Which option must you consider for this task?

In Recovery Manager (RMAN), you are taking image copies of the data files of your production database and rolling them forward at regular intervals. You attempt to restart your database. After a regular maintenance task, you realize that one of the data files that belongs to the USERS tablespace is damaged and you need to recover the data file by using the image copy. Because a media failure caused the data file to be damaged, you want to place the data file in a different location while restoring the file.exhibit Which option must you consider for this task?

In Recovery Manager (RMAN), you are taking image copies of the data files of your production database and rolling them forward at regular intervals. You attempt to restart your database. After a regular maintenance task, you realize that one of the data files that belongs to the USERS tablespace is damaged and you need to recover the data file by using the image copy. Because a media failure caused the data file to be damaged, you want to place the data file in a different location while restoring the file.

Which option must you consider for this task?

A.
using only the RMAN SWITCH command to set the new location for the data file

B.
placing the database in the MOUNT state for the restore and recovery operations.

C.
using an RMAN RUN block with the SET NEWNAME and then the SWITCH command.

D.
configuring two channels: one for the restore operation and the other for the recovery operation

Explanation:
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B10501_01/server.920/a96566/rcmconc2.htm
RMAN automates the procedure for restoring files. You do not need to go into the operating system, locate the backup or copy that you want to use, and manually copy files into the appropriate directories. When you issue a RESTORE command, RMAN directs a server session to restore the correct backups and copies to either:

The default location, overwriting the files with the same name currently there

A new location, which you can specify with the SET NEWNAME command

To restore a datafile, either mount the database or keep it open and take the datafile to be restored offline. When RMAN performs a restore, the RESTORE command creates the restored files as datafile copies and records them in the repository. The following table describes the behavior of the RESTORE, SET NEWNAME, and SWITCH commands.

For example, if you restore datafile ?/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf to its default location, then RMAN restores the file ?/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf and overwrites any file that it finds with the same filename. If you run a SET NEWNAME command before you restore a file, then RMAN creates a datafile copy with the name that you specify. For example, assume that you run the following commands:

SET NEWNAME FOR DATAFILE ‘?/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf’ TO ‘/tmp/tools01.dbf’;
RESTORE DATAFILE ‘?/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf’;

In this case, RMAN creates a datafile copy of ?/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf named /tmp/tools01.dbf and records it in the repository.

To change the name for datafile ?/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf to /tmp/tools01.dbf in the control file, run a SWITCH command so that RMAN considers the restored file as the current database file. For example:

SWITCH DATAFILE ‘/tmp/tools01.dbf’ TO DATAFILECOPY ‘?/oradata/trgt/tools01.dbf’;

The SWITCH command is equivalent to the SQL statement ALTER DATABASE RENAME FILE.



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Cuong Thi Tien Sinh

Cuong Thi Tien Sinh

“in a different location” => set new name