![]() ![]() This option is most helpful if you're trying to undo a catastrophic change to a traffic-serving environment (for example, if you have an integration that runs awry). There are some limitations to point-in-time. The environment's logs and API keys will not be affected by the rollback- any logs or API keys that existed before the rollback will remain. Point-in-time recovery requires that both automated backups and binary logging are enabled for your instance. If you rollback an environment in place, the policy and facts of the environment will be overwritten. (Note that you will not be able to select this option if your organization is at its environment limit.) This option is most helpful if you need to investigate the state of an environment at some fixed point in time. You can use this function to fully restore and then recover a group of Oracle tablespaces to a specified point in time (PIT). If you choose to recover into a new environment, note that only the facts and policy from the point in time will be copied- your new environment won't have any API keys or logs. With PITR enabled, you can restore a global table to any point in time within the specified recovery window (typically up to 35 days). You'll have a choice of either copying the facts and policy into a new environment or rolling them back in place. Next, select the environment whose facts and policy you want to recover and the point in time you want to recover them from. It is sometimes called incomplete recovery because it does not use all of the available redo or completely recover all changes to your database. DBPITR is the most basic solution to unwanted database changes. When you have completed a point in time recovery, your database will be in the state it was at the specific date and time you identified when restoring your database. Database point-in-time recovery (DBPITR) and Flashback features enable you to recover your database to a prior point in time. You'll see a list of recent recoveries for environments in your organization. A point in time recovery is restoring a database to a specified date and time. ![]() To create a recovery, navigate to the "Settings" page for your paid organization. This feature is only available for paid organizations. ![]()
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