User Accounts in the Recovery Appliance Environment
The central components of a Recovery Appliance environment are the protected databases, Recovery Appliance, and Cloud Control. Table 2-1 summarizes the most important user accounts in the environment.
Table 2-1 User Accounts in the Recovery Appliance Environment
Component | Account Type | User Name | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Cloud Control |
Cloud Control super-user |
|
This application account exists by default. Its purpose is to administer Cloud Control itself, and is not directly related to managing a Recovery Appliance or protected databases. |
Cloud Control |
Cloud Control administrator |
User-Specified |
A Cloud Control user account that has been granted the roles and privileges needed to manage a specific protected database or a specific Recovery Appliance. Multiple Cloud Control administrative accounts may exist, depending on your business requirements. |
Recovery Appliance |
Recovery Appliance metadata database super-user |
|
|
Recovery Appliance |
|
This database account owns the Recovery Appliance schema, which includes the RMAN recovery catalog and the |
|
Recovery Appliance |
User-Specified |
This account has authority to send and receive backups for databases registered with the Recovery Appliance, and to manipulate recovery catalog metadata for these databases. This is also the account to use to send redo data from a protected database to the Recovery Appliance. Unlike Typically, a Recovery Appliance metadata database contains multiple Recovery Appliance user accounts. These accounts are created when configuring access for protected databases (see Configuring Recovery Appliance for Protected Database Access). Every Recovery Appliance user account owns a virtual private catalog. The catalog owner can access and modify only those rows in the recovery catalog that pertain to the databases to which it has been granted access. The catalog user name for this is referenced in an RMAN |
|
Protected Database |
Protected database backup administrator |
User account with |
This account has the privileges to back up, restore, and recover a protected database. This is the database user name that is referenced in an RMAN |
Figure 2-2 depicts the relationship between RASYS
and two Recovery Appliance user accounts. In this example, each Recovery Appliance user account owns a separate virtual private catalog. Note that RASYS
, as owner of the Recovery Appliance schema, is also the owner of the RMAN recovery catalog.
Figure 2-2 RASYS and Recovery Appliance User Accounts

Description of "Figure 2-2 RASYS and Recovery Appliance User Accounts"
See Also:
Oracle Database Security Guide to learn how to create database user accounts