Hi Paula
Ok it sounds like you 've successfully recovered. Now the problem w/
the "missing " rows. This may be where NOLOGGING is relevant. How is
this data loaded? If it was done as INSERT /*+
Dave
Glad to hear you got (most of) your data back!
Not sure what you meant by "It was listed as NOLOGGING when backed up
so my assumption is RMAN tried to restore it that way and when an error
o
Josh
I 'm not a standby or DataGuard expert but think about what the
unrecoverable change # represents. It 's the SCN at which the last
unrecoverable operation occurred on that datafile. So if
Either from 8 or 8i whenever a block which has undergone a nologging
operation is queried we should see ora-26040 and versions before that used
the traditional ora-1578.
Thanks
-Sudhi.
Priv
Thanks Jared I 'm familiar with those pages. What I 'm not 100% clear
on is
it possible to open a database after recovering it if objects were
created
with nologging and have the db leave t
Hi!
> I welcome any discussion from the larger list regarding one or more of the
> following
> 1. Using BLOBs as opposed to BFILE. (Although I 'm not sure whether BFILE
> would work with the A