Question

Ok so for standard, non-mirrored databases, the transaction log is kept in check either simply by having the database in simple mode or by doing regular backups. We keep ours in simple as we have SAN snapshot backups taking place and there is no need for SQL backups.

We're now going to mirroring. I obviously no longer have the choice of simple mode and must use full. this obviously leads to large log files and the need for log backups. That's fine I can deal with that; a maintenance plan that takes a log backup and discards any previous ones. I realise that this backup is essentially useless without its predecessors but the SAN snapshots are doing the backups.

My question is...

a) Is there a way to truncate the log file of all processed rows without creating a backup? (as I can't use them anyway...)

b) A maintenance plan is local to a server and is not replicated across a mirrored pair. How should it be done on a mirrored setup? such that when the database fails over, the plan starts running on the new principal, but doesn't get upset when its a mirror?

Thanks

Was it helpful?

Solution

A. If your server is important enough to mirror it, why isn't it important enough to take transaction log backups? SAN snapshots are point-in-time images of just one point in time, but they don't give you the ability to stop at different points of time along the way. When your developers truncate a table, you want to replay all of the logs right up until that statement, and stop there. That's what transaction log backups are good for.

B. Set up a maintenance plan (or even better, T-SQL scripts like Ola Hallengren's at http://ola.hallengren.com) to back up all of the databases, but check the boxes to only back up the online ones. (Off the top of my head, not sure if that's an option in 2005 - might be 2008 only.) That way, you'll always get whatever ones happen to fail over.

Of course, keep in mind that you need to be careful with things like cleanup scripts and copying those backup files. If you have half of your t-log backups on one share and half on the other, it's tougher to restore.

OTHER TIPS

a) no, you cannot truncate a log that is part of a mirrored database. backing the logs up is your best option. I have several databases that are setup with mirroring simply based on teh HA needs but DR is not required for various reasons. That seems to be your situation? I would really still recommend keeping the log backups for a period of time. No reason to kill a perfectly good recovery plan that is added by your HA strategy. :)

b) My own solutions for this are to have a secondary agent job that monitors based on the status of the mirror. If the mirror is found to change, the secondary job on teh mirror instance is enabled and if possible, the old principal is disabled. if the principal was down and it comes back up, the job is still disabled. the only way the jobs themselves would be switched back is the event of again, another forced failover.

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