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How to recover root password in MySQL?

  1. As Linux system root user stop the database process: /etc/init.d/mysql stop
    (or: service mysql stop)
  2. Start MySQL in safe mode and skip the use of the “grant tables”: /usr/bin/mysqld_safe –user=mysql –socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock –pid-file=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid –datadir=/var/lib/mysql –skip-grant-tables –skip-networking &
  3. Reset the MySQL root password: mysqladmin -u root flush-privileges password newpassword
  4. Stop MySQL running in safe mode: kill `cat /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid`
  5. Start MySQL: /etc/init.d/mysql start
  6. The new MySQL root password can now be used: mysql -u root -p
    Respond withthe password: newpassword

Oralce Interview Questions – Year 2009 Part – II

1. Give one method for transferring a table from one schema to another: There are several possible methods, export-import, CREATE TABLE… AS SELECT, or COPY

 

2. What is the purpose of the IMPORT option IGNORE? What is it?s default setting The IMPORT IGNORE option tells import to ignore “already exists” errors. If it is not specified the tables that already exist will be skipped. If it is specified, the error is ignored and the tables data will be inserted. The default value is N.

 

3. You have a rollback segment in a version 7.2 database that has expanded beyond optimal, how can it be restored to optimal

Use the ALTER TABLESPACE ….. SHRINK command.

 

4. If the DEFAULT and TEMPORARY tablespace clauses are left out of a CREATE USER command what happens? Is this bad or good? Why

       The user is assigned the SYSTEM tablespace as a default and temporary tablespace. This is bad because it causes user objects and temporary segments to be placed into the SYSTEM tablespace resulting in fragmentation and improper table placement (only data dictionary objects and the system rollback segment should be in SYSTEM).

 

 

5. What are some of the Oracle provided packages that DBAs should be aware of

Oracle provides a number of packages in the form of the DBMS_ packages owned by the SYS user. The packages used by DBAs may include: DBMS_SHARED_POOL, DBMS_UTILITY, DBMS_SQL, DBMS_DDL, DBMS_SESSION, DBMS_OUTPUT and DBMS_SNAPSHOT. They may also try to answer with the UTL*.SQL or CAT*.SQL series of SQL procedures. These can be viewed as extra credit but aren?t part of the answer

 

6. What happens if the constraint name is left out of a constraint clause?

The Oracle system will use the default name of SYS_Cxxxx where xxxx is a system generated number. This is bad since it makes tracking which table the constraint belongs to or what the constraint does harder.

 

7. What happens if a tablespace clause is left off of a primary key constraint clause?

This result in the index that is automatically generated being placed in then users default tablespace. Since this will usually be the same tablespace as the table is being created in, this can cause serious performance problems.

 

8. What is the proper method for disabling and re-enabling a primary key constraint?

You use the ALTER TABLE command for both. However, for the enable clause you must specify the USING INDEX and TABLESPACE clause for primary keys.

 

9. What happens if a primary key constraint is disabled and then enabled without fully specifying the index clause

The index is created in the user’s default tablespace and all sizing information is lost. Oracle doesn’t store this information as a part of the constraint definition, but only as part of the index definition, when the constraint was disabled the index was dropped and the information is gone.

 

10.(On UNIX) When should more than one DB writer process be used? How many should be used

If the UNIX system being used is capable of asynchronous IO then only one is required, if the system is not capable of asynchronous IO then up to twice the number of disks used by Oracle number of DB writers should be specified by use of the db_writers initialization parameter.

 

11. You are using hot backup without being in archivelog mode, can you recover in the event of a failure? Why or why not

You can’t use hot backup without being in archivelog mode. So no, you couldn?t recover.

 

12. What causes the “snapshot too old” error? How can this be prevented or mitigated

This is caused by large or long running transactions that have either wrapped onto their own rollback space or have had another transaction write on part of their rollback space. This can be prevented or mitigated by breaking the transaction into a set of smaller transactions or increasing the size of the rollback segments and their extents.

 

13. How can you tell if a database object is invalid?

By checking the status column of the DBA_, ALL_ or USER_OBJECTS views, depending upon whether you own or only have permission on the view or are using a DBA account.

 

14. A user is getting an ORA-00942 error yet you know you have granted them permission on the table, what else should you check

You need to check that the user has specified the full name of the object (select empid from scott.emp; instead of select empid from emp;) or has a synonym that balls to the object (create synonym emp for scott.emp;)

 

15. A developer is trying to create a view and the database won?t let him. He has the “DEVELOPER” role which has the “CREATE VIEW” system privilege and SELECT grants on the tables he is using, what is the problem

You need to verify the developer has direct grants on all tables used in the view. You can’t create a stored object with grants given through views.

 

16. If you have an example table, what is the best way to get sizing data for the production table implementation?

The best way is to analyze the table and then use the data provided in the DBA_TABLES view to get the average row length and other pertinent data for the calculation. The quick and dirty way is to look at the number of blocks the table is actually using and ratio the number of rows in the table to its number of blocks against the number of expected rows.

 

17. How can you find out how many users are currently logged into the database? How can you find their operating system id

      There are several ways. One is to look at the v$session or v$process views. Another way is to check the current_logins parameter in the v$sysstat view. Another if you are on UNIX is to do a “ps -ef|grep oracle|wc -l? Command, but this only works against a single instance installation.

 

      18. A user selects from a sequence and gets back two values, his select is:

SELECT pk_seq.nextval FROM dual;What is the problem

Somehow two values have been inserted into the dual table. This table is a single row, single column table that should only have one value in it.

 

19. How can you determine if an index needs to be dropped and rebuilt

Run the ANALYZE INDEX command on the index to validate its structure and then calculate the ratio of LF_BLK_LEN/LF_BLK_LEN+BR_BLK_LEN and if it isn’t near 1.0 (i.e. greater than 0.7 or so) then the index should be rebuilt. Or if the ratio

BR_BLK_LEN/ LF_BLK_LEN+BR_BLK_LEN are nearing 0.3.

 

Oracle Interview Questions – Year 2009 – Part I

1. Explain the difference between a hot backup and a cold backup and the benefits associated with each.
A hot backup is basically taking a backup of the database while it is still up and running and it must be in archive log mode. A cold backup is taking a backup of the database while it is shut down and does not require being in archive log mode. The benefit of taking a hot backup is that the database is still available for use while the backup is occurring and you can recover the database to any ball in time. The benefit of taking a cold backup is that it is typically easier to administer the backup and recovery

In addition, since you are taking cold backups the database does not require being in archive log mode and thus there will be a slight performance gain as the database is not cutting archive logs to disk.

2. You have just had to restore from backup and do not have any control files. How would you go about bringing up this database?

I would create a text based backup control file, stipulating where on disk all the data files where and then issue the recover command with the using backup control file clause.

3. How do you switch from an init.ora file to a spfile?
Issue the create spfile from pfile command.

4. Explain the difference between a data block, an extent and a segment?
A data block is the smallest unit of logical storage for a database object. As objects grow they take chunks of additional storage that are composed of contiguous data blocks. These groupings of contiguous data blocks are called extents. All the extents that an object takes when grouped together are considered the segment of the database object.

5. Give two examples of how you might determine the structure of the table DEPT?
Use the describe command or use the dbms_metadata.get_ddl package.

6. Where would you look for errors from the database engine?
In the alert log

7. Compare and contrast TRUNCATE and DELETE for a table.
Both the truncate and delete command have the desired outcome of getting rid of all the rows in a table. The difference between the two is that the truncate command is a DDL operation and just moves the high water mark and produces a now rollback. The delete command, on the other hand, is a DML operation, which will produce a rollback and thus take longer to complete.

8. Give the reasoning behind using an index.
Faster access to data blocks in a table.

9. Give the two types of tables involved in producing a star schema and the type of data they hold.
Fact tables and dimension tables. A fact table contains measurements while dimension tables will contain data that will help describe the fact tables.

10. What type of index should you use on a fact table?
A Bitmap index

11. Give two examples of referential integrity constraints.
A primary key and a foreign key are the example of refe

12. A table is classified as a parent table and you want to drop and re-create it. How would you do this without affecting the children tables?
Disable the foreign key constraint to the parent, drop the table, re-create the table, enable the foreign key constraint.

13. Explain the difference between ARCHIVELOG mode and NOARCHIVELOG mode and the benefits and disadvantages to each.
ARCHIVELOG mode is a mode that you can put the database in for creating a backup of all transactions that have occurred in the database so that you can recover to any ball in time. NOARCHIVELOG mode is basically the absence of ARCHIVELOG mode and has the disadvantage of not being able to recover to any ball in time. NOARCHIVELOG mode does have the advantage of not having to write transactions to an archive log and thus increases the performance of the database slightly.

14. What command would you use to create a backup control file?
Alter database backup control file to trace.

15. Give the stages of instance startup to a usable state where normal users may access it.
STARTUP NOMOUNT – Instance startup
STARTUP MOUNT – The database is mounted
STARTUP OPEN – The database is opened

16. What column differentiates the V$ views to the GV$ views and how?
The INST_ID column which indicates the instance in a RAC environment the information came from.

17. How would you go about generating an EXPLAIN plan?
Create a plan table with utlxplan.sql.
Use the explain plan set statement_id = ‘tst1’ into plan_table for a SQL statement
Look at the explain plan with utlxplp.sql or utlxpls.sql

18. How would you go about increasing the buffer cache hit ratio?
Use the buffer cache advisory over a given workload and then query the v$db_cache_advice table. If a change was necessary then I would use the alter system set db_cache_size command.

19. Explain an ORA-01555
you get this error when you get a snapshot too old within rollback. It can usually be solved by increasing the undo retention or increasing the size of rollbacks. You should also look at the logic involved in the application getting the error message.

20. Explain the difference between $ORACLE_HOME and $ORACLE_BASE.
ORACLE_BASE is the root directory for oracle. ORACLE_HOME located beneath ORACLE_BASE is where the oracle products reside.

MySQL and Linux commands

Where are the MySQL binaries stored? Find the location? : which mysql

 

Find the version of MySQL: mysql -V

 

Start the MySQL server: /usr/bin/mysqld_safe –user=mysql & or /etc/init.d/mysql start

 

Validate MySQL process has started: ps -afe | grep mysqld

 

Validate MySQL server is up and running: mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE “%version%”;

 

Find the columns of the table in MySQL: mysql> SHOW COLUMNS FROM dept;

 

Find the table related information: SHOW TABLE STATUS LIKE ‘dept’ \G

 

Display all tables: Mysql> show tables

 

Display all databases: Myql> show databases

 

Display tables from the non current database: Mysql> SHOW TABLES FROM database_name;

 

List the filed of the tables

mySQL> describe tableName

 

Backup/Dump all databases

[mysql dir]/bin/mysqldump -u root -ppassword –opt >/tmp/alldatabases.sql

 

Backup/Dump particular database

[mysql dir]/bin/mysqldump -u username -ppassword –databases databasename >/tmp/databasename.sql

 

Backup/Dump a table from a database

[mysql dir]/bin/mysqldump -c -u username -ppassword databasename tablename > /tmp/databasename.tablename.sql

 

Restore database (or database table) from backup

[mysql dir]/bin/mysql -u username -ppassword databasename < /tmp/databasename.sql

 

 

 

 

 

How to decide Primary Key column data type in MySQL? Expectation with the Primary Key column

Decide the Primary Key column is one of the important tasks. Typically, the Primary Key is must mitigate the below properties.

 

(1) Uniquely identify each row in a table

(2) Can be referenced by another column/row (foreign key)

(3) provide a “natural” sequencing of the data (alphabetical, numeric, and chronological)

(4) Partition the data horizontally for performance

 

If your interest is either “unique identifier” or “natural sequencing”, you will be using whatever data type fits for the rows natural identifier. So that pretty much answers the question, and should be your first choice.

 

Remember that a primary key must be immutable — never changes — so using a natural key may not be possible. In that case, a surrogate key becomes a necessity.

 

A surrogate key will probably break your “natural sequencing”, since the data will be indexed on the surrogate key value, not on the natural values. This doesn’t mean to avoid it, but only to recognize that condition and address it in your design (an index, for example, restores the sequencing but adds overhead to update/delete/insert operations).

 

Also, if you are looking at this as a performance problem, you may want to substitute an integer data type as a “surrogate key” for the natural primary key.

 

If you use a surrogate key, use an integer that is sized to the native size of the platform (32-bit, 64-bit, 128-bit integer) up to the size needed to support uniqueness.

 

I would avoid integers which increment monotonically (by 1) — this presents a “bottleneck” in the processing, making it complicated to run multiple, parallel, concurrent insertions. If you’re running an OLTP system, that bottleneck will limit your performance and scalability.

 

So ultimately to decide the primary key data type we need to project the data growth, number of insertion, number of selection and performance issues.

 

For the normal table you can use primary key datatype as BIG INT with AUTO_INCREMENT option.