Before switching active and standby databases

Figure 3-4 illustrates a warm standby application for a database that does not participate in the replication system other than through the activities of the warm standby application itself. Figure 3-4 represents the warm standby application in normal operation, before you switch the active and standby databases.

Figure 3-4: Warm standby application example—before switching

Figure 3-4 illustrates a warm standby application for a database that does not participate in the replication system other than through the activities of the warm standby application itself. This also illustrates a warm standby application in normal operation before you switch the active and standby databases. The Replication Server writes transactions received from the active database into an inbound message queue. This inbound queue is read by the D S I thread for the standby database, which executes the transactions in the standby database. Transactions in this figure are simply replicated from the active database into the standby database.

Figure 3-4 adds internal detail to Figure 3-1, to show that:

In this example, transactions are simply replicated from the active database into the standby database. The logical database itself does not:

See “Warm standby applications using replication” for information about warm standby applications for a primary or replicate database.