Restore and Recover Autonomous Database on Dedicated Exadata Infrastructure
You can restore and recover an Autonomous Database on Dedicated Exadata Infrastructure from its Details page.
Note
In an Autonomous Data Guard setup, database restore is not allowed if the standby database is in snapshot standby role. You must convert the standby Autonomous Container Database (ACD) to physical standby role to restore this database. See Convert Snapshot Standby to Physical Standby for instructions.
In an Autonomous Data Guard setup, database restore is not allowed if the standby database is in snapshot standby role. You must convert the standby Autonomous Container Database (ACD) to physical standby role to restore this database. See Convert Snapshot Standby to Physical Standby for instructions.
To restore and recover your database to a point in time, do the following:
Required IAM Policies
use autonomous-databases
read autonomous-backups
Procedure
To restore and recover your database, do the following:
Note
- When your database is restored, the value of the ADMIN user password is also restored. Therefore, it may have an old value that you no longer remember. You can set the password to a new value as described in Unlock or Change the ADMIN Database User Password.
- After restoring your database, all backups between the date the restore completes and the date you specified for the restore operation - the restore time - are invalidated. You cannot initiate further restore operations to any point in time between the restore time and restore completion time. You can only initiate new restore operations to a point in time older than the restore time or more recent than the time when the actual restore succeeded.
Parent topic: Create and Manage Dedicated Autonomous Databases