FAST_START_MTTR_TARGET
An initialization parameter that specifies the desired amount of time, in seconds, to perform instance recovery after an instance failure.
See fine-grained auditing (FGA).
The intersection of a column and a row in a table.
Special auditing that allows custom rules to be used in monitoring and capturing audit records.
Generally, a combination of hardware and software that controls network traffic and prevents intruders from compromising corporate network security.
A flashback feature that lets you recover the entire database to a specific point in time in the past.
A flashback feature that retrieves a table after it has been dropped without using other more complicated and disruptive recovery techniques such as point in time recovery or flashback database.
A feature of the Oracle database that allows a user to view the contents of a table as of a user-specified point in time in the past. How far in the past a flashback query can retrieve rows depends on the size of the undo tablespace and on the setting of the UNDO_ RETENTION system parameter.
A flashback feature that allows you to recover one or more existing tables to a specific point in time. Flashback table is done in place by rolling back only the changes made to the table or tables and their dependent objects, such as indexes.
A single, unified storage area for all recovery-related files and recovery activities in an Oracle database.
A constraint requiring that the value inserted into a column matches the value in a primary or unique key. See also self-referencing foreign key.
A backup that includes all blocks of every datafile backed up in a whole or partial database backup.
A PL/SQL (Procedural Language SQL) program that returns a value.