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Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference
11g Release 2 (11.2)

Part Number E10592-02
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CREATE ROLLBACK SEGMENT

Note:

Oracle strongly recommends that you run your database in automatic undo management mode instead of using rollback segments. Do not use rollback segments unless you must do so for compatibility with earlier versions of Oracle Database. Refer to Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on automatic undo management.

Purpose

Use the CREATE ROLLBACK SEGMENT statement to create a rollback segment, which is an object that Oracle Database uses to store data necessary to reverse, or undo, changes made by transactions.

The information in this section assumes that your database is not running in automatic undo mode (the UNDO_MANAGEMENT initialization parameter is set to MANUAL or not set at all). If your database is running in automatic undo mode (the UNDO_MANAGEMENT initialization parameter is set to AUTO, which is the default), then user-created rollback segments are irrelevant.

Further, if your database has a locally managed SYSTEM tablespace, then you cannot create rollback segments in any dictionary-managed tablespace. Instead, you must either use the automatic undo management feature or create locally managed tablespaces to hold the rollback segments.

Note:

A tablespace can have multiple rollback segments. Generally, multiple rollback segments improve performance.
  • The tablespace must be online for you to add a rollback segment to it.

  • When you create a rollback segment, it is initially offline. To make it available for transactions by your Oracle Database instance, bring it online using the ALTER ROLLBACK SEGMENT statement. To bring it online automatically whenever you start up the database, add the segment name to the value of the ROLLBACK_SEGMENT initialization parameter.

To use objects in a tablespace other than the SYSTEM tablespace:

See Also:

Prerequisites

To create a rollback segment, you must have the CREATE ROLLBACK SEGMENT system privilege.

Syntax

create_rollback_segment::=

Description of create_rollback_segment.gif follows
Description of the illustration create_rollback_segment.gif

(storage_clause)

Semantics

PUBLIC

Specify PUBLIC to indicate that the rollback segment is public and is available to any instance. If you omit this clause, then the rollback segment is private and is available only to the instance naming it in its initialization parameter ROLLBACK_SEGMENTS.

rollback_segment

Specify the name of the rollback segment to be created.

TABLESPACE

Use the TABLESPACE clause to identify the tablespace in which the rollback segment is created. If you omit this clause, then the database creates the rollback segment in the SYSTEM tablespace.

Note:

Oracle Database must access rollback segments frequently. Therefore, Oracle strongly recommends that you do not create rollback segments in the SYSTEM tablespace, either explicitly or implicitly by omitting this clause. In addition, to avoid high contention for the tablespace containing the rollback segment, it should not contain other objects such as tables and indexes, and it should require minimal extent allocation and deallocation.

To achieve these goals, create rollback segments in locally managed tablespaces with autoallocation disabled—in tablespaces created with the EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL clause with the UNIFORM setting. The AUTOALLOCATE setting is not supported.

storage_clause

The storage_clause lets you specify storage characteristics for the rollback segment.

See Also:

storage_clause

Examples

Creating a Rollback Segment: Example The following statement creates a rollback segment with default storage values in an appropriately configured tablespace:

CREATE TABLESPACE rbs_ts
   DATAFILE 'rbs01.dbf' SIZE 10M
   EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL UNIFORM SIZE 100K;

/* This example and the next will fail if your database is in 
   automatic undo mode.
*/
CREATE ROLLBACK SEGMENT rbs_one
   TABLESPACE rbs_ts;

The preceding statement is equivalent to the following:

CREATE ROLLBACK SEGMENT rbs_one
   TABLESPACE rbs_ts
   STORAGE
   ( INITIAL 10K );