How would you do this?

Your storage administrator informs you about some disk corruption issues in the disk subsystem
where your Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) backups are located. Your storage administrator has
resolved these corruption issues by applying a patch to the storage subsystem, but to be sure that
the OCR backups are not affected by this problem the administrator wants you to check the
integrity of the OCR backups.
How would you do this?

Your storage administrator informs you about some disk corruption issues in the disk subsystem
where your Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) backups are located. Your storage administrator has
resolved these corruption issues by applying a patch to the storage subsystem, but to be sure that
the OCR backups are not affected by this problem the administrator wants you to check the
integrity of the OCR backups.
How would you do this?

A.
There is no easy way to check your OCR backups for corruptions.

B.
You can check whether the OCR backups are not corrupted by using the OCRCHECK
command.

C.
You create a logical export from the OCR backups by using the OCRCONFIG command and
analyze the export file for errors.

D.
You dump the OCR backup contents into a text file by using the OCRDUMP command, and if
that succeeds without errors you know that your OCR backups are not corrupted.

E.
You create another physical backup of the OCR backups by using the OCRCONFIG command,
and if this succeeds without errors you know that the OCR backups are not corrupted.



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