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A benchmark featuring DIGITAL NetWorker Save and Restore, NetWorker® BusinesSuite™ Module for Oracle®, DIGITAL AlphaServers, Oracle Enterprise Backup Utility (EBU), and StorageTek Redwood tape drives.
These benchmarks were performed in order to demonstrate the feasibility of storage management solutions for VLDB applications. This study establishes a range of benchmark results for backup and restore of large Oracle7 installations running on a DIGITAL AlphaServer 8400 system, in conjunction with StorageTek SD-3 Redwood tape subsystem, Oracle's Enterprise Backup Utility and DIGITAL NetWorker Save and Restore. These results were achieved using a new high performance version of NetWorker that is currently under joint development by DIGITAL and Legato.
Three benchmark scenarios were performed to represent real-life backup and restore situations. These benchmark scenarios consisted of the backup of an Oracle database that was off-line (cold backup), the backup of an Oracle database that was on-line without a transaction load (hot backup), and the restore from backup of an Oracle database.
The following results were achieved:
While it is now common for RDBMS applications to range from 10 to 100 gigabytes (GB) in size, the last several years have seen the emergence of very large databases, or VLDB for short. The definition of a VLDB is a database ranging from hundreds of gigabytes to terabytes in size. The dramatic decline in the cost of disk storage, coupled with the growing popularity of data warehousing applications has also fueled the amount of RDBMS data that must be managed. According to Gartner Group, the average database will grow 1000% between 1995 and 2000, or an average of 200% per year.
The impact of all this growth in data being used by RDBMS applications is a growing concern of database administrators (DBA) and IS management as to how this data can be protected in case of application error, operations error, hardware failure or disaster. For example, many installations have service level agreements that require RDBMS applications to be available for the majority of the day or up to 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The loss of even one hour's availability for some applications can cost an organization thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost revenue and productivity. All of this compounds the workload of the DBA who must perform many duties other than backup and restore.
Hot backup: A backup performed while the database is online,
available for read/write.
Cold backup: A backup performed while the database is off-line
Prior to EBU, Oracle7 users relied upon export and import along with physical backup. Export and import has the limitation of not being able to work with the redo logs (a.k.a. transaction logs) while the physical backups do not provide the performance needed to backup and restore large databases. Both suffered from the inability to utilize high speed tape devices and libraries and lack features such as scheduling, monitoring and media management.
While high speed backup and restore is a critical element, it is not the only dimension of a comprehensive VLDB data protection strategy. Installations looking for a RDBMS backup and restore solution should look for ease of use (scheduling, monitoring, tracking) along with functionality (disaster recovery, database and filesystem data support, media management). Also of importance is heterogeneous support, allowing an organization to standardize on one product that has components that support multiple RDBMSs, operating systems and applications.
While it is true that "power" benchmarks using state of the art hardware and software with databases in the hundreds of gigabytes to terabyte size seem to be more prevalent, they serve a purpose. They demonstrate to installations that currently have or who are considering VLDB applications that viable data protection solutions are available.
For installations that do not or will not have VLDB applications in the near future, the "power" benchmarks give them the security that a product they invest in today can provide the scalability they may need in the future. Lastly, VLDB benchmarks highlight the fact that the leading RDBMS and storage management vendors are architecting their software to make use of the latest hardware technology.
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GB Restored | %CPU | |||
2 | 13.94 | 0:20:52 | 40.05 | 10 |
4 | 55.78 | 0:24:32 | 136.38 | 42 |
Server System and Configuration | DIGITAL Alpha Server 8400 5/300
8 CPUs (300 MHz) 8 Gigabyte RAM |
SCSI Controllers | 30 Fast/Wide SCSI Controllers
15 with SD-3 tape drive attached 13 with 6 disks attached 2 with 5 disk attached |
SCSI Disks | 88 rz29 4.3Gigabyte SCSI Disks
59 reserved for database 22 reserved for scratch disk 7 reserved for operating system and application space |
Tape Drives | StorageTek Redwood SD-3 Helical
Cartridge Subsystem 15 SCSI SD-3 Tape Drives 15 50 Gigabyte capacity tapes |
Operating System Release | DIGITAL UNIX 4.0A |
Oracle Release | Oracle 7.2.2.3.0 |
Database Backup API | Oracle Enterprise Backup Utility 2.1 |
Backup Software | NetWorker Save and Restore for DIGITAL UNIX x4.3
NetWorker BusinesSuite Module for Oracle 2.0 |
Table Spaces | 15 tablespaces
14 comprised of 4 disks 1 comprised of 3 disks |
Tables | 59, one per disk, each 3.1 GB in size |
Index | 59, one per disk, each 0.7 GB in size |
Rows | 26,000,000 per table; 1.534 billion total |
Total allocated size | 224.2 GB |
Total used size | approximately 172 GB |
Table data structure | |
Tables | 59, one per disk, each 3.1 GB in size |
Index | 59, one per disk, each 0.7 GB in size |
Rows | 26,000,000 per table; 1.534 billion total |
Total allocated size | 224.2 GB |
Total used size | approximately 172 GB |
Table data structure | |
Field Name | Data type |
L_ORDERKEY | NUMBER(10) |
L_PARTKEY | NUMBER(10) |
L_SUPPKEY | NUMBER(10) |
L_LINENUMBER | NUMBER(10) |
L_QUANTITY | NUMBER(10) |
L_EXTENDEDPRICE | NUMBER |
L_DISCOUNT | NUMBER(10) |
L_TAX | NUMBER(10) |
L_RETURNFLAG | CHAR(1) |
L_LINESTATUS | CHAR(1) |
L_SHIPDATE | DATE |
L_COMMITDATE | DATE |
L_RECEIPTDATE | DATE |
L_SHIPINSTRUCT | VARCHAR2(25) |
L_SHIPMODE | VARCHAR2(10) |
L_COMMENT | VARCHAR2(27)__ |
The BusinesSuite Module for Oracle exploits EBU by integrating the database aware and parallel processing performance into NetWorker's parallel, high speed engine that supports a broad range of high performance tape devices. The BusinesSuite Module also provides administration, scheduling, monitoring and media management. This combination provides the safest, fastest and easiest to use solution available for Oracle data protection.
Key features of RMAN include the ability to perform incremental backups, archive log management and a new recovery catalog. The option of performing incremental backups is significant because this gives VLDB users the ability to backup only the data that has been modified. This will result in greater database availability along with reduced resource requirements such as tape and cpu. RMAN will automatically utilize the incremental backups along with full database backups that have been taken during a specific time (e.g. weekly).
While EBU is not planned to be supported against Oracle8, all existing EBU processes, products and scripts can still be used against Oracle8. Legato will support and exploit both EBU and RMAN in addition to internally developed solutions.
The combination of BusinesSuite and NetWorker provides a network-wide storage management software solution that delivers a rich set of advanced features to support enterprise applications, such as autochanger support, automated media labeling and tracking, and media cloning for local and off-site storage strategies, as well as support for state-of-the-art high-speed devices and mainframe-class tape silos. NetWorker, in concert with BusinesSuite, is the only comprehensive storage management solution that addresses the need for cross-platform support of enterprise applications running on Microsoft Windows NT and UNIX.
Whatever applications you're currently running on your mainframe, the AlphaServer 8400 system - powered by the breakthrough 64-bit 21164 Alpha chip - can run them faster than anyone. You can equip the AlphaServer 8400 system with up to twelve 440 MHz processors. That gives you a competitive advantage, with the industry's fastest enterprise server performance - running at over 3,000 transactions per second (TPS) with symmetric multiprocessing capabilities. High-speed processing is only part of the story. The AlphaServer 8400 specs show this system to be a veritable client/server juggernaut. Only on a 64-bit system can you put gigabytes of your database in memory, and get a performance increase far beyond the 2 GB limit of any 32-bit system. Internal memory starts at 256 MB and can be expanded to 14 GB as your need for additional and more complex applications increases. Storage capacity tells an even bigger story: it is capable of growing beyond 10 TB.
Consider the cost-efficient mainframe alternative or super-computer replacement - the AlphaServer 8400 - a system that can fulfill your open client/server needs today and product your investment tomorrow.
Oracle Universal Server allows you to store, manipulate, retrieve, and share any type of data - including business records, documents, messages, images, audio, and video - in any type of application, such as transaction processing for improving the bottom line, data warehouses for making better decisions, network-centric systems for streamlining the way your business communicates, and electronic commerce for building new markets and automating more processes.
Oracle Universal Server and Oracle7 allow you to securely and reliably deliver these powerful applications to any number of users, over any type of network, no matter what hardware and software they use.
The Redwood SD-3 revolution is the result of the collaborative efforts of three industry leaders - Storage Technology Corporation, 3M and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. of Japan. This collaboration has resulted in the development and implementation of a unique storage strategy, one that fulfills all of the immediate and long-term storage capacity requirements of a broad spectrum of industries. Global satellite telemetry data capture, seismic oil exploration, financial institutions, multi-national insurance companies, television broadcasting - these are but a few of the data-intensive, technology hungry industries that will realize immediate benefits from Redwood's capacity and performance.
Digital Equipment Corporation
334 South Street
Shrewsbury, MA 01545
www.digital.com
Legato Systems, Inc.
3210 Porter Drive
Palo Alto, CA 94304
415-812-6000
www.legato.com
Oracle Corporation
500 Oracle Parkway
Redwood Shores, CA 94065
415-506-7000
www.oracle.com
StorageTek
2270 South 88th Street
Louisville, CO 80028
1-800-STORTEK
www.stortek.com