribers and gives each subscriber shared access to change data

  • Handles all the storage management by automatically removing data from change tables when it is no longer required by any of the subscribers


    Note:

    Oracle provides the previously listed benefits only when the subscriber accesses change data through a subscriber view.

Change Sources and Modes of Data Capture

Change Data Capture provides synchronous and asynchronous modes for capturing change data. The following sections summarize how each mode of Change Data Capture is performed, and the change source associated with each mode of Change Data Capture.

Synchronous

This mode uses triggers on the source database to capture change data. It has no latency because the change data is captured continuously and in real time on the source database. The change tables are populated when DML operations on the source table are committed.

While the synchronous mode of Change Data Capture adds overhead to the source database at capture time, this mode can reduce costs (as compared to attempting to extract change data using table differencing or change-value section) by simplifying the extraction of change data.

There is a single, predefined synchronous change source, SYNC_SOURCE, that represents the source database. This is the only synchronous change source. It cannot be altered or dropped.

Change tables for this mode of Change Data Capture must reside locally in the source database.

Figure 16-3 illustrates the synchronous configuration. Triggers executed after DML operations occur on the source tables populate the change tables in the change sets within the SYNC_SOURCE change source.

Figure 16-3 Synchronous Change Data Capture Configuration

Description of synch.gif follows
Description of the illustration synch.gif

Asynchronous

This mode captures change data after the changes have been committed to the source database by using the database redo log files.

The asynchronous mode of Change Data Capture is dependent on the level of supplemental logging enabled at the source database. Supplemental logging adds redo logging overhead at the source database, so it must be carefully balanced with the needs of the applications or individuals using Change Data Capture. See "Asynchronous Change Data Capture and Supplemental Logging" for information on supplemental logging.

There are two methods of capturing change data asynchronously, HotLog and AutoLog, as described in the following sections:

HotLog

Change data is captured from the online redo log file on the source database. There is a brief latency between the act of committing source table transactions and the arrival of change data.

There is a single, predefined HotLog change source, HOTLOG_SOURCE, that represents the current redo log files of the source database. This is the only HotLog change source. It cannot be altered or dropped.

Change tables for this mode of Change Data Capture must reside locally in the source database.

Figure 16-4, illustrates the asynchronous HotLog configuration. The Logwriter Process (LGWR) records committed transactions in the online redo log files on the source database. Change Data Capture uses Oracle Streams processes to automatically populate the change tables in the change sets within the HOTLOG_SOURCE change source as newly committed transactions arrive.

Figure 16-4 Asynchronous HotLog Configuration

Description of hotlog.gif follows
Description of the illustration hotlog.gif

AutoLog

Change data is captured from a set of redo log files managed by log transport services. Log transport services control the automated transfer of redo log files from the source database to the staging database. Using database initialization parameters (described in "Initialization Parameters for Asynchronous AutoLog Publishing"), the publisher configures log transport services to copy the redo log files from the source database system to the staging database system and to automatically register the redo log files. Change sets are populated automatically as new redo log files arrive. The degree of latency depends on frequency of redo log switches on the source database.

There is no predefined AutoLog change source. The publisher provides information about the source database to create an AutoLog change source. See "Performing Asynchronous AutoLog Publishing" for details.

Change sets for this mode of Change Data Capture can be remote from or local to the source database. Typically, they are remote.

Figure 16-5 shows a typical Change Data Capture asynchronous AutoLog configuration in which, when the log switches on the source database, archiver processes archive the redo log file on the source database to the destination specified by the LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_1 parameter and copy the redo log file to the staging database as specified by the LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_2 parameter. (Although the image presents these parameters as LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_1 and LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_2, the integer value in these parameter strings can be any value between 1 and 10.)

Note that the archiver processes use Oracle Net to send redo data over the network to the remote file server (RFS) process. Transmitting redo log files to a remote destination requires uninterrupted connectivity through Oracle Net.

On the staging database, the RFS process writes the redo data to the copied log files in the location specified by the value of the TEMPLATE attribute in the LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_2 parameter (specified in the source database initialization parameter file). Then, Change Data Capture uses Oracle Streams downstream capture to populate the change tables in the change sets within the AutoLog change source.

Figure 16-5 Asynchronous AutoLog Change Data Capture Configuration

Description of autolog.gif follows
Description of the illustration autolog.gif

Change Sets

A change set is a logical grouping of change data that is guaranteed to be transactionally consistent and that can be managed as a unit. A change set is a member of one (and only one) change source. A change source can contain one or more change sets. Conceptually, a change set shares the same mode as its change source. For example, an AutoLog change set is a change set contained in an AutoLog change source.

When a publisher includes two or more change tables in the same change set, subscribers can perform join operations across the tables represented within the change set and be assured of transactional consistency.

There are three modes of change sets, as follow:

Publishers can purge unneeded change data from change tables at the change set level to keep the change tables in the change set from growing larger indefinitely.

See "Purging Change Tables of Unneeded Data" for more information on purging change data.

Valid Combinations of Change Sources and Change Sets

Table 16-1 summarizes the valid combinations of change sources and change sets and indicates whether each is predefined or publisher-defined. In addition, Table 16-1 indicates whether the change source represents a local or remote source database, and whether the change source is used for synchronous or asynchronous Change Data Capture.

Table 16-1 Summary of Change Sources and Change Sets

Mode Change Source Source Database Represented Associated Change Sets
Synchronous Predefined SYNC_SOURCE Local Predefined SYNC_SET and publisher-defined
Asynchronous HotLog Predefined
HOTLOG_SOURCE
Local Publisher-defined
Asynchronous AutoLog Publisher-defined Remote or local Publisher-defined


Note:

Although the AutoLog source database and AutoLog staging database can be the same, this arrangement is rarely used. AutoLog examples in this chapter assume that the source and staging databases are different.

Change Tables

A given change table contains the change data resulting from DML operations performed on a given source table. A change table consists of two things: the change data itself, which is stored in a database table, ; and the system metadata necessary to maintain the change table, which includes control columns.

The publisher specifies the source columns that are to be included in the change table. Typically, for a change table to contain useful data, the publisher needs to include the primary key column in the change table along with any other columns of interest to subscribers. For example, suppose subscribers are interested in changes that occur to the UNIT_COST and the UNIT_PRICE columns in the SH.COSTS table. If the publisher does not include the PROD_ID column in the change table, subscribers will know only that the unit cost and unit price of some products have changed, but will be unable to determine for which products these changes have occurred.

There are optional and required control columns. The required control columns are always included in a change table; the optional ones are included if specified by the publisher when creating the change table. Control columns are managed by Change Data Capture. See "Understanding Change Table Control Columns" and "Understanding TARGET_COLMAP$ and SOURCE_COLMAP$ Values" for detailed information on control columns.

Getting Information About the Change Data Capture Environment

Information about the Change Data Capture environment is provided in the static data dictionary views described in Table 16-2 and Table 16-3. Table 16-2 lists the views that are intended for use by publishers; the user must have the SELECT_CATALOG_ROLE privilege to access the views listed in this table. Table 16-3 lists the views that are intended for use by subscribers. Table 16-3 includes views with the prefixes ALL and USER. These prefixes have the following general meanings:

Table 16-2 Views Intended for Use by Change Data Capture Publishers

View Name Description
CHANGE_SOURCES Describes existing change sources.
CHANGE_SETS Describes existing change sets.
CHANGE_TABLES Describes existing change tables.
DBA_SOURCE_TABLES Describes all existing source tables in the database.
DBA_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS Describes all published columns of source tables in the database.
DBA_SUBSCRIPTIONS Describes all subscriptions.
DBA_SUBSCRIBED_TABLES Describes all source tables to which any subscriber has subscribed.
DBA_SUBSCRIBED_COLUMNS Describes the columns of source tables to which any subscriber has subscribed.

Table 16-3 Views Intended for Use by Change Data Capture Subscribers

View Name Description
ALL_SOURCE_TABLES Describes all existing source tables accessible to the current user.
USER_SOURCE_TABLES Describes all existing source tables owned by the current user.
ALL_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS Describes all published columns of source tables accessible to the current user.
USER_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS Describes all published columns of source tables owned by the current user.
ALL_SUBSCRIPTIONS Describes all subscriptions accessible to the current user.
USER_SUBSCRIPTIONS Describes all the subscriptions owned by the current user.
ALL_SUBSCRIBED_TABLES Describes the source tables to which any subscription accessible to the current user has subscribed.
USER_SUBSCRIBED_TABLES Describes the source tables to which the current user has subscribed.
ALL_SUBSCRIBED_COLUMNS Describes the columns of source tables to which any subscription accessible to the current user has subscribed.
USER_SUBSCRIBED_COLUMNS Describes the columns of source tables to which the current user has subscribed.

See Oracle Database Reference for complete information about these views.

Preparing to Publish Change Data

This section describes the tasks the publisher should perform before starting to publish, information on creating the publisher, information on selecting a mode in which to capture change data, and instructions on setting database initialization parameters required by Change Data Capture.

The publisher should do the following before performing the actual steps for publishing:

Creating a User to Serve As a Publisher

Typically, a DBA creates a user to serve as a publisher for Change Data Capture. The following sections describe the tasks involved.

Granting Privileges and Roles to the Publisher

On the staging database, the publisher must be granted the privileges and roles in the following list:

  • EXECUTE_CATALOG_ROLE privilege

  • SELECT_CATALOG_ROLE privilege

  • CREATE TABLE and CREATE SESSION privileges

  • CONNECT and RESOURCE roles

In addition, for asynchronous HotLog and AutoLog publishing, the publisher must:

  • Be granted the CREATE SEQUENCE privilege

  • Be granted the DBA role

  • Be the GRANTEE specified in a DBMS_STREAMS_AUTH.GRANT_ADMIN_PRIVILEGE() subprogram issued by the staging database DBA

In other words, for asynchronous publishing, the publisher should be configured as an Oracle Streams administrator. See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information on configuring an Oracle Streams administrator.

Creating a Default Tablespace for the Publisher

When creating the publisher account, the DBA should also consider specifying a default tablespace for the publisher in which he or she can create change tables. Otherwise, Oracle recommends that the publisher always specify a tablespace that he or she owns when creating a change table. To create a tablespace, the publisher will need the following privileges:

  • CREATE TABLESPACE

  • UNLIMITED TABLESPACE

Password Files and Setting the REMOTE_LOGIN_PASSWORDFILE Parameter

For asynchronous AutoLog publishing only, the REMOTE_LOGIN_PASSWORDFILE database initialization parameter must be set to SHARED on both the source and staging databases, and a password file must exist on both the machines hosting the source and staging databases. The DBA uses the orapwd utility to create password files. For example:

ORAPWD FILE=orapw PASSWORD=mypassword ENTRIES=10

This example creates a password file with 10 entries, where the password for SYS is mypassword. For redo log file transmission to succeed, the password for the SYS user account must be identical for the source and staging databases.

Determining the Mode in Which to Capture Data

Three factors influence the decision on the mode in which to capture change data:

  • Whether or not the staging database is remote from the source database

  • Tolerance for latency between changes made on the source database and changes captured by Change Data Capture

  • Performance impact on the source database transactions and overall database performance

Table 16-4 summarizes the factors that might influence the mode decision.

Table 16-4 Factors Influencing Choice of Change Data Capture Mode

Mode Location of Staging Database Latency Source Database
Performance Impact
Synchronous Must be the same as the source database. None - change data is automatically committed as part of the same transaction it reflects. Adds overhead to source database transactions to perform change data capture.
Asynchronous HotLog Must be the same as the source database. Change data is captured from the current online redo log file. Change sets are populated automatically as new committed transactions arrive. Minimal impact on source database transactions to perform supplemental logging. Additional source database overhead to perform change data capture.
Asynchronous AutoLog Typically remote from the source database. Depends on the frequency of redo log switches on the source database. Change sets are populated automatically as new log files arrive. Minimal impact on source database transactions to perform supplemental logging.

Minimal source database overhead for log transport services.

When the source database is remote from the staging database, then this mode has the least impact on the source database.


Setting Initialization Parameters for Change Data Capture Publishing

Initialization parameters must be set on the source or staging database, or both, for Change Data Capture to succeed. Which parameters to set depend on the mode in which Change Data Capture is publishing change data, and on whether the parameters are being set on the source or staging database.

The following sections describe the database initialization parameter settings for each mode of Change Data Capture. Sometimes you are directed to add a value to a current setting. See "Determining the Current Setting of an Initialization Parameter" to determine the current setting for a parameter if that parameter is not explicitly specified in the initialization parameter file. See Oracle Database Reference and Oracle Data Guard Concepts and Administration for more information about these database initialization parameters.

Initialization Parameters for Synchronous Publishing

Set the JAVA_POOL_SIZE parameter as follows:

JAVA_POOL_SIZE = 50000000

Initialization Parameters for Asynchronous HotLog Publishing

Table 16-5 lists the source database initialization parameters and their recommended settings for Asychronous HotLog publishing.

Table 16-5 Source Database Initialization Parameters for Asynchronous HotLog Publishing

Parameter Recommended Value
COMPATIBLE 10.1.0
JAVA_POOL_SIZE 50000000
JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES 2
PARALLEL_MAX_SERVERS (current value) + (5 * (the number of change sets planned))
PROCESSES (current value) + (7 * (the number of change sets planned))
SESSIONS (current value) + (2 * (the number of change sets planned))
STREAMS_POOL_SIZE
  • If the current value of the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is 50 MB or greater, then set this parameter to:

    (current value) + ((the number of change sets planned) * (21 MB))

  • If the current value of the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is less than 50 MB, then set the value of this parameter to:

    50 MB + ((the number of change sets planned) * (21 MB))

See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information on how the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is applied when changed dynamically.

UNDO_RETENTION 3600

Initialization Parameters for Asynchronous AutoLog Publishing

Table 16-6 lists the database initialization parameters and their recommended settings for the asynchronous AutoLog publishing source database and Table 16-7 lists the database initialization parameters and their recommended settings for the asynchronous AutoLog publishing staging database.

Table 16-6 Source Database Initialization Parameters for Asynchronous AutoLog Publishing

Parameter Recommended Value
COMPATIBLE 10.1.0
JAVA_POOL_SIZE 50000000
LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_1Foot  The directory specification on the system hosting the source database where the archived redo log files are to be kept.
LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_2Footref 1 This parameter must include the SERVICE, ARCH or LGWR ASYNC, OPTIONAL, NOREGISTER, and REOPEN attributes so that log transport services are configured to copy the redo log files from the source database to the staging database. These attributes are set as follows:
  • SERVICE specifies the network name of the staging database.

  • ARCH or LGWR ASYNC

    ARCH specifies that the archiver process (ARCn) copy the redo log files to the staging database after a source database log switch occurs.

    LGWR ASYNC specifies that the log writer process (LGWR) copy redo data to the staging database as the redo is generated on the source database. Note that, the copied redo data becomes available to Change Data Capture only after a source database log switch occurs.

  • OPTIONAL specifies that the copying of a redo log file to the staging database need not succeed before the corresponding online redo log at the source database can be overwritten. This is needed to avoid stalling operations on the source database due to a transmission failure to the staging database. The original redo log file remains available to the source database in either archived or backed up form, if it is needed.

  • NOREGISTER specifies that the staging database location is not recorded in the staging database control file.

  • REOPEN specifies the minimum number of seconds the archiver process (ARCn) should wait before trying to access the staging database if a previous attempt to access this location failed.

  • TEMPLATE defines a directory specification and a format template for the file name used for the redo log files that are copied to the staging database.Foot 

LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_STATE_1Footref 1 ENABLE

Indicates that log transport services can transmit archived redo log files to this destination.

LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_STATE_2Footref 1 ENABLE

Indicates that log transport services can transmit redo log files to this destination.

LOG_ARCHIVE_FORMAT "arch1_%s_%t_%r.dbf"

Specifies a format template for the default file name when archiving redo log files.Footref 2 The string value (arch1) and the file name extension (.dbf) do not have to be exactly as specified here.

REMOTE_LOGIN_PASSWORDFILE SHARED

Footnote The integer value in this parameter can be any value between 1 and 10. In this manual, the values 1 and 2 are used. For each LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_n parameter, there must be a corresponding LOG_ARCHIVE_DEST_STATE_n parameter that specifies the same value for n.
Footnote In the format template, %t corresponds to the thread number, %s corresponds to the sequence number, and %r corresponds to the resetlogs ID. Together, these ensure that unique names are constructed for the copied redo log files.

Table 16-7 Staging Database Initialization Parameters for Asynchronous AutoLog Publishing

Parameter Recommended Value
COMPATIBLE 10.1.0
GLOBAL_NAMES TRUE
JAVA_POOL_SIZE 50000000
JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES 2
PARALLEL_MAX_SERVERS (current value) + (5 * (the number of change sets planned))
PROCESSES (current value) + (7 * (the number of change sets planned))
REMOTE_LOGIN_PASSWORDFILE SHARED
SESSIONS (current value)+ (2 * (the number of change sets planned))
STREAMS_POOL_SIZE
  • If the current value of the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is 50 MB or greater, then set this parameter to:

    (current value) + ((the number of change sets planned) * (21 MB))

  • If the current value of the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is less than 50 MB, then set the value of this parameter to:

    50 MB + ((the number of change sets planned) * (21 MB))

See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information on how the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is applied when changed dynamically.

UNDO_RETENTION 3600


Note:

If Oracle Streams capture parallelism and apply parallelism values are increased after the change sets are created, the source or staging database DBA (depending on the mode of capture) must adjust initialization parameter values as described in "Adjusting Initialization Parameter Values When Oracle Streams Values Change".

Determining the Current Setting of an Initialization Parameter

Sometimes the DBA needs to make adjustments to the initialization parameters by adding a value to the current setting. If a specific parameter is not in the initialization parameter file, the default value (if one exists) is the current value. The current settings of all initialization parameters for the database are displayed when the following SQL statement is issued:

SQL> SHOW PARAMETERS

The current setting of a particular initialization parameter can be displayed, in this case, STREAMS_POOL_SIZE, using a SQL statement such as the following:

SQL> SHOW PARAMETER STREAMS_POOL_SIZE

Retaining Initialization Parameter Values When a Database Is Restarted

To ensure that changed initialization parameter values are retained when the database is restarted:

  • If the database is using a pfile, manually update the pfile with any parameter values you change with the SQL ALTER SYSTEM statement.

  • If the database is using an spfile, then parameter values you change with the SQL ALTER SYSTEM statement are automatically changed in the parameter file.

  • If the database is using an spfile and a given initialization parameter is not or cannot be changed dynamically (such as the PROCESS, LOG_ARCHIVE_FORMAT, and REMOTE_LOGIN_ENABLE parameters), you must change the value with the SQL ALTER SYSTEM statement, and then restart the database.

  • If the ORA-04031 error is returned when the DBA attempts to set the JAVA_POOL_SIZE dynamically, he or she should place the parameter in the database initialization parameter file and restart the database.

See Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on managing initialization parameters using a pfile or an spfile.

In any case, if a parameter is reset dynamically, the new value should also be placed in the initialization parameter file, so that the new value is retained if the database is restarted.

Adjusting Initialization Parameter Values When Oracle Streams Values Change

Asynchronous Change Data Capture uses an Oracle Streams configuration for each HotLog and AutoLog change set. This Streams configuration consists of a Streams capture process and a Streams apply process, with an accompanying queue and queue table. Each Streams configuration uses additional processes, parallel execution servers, and memory.

Oracle Streams capture and apply processes each have a parallelism parameter that is used to improve performance. When a publisher first creates a change set, its capture parallelism value and apply parallelism value are each 1. If desired, a publisher can increase one or both of these values using Streams interfaces.

If Oracle Streams capture parallelism and apply parallelism values are increased after the change sets are created, the staging database DBA must adjust initialization parameter values accordingly. Example 16-1 and Example 16-2 demonstrate how to obtain the capture parallelism and apply parallelism values for change set CHICAGO_DAILY. By default, each parallelism value is 1, so the amount by which a given parallelism value has been increased is the returned value minus 1.

Example 16-1 Obtaining the Oracle Streams Capture Parallelism Value

SELECT cp.value FROM DBA_CAPTURE_PARAMETERS cp, CHANGE_SETS cset
   WHERE cset.SET_NAME = 'CHICAGO_DAILY' and
   cset.CAPTURE_NAME = cp.CAPTURE_NAME and
   cp.PARAMETER = 'PARALLELISM';

Example 16-2 Obtaining the Oracle Streams Apply Parallelism Value

SELECT ap.value FROM DBA_APPLY_PARAMETERS ap, CHANGE_SETS cset
   WHERE cset.SET_NAME = 'CHICAGO_DAILY' and
   cset.APPLY_NAME = ap.APPLY_NAME and
   ap.parameter = 'PARALLELISM';

The staging database DBA must adjust the staging database initialization parameters as described in the following list to accommodate the parallel execution servers and other processes and memory required for asynchronous Change Data Capture:

  • PARALLEL_MAX_SERVERS

    For each change set for which Oracle Streams capture or apply parallelism values were increased, increase the value of this parameter by the sum of increased Streams parallelism values.

    For example, if the statement in Example 16-1 returns a value of 2, and the statement in Example 16-2 returns a value of 3, then the staging database DBA should increase the value of the PARALLEL_MAX_SERVERS parameter by (2-1) + (3-1), or 3 for the CHICAGO_DAILY change set. If the Streams capture or apply parallelism values have increased for other change sets, increases for those change sets must also be made.

  • PROCESSES

    For each change set for which Oracle Streams capture or apply parallelism values were changed, increase the value of this parameter by the sum of increased Streams parallelism values. See the previous list item, PARALLEL_MAX_SERVERS, for an example.

  • STREAMS_POOL_SIZE

    For each change set for which Oracle Streams capture or apply parallelism values were changed, increase the value of this parameter by (10MB * (the increased capture parallelism value)) + (1MB * increased apply parallelism value).

    For example, if the statement in Example 16-1 returns a value of 2, and the statement in Example 16-2 returns a value of 3, then the staging database DBA should increase the value of the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter by (10 MB * (2-1) + 1MB * (3-1)), or 12MB for the CHICAGO_DAILY change set. If the Oracle Streams capture or apply parallelism values have increased for other change sets, increases for those change sets must also be made.

    See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for more information on Streams capture parallelism and apply parallelism values. See Oracle Database Reference for more information about database initialization parameters.

Publishing Change Data

The following sections provide step-by-step instructions on performing the various types of publishing:

Performing Synchronous Publishing

For synchronous Change Data Capture, the publisher must use the predefined change source, SYNC_SOURCE. The publisher can define new change sets or can use the predefined change set, SYNC_SET. The publisher should not create change tables on source tables owned by SYS or SYSTEM because triggers will not fire and therefore changes will not be captured.

This example shows how to create a change set. If the publisher wants to use the predefined SYNC_SET, he or she should skip Step 3 and specify SYNC_SET as the change set name in the remaining steps.

This example assumes that the publisher and the source database DBA are two different people.


Step 1 Source Database DBA: Set the JAVA_POOL_SIZE parameter.

The source database DBA sets the database initialization parameters, as described in "Setting Initialization Parameters for Change Data Capture Publishing".

java_pool_size = 50000000

Step 2 Source Database DBA: Create and grant privileges to the publisher.

The source database DBA creates a user (for example, cdcpub), to serve as the Change Data Capture publisher and grants the necessary privileges to the publisher so that he or she can perform the operations needed to create Change Data Capture change sets and change tables on the source database, as described in "Creating a User to Serve As a Publisher". This example assumes that the tablespace ts_cdcpub has already been created.

CREATE USER cdcpub IDENTIFIED BY cdcpub DEFAULT TABLESPACE ts_cdcpub
QUOTA UNLIMITED ON SYSTEM 
QUOTA UNLIMITED ON SYSAUX;
GRANT CREATE SESSION TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE TABLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE TABLESPACE TO cdcpub;
GRANT UNLIMITED TABLESPACE TO cdcpub;
GRANT SELECT_CATALOG_ROLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT EXECUTE_CATALOG_ROLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT CONNECT, RESOURCE TO cdcpub;

Step 3 Staging Database Publisher: Create a change set.

The publisher uses the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_SET procedure on the staging database to create change sets.

The following example shows how to create a change set called CHICAGO_DAILY:

BEGIN
    DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_SET( 
    change_set_name    => 'CHICAGO_DAILY', 
    description        => 'Change set for job history info', 
    change_source_name => 'SYNC_SOURCE');
END;
/

The change set captures changes from the predefined change source SYNC_SOURCE. Because begin_date and end_date parameters cannot be specified for synchronous change sets, capture begins at the earliest available change data and continues capturing change data indefinitely.

Step 4 Staging Database Publisher: Create a change table.

The publisher uses the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure to create change tables.

The publisher can set the options_string field of the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure to have more control over the physical properties and tablespace properties of the change table. The options_string field can contain any option, except partitioning, that is available in the CREATE TABLE statement.

The following example creates a change table that captures changes that occur on a source table. The example uses the sample table HR.JOB_HISTORY as the source table. It assumes that the publisher has already created the TS_CHICAGO_DAILY tablespace.

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE(
owner => 'cdcpub',
   change_table_name => 'jobhist_ct', 
   change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
   source_schema => 'HR',
   source_table => 'JOB_HISTORY',
   column_type_list => 'EMPLOYEE_ID NUMBER(6),START_DATE DATE, 
                        END_DATE DATE,JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10), 
                        DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)',
   capture_values => 'both',
   rs_id => 'y', 
   row_id => 'n',
   user_id => 'n',
   timestamp => 'n',
   object_id => 'n',
   source_colmap => 'y',
   target_colmap => 'y',
   options_string => 'TABLESPACE TS_CHICAGO_DAILY');
END;
 /

This statement creates a change table named jobhist_ct within the change set CHICAGO_DAILY. The column_type_list parameter identifies the columns captured by the change table. The source_schema and source_table parameters identify the schema and source table that reside in the source database.

The capture_values setting in the example indicates that for update operations, the change data will contain two separate rows for each row that changed: one row will contain the row values before the update occurred, and the other row will contain the row values after the update occurred.

Step 5 Staging Database Publisher: Grant access to subscribers.

The publisher controls subscriber access to change data by granting and revoking the SELECT privilege on change tables for users and roles. The publisher grants access to specific change tables. Without this step, a subscriber cannot access any change data. This example assumes that user subscriber1 already exists.

GRANT SELECT ON cdcpub.jobhist_ct TO subscriber1;

The Change Data Capture synchronous system is now ready for subscriber1 to create subscriptions.

Performing Asynchronous HotLog Publishing

Change Data Capture uses Oracle Streams local capture to perform asynchronous HotLog publishing. (See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information on Streams local capture.)

For asynchronous HotLog Change Data Capture, the publisher must use the predefined change source, HOTLOG_SOURCE, and must create the change sets and the change tables that will contain the changes. The staging database is always the source database. This example assumes that the publisher and the source database DBA are two different people.

The following steps set up redo logging, Oracle Streams, and Change Data Capture for asynchronous HotLog publishing:


Step 1 Source Database DBA: Set the database initialization parameters.

The source database DBA sets the database initialization parameters, as described in "Setting Initialization Parameters for Change Data Capture Publishing". In this example, one change set will be defined and the current value of the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is 50 MB or greater.

compatible = 10.1.0
java_pool_size = 50000000;
job_queue_processes = 2
parallel_max_servers = <current value> + 5
processes = <current value> + 7
sessions = <current value> + 2
streams_pool_size = <current value> + 21 MB
undo_retention = 3600

Step 2 Source Database DBA: Alter the source database.

The source database DBA performs the following three tasks. The second is required. The first and third are optional, but recommended. It is assumed that the database is currently running in ARCHIVELOG mode.

  1. Place the database into FORCE LOGGING logging mode to protect against unlogged direct write operations in the source database that cannot be captured by asynchronous Change Data Capture:

    ALTER DATABASE FORCE LOGGING;
    
    
  2. Enable supplemental logging. Supplemental logging places additional column data into a redo log file whenever an UPDATE operation is performed. Minimally, database-level minimal supplemental logging must be enabled for any Change Data Capture source database:

    ALTER DATABASE ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG DATA;
    
    
  3. Create an unconditional log group on all columns to be captured in the source table. Source table columns that are unchanged and are not in an unconditional log group, will be null in the change table, instead of reflecting their actual source table values. (This example captures rows in the HR.JOB_HISTORY table only. The source database DBA would repeat this step for each source table for which change tables will be created.)

    ALTER TABLE HR.JOB_HISTORY
    ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG GROUP log_group_jobhist
      (EMPLOYEE_ID, START_DATE, END_DATE, JOB_ID, DEPARTMENT_ID) ALWAYS;
    
    

    If you intend to capture all the column values in a row whenever a column in that row is updated, you can use the following statement instead of listing each column one-by-one in the ALTER TABLE statement. However, do not use this form of the ALTER TABLE statement if all columns are not needed. Logging all columns incurs more overhead than logging selected columns.

    ALTER TABLE HR.JOB_HISTORY ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG DATA (ALL) COLUMNS;
    
    

    See Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information about running a database in ARCHIVELOG mode. See "Asynchronous Change Data Capture and Supplemental Logging" for more information on enabling supplemental logging.


Step 3 Source Database DBA: Create and grant privileges to the publisher.

The source database DBA creates a user, (for example, cdcpub), to serve as the Change Data Capture publisher and grants the necessary privileges to the publisher so that he or she can perform the underlying Oracle Streams operations needed to create Change Data Capture change sets, and change tables on the source database, as described in "Creating a User to Serve As a Publisher". This example assumes that the ts_cdcpub tablespace has already been created. For example:

CREATE USER cdcpub IDENTIFIED BY cdcpub DEFAULT TABLESPACE ts_cdcpub
QUOTA UNLIMITED ON SYSTEM 
QUOTA UNLIMITED ON SYSAUX;
GRANT CREATE SESSION TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE TABLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE TABLESPACE TO cdcpub;
GRANT UNLIMITED TABLESPACE TO cdcpub;
GRANT SELECT_CATALOG_ROLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT EXECUTE_CATALOG_ROLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE SEQUENCE TO cdcpub;
GRANT CONNECT, RESOURCE, DBA TO cdcpub;

EXECUTE DBMS_STREAMS_AUTH.GRANT_ADMIN_PRIVILEGE(GRANTEE => 'cdcpub');

Note that for HotLog Change Data Capture, the source database and the staging database are the same database.

Step 4 Source Database DBA: Prepare the source tables.

The source database DBA must prepare the source tables on the source database for asynchronous Change Data Capture by instantiating each source table so that the underlying Oracle Streams environment records the information it needs to capture each source table's changes. The source table structure and the column datatypes must be supported by Change Data Capture. See "Datatypes and Table Structures Supported for Asynchronous Change Data Capture" for more information.

BEGIN
DBMS_CAPTURE_ADM.PREPARE_TABLE_INSTANTIATION(TABLE_NAME => 'hr.job_history');
END;
/

Step 5 Staging Database Publisher: Create change sets.

The publisher uses the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_SET procedure on the staging database to create change sets. Note that when Change Data Capture creates a change set, its associated Oracle Streams capture and apply processes are also created (but not started).

The following example creates a change set called CHICAGO_DAILY that captures changes starting today, and stops capturing change data 5 days from now.

BEGIN
       DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_SET(
       change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
       description => 'Change set for job history info',
       change_source_name => 'HOTLOG_SOURCE',
       stop_on_ddl => 'y',
       begin_date => sysdate,
       end_date => sysdate+5);
END;
/

The change set captures changes from the predefined HOTLOG_SOURCE change source.

Step 6 Staging Database Publisher: Create the change tables that will contain the changes to the source tables.

The publisher uses the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure on the staging database to create change tables.

The publisher creates one or more change tables for each source table to be published, specifies which columns should be included, and specifies the combination of before and after images of the change data to capture.

The following example creates a change table on the staging database that captures changes made to a source table on the source database. The example uses the sample table HR.JOB_HISTORY as the source table.

BEGIN
       DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE(
       owner => 'cdcpub',
       change_table_name => 'job_hist_ct',
       change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
       source_schema => 'HR',
       source_table => 'JOB_HISTORY',
       column_type_list => 'EMPLOYEE_ID NUMBER(6),START_DATE DATE,END_DATE DATE,
       JOB_ID VARCHAR(10), DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)',
       capture_values => 'both',
       rs_id => 'y',
       row_id => 'n',
       user_id => 'n',
       timestamp => 'n',
       object_id => 'n',
       source_colmap => 'n',
       target_colmap => 'y',
       options_string => 'TABLESPACE TS_CHICAGO_DAILY');
END;
/

This statement creates a change table named job_history_ct within change set CHICAGO_DAILY. The column_type_list parameter identifies the columns to be captured by the change table. The source_schema and source_table parameters identify the schema and source table that reside on the source database.

The capture_values setting in this statement indicates that for update operations, the change data will contain two separate rows for each row that changed: one row will contain the row values before the update occurred and the other row will contain the row values after the update occurred.

The options_string parameter in this statement specifies a tablespace for the change table. (This example assumes that the publisher previously created the TS_CHICAGO_DAILY tablespace.)

Step 7 Staging Database Publisher: Enable the change set.

Because asynchronous change sets are always disabled when they are created, the publisher must alter the change set to enable it. The Oracle Streams capture and apply processes are started when the change set is enabled.

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
      change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
      enable_capture => 'y');
END;
/

Step 8 Staging Database Publisher: Grant access to subscribers.

The publisher controls subscriber access to change data by granting and revoking the SELECT privilege on change tables for users and roles. The publisher grants access to specific change tables. Without this step, a subscriber cannot access change data. This example assumes that user subscriber1 already exists.

GRANT SELECT ON cdcpub.job_hist_ct TO subscriber1;

The Change Data Capture Asynchronous HotLog system is now ready for subscriber1 to create subscriptions.

Performing Asynchronous AutoLog Publishing

Change Data Capture uses Oracle Streams downstream capture to perform asynchronous AutoLog publishing. The Change Data Capture staging database is considered a downstream database in the Streams environment. See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information on Streams downstream capture.

For asynchronous AutoLog Change Data Capture, the publisher creates new change sources, as well as the change sets and the change tables that will contain the changes that are made to individual source tables. For AutoLog Change Data Capture, the staging database is usually remote from the source database.

Steps must be performed on both the source database and the staging database to set up redo logging, Streams, and Change Data Capture for asynchronous AutoLog publishing. Because the source database and staging database are usually on separate systems, this example assumes that the source database DBA, the staging database DBA, and the publisher are different people.


Step 1 Source Database DBA: Prepare to copy redo log files from the source database.

The source database DBA and the staging database DBA must set up log transport services to copy redo log files from the source database to the staging database and to prepare the staging database to receive these redo log files, as follows:

  1. The source database DBA configures Oracle Net so that the source database can communicate with the staging database. (See Oracle Net Services Administrator's Guide for information about Oracle Net).

  2. The source database DBA sets the database initialization parameters on the source database as described in "Setting Initialization Parameters for Change Data Capture Publishing". In the following code example stagingdb is the network name of the staging database:

    compatible = 10.1.0
    java_pool_size = 50000000
    log_archive_dest_1="location=/oracle/dbs mandatory reopen=5"
    log_archive_dest_2 = "service=stagingdb arch optional noregister reopen=5
                          template = /usr/oracle/dbs/arch1_%s_%t_%r.dbf" 
    log_archive_dest_state_1 = enable
    log_archive_dest_state_2 = enable
    log_archive_format="arch1_%s_%t_%r.dbf"
    remote_login_passwordfile=shared
    
    

    See Oracle Data Guard Concepts and Administration for information on log transport services.


Step 2 Staging Database DBA: Set the database initialization parameters.

The staging database DBA sets the database initialization parameters on the staging database, as described in "Setting Initialization Parameters for Change Data Capture Publishing". In this example, one change set will be defined and the current value for the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE parameter is 50 MB or greater:

compatible = 10.1.0
global_names = true
java_pool_size = 50000000
job_queue_processes = 2
parallel_max_servers = <current_value> + 5
processes = <current_value> + 7
remote_login_passwordfile = shared
sessions = <current value> + 2
streams_pool_size = <current_value> + 21 MB
undo_retention = 3600

Step 3 Source Database DBA: Alter the source database.

The source database DBA performs the following three tasks. The second is required. The first and third are optional, but recommended. It is assumed that the database is currently running in ARCHIVELOG mode.

  1. Place the database into FORCE LOGGING logging mode to protect against unlogged direct writes in the source database that cannot be captured by asynchronous Change Data Capture:

    ALTER DATABASE FORCE LOGGING;
    
    
  2. Enable supplemental logging. Supplemental logging places additional column data into a redo log file whenever an update operation is performed.

    ALTER DATABASE ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG DATA;
    
    
  3. Create an unconditional log group on all columns to be captured in the source table. Source table columns that are unchanged and are not in an unconditional log group, will be null in the change table, instead of reflecting their actual source table values. (This example captures rows in the HR.JOB_HISTORY table only. The source database DBA would repeat this step for each source table for which change tables will be created).

    ALTER TABLE HR.JOB_HISTORY
    ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG GROUP log_group_job_hist
       (EMPLOYEE_ID, START_DATE, END_DATE, JOB_ID, DEPARTMENT_ID) ALWAYS;
    
    

    If you intend to capture all the column values in a row whenever a column in that row is updated, you can use the following statement instead of listing each column one-by-one in the ALTER TABLE statement. However, do not use this form of the ALTER TABLE statement if all columns are not needed. Logging all columns incurs more overhead than logging selected columns.

    ALTER TABLE HR.JOB_HISTORY ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG DATA (ALL) COLUMNS;
    
    

    See Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information about running a database in ARCHIVELOG mode. See "Asynchronous Change Data Capture and Supplemental Logging" for more information on enabling supplemental logging.


Step 4 Staging Database DBA: Create and grant privileges to the publisher.

The staging database DBA creates a user, (for example, cdcpub), to serve as the Change Data Capture publisher and grants the necessary privileges to the publisher so that he or she can perform the underlying Oracle Streams operations needed to create Change Data Capture change sources, change sets, and change tables on the staging database, as described in "Creating a User to Serve As a Publisher". For example:.

CREATE USER cdcpub IDENTIFIED BY cdcpub DEFAULT TABLESPACE ts_cdcpub
   QUOTA UNLIMITED ON SYSTEM
   QUOTA UNLIMITED ON SYSAUX;
GRANT CREATE SESSION TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE TABLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE TABLESPACE TO cdcpub;
GRANT UNLIMITED TABLESPACE TO cdcpub;
GRANT SELECT_CATALOG_ROLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT EXECUTE_CATALOG_ROLE TO cdcpub;
GRANT CONNECT, RESOURCE, DBA TO cdcpub;
GRANT CREATE SEQUENCE TO cdcpub;
EXECUTE DBMS_STREAMS_AUTH.GRANT_ADMIN_PRIVILEGE(grantee => 'cdcpub');

Step 5 Source Database DBA: Build the LogMiner data dictionary.

The source database DBA builds a LogMiner data dictionary at the source database so that log transport services can transport this data dictionary to the staging database. This LogMiner data dictionary build provides the table definitions as they were just prior to beginning to capture change data. Change Data Capture automatically updates the data dictionary with any source table data definition language (DDL) operations that are made during the course of change data capture to ensure that the dictionary is always synchronized with the source database tables.

When building the LogMiner data dictionary, the source database DBA should get the SCN value of the data dictionary build. In Step 8, when the publisher creates a change source, he or she will need to provide this value as the first_scn parameter.

SET SERVEROUTPUT ON
VARIABLE f_scn NUMBER;
BEGIN
    :f_scn := 0;
    DBMS_CAPTURE_ADM.BUILD(:f_scn);
    DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('The first_scn value is ' || :f_scn);
END;
/
The first_scn value is 207722

For asynchronous AutoLog publishing to work, it is critical that the source database DBA build the data dictionary before the source tables are prepared. The source database DBA must be careful to follow Step 5 and Step 6 in the order they are presented here.

See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for more information on the LogMiner data dictionary.

Step 6 Source Database DBA: Prepare the source tables.

The source database DBA must prepare the source tables on the source database for asynchronous Change Data Capture by instantiating each source table so that the underlying Oracle Streams environment records the information it needs to capture each source table's changes. The source table structure and the column datatypes must be supported by Change Data Capture. See "Datatypes and Table Structures Supported for Asynchronous Change Data Capture" for more information.

BEGIN
   DBMS_CAPTURE_ADM.PREPARE_TABLE_INSTANTIATION(
       TABLE_NAME => 'hr.job_history');
END;
/

Step 7 Source Database DBA: Get the global name of the source database.

In Step 8, the publisher will need to reference the global name of the source database. The source database DBA can query the GLOBAL_NAME column in the GLOBAL_NAME view on the source database to retrieve this information for the publisher:

SELECT GLOBAL_NAME FROM GLOBAL_NAME;
GLOBAL_NAME                                                                     
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
HQDB 

Step 8 Staging Database Publisher: Identify each change source database and create the change sources.

The publisher uses the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_AUTOLOG_CHANGE_SOURCE procedure on the staging database to create change sources.

The process of managing the capture system begins with the creation of a change source. A change source describes the source database from which the data will be captured, and manages the relationship between the source database and the staging database. A change source always specifies the SCN of a data dictionary build from the source database as its first_scn parameter.

The publisher gets the SCN of the data dictionary build and the global database name from the source database DBA (as shown in Step 5 and Step 7, respectively). If the publisher cannot get the value to use for the first_scn parameter value from the source database DBA, then, with the appropriate privileges, he or she can query the V$ARCHIVED_LOG view on the source database to determine the value. This is described in the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH chapter of the PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference.

On the staging database, the publisher creates the AutoLog change source and specifies the global name as the source_database parameter value and the SCN of the data dictionary build as the first_scn parameter value:

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_AUTOLOG_CHANGE_SOURCE(
       change_source_name => 'CHICAGO',
       description => 'test source',
       source_database => 'HQDB',
       first_scn => 207722);
END;
/

Step 9 Staging Database Publisher: Create change sets.

The publisher uses the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_SET procedure on the staging database to create change sets. The publisher can optionally provide beginning and ending dates to indicate where to begin and end the data capture.

Note that when Change Data Capture creates a change set, its associated Oracle Streams capture and apply processes are also created (but not started).

The following example shows how to create a change set called CHICAGO_DAILY that captures changes starting today, and continues capturing change data indefinitely. (If, at some time in the future, the publisher decides that he or she wants to stop capturing change data for this change set, he or she should disable the change set and then drop it.)

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_SET(
       change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
       description => 'change set for job history info',
       change_source_name => 'CHICAGO',
       stop_on_ddl => 'y');
END;
/

Step 10 Staging Database Publisher: Create the change tables.

The publisher uses the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure on the staging database to create change tables.

The publisher creates one or more change tables for each source table to be published, specifies which columns should be included, and specifies the combination of before and after images of the change data to capture.

The publisher can set the options_string field of the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure to have more control over the physical properties and tablespace properties of the change tables. The options_string field can contain any option available (except partitioning) on the CREATE TABLE statement. In this example, it specifies a tablespace for the change set. (This example assumes that the publisher previously created the TS_CHICAGO_DAILY tablespace.)

The following example creates a change table on the staging database that captures changes made to a source table in the source database. The example uses the sample table HR.JOB_HISTORY.

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE(
       owner => 'cdcpub',
       change_table_name => 'JOB_HIST_CT',
       change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
       source_schema => 'HR',
       source_table => 'JOB_HISTORY',
       column_type_list => 'EMPLOYEE_ID NUMBER(6),START_DATE DATE,END_DATE DATE,
       JOB_ID VARCHAR2(10), DEPARTMENT_ID NUMBER(4)',
       capture_values => 'both',
       rs_id => 'y',
       row_id => 'n',
       user_id => 'n',
       timestamp => 'n',
       object_id => 'n',
       source_colmap => 'n',
       target_colmap => 'y',
       options_string => 'TABLESPACE TS_CHICAGO_DAILY');
END;
/

This example creates a change table named job_hist_ct within change set CHICAGO_DAILY. The column_type_list parameter identifies the columns captured by the change table. The source_schema and source_table parameters identify the schema and source table that reside in the source database, not the staging database.

The capture_values setting in the example indicates that for update operations, the change data will contain two separate rows for each row that changed: one row will contain the row values before the update occurred and the other row will contain the row values after the update occurred.

Step 11 Staging Database Publisher: Enable the change set.

Because asynchronous change sets are always disabled when they are created, the publisher must alter the change set to enable it. The Oracle Streams capture and apply processes are started when the change set is enabled.

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
       change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
       enable_capture => 'y');
END;
/

Step 12 Source Database DBA: Switch the redo log files at the source database.

To begin capturing data, a log file must be archived. The source database DBA can initiate the process by switching the current redo log file:

ALTER SYSTEM ARCHIVE LOGFILE;

Step 13 Staging Database Publisher: Grant access to subscribers.

The publisher controls subscriber access to change data by granting and revoking the SQL SELECT privilege on change tables for users and roles on the staging database. The publisher grants access to specific change tables. Without this step, a subscriber cannot access any change data. This example assumes that user subscriber1 already exists.

GRANT SELECT ON cdcpub.job_hist_ct TO subscriber1;

The Change Data Capture asynchronous AutoLog system is now ready for subscriber1 to create subscriptions.

Subscribing to Change Data

When a publisher creates a change table, Change Data Capture assigns it a publication ID and maintains a list of all the publication IDs in the ALL_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS view. A publication ID is a numeric value that Change Data Capture assigns to each change table defined by the publisher.

The subscribers register their interest in one or more source tables, and obtain subscriptions to these tables. Assuming sufficient access privileges, the subscribers may subscribe to any source tables for which the publisher has created one or more change tables by doing one of the following:

The following steps provide an example to demonstrate the second scenario:


Step 1 Find the source tables for which the subscriber has access privileges.

The subscriber queries the ALL_SOURCE_TABLES view to see all the published source tables for which the subscriber has access privileges:

SELECT * FROM ALL_SOURCE_TABLES;

SOURCE_SCHEMA_NAME             SOURCE_TABLE_NAME
------------------------------ ------------------------------
HR                             JOB_HISTORY

Step 2 Find the change set names and columns for which the subscriber has access privileges.

The subscriber queries the ALL_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS view to see all the change sets, columns, and publication IDs for the HR.JOB_HISTORY table for which the subscriber has access privileges:

SELECT UNIQUE CHANGE_SET_NAME, COLUMN_NAME, PUB_ID 
FROM ALL_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS 
WHERE SOURCE_SCHEMA_NAME ='HR' AND SOURCE_TABLE_NAME = 'JOB_HISTORY';

CHANGE_SET_NAME     COLUMN_NAME        PUB_ID
----------------    ------------------ ------------ 
CHICAGO_DAILY       DEPARTMENT_ID      34883
CHICAGO_DAILY       EMPLOYEE_ID        34883
CHICAGO_DAILY       END_DATE           34883
CHICAGO_DAILY       JOB_ID             34883
CHICAGO_DAILY       START_DATE         34883

Step 3 Create a subscription.

The subscriber calls the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.CREATE_SUBSCRIPTION procedure to create a subscription.

The following example shows how the subscriber identifies the change set of interest (CHICAGO_DAILY), and then specifies a unique subscription name that will be used throughout the life of the subscription:

BEGIN
       DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.CREATE_SUBSCRIPTION(
       change_set_name => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
       description => 'Change data for JOB_HISTORY',
       subscription_name => 'JOBHIST_SUB');
END;
/

Step 4 Subscribe to a source table and the columns in the source table.

The subscriber calls the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.SUBSCRIBE procedure to specify which columns of the source tables are of interest to the subscriber.

A subscription can contain one or more source tables referenced by the same change set.

In the following example, the subscriber wants to see the EMPLOYEE_ID, START_DATE, and END_DATE columns from the JOB_HISTORY table. Because all these columns are contained in the same publication (and the subscriber has privileges to access that publication) as shown in the query in Step 2, the following call can be used:

BEGIN
       DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.SUBSCRIBE(
       subscription_name => 'JOBHIST_SUB',
       source_schema => 'HR',
       source_table => 'JOB_HISTORY',
       column_list => 'EMPLOYEE_ID, START_DATE, END_DATE, JOB_ID',
       subscriber_view => 'JOBHIST_VIEW');
END;
/

However, assume that for security reasons the publisher has not created a single change table that includes all these columns. Suppose that instead of the results shown in Step 2, the query of the ALL_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS view shows that the columns of interest are included in multiple publications as shown in the following example:

SELECT UNIQUE CHANGE_SET_NAME, SOURCE_TABLE_NAME, COLUMN_NAME, PUB_ID 
FROM ALL_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS 
WHERE SOURCE_SCHEMA_NAME ='HR' AND SOURCE_TABLE_NAME = 'JOB_HISTORY';

CHANGE_SET_NAME     COLUMN_NAME        PUB_ID
----------------    ------------------ ------------ 
CHICAGO_DAILY       DEPARTMENT_ID      34883
CHICAGO_DAILY       EMPLOYEE_ID        34883
CHICAGO_DAILY       END_DATE           34885
CHICAGO_DAILY       JOB_ID             34883
CHICAGO_DAILY       START_DATE         34885
CHICAGO_DAILY       EMPLOYEE_ID        34885

This returned data shows that the EMPLOYEE_ID column is included in both publication 34883 and publication 34885. A single subscribe call must specify columns available in a single publication. Therefore, if the subscriber wants to subscribe to columns in both publications, using EMPLOYEE_ID to join across the subscriber views, then the subscriber must use two calls, each specifying a different publication ID:

BEGIN
       DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.SUBSCRIBE(
       subscription_name => 'MULTI_PUB',
       publication_id => 34885,
       column_list => 'EMPLOYEE_ID, START_DATE, END_DATE',
       subscriber_view => 'job_dates');

       DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.SUBSCRIBE(
       subscription_name => 'MULTI_PUB',
       publication_id => 34883, 
       column_list => 'EMPLOYEE_ID, JOB_ID',
       subscriber_view => 'job_type'); 
END; 
/

Note that each DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.SUBSCRIBE call specifies a unique subscriber view.

Step 5 Activate the subscription.

The subscriber calls the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.ACTIVATE_SUBSCRIPTION procedure to activate the subscription.

A subscriber calls this procedure when finished subscribing to source tables (or publications), and ready to receive change data. Whether subscribing to one or multiple source tables, the subscriber needs to call the ACTIVATE_SUBSCRIPTION procedure only once.

The ACTIVATE_SUBSCRIPTION procedure creates empty subscriber views. At this point, no additional source tables can be added to the subscription.

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.ACTIVATE_SUBSCRIPTION(
       subscription_name => 'JOBHIST_SUB');
END;
/

Step 6 Get the next set of change data.

The subscriber calls the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.EXTEND_WINDOW procedure to get the next available set of change data. This sets the high boundary of the subscription window.

For example:

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.EXTEND_WINDOW(
       subscription_name => 'JOBHIST_SUB');
END;
/

If this is the subscriber's first call to the EXTEND_WINDOW procedure, then the subscription window contains all the change data in the publication. Otherwise, the subscription window contains all the new change data that was created since the last call to the EXTEND_WINDOW procedure.

If no new change data has been added, then the subscription window remains unchanged.

Step 7 Read and query the contents of the subscriber views.

The subscriber uses the SQL SELECT statement on the subscriber view to query the change data (within the current boundaries of the subscription window). The subscriber can do this for each subscriber view in the subscription. For example:

SELECT EMPLOYEE_ID, START_DATE, END_DATE FROM JOBHIST_VIEW;

EMPLOYEE_ID START_DAT  END_DATE
----------- ---------  ---------
176         24-MAR-98  31-DEC-98
180         24-MAR-98  31-DEC-98
190         01-JAN-99  31-DEC-99
200         01-JAN-99  31-DEC-99

The subscriber view name, JOBHIST_VIEW, was specified when the subscriber called the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.SUBSCRIBE procedure in Step 4.

Step 8 Indicate that the current set of change data is no longer needed.

The subscriber uses the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.PURGE_WINDOW procedure to let Change Data Capture know that the subscriber no longer needs the current set of change data. This helps Change Data Capture to manage the amount of data in the change table and sets the low boundary of the subscription window. Calling the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.PURGE_WINDOW procedure causes the subscription window to be empty.

For example:

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.PURGE_WINDOW(
       subscription_name => 'JOBHIST_SUB');
END;
/

Step 9 Repeat Steps 6 through 8.

The subscriber repeats Steps 6 through 8 as long as the subscriber is interested in additional change data.

Step 10 End the subscription.

The subscriber uses the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.DROP_SUBSCRIPTION procedure to end the subscription. This is necessary to prevent the publications that underlie the subscription from holding change data indefinitely.

BEGIN
   DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.DROP_SUBSCRIPTION(
       subscription_name => 'JOBHIST_SUB');
END;
/

Considerations for Asynchronous Change Data Capture

The following sections provide information that the publisher and the source and staging database DBAs should be aware of when using the asynchronous mode of Change Data Capture.

Asynchronous Change Data Capture and Redo Log Files

The asynchronous mode of Change Data Capture uses redo log files, as follows:

  • HotLog

    Asynchronous HotLog Change Data Capture reads online redo log files whenever possible and archived redo log files otherwise.

  • AutoLog

    Asynchronous AutoLog Change Data Capture reads redo log files that have been copied from the source database to the staging database by log transport services.

    In ARCH mode, log transport services copies archived redo log files to the staging database after a log switch occurs on the source database. In LGWR mode, log transport services copies redo data to the staging database while it is being written to the online redo log file on the source database, and then makes it available to Change Data Capture when a log switch occurs on the source database.

For log files to be archived, the source databases for asynchronous Change Data Capture must run in ARCHIVELOG mode, as specified with the following SQL statement:

ALTER DATABASE ARCHIVELOG;

See Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information about running a database in ARCHIVELOG mode.

A redo log file used by Change Data Capture must remain available on the staging database until Change Data Capture has captured it. However, it is not necessary that the redo log file remain available until the Change Data Capture subscriber is done with the change data.

To determine which redo log files are no longer needed by Change Data Capture for a given change set, the publisher alters the change set's Streams capture process, which causes Streams to perform some internal cleanup and populates the DBA_LOGMNR_PURGED_LOG view. The publisher follows these steps:

  1. Uses the following query on the staging database to get the three SCN values needed to determine an appropriate new first_scn value for the change set, CHICAGO_DAILY:

    SELECT cap.CAPTURE_NAME, cap.FIRST_SCN, cap.APPLIED_SCN, 
            cap.SAFE_PURGE_SCN
    FROM DBA_CAPTURE cap, CHANGE_SETS cset
    WHERE cset.SET_NAME = 'CHICAGO_DAILY' AND
          cap.CAPTURE_NAME = cset.CAPTURE_NAME;
    
    CAPTURE_NAME                    FIRST_SCN APPLIED_SCN SAFE_PURGE_SCN
    ------------------------------ ---------- ----------- --------------
    CDC$C_CHICAGO_DAILY                778059      778293         778293
    
    
  2. Determines a new first_scn value that is greater than the original first_scn value and less than or equal to the applied_scn and safe_purge_scn values returned by the query in step 1. In this example, this value is 778293, and the capture process name is CDC$C_CHICAGO_DAILY, therefore the publisher can alter the first_scn value for the capture process as follows:

    BEGIN
    DBMS_CAPTURE_ADM.ALTER_CAPTURE(
      capture_name => 'CDC$C_CHICAGO_DAILY',
      first_scn    => 778293);
    END;
    /
    
    

    If there if not an SCN value that meets these criteria, then the change set needs all of its redo log files.

  3. Queries the DBA_LOGMNR_PURGED_LOG view to see any log files that are no longer needed by Change Data Capture:

    SELECT FILE_NAME
    FROM DBA_LOGMNR_PURGED_LOG;
    
    

    Note:

    Redo log files may be required on the staging database for purposes other than Change Data Capture. Before deleting a redo log file, the publisher should be sure that no other users need it.

See the information on setting the first SCN for an existing capture process and on capture process checkpoints in Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for more information.

The first_scn value can be updated for all change sets in an AutoLog change source by using the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_AUTOLOG_CHANGE_SOURCE first_scn parameter. Note that the new first_scn value must meet the criteria stated in step 2 of the preceding list for all change sets in the AutoLog change source.

Both the size of the redo log files and the frequency with which a log switch occurs can affect the generation of the archived log files at the source database. For Change Data Capture, the most important factor in deciding what size to make a redo log file is the tolerance for latency between when a change is made and when that change data is available to subscribers. However, because the Oracle Database software attempts a check point at each log switch, if the redo log file is too small, frequent log switches will lead to frequent checkpointing and negatively impact the performance of the source database.

See Oracle Data Guard Concepts and Administration for step-by-step instructions on monitoring log file archival information. Substitute the terms source and staging database for the Oracle Data Guard terms primary database and archiving destinations, respectively.

When using log transport services to supply redo log files to an AutoLog change source, gaps in the sequence of redo log files are automatically detected and resolved. If a situation arises where it is necessary to manually add a log file to an AutoLog change set, the publisher can use instructions on explicitly assigning log files to a downstream capture process described in the Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration. These instructions require the name of the capture process for the AutoLog change set. The publisher can obtain the name of the capture process for an AutoLog change set from the CHANGE_SETS data dictionary view.

Asynchronous Change Data Capture and Supplemental Logging

The asynchronous mode of Change Data Capture works best when supplemental logging is enabled on the source database. (Supplemental logging is not used by synchronous Change Data Capture.)

Oracle recommends that the source database DBA enable minimal supplemental logging at the database level:

ALTER DATABASE ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG DATA;

In addition, Oracle recommends that the source database DBA:

  • Supplementally log all source table columns that are part of a primary key or function to uniquely identify a row. This can be done using database-level or table-level identification key logging, or through a table-level unconditional log group.

  • Create an unconditional log group for all source table columns that are captured by any asynchronous change table. This should be done before any change tables are created on a source table.

    ALTER TABLE SH.PROMOTIONS
    ADD SUPPLEMENTAL LOG GROUP log_group_cust
    (PROMO_NAME, PROMO_SUBCATEGORY, PROMO_CATEGORY) ALWAYS;
    
    

    If an unconditional log group is not created for all source table columns to be captured, then when an update DML operation occurs, some unchanged user column values in change tables will be null instead of reflecting the actual source table value.

    For example, suppose a source table contains two columns, X and Y, and that the source database DBA has defined an unconditional log group for that table that includes only column Y. Furthermore, assume that a user updates only column Y in that table row. When the subscriber views the change data for that row, the value of the unchanged column X will be null. However, because the actual column value for X is excluded from the redo log file and therefore cannot be included in the change table, the subscriber cannot assume that the actual source table value for column X is null. The subscriber must rely on the contents of the TARGET_COLMAP$ control column to determine whether the actual source table value for column X is null or it is unchanged.

See Oracle Database Utilities for more information on the various types of supplemental logging.

Datatypes and Table Structures Supported for Asynchronous Change Data Capture

Asynchronous Change Data Capture supports columns of all built-in Oracle datatypes except the following:

  • BFILE

  • BLOB

  • CLOB

  • LONG

  • NCLOB

  • ROWID

  • UROWID

  • object types (for example, XMLType)

Asynchronous Change Data Capture does not support the following table structures:

  • Source tables that are temporary tables

  • Source tables that are object tables

  • Index-organized tables with columns of unsupported datatypes (including LOB columns) or with overflow segments

Managing Published Data

This section provides information about the management tasks involved in managing change sets and change tables. For the most part, these tasks are the responsibility of the publisher. However, to purge unneeded data from the change tables, both the publisher and the subscribers have responsibilities as described in "Purging Change Tables of Unneeded Data".

The following topics are covered in this section:

Managing Asynchronous Change Sets

This section provides information about tasks that the publisher can perform to manage asynchronous change sets. The following topics are covered:

Creating Asynchronous Change Sets with Starting and Ending Dates

Change sets associated with asynchronous change sources (AutoLog and HotLog) can optionally specify starting and ending dates to limit the change data that they capture. A change set with no starting date begins capture with the earliest available change data. A change set with no ending date continues capturing change data indefinitely.

The following example creates a change set, JOBHIST_SET, in the AutoLog change source, HQ_SOURCE, that starts capture two days from now and continues indefinitely:

BEGIN
DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_SET(
change_set_name => 'JOBHIST_SET',
description => 'Job History Application Change Set',
change_source_name => 'HQ_SOURCE',
stop_on_ddl => 'Y',
begin_date => sysdate+2);
END;
/

Enabling and Disabling Asynchronous Change Sets

The publisher can enable and disable asynchronous change sets. When a change set is disabled, it cannot process new change data until the change set is enabled.

Synchronous change sets are always created enabled and cannot be disabled. Asynchronous change sets are always created disabled.

The publisher can enable the JOBHIST_SET asynchronous change set with the following call:

BEGIN
DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
change_set_name => 'JOBHIST_SET',
enable_capture  => 'y');
END;
/

The Oracle Streams capture and apply processes for the change set are started when the change set is enabled.

The publisher can disable the JOBHIST_SET asynchronous change set with the following call:

BEGIN
DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
change_set_name => 'JOBHIST_SET',
enable_capture  => 'n');
END;
/

The Oracle Streams capture and apply processes for the change set are stopped when the change set is disabled.

Although a disabled change set cannot process new change data, it does not lose any change data provided that the necessary archived redo log files remain available until the change set is enabled and processes them. Oracle recommends that change sets be enabled as much as possible to avoid accumulating archived redo log files. See "Asynchronous Change Data Capture and Redo Log Files" for more information.

Change Data Capture can automatically disable an asynchronous change set if DDL is encountered during capture and the stop_on_ddl parameter is set to 'Y', or if there is an internal capture error. The publisher must check the alert log for more information, take any necessary actions to adjust to the DDL or recover from the internal error, and explicitly enable the change set. See "Recovering from Errors Returned on Asynchronous Change Sets" for more information.

Stopping Capture on DDL for Asynchronous Change Sets

The publisher can specify that a change set be automatically disabled by Change Data Capture if DDL is encountered. Some DDL commands can adversely affect capture, such as dropping a source table column that is being captured. If the change set stops on DDL, the publisher has a chance to analyze and fix the problem before capture proceeds. If the change set does not stop on DDL, internal capture errors are possible after DDL occurs.

The publisher can specify whether a change set stops on DDL when creating or altering the change set. The publisher can alter the JOBHIST_SET change set to stop on DDL with the following call:

BEGIN
DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
change_set_name  => 'JOBHIST_SET',
stop_on_ddl      => 'y');
END;
/

The publisher can alter the JOBHIST_SET change set so that it does not stop on DDL by using the following call:

BEGIN
DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
change_set_name => 'JOBHIST_SET',
 stop_on_ddl     => 'n');
END;
/

If a DDL statement causes processing to stop, a message is written to the alert log indicating the DDL statement and change set involved. For example, if a TRUNCATE TABLE DDL statement causes the JOB_HIST change set to stop processing, the alert log contains lines such as the following:

Change Data Capture received DDL for change set JOB_HIST
Change Data Capture received DDL and stopping: truncate table job_history

Because they do not affect the column data itself, the following DDL statements do not cause Change Data Capture to stop capturing change data when the stop_on_ddl parameter is set to 'Y':

  • ANALYZE TABLE

  • LOCK TABLE

  • GRANT privileges to access a table

  • REVOKE privileges to access a table

  • COMMENT on a table

  • COMMENT on a column

These statements can be issued on the source database without concern for their impact on Change Data Capture processing. For example, when an ANALYZE TABLE command is issued on the JOB_HISTORY source table, the alert log on the staging database will contain a line similar to the following when the stop_on_ddl parameter is set to 'Y':

Change Data Capture received DDL and ignoring: analyze table job_history compute statistics

Recovering from Errors Returned on Asynchronous Change Sets

Errors during asynchronous Change Data Capture are possible due to a variety of circumstances. If a change set stops on DDL, that DDL must be removed before capture can continue. If a change set does not stop on DDL, but a DDL change occurs that affects capture, it can result in an internal error. There are also system conditions that can cause internal errors, such as being out of disk space.

In all these cases, the change set is disabled and marked as having an error. Subscriber procedures detect when a change set has an error and return the following message:

ORA-31514: change set disabled due to capture error

The publisher must check the alert log for more information and attempt to fix the underlying problem. The publisher can then attempt to recover from the error by calling ALTER_CHANGE_SET with the recover_after_error and remove_ddl parameters set appropriately. The publisher can retry this procedure as many times as necessary to resolve the problem. When recovery succeeds, the error is removed from the change set and the publisher can enable the asynchronous change set (as described in "Enabling and Disabling Asynchronous Change Sets").

If more information is needed to resolve capture errors, the publisher can query the DBA_APPLY_ERROR view to see information about Streams apply errors; capture errors correspond to Streams apply errors. The publisher must always use the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET procedure to recover from capture errors because both Streams and Change Data Capture actions are needed for recovery and only the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET procedure performs both sets of actions. See Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information about the error queue and apply errors.

The following two scenarios demonstrate how a publisher might investigate and then recover from two different types of errors returned to Change Data Capture:

An Error Due to Running Out of Disk Space

The publisher can view the contents of the alert log to determine which error is being returned for a given change set and which SCN is not being processed. For example, the alert log may contain lines such as the following (where LCR refers to a logical change record):

Change Data Capture has encountered error number: 1688 for change set: CHICAGO_DAILY
Change Data Capture did not process LCR with scn 219337

The publisher can determine the message associated with the error number specified in the alert log by querying the DBA_APPLY_ERROR view for the error message text, where the APPLY_NAME in the DBA_APPLY_ERROR view equals the APPLY_NAME of the change set specified in the alert log. For example:

SQL> SELECT ERROR_MESSAGE FROM DBA_APPLY_ERROR
       WHERE APPLY_NAME =
      (SELECT APPLY_NAME FROM CHANGE_SETS WHERE SET_NAME ='CHICAGO_DAILY');

ERROR_MESSAGE 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
ORA-01688: unable to extend table LOGADMIN.CT1 partition P1 by 32 in tablespace 
    TS_CHICAGO_DAILY 

After taking action to fix the problem that is causing the error, the publisher can attempt to recover from the error. For example, the publisher can attempt to recover the CHICAGO_DAILY change set after an error with the following call:

BEGIN
DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
  change_set_name     => 'CHICAGO_DAILY',
  recover_after_error => 'y');
END;
/

If the recovery does not succeed, then an error is returned and the publisher can take further action to attempt to resolve the problem. The publisher can retry the recovery procedure as many times as necessary to resolve the problem.


Note:

When recovery succeeds, the publisher must remember to enable the change set.

An Error Due to Stopping on DDL

Suppose a SQL TRUNCATE TABLE statement is issued against the JOB_HISTORY source table and the stop_on_ddl parameter is set to 'Y', then an error such as the following is returned from an attempt to enable the change set:

ERROR at line 1:
ORA-31468: cannot process DDL change record
ORA-06512: at "SYS.DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH", line 79
ORA-06512: at line 2

The alert log will contain lines similar to the following:

Mon Jun  9 16:13:44 2003
Change Data Capture received DDL for change set JOB_HIST
Change Data Capture received DDL and stopping: truncate table job_history
Mon Jun  9 16:13:50 2003
Change Data Capture did not process LCR with scn 219777
Streams Apply Server P001 pid=19 OS id=11730 stopped
Streams Apply Reader P000 pid=17 OS id=11726 stopped
Streams Apply Server P000 pid=17 OS id=11726 stopped
Streams Apply Server P001 pid=19 OS id=11730 stopped
Streams AP01 with pid=15, OS id=11722 stopped

Because the TRUNCATE TABLE statement removes all rows from a table, the publisher will want to notify subscribers before taking action to reenable Change Data Capture processing. He or she might suggest to subscribers that they purge and extend their subscription windows. The publisher can then attempt to restore Change Data Capture processing by altering the change set and specifying the remove_ddl => 'Y' parameter along with the recover_after_error => 'Y' parameter, as follows:

BEGIN
DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.ALTER_CHANGE_SET(
change_set_name     => 'JOB_HIST',
  recover_after_error => 'y',
  remove_ddl          => 'y');
END;
/

After this procedure completes, the alert log will contain lines similar to the following:

Mon Jun  9 16:20:17 2003
Change Data Capture received DDL and ignoring: truncate table JOB_HISTORY
The scn for the truncate statement is 202998

Now, the publisher must enable the change set.

Managing Change Tables

All change table management tasks are the responsibility of the publisher with one exception: purging change tables of unneeded data. This task requires action from both the publisher and the subscriber to work most effectively.

The following topics are discussed in this section:

Creating Change Tables

When creating change tables, the publisher should be aware that Oracle recommends the following:

  • For all modes of Change Data Capture, publishers should not create change tables in system tablespaces.

    Either of the following methods can be used to ensure that change tables are created in tablespaces managed by the publisher. The first method creates all the change tables created by the publisher in a single tablespace, while the second method allows the publisher to specify a different tablespace for each change table.

    • When the database administrator creates the account for the publisher, he or she can specify a default tablespace. For example:

      CREATE USER cdcpub DEFAULT TABLESPACE ts_cdcpub;
      
      
    • When the publisher creates a change table, he or she can use the options_string parameter to specify a tablespace for the change table being created. See Step 4 in "Performing Synchronous Publishing" for an example.

    If both methods are used, the tablespace specified by the publisher in the options_string parameter takes precedence over the default tablespace specified in the SQL CREATE USER statement.

  • For asynchronous Change Data Capture, the publisher should be certain that the source table that will be referenced in a DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure has been created prior to calling this procedure, particularly if the change set that will be specified in the procedure has the stop_on_ddl parameter set to 'Y'.

    Suppose the publisher created a change set with the stop_on_ddl parameter set to 'Y', then created the change table, and then the source table was created. In this scenario, the DDL that creates the source table would trigger the stop_on_ddl condition and cause Change Data Capture processing to stop.


    Note:

    The publisher must not attempt to control a change table's partitioning properties. Change Data Capture automatically manages the change table partitioning as part of its change table management.

  • For asynchronous Change Data Capture, the source database DBA should create an unconditional log group for all source table columns that will be captured in a change table. This should be done before any change tables are created on a source table. If an unconditional log group is not created for source table columns to be captured, then when an update DML operation occurs, some unchanged user column values in change tables will be null instead of reflecting the actual source table value. This will require the publisher to evaluate the TARGET_COLMAP$ control column to distinguish unchanged column values from column values that are actually null. See "Asynchronous Change Data Capture and Supplemental Logging" for information on creating unconditional log groups and see "Understanding Change Table Control Columns" for information on control columns.

Understanding Change Table Control Columns

A change table consists of two things: the change data itself, which is stored in a database table, and the system metadata necessary to maintain the change table, which includes control columns.

Table 16-8 describes the control columns for a change table, including the column name, datatype, mode, whether the column is optional or not, and a description.

The mode indicates the type of Change Data Capture associated with the column. A value of All indicates that the column is associated with the synchronous mode and both modes of asynchronous Change Data Capture. Note that for both synchronous and asynchronous Change Data Capture, if the subscriber wants a query of a subscriber view to return DML changes in the order in which they occurred, the query should order data by CSCN$ and then RSID$.

A column is considered optional if the publisher can choose to exclude it from a change table using the operation parameter and the parameters that indicate specific control columns in the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure. The syntax for the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.CREATE_CHANGE_TABLE procedure is documented in PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference.

Table 16-8 Control Columns for a Change Table

Column Datatype Mode Optional Column Description
OPERATION$ CHAR(2) All No The value in this column can be any one of the followingFoot :

I: Indicates this row represents an insert operation

UO: Indicates this row represents the before-image of an updated source table row for the following cases:

  • Asynchronous Change Data Capture

  • Synchronous Change Data Capture when the change table includes a primary key-based object ID and a captured column that is not a primary key has changed.

UU: Indicates this row represents the before-image of an updated source table row for synchronous Change Data Capture, in cases other than those represented by UO.

UN: Indicates this row represents the after-image of an updated source table row.

D: Indicates this row represents a delete operation.

CSCN$ NUMBER All No Commit SCN of this transaction.
RSID$ NUMBER All Yes Unique row sequence ID within this transaction.Foot  The RSID$ column reflects an operation's capture order within a transaction, but not across transactions. The publisher cannot use the RSID$ column value by itself to order committed operations across transactions; it must be used in conjunction with the CSCN$ column value.
SOURCE_COLMAP$ RAW(128) Synchronous Yes Bit maskFoot  of updated columns in the source table.
TARGET_COLMAP$ RAW(128) All Yes Bit maskFootref 3 of updated columns in the change table.
COMMIT_TIMESTAMP$ DATE All No Commit time of this transaction.
TIMESTAMP$ DATE All Yes Time when the operation occurred in the source table.
USERNAME$ VARCHAR2(30) All Yes Name of the user who caused the operation.
ROW_ID$ ROW_ID All Yes Row ID of affected row in source table.
XIDUSN$ NUMBER Asynchronous No Transaction ID undo segment number.
XIDSLT$ NUMBER Asynchronous No Transaction ID slot number.
XIDSEQ$ NUMBER Asynchronous No Transaction ID sequence number.
SYS_NC_OID$ RAW(16) Synchronous Yes Object ID.

Footnote If you specify a query based on this column, specify the I or D column values as "I " or "D ", respectively. The OPERATION$ column is a 2-character column; values are left-justified and space-filled. A query that specifies a value of "I" or "D" will return no values.
Footnote You can use the RSID$ column to associate the after-image with the before-image of a given operation. The value of the after-image RSID$ column always matches the value of the before-image RSID$ column value for a given update operation.
Footnote A bit mask is an array of binary values that indicate which columns in a row have been updated.

Understanding TARGET_COLMAP$ and SOURCE_COLMAP$ Values

The TARGET_COLMAP$ and SOURCE_COLMAP$ columns are used to indicate which columns in a row have changed. The TARGET_COLMAP$ column indicates which columns in the change table row have changed. The SOURCE_COLMAP$ column (which is included for synchronous change tables only) indicates which columns in a source table row have changed.

Because the datatype of the TARGET_COLMAP$ and the SOURCE_COLMAP$ columns is RAW(128), each column can hold 128 bytes of binary information. This binary information consists of words strung together with the low order byte on the left and the high order byte on the right. By default, when the field is displayed, the system interprets each byte and displays a value for each. Example 16-3 provides a sample TARGET_COLMAP$ value. The text following the example explains how to interpret this data.

Example 16-3 Sample TARGET_COLMAP$ VALUE

FE110000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
000000000000

In Example 16-3, the first 'FE' is the low order byte and the last '00' is the high order byte. To correctly interpret the meaning of the values, you must consider which bits are set in each byte. The bits in the bitmap are counted starting at zero. The first bit is bit 0, the second bit is bit 1, and so on. Bit 0 is always ignored. For the other bits, if a particular bit is set to 1, it means that the value for that column has been changed.

To interpret the string of bytes as presented in the Example 16-3, you read from left to right. The first byte is the string 'FE'. Broken down into bits (again from left to right) this string is "1111 1110", which maps to columns " 7,6,5,4 3,2,1,-" in the change table (where the hyphen represents the ignored bit). The first bit tells you if column 7 in the change table has changed. The right-most bit is ignored. The values in Example 16-3 indicate that the first 7 columns have a value present. This is typical - the first several columns in a change table are control columns.

The next byte in Example 16-3 is the string '11'. Broken down into bits, this string is "0001 0001", which maps to columns "15,14,13,12 11,10,9,8" in the change table. These bits indicate that columns 8 and 12 are changed. Columns 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, are not changed. The rest of the string is all '00', indicating that none of the other columns has been changed.

A publisher can issue the following query to determine the mapping of column numbers to column names:

SELECT COLUMN_NAME, COLUMN_ID FROM ALL_TAB_COLUMNS WHERE OWNER='PUBLISHER_STEWART' AND TABLE_NAME='MY_CT';

COLUMN_NAME                    COLUMN_ID
------------------------------ ----------
OPERATION$                           1
CSCN$                                2
COMMIT_TIMESTAMP$                    3
XIDUSN$                              4
XIDSLT$                              5
XIDSEQ$                              6
RSID$                                7
TARGET_COLMAP$                       8
C_ID                                 9
C_KEY                                10
C_ZIP                                11

COLUMN_NAME                     COLUMN_ID
------------------------------ ----------
C_DATE                               12
C_1                                  13
C_3                                  14
C_5                                  15
C_7                                  16
C_9                                  17

Using Example 16-3, the publisher can conclude that following columns were changed in the particular change row in the change table represented by this TARGET_COLMAP$ value: OPERATION$, CSCN$, COMMIT_TIMESTAMP$, XIDUSN$, XIDSLT$, XIDSEQ$, RSID$, TARGET_COLMAP$, and C_DATE.

Note that Change Data Capture generates values for all control columns in all change rows, so the bits corresponding to control columns are always set to 1 in every TARGET_COLMAP$ column. Bits that correspond to user columns that have changed are set to 1 for the OPERATION$ column values UN and I, as appropriate. (See Table 16-8 for information about the OPERATION$ column values.)

A common use for the values in the TARGET_COLMAP$ column is for determining the meaning of a null value in a change table. A column value in a change table can be null for two reasons: the value was changed to null by a user or application, or Change Data Capture inserted a null value into the column because a value was not present in the redo data from the source table. If a user changed the value to null, the bit for that column will be set to 1; if Change Data Capture set the value to null, then the column will be set to 0.

Values in the SOURCE_COLMAP$ column are interpreted in a similar manner, with the following exceptions:

  • The SOURCE_COLMAP$ column refers to columns of source tables, not columns of change tables.

  • The SOURCE_COLMAP$ column does not reference control columns because these columns are not present in the source table.

  • Changed source columns are set to 1 in the SOURCE_COLMAP$ column for OPERATION$ column values UO, UU, UN, and I, as appropriate. (See Table 16-8 for information about the OPERATION$ column values.)

  • The SOURCE_COLMAP$ column is valid only for synchronous change tables.

Controlling Subscriber Access to Change Tables

The publisher grants privileges to subscribers to allow them access to change tables. Because privileges on source tables are not propagated to change tables, a subscriber might have privileges to perform a SELECT operation on a source table, but might not have privileges to perform a SELECT operation on a change table.

The publisher controls subscriber access to change data by using the SQL GRANT and REVOKE statements to grant and revoke the SELECT privilege on change tables for users and roles. The publisher must grant the SELECT privilege before a subscriber can subscribe to the change table.

The publisher must not grant any DML access (use of INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements) to the subscribers on the change tables because of the risk that a subscriber might inadvertently change the data in the change table, making it inconsistent with its source. Furthermore, the publisher should avoid creating change tables in schemas to which subscribers have DML access.

Purging Change Tables of Unneeded Data

This section describes purge operations. For optimum results, purge operations require action from the subscribers. Each subscriber indicates when he or she is done using change data, and then Change Data Capture or the publisher actually removes (purges) data that is no longer being used by any subscriber from the change table, as follows:

  • Subscriber

    When finished using change data, a subscriber must call the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.PURGE_WINDOW procedure. This indicates to Change Data Capture and the publisher that the change data is no longer needed by this subscriber. The DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.PURGE_WINDOW procedure does not physically remove rows from the change tables.

    In addition, as shown in "Subscribing to Change Data" beginning, the subscriber should call the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.DROP_SUBSCRIPTION procedure to drop unneeded subscriptions.

    See PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for information about the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.DROP_SUBSCRIPTION and the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.PURGE_WINDOW procedures.

  • Change Data Capture

    Change Data Capture creates a purge job using the DBMS_JOB PL/SQL package (which runs under the account of the publisher who created the first change table). This purge job automatically calls the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.PURGE procedure to remove data that subscribers are no longer using from the change tables. This ensures that the size of the change tables does not grow without limit. The automatic call to the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.PURGE procedure evaluates all active subscription windows to determine which change data is still needed. It will not purge any data that could be referenced by one or more subscribers with active subscription windows.

    By default, this purge job runs every 24 hours. The publisher who created the first change table can adjust this interval using the PL/SQL DBMS_JOB.CHANGE procedure. The values for the JOB parameter for this procedure can be found by querying the USER_JOBS view for the job number that corresponds to the WHAT column containing the string 'SYS.DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.PURGE();'.

    See PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for information about the DBMS_JOB package and the Oracle Database Reference for information about the USER_JOBS view.

  • Publisher

    The publisher can manually execute a purge operation at any time. The publisher has the ability to perform purge operations at a finer granularity than the automatic purge operation performed by Change Data Capture. There are three purge operations available to the publisher:

    • DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.PURGE

      Purges all change tables on the staging database. This is the same PURGE operation as is performed automatically by Change Data Capture.

    • DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.PURGE_CHANGE_SET

      Purges all the change tables in a named change set.

    • DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.PURGE_CHANGE_TABLE

      Purges a named changed table.

Thus, calls to the DBMS_CDC_SUBSCRIBE.PURGE_WINDOW procedure by subscribers and calls to the PURGE procedure by Change Data Capture (or one of the PURGE procedures by the publisher) work together: when each subscriber purges a subscription window, it indicates change data that is no longer needed; the PURGE procedure evaluates the sum of the input from all the subscribers before actually purging data.

Note that it is possible that a subscriber could fail to call PURGE_WINDOW, with the result being that unneeded rows would not be deleted by the purge job. The publisher can query the DBA_SUBSCRIPTIONS view to determine if this is happening. In extreme circumstances, a publisher may decide to manually drop an active subscription so that space can be reclaimed. One such circumstance is a subscriber that is an applications program that fails to call the PURGE_WINDOW procedure when appropriate. The DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.DROP_SUBSCRIPTION procedure lets the publisher drop active subscriptions if circumstances require it; however, the publisher should first consider that subscribers may still be using the change data.

Dropping Change Tables

To drop a change table, the publisher must call the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.DROP_CHANGE_TABLE procedure. This procedure ensures that both the change table itself and the Change Data Capture metadata for the table are dropped. If the publisher tries to use a SQL DROP TABLE statement on a change table, it will fail with the following error:

ORA-31496 must use DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.DROP_CHANGE_TABLE to drop change tables

The DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.DROP_CHANGE_TABLE procedure also safeguards the publisher from inadvertently dropping a change table while there are active subscribers using the change table. If DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.DROP_CHANGE_TABLE is called while subscriptions are active, the procedure will fail with the following error:

ORA-31424 change table has active subscriptions

If the publisher still wants to drop the change table, in spite of active subscriptions, he or she must call the DROP_CHANGE_TABLE procedure using the force_flag => 'Y' parameter. This tells Change Data Capture to override its normal safeguards and allow the change table to be dropped despite active subscriptions. The subscriptions will no longer be valid, and subscribers will lose access to the change data.


Note:

The SQL DROP USER CASCADE statement will drop all the publisher's change tables, and if any other users have active subscriptions to the (dropped) change table, these will no longer be valid. In addition to dropping the change tables, the DROP USER CASCADE statement drops any change sources, change sets, and subscriptions that are owned by the user specified in the DROP USER CASCADE statement.

Considerations for Exporting and Importing Change Data Capture Objects

Starting in Oracle Databse 10g, Oracle Data Pump is the supported export and import utility for Change Data Capture. Change Data Capture change sources, change sets, change tables, and subscriptions are exported and imported by the Oracle Data Pump expdp and impdp commands with the following restrictions:

  • Change Data Capture objects are exported and imported only as part of full database export and import operations (those in which the expdp and impdb commands specify the FULL=y parameter). Schema-level import and export operations include some underlying objects (for example, the table underlying a change table), but not the Change Data Capture metadata needed for change data capture to occur.

  • AutoLog change sources, change sets, and change tables are not supported.

  • You should export asynchronous change sets and change tables at a time when users are not making DDL and DML changes to the database being exported.

  • When importing asynchronous change sets and change tables, you must also import the underlying Oracle Streams configuration; set the Oracle Data Pump import parameter STREAMS_CONFIGURATION to y explicitly (or implicitly by accepting the default), so that the necessary Streams objects are imported. If you perform an import operation and specify STREAMS_CONFIGURATION=n, then imported asynchronous change sets and change tables will not be able to continue capturing change data.

  • Change Data Capture objects never overwrite existing objects when they are imported (similar to the effect of the import command TABLE_EXISTS_ACTION=skip parameter for tables). Change Data Capture generates warnings in the import log for these cases.

  • Change Data Capture objects are validated at the end of an import operation to determine if all expected underlying objects are present in the correct form. Change Data Capture generates validation warnings in the import log if it detects validation problems. Imported Change Data Capture objects with validation warnings usually cannot continue capturing change data.

The following are examples of Data Pump export and import commands that support Change Data Capture objects:

> expdp system/manager DIRECTORY=dpump_dir FULL=y
> impdp system/manager DIRECTORY=dpump_dir FULL=y STREAMS_CONFIGURATION=y

After a Data Pump full database import operation completes for a database containing AutoLog Change Data Capture objects, the following steps must be performed to restore these objects:

  1. The publisher must manually drop the change tables with the SQL DROP TABLE command. This is needed because the tables are imported without the accompanying Change Data Capture metadata.

  2. The publisher must re-create the AutoLog change sources, change sets, and change tables using the appropriate DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH procedures.

  3. Subscribers must re-create their subscriptions to the AutoLog change sets.

Change data may be lost in the interval between a Data Pump full database export operation involving AutoLog Change Data Capture objects and their re-creation after a Data Pump full database import operation in the preceding step. This can be minimized by preventing changes to the source tables during this interval, if possible.

See Oracle Database Utilities for information on Oracle Data Pump.

The following are publisher considerations for exporting and importing change tables:

  • When change tables are imported, the job queue is checked for a Change Data Capture purge job. If no purge job is found, then one is submitted automatically (using the DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.PURGE procedure). If a change table is imported, but no subscriptions are taken out before the purge job runs (24 hours later, by default), then all rows in the table will be purged.

    The publisher can use one of the following methods to prevent the purging of data from a change table:

    • Suspend the purge job using the DBMS_JOB package to either disable the job (using the BROKEN procedure) or execute the job sometime in the future when there are subscriptions (using the NEXT_DATE procedure).


      Note:

      If you disable the purge job by marking it as broken, you need to remember to reset it once subscriptions have been activated. This prevents the change table from growing indefinitely.

    • Create a temporary subscription to preserve the change table data until real subscriptions appear. Then, drop the temporary subscription.

  • When importing data into a source table for which a change table already exists, the imported data is also recorded in any associated change tables.

    Assume that the publisher has a source table SALES that has an associated change table ct_sales. When the publisher imports data into SALES, that data is also recorded in ct_sales.

  • When importing a change table having the optional control ROW_ID column, the ROW_ID columns stored in the change table have meaning only if the associated source table has not been imported. If a source table is re-created or imported, each row will have a new ROW_ID that is unrelated to the ROW_ID that was previously recorded in a change table.

The original level of export and import support available in Oracle9i is retained for backward compatibility. Synchronous change tables that reside in the SYNC_SET change set can be exported as part of a full database, schema, or individual table export operation and can be imported as needed. The following Change Data Capture objects are not included in the original export and import support: change sources, change sets, change tables that do not reside in the SYNC_SET change set, and subscriptions.

Impact on Subscriptions When the Publisher Makes Changes

The Change Data Capture environment is dynamic. The publisher can add and drop change tables at any time. The publisher can also add columns to and drop columns from existing change tables at any time. The following list describes how changes to the Change Data Capture environment affect subscriptions:

  • Subscribers do not get explicit notification if the publisher adds a new change table or adds columns to an existing change table. A subscriber can check the ALL_PUBLISHED_COLUMNS view to see if new columns have been added, and whether or not the subscriber has access to them.

  • Table 16-9 describes what happens when the publisher adds a column to a change table.

Table 16-9 Effects of Publisher Adding a Column to a Change Table

If the publisher adds And . . . Then . . .
A user column A new subscription includes this column The subscription window for this subscription starts at the point the column was added.
A user column A new subscription does not include this newly added column The subscription window for this subscription starts at the earliest available change data. The new column will not be seen.
A user column A subscription exists The subscription window for this subscription remains unchanged.
A control column A new subscription is created The subscription window for this subscription starts at the earliest available change data. The subscription can see the control column immediately. All change table rows that existed prior to adding the control column will have the null value for the newly added control column.
A control column A subscription exists This subscription can see the new control column when the subscription window is extended (DBMS_CDC_PUBLISH.EXTEND_WINDOW procedure) such that the low boundary for the window crosses over the point when the control column was added.

Implementation and System Configuration

Change Data Capture comes packaged with the appropriate Oracle drivers already installed with which you can implement either asynchronous or synchronous data capture. Starting with Oracle Database 10g, the synchronous mode of Change Data Capture is included with the Standard Edition; the synchronous and asynchronous modes of Change Data Capture are included with the Enterprise Edition.

In addition, note that Change Data Capture uses Java. Therefore, when you install Oracle Database, ensure that Java is enabled.

Change Data Capture places systemwide triggers on the SQL CREATE TABLE, ALTER TABLE, and DROP TABLE statements. If system triggers are disabled on the source database, Change Data Capture will not function correctly. Therefore, you should never disable system triggers.

To remove Change Data Capture from the database, the SQL script rmcdc.sql is provided in the admin directory. This will remove the system triggers that Change Data Capture places on the SQL CREATE TABLE, ALTER TABLE, and DROP TABLE statements. In addition, rmcdc.sql removes all Java classes used by Change Data Capture. Note that after rmcdc.sql is called, Change Data Capture will no longer operate on the system. If the system administrator decides to remove the Java Virtual Machine from a database, rmcdc.sql must be called before rmjvm is called.

To reinstall Change Data Capture, the SQL script initcdc.sql is provided in the admin directory. It creates the Change Data Capture system triggers and Java classes that are required by Change Data Capture.

Synchronous Change Data Capture Restriction on Direct-Path INSERT

Synchronous Change Data Capture does not support the direct-path INSERT statement (and, by association, the MERGE statement and the multi_table_insert clause of the INSERT statement) in parallel DML mode.

When the publisher creates a change table in synchronous mode, Change Data Capture creates triggers on the source table. Because a direct-path INSERT statement disables all database triggers, any rows inserted into the source table using the SQL statement for direct-path INSERT in parallel DML mode will not be captured in the change table.

Similarly, Change Data Capture cannot capture the inserted rows from multitable insert and merge operations because these statements use a direct-path INSERT statement. The direct-path INSERT statement does not return an error message to indicate that the triggers used by Change Data Capture did not fire.

See Oracle Database SQL Reference for more information regarding the direct-path INSERT statement and triggers.