Oracle® Database Performance Tuning Guide 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14211-01 |
|
|
View PDF |
This chapter explains how to allocate memory to Oracle memory caches, and how to use those caches. Proper sizing and effective use of the Oracle memory caches greatly improves database performance.
Oracle recommends automatic memory configuration for your system using the SGA_TARGET
and PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
initialization parameters. However, you can manually adjust the memory pools on your system and that process is provided in this chapter.
This chapter contains the following sections:
See Also:
Oracle Database Concepts for information on the memory architecture of an Oracle databaseOracle stores information in memory caches and on disk. Memory access is much faster than disk access. Disk access (physical I/O) take a significant amount of time, compared with memory access, typically in the order of 10 milliseconds. Physical I/O also increases the CPU resources required, because of the path length in device drivers and operating system event schedulers. For this reason, it is more efficient for data requests for frequently accessed objects to be satisfied solely by memory, rather than also requiring disk access.
A performance goal is to reduce the physical I/O overhead as much as possible, either by making it more likely that the required data is in memory or by making the process of retrieving the required data more efficient.
Oracle strongly recommends the use of automatic memory management. Before setting any memory pool sizes, review the following:
If you need to configure memory allocations, Oracle Enterprise Manager provides the Memory Advisor for updates. To access the Memory Advisor through Oracle Enterprise Manager Database Control:
Click the Advisor Central link under Related Links at the bottom of the Database pages.
On the Advisor Central page, you can click the Memory Advisor link to access the Memory Parameters SGA and PGA pages.
The main Oracle memory caches that affect performance are:
Shared pool
Large pool
Java pool
Buffer cache
Streams pool size
Log buffer
Process-private memory, such as memory used for sorting and hash joins
Automatic Shared Memory Management simplifies the configuration of the SGA and is the recommended memory configuration. To use Automatic Shared Memory Management, set the SGA_TARGET
initialization parameter to a nonzero value and set the STATISTICS_LEVEL
initialization parameter to TYPICAL
or ALL
. The value of the SGA_TARGET
parameter should be set to the amount of memory that you want to dedicate for the SGA. In response to the workload on the system, the automatic SGA management distributes the memory appropriately for the following memory pools:
Database buffer cache (default pool)
Shared pool
Large pool
Java pool
Streams pool
If these automatically tuned memory pools had been set to nonzero values, those values are used as a minimum levels by Automatic Shared Memory Management. You would set minimum values if an application components needs a minimum amount of memory to function properly.
SGA_TARGET
is a dynamic parameter that can be changed by accessing the SGA Size Advisor from the Memory Parameters SGA page in Oracle Enterprise Manager, or by querying the V$SGA_TARGET_ADVICE
view and using the ALTER
SYSTEM
command. SGA_TARGET
can be set less than or equal to the value of SGA_MAX_SIZE
initialization parameter. Changes in the value of SGA_TARGET
automatically resize the automatically tuned memory pools.
See Also:
Oracle Database Concepts for information on automatic SGA management
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on managing the System Global Area (SGA)
If you dynamically disable SGA_TARGET
by setting its value to 0 at instance startup, Automatic Shared Memory Management will be disabled and the current auto-tuned sizes will be used for each memory pool. If necessary, you can manually resize each memory pool using the DB_CACHE_SIZE
, SHARED_POOL_SIZE
, LARGE_POOL_SIZE
, JAVA_POOL_SIZE
, and STREAMS_POOL_SIZE
initialization parameters. See "Dynamically Changing Cache Sizes".
The following pools are manually sized components and are not affected by Automatic Shared Memory Management:
Log buffer
Other buffer caches (such as KEEP
, RECYCLE
, and other non-default block size)
Fixed SGA and other internal allocations
To manually size these memory pools, you need to set the DB_KEEP_CACHE_SIZE
, DB_RECYCLE_CACHE_SIZE
, DB_nK_CACHE_SIZE
, and LOG_BUFFER
initialization parameters. The memory allocated to these pools is deducted from the total available for SGA_TARGET
when Automatic Shared Memory Management computes the values of the automatically tuned memory pools.
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on managing initialization parameters
Oracle Streams Concepts and Administration for information on the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE
initialization parameter
Oracle Database Java Developer's Guide for information on Java memory usage
If the system is not using Automatic Shared Memory Management, you can choose to dynamically reconfigure the sizes of the shared pool, the large pool, the buffer cache, and the process-private memory. The following sections contain details on sizing of caches:
The size of these memory caches is configurable using initialization configuration parameters, such as DB_CACHE_ADVICE
, JAVA_POOL_SIZE
, LARGE_POOL_SIZE
, LOG_BUFFER
, and
SHARED_POOL_SIZE
. The values for these parameters are also dynamically configurable using the ALTER
SYSTEM
statement except for the log buffer pool and process-private memory, which are static after startup.
Memory for the shared pool, large pool, java pool, and buffer cache is allocated in units of granules. The granule size is 4MB if the SGA size is less than 1GB. If the SGA size is greater than 1GB, the granule size changes to 16MB. The granule size is calculated and fixed when the instance starts up. The size does not change during the lifetime of the instance.
The granule size that is currently being used for SGA can be viewed in the view V$SGA_DYNAMIC_COMPONENTS
. The same granule size is used for all dynamic components in the SGA.
You can expand the total SGA size to a value equal to the SGA_MAX_SIZE
parameter. If the SGA_MAX_SIZE
is not set, you can decrease the size of one cache and reallocate that memory to another cache if necessary. SGA_MAX_SIZE
defaults to the aggregate setting of all the components.
Note:
SGA_MAX_SIZE
cannot be dynamically resized.The maximum amount of memory usable by the instance is determined at instance startup by the initialization parameter SGA_MAX_SIZE
. You can specify SGA_MAX_SIZE
to be larger than the sum of all of the memory components, such as buffer cache and shared pool. Otherwise, SGA_MAX_SIZE
defaults to the actual size used by those components. Setting SGA_MAX_SIZE
larger than the sum of memory used by all of the components lets you dynamically increase a cache size without needing to decrease the size of another cache.
See Also:
Your operating system's documentation for information on managing dynamic SGA.The following views provide information about dynamic SGA resize operations:
V$SGA_CURRENT_RESIZE_OPS
: Information about SGA resize operations that are currently in progress. An operation can be a grow or a shrink of a dynamic SGA component.
V$SGA_RESIZE_OPS
: Information about the last 800 completed SGA resize operations. This does not include any operations currently in progress.
V$SGA_DYNAMIC_COMPONENTS
: Information about the dynamic components in SGA. This view summarizes information based on all completed SGA resize operations since startup.
V$SGA_DYNAMIC_FREE_MEMORY
: Information about the amount of SGA memory available for future dynamic SGA resize operations.
See Also:
Oracle Database Concepts for more information about dynamic SGA
Oracle Database Reference for detailed column information for these views
With memory configuration, it is important to size the cache appropriately for the application's needs. Conversely, tuning the application's use of the caches can greatly reduce resource requirements. Efficient use of the Oracle memory caches also reduces the load on related resources, such as the latches that protect the caches, the CPU, and the I/O system.
For best performance, you should consider the following:
The cache should be optimally designed to use the operating system and database resources most efficiently.
Memory allocations to Oracle memory structures should best reflect the needs of the application.
Making changes or additions to an existing application might require resizing Oracle memory structures to meet the needs of your modified application.
If your application uses Java, you should investigate whether you need to modify the default configuration for the Java pool. See the Oracle Database Java Developer's Guide for information on Java memory usage.
For most operating systems, it is important to consider the following:
Paging occurs when an operating system transfers memory-resident pages to disk solely to allow new pages to be loaded into memory. Many operating systems page to accommodate large amounts of information that do not fit into real memory. On most operating systems, paging reduces performance.
Use the operating system utilities to examine the operating system, to identify whether there is a lot of paging on your system. If there is, then the total memory on the system might not be large enough to hold everything for which you have allocated memory. Either increase the total memory on your system, or decrease the amount of memory allocated.
Because the purpose of the SGA is to store data in memory for fast access, the SGA should be within main memory. If pages of the SGA are swapped to disk, then the data is no longer quickly accessible. On most operating systems, the disadvantage of paging significantly outweighs the advantage of a large SGA.
Note:
TheLOCK_SGA
parameter can be used to lock the SGA into physical memory and prevent it from being paged out.To see how much memory is allocated to the SGA and each of its internal structures, enter the following SQL*Plus statement:
SHOW SGA
The output of this statement will look similar to the following:
Total System Global Area 840205000 bytes Fixed Size 279240 bytes Variable Size 520093696 bytes Database Buffers 318767104 bytes Redo Buffers 1064960 bytes
When sizing the SGA, ensure that you allow enough memory for the individual server processes and any other programs running on the system.
See Also:
Your operating system hardware and software documentation, as well as the Oracle documentation specific to your operating system, for more information on tuning operating system memory usageConfiguring memory allocation involves distributing available memory to Oracle memory structures, depending on the needs of the application. The distribution of memory to Oracle structures can affect the amount of physical I/O necessary for Oracle to operate. Having a good first initial memory configuration also provides an indication of whether the I/O system is effectively configured.
It might be necessary to repeat the steps of memory allocation after the initial pass through the process. Subsequent passes let you make adjustments in earlier steps, based on changes in later steps. For example, decreasing the size of the buffer cache lets you increase the size of another memory structure, such as the shared pool.
For many types of operations, Oracle uses the buffer cache to store blocks read from disk. Oracle bypasses the buffer cache for particular operations, such as sorting and parallel reads. For operations that use the buffer cache, this section explains the following:
To use the buffer cache effectively, SQL statements for the application should be tuned to avoid unnecessary resource consumption. To ensure this, verify that frequently executed SQL statements and SQL statements that perform many buffer gets have been tuned.
See Also:
Chapter 11, "SQL Tuning Overview" for information on how to do thisWhen configuring a new instance, it is impossible to know the correct size for the buffer cache. Typically, a database administrator makes a first estimate for the cache size, then runs a representative workload on the instance and examines the relevant statistics to see whether the cache is under or over configured.
A number of statistics can be used to examine buffer cache activity. These include the following:
This view is populated when the DB_CACHE_ADVICE
initialization parameter is set to ON
. This view shows the simulated miss rates for a range of potential buffer cache sizes.
Each cache size simulated has its own row in this view, with the predicted physical I/O activity that would take place for that size. The DB_CACHE_ADVICE
parameter is dynamic, so the advisory can be enabled and disabled dynamically to allow you to collect advisory data for a specific workload.
There is some overhead associated with this advisory. When the advisory is enabled, there is a small increase in CPU usage, because additional bookkeeping is required.
Oracle uses DBA-based sampling to gather cache advisory statistics. Sampling substantially reduces both CPU and memory overhead associated with bookkeeping. Sampling is not used for a buffer pool if the number of buffers in that buffer pool is small to begin with.
To use V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
, the parameter DB_CACHE_ADVICE
should be set to ON
, and a representative workload should be running on the instance. Allow the workload to stabilize before querying the V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
view.
The following SQL statement returns the predicted I/O requirement for the default buffer pool for various cache sizes:
COLUMN size_for_estimate FORMAT 999,999,999,999 heading 'Cache Size (MB)' COLUMN buffers_for_estimate FORMAT 999,999,999 heading 'Buffers' COLUMN estd_physical_read_factor FORMAT 999.90 heading 'Estd Phys|Read Factor' COLUMN estd_physical_reads FORMAT 999,999,999 heading 'Estd Phys| Reads' SELECT size_for_estimate, buffers_for_estimate, estd_physical_read_factor, estd_physical_reads FROM V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE WHERE name = 'DEFAULT' AND block_size = (SELECT value FROM V$PARAMETER WHERE name = 'db_block_size') AND advice_status = 'ON';
The following output shows that if the cache was 212 MB, rather than the current size of 304 MB, the estimated number of physical reads would increase by a factor of 1.74 or 74%. This means it would not be advisable to decrease the cache size to 212MB.
However, increasing the cache size to 334MB would potentially decrease reads by a factor of .93 or 7%. If an additional 30MB memory is available on the host machine and the SGA_MAX_SIZE
setting allows the increment, it would be advisable to increase the default buffer cache pool size to 334MB.
Estd Phys Estd Phys Cache Size (MB) Buffers Read Factor Reads ---------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ 30 3,802 18.70 192,317,943 10% of Current Size 60 7,604 12.83 131,949,536 91 11,406 7.38 75,865,861 121 15,208 4.97 51,111,658 152 19,010 3.64 37,460,786 182 22,812 2.50 25,668,196 212 26,614 1.74 17,850,847 243 30,416 1.33 13,720,149 273 34,218 1.13 11,583,180 304 38,020 1.00 10,282,475 Current Size 334 41,822 .93 9,515,878 364 45,624 .87 8,909,026 395 49,426 .83 8,495,039 424 53,228 .79 8,116,496 456 57,030 .76 7,824,764 486 60,832 .74 7,563,180 517 64,634 .71 7,311,729 547 68,436 .69 7,104,280 577 72,238 .67 6,895,122 608 76,040 .66 6,739,731 200% of Current Size
This view assists in cache sizing by providing information that predicts the number of physical reads for each potential cache size. The data also includes a physical read factor, which is a factor by which the current number of physical reads is estimated to change if the buffer cache is resized to a given value.
Note:
With Oracle, physical reads do not necessarily indicate disk reads; physical reads may well be satisfied from the file system cache.The relationship between successfully finding a block in the cache and the size of the cache is not always a smooth distribution. When sizing the buffer pool, avoid the use of additional buffers that contribute little or nothing to the cache hit ratio. In the example illustrated in Figure 7-1, only narrow bands of increments to the cache size may be worthy of consideration.
Examining Figure 7-1 leads to the following observations:
The benefit from increasing buffers from point A to point B is considerably higher than from point B to point C.
The decrease in the physical I/O between points A and B and points B and C is not smooth, as indicated by the dotted line in the graph.
The buffer cache hit ratio calculates how often a requested block has been found in the buffer cache without requiring disk access. This ratio is computed using data selected from the dynamic performance view V$SYSSTAT
. The buffer cache hit ratio can be used to verify the physical I/O as predicted by V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
.
The statistics in Table 7-1 are used to calculate the hit ratio.
Table 7-1 Statistics for Calculating the Hit Ratio
Example 7-1 has been simplified by using values selected directly from the V$SYSSTAT
table, rather than over an interval. It is best to calculate the delta of these statistics over an interval while your application is running, then use them to determine the hit ratio.
See Also:
Chapter 6, "Automatic Performance Diagnostics" for more information on collecting statistics over an intervalExample 7-1 Calculating the Buffer Cache Hit Ratio
SELECT NAME, VALUE FROM V$SYSSTAT WHERE NAME IN ('db block gets from cache', 'consistent gets from cache', 'physical reads cache');
Using the values in the output of the query, calculate the hit ratio for the buffer cache with the following formula:
1 - (('physical reads cache') / ('consistent gets from cache' + 'db block gets from cache')
There are many factors to examine before considering whether to increase or decrease the buffer cache size. For example, you should examine V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
data and the buffer cache hit ratio.
A low cache hit ratio does not imply that increasing the size of the cache would be beneficial for performance. A good cache hit ratio could wrongly indicate that the cache is adequately sized for the workload.
To interpret the buffer cache hit ratio, you should consider the following:
Repeated scanning of the same large table or index can artificially inflate a poor cache hit ratio. Examine frequently executed SQL statements with a large number of buffer gets, to ensure that the execution plan for such SQL statements is optimal. If possible, avoid repeated scanning of frequently accessed data by performing all of the processing in a single pass or by optimizing the SQL statement.
If possible, avoid requerying the same data, by caching frequently accessed data in the client program or middle tier.
Oracle blocks accessed during a long full table scan are put on the tail end of the least recently used (LRU) list and not on the head of the list. Therefore, the blocks are aged out faster than blocks read when performing indexed lookups or small table scans. When interpreting the buffer cache data, poor hit ratios when valid large full table scans are occurring should also be considered.
Note:
Short table scans are scans performed on tables under a certain size threshold. The definition of a small table is the maximum of 2% of the buffer cache and 20, whichever is bigger.In any large database running OLTP applications in any given unit of time, most rows are accessed either one or zero times. On this basis, there might be little purpose in keeping the block in memory for very long following its use.
A common mistake is to continue increasing the buffer cache size. Such increases have no effect if you are doing full table scans or operations that do not use the buffer cache.
As a general rule, investigate increasing the size of the cache if the cache hit ratio is low and your application has been tuned to avoid performing full table scans.
To increase cache size, first set the DB_CACHE_ADVICE
initialization parameter to ON
, and let the cache statistics stabilize. Examine the advisory data in the V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
view to determine the next increment required to significantly decrease the amount of physical I/O performed. If it is possible to allocate the required extra memory to the buffer cache without causing the host operating system to page, then allocate this memory. To increase the amount of memory allocated to the buffer cache, increase the value of the DB_CACHE_SIZE
initialization parameter.
If required, resize the buffer pools dynamically, rather than shutting down the instance to perform this change.
Note:
When the cache is resized significantly (greater than 20 percent), the old cache advisory value is discarded and the cache advisory is set to the new size. Otherwise, the old cache advisory value is adjusted to the new size by the interpolation of existing values.The DB_CACHE_SIZE
parameter specifies the size of the default cache for the database's standard block size. To create and use tablespaces with block sizes different than the database's standard block sizes (such as to support transportable tablespaces), you must configure a separate cache for each block size used. The
DB_
n
K_CACHE_SIZE
parameter can be used to configure the nonstandard block size needed (where n
is 2, 4, 8, 16 or 32 and n
is not the standard block size).
Note:
The process of choosing a cache size is the same, regardless of whether the cache is the default standard block size cache, theKEEP
or RECYCLE
cache, or a nonstandard block size cache.See Also:
Oracle Database Reference and Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information on using theDB_
n
K_CACHE_SIZE
parametersIf the cache hit ratio is high, then the cache is probably large enough to hold the most frequently accessed data. Check V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
data to see whether decreasing the cache size significantly causes the number of physical I/Os to increase. If not, and if you require memory for another memory structure, then you might be able to reduce the cache size and still maintain good performance. To make the buffer cache smaller, reduce the size of the cache by changing the value for the parameter DB_CACHE_SIZE
.
A single default buffer pool is generally adequate for most systems. However, users with detailed knowledge of an application's buffer pool might benefit from configuring multiple buffer pools.
With segments that have atypical access patterns, store blocks from those segments in two different buffer pools: the KEEP
pool and the RECYCLE
pool. A segment's access pattern may be atypical if it is constantly accessed (that is, hot) or infrequently accessed (for example, a large segment accessed by a batch job only once a day).
Multiple buffer pools let you address these differences. You can use a KEEP
buffer pool to maintain frequently accessed segments in the buffer cache, and a RECYCLE
buffer pool to prevent objects from consuming unnecessary space in the cache. When an object is associated with a cache, all blocks from that object are placed in that cache. Oracle maintains a DEFAULT
buffer pool for objects that have not been assigned to a specific buffer pool. The default buffer pool is of size DB_CACHE_SIZE
. Each buffer pool uses the same LRU replacement policy (for example, if the KEEP
pool is not large enough to store all of the segments allocated to it, then the oldest blocks age out of the cache).
By allocating objects to appropriate buffer pools, you can:
Reduce or eliminate I/Os
Isolate or limit an object to a separate cache
A problem can occur with an LRU aging method when a very large segment is accessed with a large or unbounded index range scan. Here, very large means large compared to the size of the cache. Any single segment that accounts for a substantial portion (more than 10%) of nonsequential physical reads can be considered very large. Random reads to a large segment can cause buffers that contain data for other segments to be aged out of the cache. The large segment ends up consuming a large percentage of the cache, but it does not benefit from the cache.
Very frequently accessed segments are not affected by large segment reads because their buffers are warmed frequently enough that they do not age out of the cache. However, the problem affects warm segments that are not accessed frequently enough to survive the buffer aging caused by the large segment reads. There are three options for solving this problem:
If the object accessed is an index, find out whether the index is selective. If not, tune the SQL statement to use a more selective index.
If the SQL statement is tuned, you can move the large segment into a separate RECYCLE
cache so that it does not affect the other segments. The RECYCLE
cache should be smaller than the DEFAULT
buffer pool, and it should reuse buffers more quickly than the DEFAULT
buffer pool.
Alternatively, you can move the small warm segments into a separate KEEP
cache that is not used at all for large segments. The KEEP
cache can be sized to minimize misses in the cache. You can make the response times for specific queries more predictable by putting the segments accessed by the queries in the KEEP
cache to ensure that they do not age out.
You can create multiple buffer pools for each database instance. The same set of buffer pools need not be defined for each instance of the database. Among instances, the buffer pools can be different sizes or not defined at all. Tune each instance according to the application requirements for that instance.
To define a default buffer pool for an object, use the BUFFER_POOL
keyword of the STORAGE
clause. This clause is valid for CREATE
and ALTER
TABLE
, CLUSTER
, and INDEX
SQL statements. After a buffer pool has been specified, all subsequent blocks read for the object are placed in that pool.
If a buffer pool is defined for a partitioned table or index, then each partition of the object inherits the buffer pool from the table or index definition, unless you override it with a specific buffer pool.
When the buffer pool of an object is changed using the ALTER
statement, all buffers currently containing blocks of the altered segment remain in the buffer pool they were in before the ALTER
statement. Newly loaded blocks and any blocks that have aged out and are reloaded go into the new buffer pool.
See Also:
Oracle Database SQL Reference for information on specifyingBUFFER_POOL
in the STORAGE
clauseV$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
can be used to size all pools configured on an instance. Make the initial cache size estimate, run the representative workload, then simply query the V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE
view for the pool you want to use.
For example, to query data from the KEEP
pool:
SELECT SIZE_FOR_ESTIMATE, BUFFERS_FOR_ESTIMATE, ESTD_PHYSICAL_READ_FACTOR, ESTD_PHYSICAL_READS FROM V$DB_CACHE_ADVICE WHERE NAME = 'KEEP' AND BLOCK_SIZE = (SELECT VALUE FROM V$PARAMETER WHERE NAME = 'db_block_size') AND ADVICE_STATUS = 'ON';
The data in V$SYSSTAT
reflects the logical and physical reads for all buffer pools within one set of statistics. To determine the hit ratio for the buffer pools individually, query the V$BUFFER_POOL_STATISTICS
view. This view maintains statistics for each pool on the number of logical reads and writes.
The buffer pool hit ratio can be determined using the following formula:
1 - (physical_reads/(db_block_gets + consistent_gets))
The ratio can be calculated with the following query:
SELECT NAME, PHYSICAL_READS, DB_BLOCK_GETS, CONSISTENT_GETS, 1 - (PHYSICAL_READS / (DB_BLOCK_GETS + CONSISTENT_GETS)) "Hit Ratio" FROM V$BUFFER_POOL_STATISTICS;
The V$BH
view shows the data object ID of all blocks that currently reside in the SGA. To determine which segments have many buffers in the pool, you can use one of the two methods described in this section. You can either look at the buffer cache usage pattern for all segments (Method 1) or examine the usage pattern of a specific segment, (Method 2).
Method 1
The following query counts the number of blocks for all segments that reside in the buffer cache at that point in time. Depending on buffer cache size, this might require a lot of sort space.
COLUMN OBJECT_NAME FORMAT A40 COLUMN NUMBER_OF_BLOCKS FORMAT 999,999,999,999 SELECT o.OBJECT_NAME, COUNT(*) NUMBER_OF_BLOCKS FROM DBA_OBJECTS o, V$BH bh WHERE o.DATA_OBJECT_ID = bh.OBJD AND o.OWNER != 'SYS' GROUP BY o.OBJECT_NAME ORDER BY COUNT(*); OBJECT_NAME NUMBER_OF_BLOCKS ---------------------------------------- ---------------- OA_PREF_UNIQ_KEY 1 SYS_C002651 1 .. DS_PERSON 78 OM_EXT_HEADER 701 OM_SHELL 1,765 OM_HEADER 5,826 OM_INSTANCE 12,644
Method 2
Use the following steps to determine the percentage of the cache used by an individual object at a given point in time:
Find the Oracle internal object number of the segment by entering the following query:
SELECT DATA_OBJECT_ID, OBJECT_TYPE
FROM DBA_OBJECTS
WHERE OBJECT_NAME = UPPER('segment_name');
Because two objects can have the same name (if they are different types of objects), use the OBJECT_TYPE
column to identify the object of interest.
Find the number of buffers in the buffer cache for SEGMENT_NAME
:
SELECT COUNT(*) BUFFERS
FROM V$BH
WHERE OBJD = data_object_id_value;
where data_object_id_value
is from step 1.
Find the number of buffers in the instance:
SELECT NAME, BLOCK_SIZE, SUM(BUFFERS) FROM V$BUFFER_POOL GROUP BY NAME, BLOCK_SIZE HAVING SUM(BUFFERS) > 0;
Calculate the ratio of buffers to total buffers to obtain the percentage of the cache currently used by SEGMENT_NAME:
% cache used by segment_name = [buffers(Step2)/total buffers(Step3)]
Note:
This technique works only for a single segment. You must run the query for each partition for a partitioned object.If there are certain segments in your application that are referenced frequently, then store the blocks from those segments in a separate cache called the KEEP
buffer pool. Memory is allocated to the KEEP
buffer pool by setting the parameter DB_KEEP_CACHE_SIZE
to the required size. The memory for the KEEP
pool is not a subset of the default pool. Typical segments that can be kept are small reference tables that are used frequently. Application developers and DBAs can determine which tables are candidates.
You can check the number of blocks from candidate tables by querying V$BH
, as described in "Determining Which Segments Have Many Buffers in the Pool".
Note:
TheNOCACHE
clause has no effect on a table in the KEEP
cache.The goal of the KEEP
buffer pool is to retain objects in memory, thus avoiding I/O operations. The size of the KEEP
buffer pool, therefore, depends on the objects that you want to keep in the buffer cache. You can compute an approximate size for the KEEP
buffer pool by adding together the blocks used by all objects assigned to this pool. If you gather statistics on the segments, you can query DBA_TABLES.BLOCKS
and DBA_TABLES
.EMPTY_BLOCKS
to determine the number of blocks used.
Calculate the hit ratio by taking two snapshots of system performance at different times, using the previous query. Subtract the more recent values for physical
reads
, block
gets
, and consistent
gets
from the older values, and use the results to compute the hit ratio.
A buffer pool hit ratio of 100% might not be optimal. Often, you can decrease the size of your KEEP
buffer pool and still maintain a sufficiently high hit ratio. Allocate blocks removed from the KEEP
buffer pool to other buffer pools.
Note:
If an object grows in size, then it might no longer fit in theKEEP
buffer pool. You will begin to lose blocks out of the cache.Each object kept in memory results in a trade-off. It is beneficial to keep frequently-accessed blocks in the cache, but retaining infrequently-used blocks results in less space for other, more active blocks.
It is possible to configure a RECYCLE
buffer pool for blocks belonging to those segments that you do not want to remain in memory. The RECYCLE
pool is good for segments that are scanned rarely or are not referenced frequently. If an application accesses the blocks of a very large object in a random fashion, then there is little chance of reusing a block stored in the buffer pool before it is aged out. This is true regardless of the size of the buffer pool (given the constraint of the amount of available physical memory). Consequently, the object's blocks need not be cached; those cache buffers can be allocated to other objects.
Memory is allocated to the RECYCLE
buffer pool by setting the parameter DB_RECYCLE_CACHE_SIZE
to the required size. This memory for the RECYCLE
buffer pool is not a subset of the default pool.
Do not discard blocks from memory too quickly. If the buffer pool is too small, then blocks can age out of the cache before the transaction or SQL statement has completed execution. For example, an application might select a value from a table, use the value to process some data, and then update the record. If the block is removed from the cache after the SELECT
statement, then it must be read from disk again to perform the update. The block should be retained for the duration of the user transaction.
Oracle uses the shared pool to cache many different types of data. Cached data includes the textual and executable forms of PL/SQL blocks and SQL statements, dictionary cache data, and other data.
Proper use and sizing of the shared pool can reduce resource consumption in at least four ways:
Parse overhead is avoided if the SQL statement is already in the shared pool. This saves CPU resources on the host and elapsed time for the end user.
Latching resource usage is significantly reduced, which results in greater scalability.
Shared pool memory requirements are reduced, because all applications use the same pool of SQL statements and dictionary resources.
I/O resources are saved, because dictionary elements that are in the shared pool do not require disk access.
This section covers the following:
The main components of the shared pool are the library cache and the dictionary cache. The library cache stores the executable (parsed or compiled) form of recently referenced SQL and PL/SQL code. The dictionary cache stores data referenced from the data dictionary. Many of the caches in the shared pool automatically increase or decrease in size, as needed, including the library cache and the dictionary cache. Old entries are aged out of these caches to accommodate new entries when the shared pool does not have free space.
A cache miss on the data dictionary cache or library cache is more expensive than a miss on the buffer cache. For this reason, the shared pool should be sized to ensure that frequently used data is cached.
A number of features make large memory allocations in the shared pool: for example, the shared server, parallel query, or Recovery Manager. Oracle recommends segregating the SGA memory used by these features by configuring a distinct memory area, called the large pool.
See Also:
"Using the Large Pool" for more information on configuring the large poolAllocation of memory from the shared pool is performed in chunks. This allows large objects (over 5k) to be loaded into the cache without requiring a single contiguous area, hence reducing the possibility of running out of enough contiguous memory due to fragmentation.
Infrequently, Java, PL/SQL, or SQL cursors may make allocations out of the shared pool that are larger than 5k. To allow these allocations to occur most efficiently, Oracle segregates a small amount of the shared pool. This memory is used if the shared pool does not have enough space. The segregated area of the shared pool is called the reserved pool.
See Also:
"Configuring the Reserved Pool" for more information on the reserved area of the shared poolInformation stored in the data dictionary cache includes usernames, segment information, profile data, tablespace information, and sequence numbers. The dictionary cache also stores descriptive information, or metadata, about schema objects. Oracle uses this metadata when parsing SQL cursors or during the compilation of PL/SQL programs.
The library cache holds executable forms of SQL cursors, PL/SQL programs, and Java classes. This section focuses on tuning as it relates to cursors, PL/SQL programs, and Java classes. These are collectively referred to as application code.
When application code is run, Oracle attempts to reuse existing code if it has been executed previously and can be shared. If the parsed representation of the statement does exist in the library cache and it can be shared, then Oracle reuses the existing code. This is known as a soft parse, or a library cache hit. If Oracle is unable to use existing code, then a new executable version of the application code must be built. This is known as a hard parse, or a library cache miss. See "SQL Sharing Criteria" for details on when a SQL and PL/SQL statements can be shared.
Library cache misses can occur on either the parse step or the execute step when processing a SQL statement. When an application makes a parse call for a SQL statement, if the parsed representation of the statement does not already exist in the library cache, then Oracle parses the statement and stores the parsed form in the shared pool. This is a hard parse. You might be able to reduce library cache misses on parse calls by ensuring that all shareable SQL statements are in the shared pool whenever possible.
If an application makes an execute call for a SQL statement, and if the executable portion of the previously built SQL statement has been aged out (that is, deallocated) from the library cache to make room for another statement, then Oracle implicitly reparses the statement, creating a new shared SQL area for it, and executes it. This also results in a hard parse. Usually, you can reduce library cache misses on execution calls by allocating more memory to the library cache.
In order to perform a hard parse, Oracle uses more resources than during a soft parse. Resources used for a soft parse include CPU and library cache latch gets. Resources required for a hard parse include additional CPU, library cache latch gets, and shared pool latch gets. See "SQL Execution Efficiency" for a discussion of hard and soft parsing.
Oracle automatically determines whether a SQL statement or PL/SQL block being issued is identical to another statement currently in the shared pool.
Oracle performs the following steps for the comparison:
The text of the statement issued is compared to existing statements in the shared pool.
The text of the statement is hashed. If there is no matching hash value, then the SQL statement does not currently exist in the shared pool, and a hard parse is performed.
If there is a matching hash value for an existing SQL statement in the shared pool, then Oracle compares the text of the matched statement to the text of the statement hashed to see if they are identical. The text of the SQL statements or PL/SQL blocks must be identical, character for character, including spaces, case, and comments. For example, the following statements cannot use the same shared SQL area:
SELECT * FROM employees; SELECT * FROM Employees; SELECT * FROM employees;
Usually, SQL statements that differ only in literals cannot use the same shared SQL area. For example, the following SQL statements do not resolve to the same SQL area:
SELECT count(1) FROM employees WHERE manager_id = 121; SELECT count(1) FROM employees WHERE manager_id = 247;
The only exception to this rule is when the parameter CURSOR_SHARING
has been set to SIMILAR
or FORCE
. Similar statements can share SQL areas when the CURSOR_SHARING
parameter is set to SIMILAR
or FORCE
. The costs and benefits involved in using CURSOR_SHARING
are explained later in this section.
The objects referenced in the issued statement are compared to the referenced objects of all existing statements in the shared pool to ensure that they are identical.
References to schema objects in the SQL statements or PL/SQL blocks must resolve to the same object in the same schema. For example, if two users each issue the following SQL statement:
SELECT * FROM employees;
and they each have their own employees
table, then this statement is not considered identical, because the statement references different tables for each user.
Bind variables in the SQL statements must match in name, datatype, and length.
For example, the following statements cannot use the same shared SQL area, because the bind variable names differ:
SELECT * FROM employees WHERE department_id = :department_id; SELECT * FROM employees WHERE department_id = :dept_id;
Many Oracle products, such as Oracle Forms and the precompilers, convert the SQL before passing statements to the database. Characters are uniformly changed to uppercase, white space is compressed, and bind variables are renamed so that a consistent set of SQL statements is produced.
The session's environment must be identical. For example, SQL statements must be optimized using the same optimization goal.
An important purpose of the shared pool is to cache the executable versions of SQL and PL/SQL statements. This allows multiple executions of the same SQL or PL/SQL code to be performed without the resources required for a hard parse, which results in significant reductions in CPU, memory, and latch usage.
The shared pool is also able to support unshared SQL in data warehousing applications, which execute low-concurrency, high-resource SQL statements. In this situation, using unshared SQL with literal values is recommended. Using literal values rather than bind variables allows the optimizer to make good column selectivity estimates, thus providing an optimal data access plan.
See Also:
Oracle Database Data Warehousing GuideIn an OLTP system, there are a number of ways to ensure efficient use of the shared pool and related resources. Discuss the following items with application developers and agree on strategies to ensure that the shared pool is used effectively:
Efficient use of the shared pool in high-concurrency OLTP systems significantly reduces the probability of parse-related application scalability issues.
Reuse of shared SQL for multiple users running the same application, avoids hard parsing. Soft parses provide a significant reduction in the use of resources such as the shared pool and library cache latches. To share cursors, do the following:
Use bind variables rather than literals in SQL statements whenever possible. For example, the following two statements cannot use the same shared area because they do not match character for character:
SELECT employee_id FROM employees WHERE department_id = 10; SELECT employee_id FROM employees WHERE department_id = 20;
By replacing the literals with a bind variable, only one SQL statement would result, which could be executed twice:
SELECT employee_id FROM employees WHERE department_id = :dept_id;
Note:
For existing applications where rewriting the code to use bind variables is impractical, it is possible to use theCURSOR_SHARING
initialization parameter to avoid some of the hard parse overhead. For more information see section "CURSOR_SHARING for Existing Applications".Avoid application designs that result in large numbers of users issuing dynamic, unshared SQL statements. Typically, the majority of data required by most users can be satisfied using preset queries. Use dynamic SQL where such functionality is required.
Be sure that users of the application do not change the optimization approach and goal for their individual sessions.
Establish the following policies for application developers:
Standardize naming conventions for bind variables and spacing conventions for SQL statements and PL/SQL blocks.
Consider using stored procedures whenever possible. Multiple users issuing the same stored procedure use the same shared PL/SQL area automatically. Because stored procedures are stored in a parsed form, their use reduces runtime parsing.
For SQL statements which are identical but are not being shared, you can query V$SQL_SHARED_CURSOR
to determine why the cursors are not shared. This would include optimizer settings and bind variable mismatches.
Large OLTP systems where users log in to the database as their own user ID can benefit from explicitly qualifying the segment owner, rather than using public synonyms. This significantly reduces the number of entries in the dictionary cache. For example:
SELECT employee_id FROM hr.employees WHERE department_id = :dept_id;
An alternative to qualifying table names is to connect to the database through a single user ID, rather than individual user IDs. User-level validation can take place locally on the middle tier. Reducing the number of distinct userIDs also reduces the load on the dictionary cache.
Using stored PL/SQL packages can overcome many of the scalability issues for systems with thousands of users, each with individual user sign-on and public synonyms. This is because a package is executed as the owner, rather than the caller, which reduces the dictionary cache load considerably.
Note:
Oracle Corporation encourages the use of definer's rights packages to overcome scalability issues. The benefits of reduced dictionary cache load are not as obvious with invoker's rights packages.Avoid performing DDL operations on high-usage segments during peak hours. Performing DDL on such segments often results in the dependent SQL being invalidated and hence reparsed on a later execution.
Allocating sufficient cache space for frequently updated sequence numbers significantly reduces the frequency of dictionary cache locks, which improves scalability. The CACHE
keyword on the CREATE
SEQUENCE
or ALTER
SEQUENCE
statement lets you configure the number of cached entries for each sequence.
See Also:
Oracle Database SQL Reference for details on theCREATE SEQUENCE
and ALTER
SEQUENCE
statementsDepending on the Oracle application tool you are using, it is possible to control how frequently your application performs parse calls.
The frequency with which your application either closes cursors or reuses existing cursors for new SQL statements affects the amount of memory used by a session and often the amount of parsing performed by that session.
An application that closes cursors or reuses cursors (for a different SQL statement), does not need as much session memory as an application that keeps cursors open. Conversely, that same application may need to perform more parse calls, using extra CPU and Oracle resources.
Cursors associated with SQL statements that are not executed frequently can be closed or reused for other statements, because the likelihood of reexecuting (and reparsing) that statement is low.
Extra parse calls are required when a cursor containing a SQL statement that will be reexecuted is closed or reused for another statement. Had the cursor remained open, it could have been reused without the overhead of issuing a parse call.
The ways in which you control cursor management depends on your application development tool. The following sections introduce the methods used for some Oracle tools.
See Also:
The tool-specific documentation for more information about each tool
Oracle Database Concepts for more information on cursors shared SQL
When using Oracle Call Interface (OCI), do not close and reopen cursors that you will be reexecuting. Instead, leave the cursors open, and change the literal values in the bind variables before execution.
Avoid reusing statement handles for new SQL statements when the existing SQL statement will be reexecuted in the future.
When using the Oracle precompilers, you can control when cursors are closed by setting precompiler clauses. In Oracle mode, the clauses are as follows:
Oracle Corporation recommends that you not use ANSI mode, in which the values of HOLD_CURSOR
and RELEASE_CURSOR
are switched.
The precompiler clauses can be specified on the precompiler command line or within the precompiler program. With these clauses, you can employ different strategies for managing cursors during execution of the program.
See Also:
Your language's precompiler manual for more information on these clausesPrepare the statement, then reexecute the statement with the new values for the bind variables. The cursor stays open for the duration of the session.
Avoid closing cursors if they will be reexecuted, because the new literal values can be bound to the cursor for reexecution. Alternatively, JDBC provides a SQL statement cache within the JDBC client using the setStmtCacheSize()
method. Using this method, JDBC creates a SQL statement cache that is local to the JDBC program.
See Also:
Oracle Database JDBC Developer's Guide and Reference for more information on using the JDBC SQL statement cacheWhen configuring a brand new instance, it is impossible to know the correct size to make the shared pool cache. Typically, a DBA makes a first estimate for the cache size, then runs a representative workload on the instance, and examines the relevant statistics to see whether the cache is under-configured or over-configured.
For most OLTP applications, shared pool size is an important factor in application performance. Shared pool size is less important for applications that issue a very limited number of discrete SQL statements, such as decision support systems (DSS).
If the shared pool is too small, then extra resources are used to manage the limited amount of available space. This consumes CPU and latching resources, and causes contention. Optimally, the shared pool should be just large enough to cache frequently accessed objects. Having a significant amount of free memory in the shared pool is a waste of memory. When examining the statistics after the database has been running, a DBA should check that none of these mistakes are in the workload.
When sizing the shared pool, the goal is to ensure that SQL statements that will be executed multiple times are cached in the library cache, without allocating too much memory.
The statistic that shows the amount of reloading (that is, reparsing) of a previously cached SQL statement that was aged out of the cache is the RELOADS
column in the V$LIBRARYCACHE
view. In an application that reuses SQL effectively, on a system with an optimal shared pool size, the RELOADS
statistic will have a value near zero.
The INVALIDATIONS
column in V$LIBRARYCACHE
view shows the number of times library cache data was invalidated and had to be reparsed. INVALIDATIONS
should be near zero. This means SQL statements that could have been shared were invalidated by some operation (for example, a DDL). This statistic should be near zero on OLTP systems during peak loads.
Another key statistic is the amount of free memory in the shared pool at peak times. The amount of free memory can be queried from V$SGASTAT
, looking at the free memory for the shared pool. Optimally, free memory should be as low as possible, without causing any reloads on the system.
Lastly, a broad indicator of library cache health is the library cache hit ratio. This value should be considered along with the other statistics discussed in this section and other data, such as the rate of hard parsing and whether there is any shared pool or library cache latch contention.
These statistics are discussed in more detail in the following section.
You can monitor statistics reflecting library cache activity by examining the dynamic performance view V$LIBRARYCACHE
. These statistics reflect all library cache activity since the most recent instance startup.
Each row in this view contains statistics for one type of item kept in the library cache. The item described by each row is identified by the value of the NAMESPACE
column. Rows with the following NAMESPACE
values reflect library cache activity for SQL statements and PL/SQL blocks:
SQL
AREA
TABLE/PROCEDURE
BODY
TRIGGER
Rows with other NAMESPACE
values reflect library cache activity for object definitions that Oracle uses for dependency maintenance.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for information about the dynamic performanceV$LIBRARYCACHE
viewTo examine each namespace individually, use the following query:
SELECT NAMESPACE, PINS, PINHITS, RELOADS, INVALIDATIONS FROM V$LIBRARYCACHE ORDER BY NAMESPACE;
The output of this query could look like the following:
NAMESPACE PINS PINHITS RELOADS INVALIDATIONS --------------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------------- BODY 8870 8819 0 0 CLUSTER 393 380 0 0 INDEX 29 0 0 0 OBJECT 0 0 0 0 PIPE 55265 55263 0 0 SQL AREA 21536413 21520516 11204 2 TABLE/PROCEDURE 10775684 10774401 0 0 TRIGGER 1852 1844 0 0
To calculate the library cache hit ratio, use the following formula:
Library Cache Hit Ratio = sum(pinhits) / sum(pins)
Using the library cache hit ratio formula, the cache hit ratio is the following:
SUM(PINHITS)/SUM(PINS) ---------------------- .999466248
Note:
These queries return data from instance startup, rather than statistics gathered during an interval; interval statistics can better pinpoint the problem.See Also:
Chapter 6, "Automatic Performance Diagnostics" for information on how gather information over an intervalExamining the returned data leads to the following observations:
For the SQL AREA
namespace, there were 21,536,413 executions.
11,204 of the executions resulted in a library cache miss, requiring Oracle to implicitly reparse a statement or block or reload an object definition because it aged out of the library cache (that is, a RELOAD
).
SQL statements were invalidated two times, again causing library cache misses.
The hit percentage is about 99.94%. This means that only .06% of executions resulted in reparsing.
The amount of free memory in the shared pool is reported in V$SGASTAT
. Report the current value from this view using the following query:
SELECT * FROM V$SGASTAT WHERE NAME = 'free memory' AND POOL = 'shared pool'; The output will be similar to the following: POOL NAME BYTES ----------- -------------------------- ---------- shared pool free memory 4928280
If free memory is always available in the shared pool, then increasing the size of the pool offers little or no benefit. However, just because the shared pool is full does not necessarily mean there is a problem. It may be indicative of a well-configured system.
The amount of memory available for the library cache can drastically affect the parse rate of an Oracle instance. The shared pool advisory statistics provide a database administrator with information about library cache memory, allowing a DBA to predict how changes in the size of the shared pool can affect aging out of objects in the shared pool.
The shared pool advisory statistics track the library cache's use of shared pool memory and predict how the library cache will behave in shared pools of different sizes. Two fixed views provide the information to determine how much memory the library cache is using, how much is currently pinned, how much is on the shared pool's LRU list, as well as how much time might be lost or gained by changing the size of the shared pool.
The following views of the shared pool advisory statistics are available. These views display any data when shared pool advisory is on. These statistics reset when the advisory is turned off.
This view displays information about estimated parse time in the shared pool for different pool sizes. The sizes range from 10% of the current shared pool size or the amount of pinned library cache memory, whichever is higher, to 200% of the current shared pool size, in equal intervals. The value of the interval depends on the current size of the shared pool.
This view displays information about memory allocated to library cache memory objects in different namespaces. A memory object is an internal grouping of memory for efficient management. A library cache object may consist of one or more memory objects.
These views contain Java pool advisory statistics that track information about library cache memory used for Java and predict how changes in the size of the Java pool can affect the parse rate.
V$JAVA_POOL_ADVICE
displays information about estimated parse time in the Java pool for different pool sizes. The sizes range from 10% of the current Java pool size or the amount of pinned Java library cache memory, whichever is higher, to 200% of the current Java pool size, in equal intervals. The value of the interval depends on the current size of the Java pool.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for information about the dynamic performanceV$SHARED_POOL_ADVICE
, V$LIBRARY_CACHE_MEMORY
, V$JAVA_POOL_ADVICE
, and V$JAVA_LIBRARY_CACHE_MEMORY
viewTypically, if the shared pool is adequately sized for the library cache, it will also be adequate for the dictionary cache data.
Misses on the data dictionary cache are to be expected in some cases. On instance startup, the data dictionary cache contains no data. Therefore, any SQL statement issued is likely to result in cache misses. As more data is read into the cache, the likelihood of cache misses decreases. Eventually, the database reaches a steady state, in which the most frequently used dictionary data is in the cache. At this point, very few cache misses occur.
Each row in the V$ROWCACHE
view contains statistics for a single type of data dictionary item. These statistics reflect all data dictionary activity since the most recent instance startup. The columns in the V$ROWCACHE
view that reflect the use and effectiveness of the data dictionary cache are listed in Table 7-2.
Table 7-2 V$ROWCACHE Columns
Column | Description |
---|---|
PARAMETER |
Identifies a particular data dictionary item. For each row, the value in this column is the item prefixed by dc_ . For example, in the row that contains statistics for file descriptions, this column has the value dc_files . |
GETS |
Shows the total number of requests for information on the corresponding item. For example, in the row that contains statistics for file descriptions, this column has the total number of requests for file description data. |
GETMISSES |
Shows the number of data requests which were not satisfied by the cache, requiring an I/O. |
MODIFICATIONS |
Shows the number of times data in the dictionary cache was updated. |
Use the following query to monitor the statistics in the V$ROWCACHE
view over a period of time while your application is running. The derived column PCT_SUCC_GETS
can be considered the item-specific hit ratio:
column parameter format a21 column pct_succ_gets format 999.9 column updates format 999,999,999 SELECT parameter , sum(gets) , sum(getmisses) , 100*sum(gets - getmisses) / sum(gets) pct_succ_gets , sum(modifications) updates FROM V$ROWCACHE WHERE gets > 0 GROUP BY parameter;
The output of this query will be similar to the following:
PARAMETER SUM(GETS) SUM(GETMISSES) PCT_SUCC_GETS UPDATES --------------------- ---------- -------------- ------------- ------------ dc_database_links 81 1 98.8 0 dc_free_extents 44876 20301 54.8 40,453 dc_global_oids 42 9 78.6 0 dc_histogram_defs 9419 651 93.1 0 dc_object_ids 29854 239 99.2 52 dc_objects 33600 590 98.2 53 dc_profiles 19001 1 100.0 0 dc_rollback_segments 47244 16 100.0 19 dc_segments 100467 19042 81.0 40,272 dc_sequence_grants 119 16 86.6 0 dc_sequences 26973 16 99.9 26,811 dc_synonyms 6617 168 97.5 0 dc_tablespace_quotas 120 7 94.2 51 dc_tablespaces 581248 10 100.0 0 dc_used_extents 51418 20249 60.6 42,811 dc_user_grants 76082 18 100.0 0 dc_usernames 216860 12 100.0 0 dc_users 376895 22 100.0 0
Examining the data returned by the sample query leads to these observations:
There are large numbers of misses and updates for used extents, free extents, and segments. This implies that the instance had a significant amount of dynamic space extension.
Based on the percentage of successful gets, and comparing that statistic with the actual number of gets, the shared pool is large enough to store dictionary cache data adequately.
It is also possible to calculate an overall dictionary cache hit ratio using the following formula; however, summing up the data over all the caches will lose the finer granularity of data:
SELECT (SUM(GETS - GETMISSES - FIXED)) / SUM(GETS) "ROW CACHE" FROM V$ROWCACHE;
Shared pool statistics indicate adjustments that can be made. The following sections describe some of your choices.
Increasing the amount of memory for the shared pool increases the amount of memory available to both the library cache and the dictionary cache.
To ensure that shared SQL areas remain in the cache after their SQL statements are parsed, increase the amount of memory available to the library cache until the V$LIBRARYCACHE
.RELOADS
value is near zero. To increase the amount of memory available to the library cache, increase the value of the initialization parameter SHARED_POOL_SIZE
. The maximum value for this parameter depends on your operating system. This measure reduces implicit reparsing of SQL statements and PL/SQL blocks on execution.
To take advantage of additional memory available for shared SQL areas, you might also need to increase the number of cursors permitted for a session. You can do this by increasing the value of the initialization parameter OPEN_CURSORS
.
Examine cache activity by monitoring the GETS
and GETMISSES
columns. For frequently accessed dictionary caches, the ratio of total GETMISSES
to total GETS
should be less than 10% or 15%, depending on the application.
Consider increasing the amount of memory available to the cache if all of the following are true:
Your application is using the shared pool effectively. See "Using the Shared Pool Effectively" .
Your system has reached a steady state, any of the item-specific hit ratios are low, and there are a large numbers of gets for the caches with low hit ratios.
Increase the amount of memory available to the data dictionary cache by increasing the value of the initialization parameter SHARED_POOL_SIZE
.
If your RELOADS
are near zero, and if you have a small amount of free memory in the shared pool, then the shared pool is probably large enough to hold the most frequently accessed data.
If you always have significant amounts of memory free in the shared pool, and if you would like to allocate this memory elsewhere, then you might be able to reduce the shared pool size and still maintain good performance.
To make the shared pool smaller, reduce the size of the cache by changing the value for the parameter SHARED_POOL_SIZE
.
Unlike the shared pool, the large pool does not have an LRU list. Oracle does not attempt to age objects out of the large pool.
You should consider configuring a large pool if your instance uses any of the following:
Parallel query
Parallel query uses shared pool memory to cache parallel execution message buffers.
See Also:
Oracle Database Data Warehousing Guide for more information on sizing the large pool with parallel queryRecovery Manager
Recovery Manager uses the shared pool to cache I/O buffers during backup and restore operations. For I/O server processes and backup and restore operations, Oracle allocates buffers that are a few hundred kilobytes in size.
See Also:
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Reference for more information on sizing the large pool when using Recovery ManagerShared server
In a shared server architecture, the session memory for each client process is included in the shared pool.
As Oracle allocates shared pool memory for shared server session memory, the amount of shared pool memory available for the library cache and dictionary cache decreases. If you allocate this session memory from a different pool, then Oracle can use the shared pool primarily for caching shared SQL and not incur the performance overhead from shrinking the shared SQL cache.
Oracle recommends using the large pool to allocate the shared server-related User Global Area (UGA), rather that using the shared pool. This is because Oracle uses the shared pool to allocate System Global Area (SGA) memory for other purposes, such as shared SQL and PL/SQL procedures. Using the large pool instead of the shared pool decreases fragmentation of the shared pool.
To store shared server-related UGA in the large pool, specify a value for the initialization parameter LARGE_POOL_SIZE
. To see which pool (shared pool or large pool) the memory for an object resides in, check the column POOL
in V$SGASTAT
. The large pool is not configured by default; its minimum value is 300K. If you do not configure the large pool, then Oracle uses the shared pool for shared server user session memory.
Configure the size of the large pool based on the number of simultaneously active sessions. Each application requires a different amount of memory for session information, and your configuration of the large pool or SGA should reflect the memory requirement. For example, assuming that the shared server requires 200K to 300K to store session information for each active session. If you anticipate 100 active sessions simultaneously, then configure the large pool to be 30M, or increase the shared pool accordingly if the large pool is not configured.
Note:
If a shared server architecture is used, then Oracle allocates some fixed amount of memory (about 10K) for each configured session from the shared pool, even if you have configured the large pool. TheCIRCUITS
initialization parameter specifies the maximum number of concurrent shared server connections that the database allows.See Also:
Oracle Database Concepts for more information about the large pool
Oracle Database Reference for complete information about initialization parameters
The exact amount of UGA Oracle uses depends on each application. To determine an effective setting for the large or shared pools, observe UGA use for a typical user and multiply this amount by the estimated number of user sessions.
Even though use of shared memory increases with shared servers, the total amount of memory use decreases. This is because there are fewer processes; therefore, Oracle uses less PGA memory with shared servers when compared to dedicated server environments.
Note:
For best performance with sorts using shared servers, setSORT_AREA_SIZE
and SORT_AREA_RETAINED_SIZE
to the same value. This keeps the sort result in the large pool instead of having it written to disk.Oracle collects statistics on total memory used by a session and stores them in the dynamic performance view V$SESSTAT
. Table 7-3 lists these statistics.
Table 7-3 V$SESSTAT Statistics Reflecting Memory
To find the value, query V$STATNAME
. If you are using a shared server, you can use the following query to decide how much larger to make the shared pool. Issue the following queries while your application is running:
SELECT SUM(VALUE) || ' BYTES' "TOTAL MEMORY FOR ALL SESSIONS" FROM V$SESSTAT, V$STATNAME WHERE NAME = 'session uga memory' AND V$SESSTAT.STATISTIC# = V$STATNAME.STATISTIC#; SELECT SUM(VALUE) || ' BYTES' "TOTAL MAX MEM FOR ALL SESSIONS" FROM V$SESSTAT, V$STATNAME WHERE NAME = 'session uga memory max' AND V$SESSTAT.STATISTIC# = V$STATNAME.STATISTIC#;
These queries also select from the dynamic performance view V$STATNAME
to obtain internal identifiers for session memory
and max session memory.
The results of these queries could look like the following:
TOTAL MEMORY FOR ALL SESSIONS ----------------------------- 157125 BYTES TOTAL MAX MEM FOR ALL SESSIONS ------------------------------ 417381 BYTES
The result of the first query indicates that the memory currently allocated to all sessions is 157,125 bytes. This value is the total memory with a location that depends on how the sessions are connected to Oracle. If the sessions are connected to dedicated server processes, then this memory is part of the memories of the user processes. If the sessions are connected to shared server processes, then this memory is part of the shared pool.
The result of the second query indicates that the sum of the maximum size of the memory for all sessions is 417,381 bytes. The second result is greater than the first because some sessions have deallocated memory since allocating their maximum amounts.
If you use a shared server architecture, you can use the result of either of these queries to determine how much larger to make the shared pool. The first value is likely to be a better estimate than the second unless nearly all sessions are likely to reach their maximum allocations at the same time.
You can set the PRIVATE_SGA
resource limit to restrict the memory used by each client session from the SGA. PRIVATE_SGA
defines the number of bytes of memory used from the SGA by a session. However, this parameter is used rarely, because most DBAs do not limit SGA consumption on a user-by-user basis.
See Also:
Oracle Database SQL Reference,ALTER
RESOURCE
COST
statement, for more information about setting the PRIVATE_SGA
resource limitIf you have a high number of connected users, then you can reduce memory usage by implementing three-tier connections. This by-product of using a transaction process (TP) monitor is feasible only with pure transactional models, because locks and uncommitted DMLs cannot be held between calls. A shared server environment offers the following advantages:
It is much less restrictive of the application design than a TP monitor.
It dramatically reduces operating system process count and context switches by enabling users to share a pool of servers.
It substantially reduces overall memory usage, even though more SGA is used in shared server mode.
If you have no library cache misses, then you might be able to accelerate execution calls by setting the value of the initialization parameter CURSOR_SPACE_FOR_TIME
to true
. This parameter specifies whether a cursor can be deallocated from the library cache to make room for a new SQL statement. CURSOR_SPACE_FOR_TIME
has the following values meanings:
If CURSOR_SPACE_FOR_TIME
is set to false
(the default), then a cursor can be deallocated from the library cache regardless of whether application cursors associated with its SQL statement are open. In this case, Oracle must verify that the cursor containing the SQL statement is in the library cache.
If CURSOR_SPACE_FOR_TIME
is set to true
, then a cursor can be deallocated only when all application cursors associated with its statement are closed. In this case, Oracle need not verify that a cursor is in the cache, because it cannot be deallocated while an application cursor associated with it is open.
Setting the value of the parameter to true
saves Oracle a small amount of time and can slightly improve the performance of execution calls. This value also prevents the deallocation of cursors until associated application cursors are closed.
Do not set the value of CURSOR_SPACE_FOR_TIME
to true
if you have found library cache misses on execution calls. Such library cache misses indicate that the shared pool is not large enough to hold the shared SQL areas of all concurrently open cursors. If the value is true
, and if the shared pool has no space for a new SQL statement, then the statement cannot be parsed, and Oracle returns an error saying that there is no more shared memory. If the value is false
, and if there is no space for a new statement, then Oracle deallocates an existing cursor. Although deallocating a cursor could result in a library cache miss later (only if the cursor is reexecuted), it is preferable to an error halting your application because a SQL statement cannot be parsed.
Do not set the value of CURSOR_SPACE_FOR_TIME
to true
if the amount of memory available to each user for private SQL areas is scarce. This value also prevents the deallocation of private SQL areas associated with open cursors. If the private SQL areas for all concurrently open cursors fills your available memory so that there is no space for a new SQL statement, then the statement cannot be parsed. Oracle returns an error indicating that there is not enough memory.
If an application repeatedly issues parse calls on the same set of SQL statements, then the reopening of the session cursors can affect system performance. To minimize the impact on performance, session cursors can be stored in a session cursor cache. These cursors are those that have been closed by the application and can be reused. This feature can be particularly useful for applications that use Oracle Forms, because switching from one form to another closes all session cursors associated with the first form.
Oracle checks the library cache to determine whether more than three parse requests have been issued on a given statement. If so, then Oracle assumes that the session cursor associated with the statement should be cached and moves the cursor into the session cursor cache. Subsequent requests to parse that SQL statement by the same session then find the cursor in the session cursor cache.
To enable caching of session cursors, you must set the initialization parameter SESSION_CACHED_CURSORS
. The value of this parameter is a positive integer specifying the maximum number of session cursors kept in the cache. An LRU algorithm removes entries in the session cursor cache to make room for new entries when needed.
You can also enable the session cursor cache dynamically with the statement:
ALTER SESSION SET SESSION_CACHED_CURSORS = value;
To determine whether the session cursor cache is sufficiently large for your instance, you can examine the session statistic session
cursor
cache
hits
in the V$SYSSTAT
view. This statistic counts the number of times a parse call found a cursor in the session cursor cache. If this statistic is a relatively low percentage of the total parse call count for the session, then consider setting SESSION_CACHED_CURSORS
to a larger value.
Although Oracle breaks down very large requests for memory into smaller chunks, on some systems there might still be a requirement to find a contiguous chunk (for example, over 5 KB) of memory. (The default minimum reserved pool allocation is 4,400 bytes.)
If there is not enough free space in the shared pool, then Oracle must search for and free enough memory to satisfy this request. This operation could conceivably hold the latch resource for detectable periods of time, causing minor disruption to other concurrent attempts at memory allocation.
Hence, Oracle internally reserves a small memory area in the shared pool that can be used if the shared pool does not have enough space. This reserved pool makes allocation of large chunks more efficient.
By default, Oracle configures a small reserved pool. This memory can be used for operations such as PL/SQL and trigger compilation or for temporary space while loading Java objects. After the memory allocated from the reserved pool is freed, it returns to the reserved pool.
You probably will not need to change the default amount of space Oracle reserves. However, if necessary, the reserved pool size can be changed by setting the SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
initialization parameter. This parameter sets aside space in the shared pool for unusually large allocations.
For large allocations, Oracle attempts to allocate space in the shared pool in the following order:
From the unreserved part of the shared pool.
From the reserved pool. If there is not enough space in the unreserved part of the shared pool, then Oracle checks whether the reserved pool has enough space.
From memory. If there is not enough space in the unreserved and reserved parts of the shared pool, then Oracle attempts to free enough memory for the allocation. It then retries the unreserved and reserved parts of the shared pool.
The default value for SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
is 5% of the SHARED_POOL_SIZE
. This means that, by default, the reserved list is configured.
If you set SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
to more than half of SHARED_POOL_SIZE
, then Oracle signals an error. Oracle does not let you reserve too much memory for the reserved pool. The amount of operating system memory, however, might constrain the size of the shared pool. In general, set SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
to 10% of SHARED_POOL_SIZE
. For most systems, this value is sufficient if you have already tuned the shared pool. If you increase this value, then the database takes memory from the shared pool. (This reduces the amount of unreserved shared pool memory available for smaller allocations.)
Statistics from the V$SHARED_POOL_RESERVED
view help you tune these parameters. On a system with ample free memory to increase the size of the SGA, the goal is to have the value of REQUEST_MISSES
equal zero. If the system is constrained for operating system memory, then the goal is to not have REQUEST_FAILURES
or at least prevent this value from increasing.
If you cannot achieve these target values, then increase the value for SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
. Also, increase the value for SHARED_POOL_SIZE
by the same amount, because the reserved list is taken from the shared pool.
The reserved pool is too small when the value for REQUEST_FAILURES
is more than zero and increasing. To resolve this, increase the value for the SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
and SHARED_POOL_SIZE
accordingly. The settings you select for these parameters depend on your system's SGA size constraints.
Increasing the value of SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
increases the amount of memory available on the reserved list without having an effect on users who do not allocate memory from the reserved list.
Too much memory might have been allocated to the reserved list if:
REQUEST_MISSES
is zero or not increasing
FREE_MEMORY
is greater than or equal to 50% of SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
minimum
If either of these conditions is true, then decrease the value for SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
.
The V$SHARED_POOL_RESERVED
fixed view can also indicate when the value for SHARED_POOL_SIZE
is too small. This can be the case if REQUEST_FAILURES
is greater than zero and increasing.
If you have enabled the reserved list, then decrease the value for SHARED_POOL_RESERVED_SIZE
. If you have not enabled the reserved list, then you could increase SHARED_POOL_SIZE
.
After an entry has been loaded into the shared pool, it cannot be moved. Sometimes, as entries are loaded and aged, the free memory can become fragmented.
Use the PL/SQL package DBMS_SHARED_POOL
to manage the shared pool. Shared SQL and PL/SQL areas age out of the shared pool according to a least recently used (LRU) algorithm, similar to database buffers. To improve performance and prevent reparsing, you might want to prevent large SQL or PL/SQL areas from aging out of the shared pool.
The DBMS_SHARED_POOL
package lets you keep objects in shared memory, so that they do not age out with the normal LRU mechanism. By using the DBMS_SHARED_POOL
package and by loading the SQL and PL/SQL areas before memory fragmentation occurs, the objects can be kept in memory. This ensures that memory is available, and it prevents the sudden, inexplicable slowdowns in user response time that occur when SQL and PL/SQL areas are accessed after aging out.
The DBMS_SHARED_POOL
package is useful for the following:
When loading large PL/SQL objects, such as the STANDARD
and DIUTIL
packages. When large PL/SQL objects are loaded, user response time may be affected if smaller objects that need to age out of the shared pool to make room. In some cases, there might be insufficient memory to load the large objects.
Frequently executed triggers. You might want to keep compiled triggers on frequently used tables in the shared pool.
DBMS_SHARED_POOL
supports sequences. Sequence numbers are lost when a sequence ages out of the shared pool. DBMS_SHARED_POOL
keeps sequences in the shared pool, thus preventing the loss of sequence numbers.
To use the DBMS_SHARED_POOL
package to pin a SQL or PL/SQL area, complete the following steps:
Decide which packages or cursors to pin in memory.
Start up the database.
Make the call to DBMS_SHARED_POOL
.KEEP
to pin your objects.
This procedure ensures that your system does not run out of shared memory before the kept objects are loaded. By pinning the objects early in the life of the instance, you prevent memory fragmentation that could result from pinning a large portion of memory in the middle of the shared pool.
See Also:
Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for specific information on usingDBMS_SHARED_POOL
proceduresOne of the first stages of parsing is to compare the text of the statement with existing statements in the shared pool to see if the statement can be shared. If the statement differs textually in any way, then Oracle does not share the statement.
Exceptions to this are possible when the parameter CURSOR_SHARING
has been set to SIMILAR
or FORCE
. When this parameter is used, Oracle first checks the shared pool to see if there is an identical statement in the shared pool. If an identical statement is not found, then Oracle searches for a similar statement in the shared pool. If the similar statement is there, then the parse checks continue to verify the executable form of the cursor can be used. If the statement is not there, then a hard parse is necessary to generate the executable form of the statement.
Statements that are identical, except for the values of some literals, are called similar statements. Similar statements pass the textual check in the parse phase when the CURSOR_SHARING
parameter is set to SIMILAR
or FORCE
. Textual similarity does not guarantee sharing. The new form of the SQL statement still needs to go through the remaining steps of the parse phase to ensure that the execution plan of the preexisting statement is equally applicable to the new statement.
See Also:
"SQL Sharing Criteria" for more details on the various checks performedSetting CURSOR_SHARING
to EXACT
allows SQL statements to share the SQL area only when their texts match exactly. This is the default behavior. Using this setting, similar statements cannot shared; only textually exact statements can be shared.
Setting CURSOR_SHARING
to either SIMILAR
or FORCE
allows similar statements to share SQL. The difference between SIMILAR
and FORCE
is that SIMILAR
forces similar statements to share the SQL area without deteriorating execution plans. Setting CURSOR_SHARING
to FORCE
forces similar statements to share the executable SQL area, potentially deteriorating execution plans. Hence, FORCE
should be used as a last resort, when the risk of suboptimal plans is outweighed by the improvements in cursor sharing.
The CURSOR_SHARING
initialization parameter can solve some performance problems. It has the following values: FORCE
, SIMILAR
, and EXACT
(default). Using this parameter provides benefit to existing applications that have many similar SQL statements.
Note:
Oracle does not recommend settingCURSOR_SHARING
to FORCE
in a DSS environment or if you are using complex queries. Also, star transformation is not supported with CURSOR_SHARING
set to either SIMILAR
or FORCE
. For more information, see the "Enabling Query Optimizer Features".The optimal solution is to write sharable SQL, rather than rely on the CURSOR_SHARING
parameter. This is because although CURSOR_SHARING
does significantly reduce the amount of resources used by eliminating hard parses, it requires some extra work as a part of the soft parse to find a similar statement in the shared pool.
Note:
SettingCURSOR_SHARING
to SIMILAR
or FORCE
causes an increase in the maximum lengths (as returned by DESCRIBE
) of any selected expressions that contain literals (in a SELECT
statement). However, the actual length of the data returned does not change.Consider setting CURSOR_SHARING
to SIMILAR
or FORCE
if both of the following questions are true:
Are there statements in the shared pool that differ only in the values of literals?
Is the response time low due to a very high number of library cache misses?
Caution:
SettingCURSOR_SHARING
to FORCE
or SIMILAR
prevents any outlines generated with literals from being used if they were generated with CURSOR_SHARING
set to EXACT
.
To use stored outlines with CURSOR_SHARING
=FORCE
or SIMILAR
, the outlines must be generated with CURSOR_SHARING
set to FORCE
or SIMILAR
and with the CREATE_STORED_OUTLINES
parameter.
Using CURSOR_SHARING
= SIMILAR
(or FORCE
) can significantly improve cursor sharing on some applications that have many similar statements, resulting in reduced memory usage, faster parses, and reduced latch contention.
Large OLTP applications with middle tiers should maintain connections, rather than connecting and disconnecting for each database request. Maintaining persistent connections saves CPU resources and database resources, such as latches.
See Also:
"Operating System Statistics" for a description of important operating system statisticsServer processes making changes to data blocks in the buffer cache generate redo data into the log buffer. LGWR begins writing to copy entries from the redo log buffer to the online redo log if any of the following are true:
The log buffer becomes one third full.
LGWR is posted by a server process performing a COMMIT
or ROLLBACK.
DBWR posts LGWR to do so.
When LGWR writes redo entries from the redo log buffer to a redo log file or disk, user processes can then copy new entries over the entries in memory that have been written to disk. LGWR usually writes fast enough to ensure that space is available in the buffer for new entries, even when access to the redo log is heavy.
A larger buffer makes it more likely that there is space for new entries, and also gives LGWR the opportunity to efficiently write out redo records (too small a log buffer on a system with large updates means that LGWR is continuously flushing redo to disk so that the log buffer remains 2/3 empty).
On machines with fast processors and relatively slow disks, the processors might be filling the rest of the buffer in the time it takes the redo log writer to move a portion of the buffer to disk. A larger log buffer can temporarily mask the effect of slower disks in this situation. Alternatively, you can do one of the following:
Improve the checkpointing or archiving process
Improve the performance of log writer (perhaps by moving all online logs to fast raw devices)
Good usage of the redo log buffer is a simple matter of:
Batching commit operations for batch jobs, so that log writer is able to write redo log entries efficiently
Using NOLOGGING
operations when you are loading large quantities of data
The size of the redo log buffer is determined by the initialization parameter LOG_BUFFER
. The log buffer size cannot be modified after instance startup.
Applications that insert, modify, or delete large volumes of data usually need to change the default log buffer size. The log buffer is small compared with the total SGA size, and a modestly sized log buffer can significantly enhance throughput on systems that perform many updates.
A reasonable first estimate for such systems is to the default value, which is:
MAX(0.5M, (128K * number of cpus))
On most systems, sizing the log buffer larger than 1M does not provide any performance benefit. Increasing the log buffer size does not have any negative implications on performance or recoverability. It merely uses extra memory.
The statistic REDO
BUFFER
ALLOCATION
RETRIES
reflects the number of times a user process waits for space in the redo log buffer. This statistic can be queried through the dynamic performance view V$SYSSTAT
.
Use the following query to monitor these statistics over a period of time while your application is running:
SELECT NAME, VALUE FROM V$SYSSTAT WHERE NAME = 'redo buffer allocation retries';
The value of redo buffer allocation retries
should be near zero over an interval. If this value increments consistently, then processes have had to wait for space in the redo log buffer. The wait can be caused by the log buffer being too small or by checkpointing. Increase the size of the redo log buffer, if necessary, by changing the value of the initialization parameter LOG_BUFFER
. The value of this parameter is expressed in bytes. Alternatively, improve the checkpointing or archiving process.
Another data source is to check whether the log
buffer
space
wait event is not a significant factor in the wait time for the instance; if not, the log buffer size is most likely adequate.
The Program Global Area (PGA) is a private memory region containing data and control information for a server process. Access to it is exclusive to that server process and is read and written only by the Oracle code acting on behalf of it. An example of such information is the runtime area of a cursor. Each time a cursor is executed, a new runtime area is created for that cursor in the PGA memory region of the server process executing that cursor.
Note:
Part of the runtime area can be located in the SGA when using shared servers.For complex queries (for example, decision support queries), a big portion of the runtime area is dedicated to work areas allocated by memory intensive operators, such as the following:
Sort-based operators, such as ORDER
BY
, GROUP
BY
, ROLLUP
, and window functions
Hash-join
Bitmap merge
Bitmap create
Write buffers used by bulk load operations
A sort operator uses a work area (the sort area) to perform the in-memory sort of a set of rows. Similarly, a hash-join operator uses a work area (the hash area) to build a hash table from its left input.
The size of a work area can be controlled and tuned. Generally, bigger work areas can significantly improve the performance of a particular operator at the cost of higher memory consumption. Ideally, the size of a work area is big enough that it can accommodate the input data and auxiliary memory structures allocated by its associated SQL operator. This is known as the optimal size of a work area. When the size of the work area is smaller than optimal, the response time increases, because an extra pass is performed over part of the input data. This is known as the one-pass size of the work area. Under the one-pass threshold, when the size of a work area is far too small compared to the input data size, multiple passes over the input data are needed. This could dramatically increase the response time of the operator. This is known as the multi-pass size of the work area. For example, a serial sort operation that needs to sort 10GB of data needs a little more than 10GB to run optimal and at least 40MB to run one-pass. If this sort gets less that 40MB, then it must perform several passes over the input data.
The goal is to have most work areas running with an optimal size (for example, more than 90% or even 100% for pure OLTP systems), while a smaller fraction of them are running with a one-pass size (for example, less than 10%). Multi-pass execution should be avoided. Even for DSS systems running large sorts and hash-joins, the memory requirement for the one-pass executions is relatively small. A system configured with a reasonable amount of PGA memory should not need to perform multiple passes over the input data.
Automatic PGA memory management simplifies and improves the way PGA memory is allocated. By default, PGA memory management is enabled. In this mode, Oracle dynamically adjusts the size of the portion of the PGA memory dedicated to work areas, based on 20% of the SGA memory size. The minimum value is 10MB.
Note:
For backward compatibility, automatic PGA memory management can be disabled by setting the value of thePGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
initialization parameter to 0. When automatic PGA memory management is disabled, the maximum size of a work area can be sized with the associated _AREA_SIZE
parameter, such as the SORT_AREA_SIZE
initialization parameter.
See Oracle Database Reference for information on the PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, SORT_AREA_SIZE
, HASH_AREA_SIZE
, BITMAP_MERGE_AREA_SIZE
and CREATE_BITMAP_AREA_SIZE
initialization parameters.
When running under the automatic PGA memory management mode, sizing of work areas for all sessions becomes automatic and the *_AREA_SIZE
parameters are ignored by all sessions running in that mode. At any given time, the total amount of PGA memory available to active work areas in the instance is automatically derived from the PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
initialization parameter. This amount is set to the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
minus the amount of PGA memory allocated by other components of the system (for example, PGA memory allocated by sessions). The resulting PGA memory is then assigned to individual active work areas, based on their specific memory requirements.
Under automatic PGA memory management mode, the main goal of Oracle is to honor the PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
limit set by the DBA, by controlling dynamically the amount of PGA memory allotted to SQL work areas. At the same time, Oracle tries to maximize the performance of all the memory-intensive SQL operations, by maximizing the number of work areas that are using an optimal amount of PGA memory (cache memory). The rest of the work areas are executed in one-pass mode, unless the PGA memory limit set by the DBA with the parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is so low that multi-pass execution is required to reduce even more the consumption of PGA memory and honor the PGA target limit.
When configuring a brand new instance, it is hard to know precisely the appropriate setting for PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. You can determine this setting in three stages:
Make a first estimate for PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, based on a rule of thumb. By default, Oracle uses 20% of the SGA size. However, this initial setting may be too low for a large DSS system.
Run a representative workload on the instance and monitor performance, using PGA statistics collected by Oracle, to see whether the maximum PGA size is under-configured or over-configured.
Tune PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, using Oracle PGA advice statistics.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for information on thePGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
initialization parameterThe following sections explain this in detail:
The value of the PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
initialization parameter (for example 100000 KB, 2500 MB, or 50 GB) should be set based on the total amount of memory available for the Oracle instance. This value can then be tuned and dynamically modified at the instance level. Example 7-2 illustrates a typical situation.
Example 7-2 Initial Setting of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
Assume that an Oracle instance is configured to run on a system with 4 GB of physical memory. Part of that memory should be left for the operating system and other non-Oracle applications running on the same hardware system. You might decide to dedicate only 80% (3.2 GB) of the available memory to the Oracle instance.
You must then divide the resulting memory between the SGA and the PGA.
For OLTP systems, the PGA memory typically accounts for a small fraction of the total memory available (for example, 20%), leaving 80% for the SGA.
For DSS systems running large, memory-intensive queries, PGA memory can typically use up to 70% of that total (up to 2.2 GB in this example).
Good initial values for the parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
might be:
For OLTP:
PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
= (total_mem
* 80%) * 20%
For DSS:
PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
= (total_mem
* 80%) * 50%
where total_mem
is the total amount of physical memory available on the system.
In this example, with a value of total_mem
equal to 4 GB, you can initially set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
to 1600 MB for a DSS system and to 655 MB for an OLTP system.
Before starting the tuning process, you need to know how to monitor and interpret the key statistics collected by Oracle to help in assessing the performance of the automatic PGA memory management component. Several dynamic performance views are available for this purpose:
This view gives instance-level statistics on the PGA memory usage and the automatic PGA memory manager. For example:
SELECT * FROM V$PGASTAT;
The output of this query might look like the following:
NAME VALUE UNIT -------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ aggregate PGA target parameter 41156608 bytes aggregate PGA auto target 21823488 bytes global memory bound 2057216 bytes total PGA inuse 16899072 bytes total PGA allocated 35014656 bytes maximum PGA allocated 136795136 bytes total freeable PGA memory 524288 bytes PGA memory freed back to OS 1713242112 bytes total PGA used for auto workareas 0 bytes maximum PGA used for auto workareas 2383872 bytes total PGA used for manual workareas 0 bytes maximum PGA used for manual workareas 8470528 bytes over allocation count 291 bytes processed 2124600320 bytes extra bytes read/written 39949312 bytes cache hit percentage 98.15 percent
The main statistics displayed in V$PGASTAT
are as follows:
aggregate PGA target parameter
: This is the current value of the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. The default value is 20% of the SGA size. If you set this parameter to 0, automatic management of the PGA memory is disabled.
aggregate PGA auto target
: This gives the amount of PGA memory Oracle can use for work areas running in automatic mode. This amount is dynamically derived from the value of the parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
and the current work area workload. Hence, it is continuously adjusted by Oracle. If this value is small compared to the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, then a lot of PGA memory is used by other components of the system (for example, PL/SQL or Java memory) and little is left for sort work areas. You must ensure that enough PGA memory is left for work areas running in automatic mode.
global memory bound
: This gives the maximum size of a work area executed in AUTO
mode. This value is continuously adjusted by Oracle to reflect the current state of the work area workload. The global memory bound generally decreases when the number of active work areas is increasing in the system. As a rule of thumb, the value of the global bound should not decrease to less than one megabyte. If it does, then the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
should probably be increased.
total PGA allocated
: This gives the current amount of PGA memory allocated by the instance. Oracle tries to keep this number less than the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. However, it is possible for the PGA allocated to exceed that value by a small percentage and for a short period of time, when the work area workload is increasing very rapidly or when the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is set to a too small value.
total freeable PGA memory:
This indicates how much allocated PGA memory which can be freed.
total PGA used for auto workareas
: This indicates how much PGA memory is currently consumed by work areas running under automatic memory management mode. This number can be used to determine how much memory is consumed by other consumers of the PGA memory (for example, PL/SQL or Java):
PGA other = total PGA allocated - total PGA used for auto workareas
over allocation count
: This statistic is cumulative from instance start-up. Over-allocating PGA memory can happen if the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is too small to accommodate the PGA other
component in the previous equation plus the minimum memory required to execute the work area workload. When this happens, Oracle cannot honor the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, and extra PGA memory needs to be allocated. If over-allocation occurs, you should increase the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
using the information provided by the advice view V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE
.
total bytes processed
: This is the number of bytes processed by memory-intensive SQL operators since instance start-up. For example, the number of byte processed is the input size for a sort operation. This number is used to compute the cache
hit
percentage
metric.
extra bytes read/written
: When a work area cannot run optimally, one or more extra passes is performed over the input data. extra
bytes
read/written
represents the number of bytes processed during these extra passes since instance start-up. This number is also used to compute the cache
hit
percentage
. Ideally, it should be small compared to total bytes processed
.
cache hit percentage
: This metric is computed by Oracle to reflect the performance of the PGA memory component. It is cumulative from instance start-up. A value of 100% means that all work areas executed by the system since instance start-up have used an optimal amount of PGA memory. This is, of course, ideal but rarely happens except maybe for pure OLTP systems. In reality, some work areas run one-pass or even multi-pass, depending on the overall size of the PGA memory. When a work area cannot run optimally, one or more extra passes is performed over the input data. This reduces the cache
hit
percentage
in proportion to the size of the input data and the number of extra passes performed. Example 7-3 shows how cache
hit
percentage
is affected by extra passes.
Example 7-3 Calculating Cache Hit Percentage
Consider a simple example: Four sort operations have been executed, three were small (1 MB of input data) and one was bigger (100 MB of input data). The total number of bytes processed (BP
) by the four operations is 103 MB. If one of the small sorts runs one-pass, an extra pass over 1 MB of input data is performed. This 1 MB value is the number of extra
bytes
read/written
, or EBP
. The cache
hit
percentage
is calculated by the following formula:
BP x 100 / (BP + EBP)
The cache
hit
percentage
in this case is 99.03%, almost 100%. This value reflects the fact that only one of the small sorts had to perform an extra pass while all other sorts were able to run optimally. Hence, the cache
hit
percentage
is almost 100%, because this extra pass over 1 MB represents a tiny overhead. On the other hand, if the big sort is the one to run one-pass, then EBP is 100 MB instead of 1 MB, and the cache
hit
percentage
falls to 50.73%, because the extra pass has a much bigger impact.
This view has one row for each Oracle process connected to the instance. The columns PGA_USED_MEM
, PGA_ALLOC_MEM
, PGA_FREEABLE_MEM
and PGA_MAX_MEM
can be used to monitor the PGA memory usage of these processes. For example:
SELECT PROGRAM, PGA_USED_MEM, PGA_ALLOC_MEM, PGA_FREEABLE_MEM, PGA_MAX_MEM FROM V$PROCESS;
The output of this query might look like the following:
PROGRAM PGA_USED_MEM PGA_ALLOC_MEM PGA_FREEABLE_MEM PGA_MAX_MEM -------------------------------------- ------------ ------------- ---------------- ----------- PSEUDO 0 0 0 0 oracle@dlsun1690 (PMON) 314540 685860 0 685860 oracle@dlsun1690 (MMAN) 313992 685860 0 685860 oracle@dlsun1690 (DBW0) 696720 1063112 0 1063112 oracle@dlsun1690 (LGWR) 10835108 22967940 0 22967940 oracle@dlsun1690 (CKPT) 352716 710376 0 710376 oracle@dlsun1690 (SMON) 541508 948004 0 1603364 oracle@dlsun1690 (RECO) 323688 685860 0 816932 oracle@dlsun1690 (q001) 233508 585128 0 585128 oracle@dlsun1690 (QMNC) 314332 685860 0 685860 oracle@dlsun1690 (MMON) 885756 1996548 393216 1996548 oracle@dlsun1690 (MMNL) 315068 685860 0 685860 oracle@dlsun1690 (q000) 330872 716200 65536 716200 oracle@dlsun1690 (TNS V1-V3) 635768 928024 0 1255704 oracle@dlsun1690 (CJQ0) 533476 1013540 0 1144612 oracle@dlsun1690 (TNS V1-V3) 430648 812108 0 812108
This view displays dynamic PGA memory usage by named component categories for each Oracle process. This view will contain up to six rows for each Oracle process, one row for:
Each named component category:
Java
PL/SQL
OLAP
SQL
Freeable - memory that has been allocated to the process by the operating system, but not to a specific category.
Other - memory that has been allocated to a category, but not to one of the named categories.
The columns CATEGORY
, ALLOCATED
, USED
, and MAX_ALLOCATED
can be used to dynamically monitor the PGA memory usage of Oracle processes for each of the six categories.
This view shows the number of work areas executed with optimal memory size, one-pass memory size, and multi-pass memory size since instance start-up. Statistics in this view are subdivided into buckets that are defined by the optimal memory requirement of the work area. Each bucket is identified by a range of optimal memory requirements specified by the values of the columns LOW_OPTIMAL_SIZE
and HIGH_OPTIMAL_SIZE
.
Example 7-3 and Example 7-4 show two ways of using V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM
.
Example 7-4 Querying V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM: Non-empty Buckets
Consider a sort operation that requires 3 MB of memory to run optimally (cached). Statistics about the work area used by this sort are placed in the bucket defined by LOW_OPTIMAL_SIZE = 2097152
(2 MB) and HIGH_OPTIMAL_SIZE = 4194303
(4 MB minus 1 byte), because 3 MB falls within that range of optimal sizes. Statistics are segmented by work area size, because the performance impact of running a work area in optimal, one-pass or multi-pass mode depends mainly on the size of that work area.
The following query shows statistics for all non-empty buckets. Empty buckets are removed with the predicate where total_execution != 0
.
SELECT LOW_OPTIMAL_SIZE/1024 low_kb, (HIGH_OPTIMAL_SIZE+1)/1024 high_kb, OPTIMAL_EXECUTIONS, ONEPASS_EXECUTIONS, MULTIPASSES_EXECUTIONS FROM V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM WHERE TOTAL_EXECUTIONS != 0;
The result of the query might look like the following:
LOW_KB HIGH_KB OPTIMAL_EXECUTIONS ONEPASS_EXECUTIONS MULTIPASSES_EXECUTIONS ------ ------- ------------------ ------------------ ---------------------- 8 16 156255 0 0 16 32 150 0 0 32 64 89 0 0 64 128 13 0 0 128 256 60 0 0 256 512 8 0 0 512 1024 657 0 0 1024 2048 551 16 0 2048 4096 538 26 0 4096 8192 243 28 0 8192 16384 137 35 0 16384 32768 45 107 0 32768 65536 0 153 0 65536 131072 0 73 0 131072 262144 0 44 0 262144 524288 0 22 0
The query result shows that, in the 1024 KB to 2048 KB bucket, 551 work areas used an optimal amount of memory, while 16 ran in one-pass mode and none ran in multi-pass mode. It also shows that all work areas under 1 MB were able to run in optimal mode.
Example 7-5 Querying V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM: Percent Optimal
You can also use V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM
to find the percentage of times work areas were executed in optimal, one-pass, or multi-pass mode since start-up. This query only considers work areas of a certain size, with an optimal memory requirement of at least 64 KB.
SELECT optimal_count, round(optimal_count*100/total, 2) optimal_perc, onepass_count, round(onepass_count*100/total, 2) onepass_perc, multipass_count, round(multipass_count*100/total, 2) multipass_perc FROM (SELECT decode(sum(total_executions), 0, 1, sum(total_executions)) total, sum(OPTIMAL_EXECUTIONS) optimal_count, sum(ONEPASS_EXECUTIONS) onepass_count, sum(MULTIPASSES_EXECUTIONS) multipass_count FROM v$sql_workarea_histogram WHERE low_optimal_size > 64*1024);
The output of this query might look like the following:
OPTIMAL_COUNT OPTIMAL_PERC ONEPASS_COUNT ONEPASS_PERC MULTIPASS_COUNT MULTIPASS_PERC ------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------------- -------------- 2239 81.63 504 18.37 0 0
This result shows that 81.63% of these work areas have been able to run using an optimal amount of memory. The rest (18.37%) ran one-pass. None of them ran multi-pass. Such behavior is preferable, for the following reasons:
Multi-pass mode can severely degrade performance. A high number of multi-pass work areas has an exponentially adverse effect on the response time of its associated SQL operator.
Running one-pass does not require a large amount of memory; only 22 MB is required to sort 1 GB of data in one-pass mode.
This view can be used to display the work areas that are active (or executing) in the instance. Small active sorts (under 64 KB) are excluded from the view. Use this view to precisely monitor the size of all active work areas and to determine if these active work areas spill to a temporary segment. Example 7-6 shows a typical query of this view:
Example 7-6 Querying V$SQL_WORKAREA_ACTIVE
SELECT to_number(decode(SID, 65535, NULL, SID)) sid, operation_type OPERATION, trunc(EXPECTED_SIZE/1024) ESIZE, trunc(ACTUAL_MEM_USED/1024) MEM, trunc(MAX_MEM_USED/1024) "MAX MEM", NUMBER_PASSES PASS, trunc(TEMPSEG_SIZE/1024) TSIZE FROM V$SQL_WORKAREA_ACTIVE ORDER BY 1,2; The output of this query might look like the following: SID OPERATION ESIZE MEM MAX MEM PASS TSIZE --- ----------------- --------- --------- --------- ----- ------- 8 GROUP BY (SORT) 315 280 904 0 8 HASH-JOIN 2995 2377 2430 1 20000 9 GROUP BY (SORT) 34300 22688 22688 0 11 HASH-JOIN 18044 54482 54482 0 12 HASH-JOIN 18044 11406 21406 1 120000
This output shows that session 12 (column SID
) is running a hash-join having its work area running in one-pass mode (PASS
column). This work area is currently using 11406 KB of memory (MEM
column) and has used, in the past, up to 21406 KB of PGA memory (MAX
MEM
column). It has also spilled to a temporary segment of size 120000 KB. Finally, the column ESIZE
indicates the maximum amount of memory that the PGA memory manager expects this hash-join to use. This maximum is dynamically computed by the PGA memory manager according to workload.
When a work area is deallocated—that is, when the execution of its associated SQL operator is complete—the work area is automatically removed from the V$SQL_WORKAREA_ACTIVE
view.
Oracle maintains cumulative work area statistics for each loaded cursor whose execution plan uses one or more work areas. Every time a work area is deallocated, the V$SQL_WORKAREA
table is updated with execution statistics for that work area.
V$SQL_WORKAREA
can be joined with V$SQL
to relate a work area to a cursor. It can even be joined to V$SQL_PLAN
to precisely determine which operator in the plan uses a work area.
Example 7-7 shows three typical queries on the V$SQL_WORKAREA
dynamic view:
Example 7-7 Querying V$SQL_WORKAREA
The following query finds the top 10 work areas requiring most cache memory:
SELECT * FROM ( SELECT workarea_address, operation_type, policy, estimated_optimal_size FROM V$SQL_WORKAREA ORDER BY estimated_optimal_size ) WHERE ROWNUM <= 10;
The following query finds the cursors with one or more work areas that have been executed in one or even multiple passes:
col sql_text format A80 wrap SELECT sql_text, sum(ONEPASS_EXECUTIONS) onepass_cnt, sum(MULTIPASSES_EXECUTIONS) mpass_cnt FROM V$SQL s, V$SQL_WORKAREA wa WHERE s.address = wa.address GROUP BY sql_text HAVING sum(ONEPASS_EXECUTIONS+MULTIPASSES_EXECUTIONS)>0;
Using the hash value and address of a particular cursor, the following query displays the cursor execution plan, including information about the associated work areas.
col "O/1/M" format a10 col name format a20 SELECT operation, options, object_name name, trunc(bytes/1024/1024) "input(MB)", trunc(last_memory_used/1024) last_mem, trunc(estimated_optimal_size/1024) optimal_mem, trunc(estimated_onepass_size/1024) onepass_mem, decode(optimal_executions, null, null, optimal_executions||'/'||onepass_executions||'/'|| multipasses_executions) "O/1/M" FROM V$SQL_PLAN p, V$SQL_WORKAREA w WHERE p.address=w.address(+) AND p.hash_value=w.hash_value(+) AND p.id=w.operation_id(+) AND p.address='88BB460C' AND p.hash_value=3738161960; OPERATION OPTIONS NAME input(MB) LAST_MEM OPTIMAL_ME ONEPASS_ME O/1/M ------------ -------- -------- --------- -------- ---------- ---------- ------ SELECT STATE HASH GROUP BY 4582 8 16 16 16/0/0 HASH JOIN SEMI 4582 5976 5194 2187 16/0/0 TABLE ACCESS FULL ORDERS 51 TABLE ACCESS FUL LINEITEM 1000
You can get the address and hash value from the V$SQL
view by specifying a pattern in the query. For example:
SELECT address, hash_value
FROM V$SQL
WHERE sql_text LIKE '%my_pattern%';
To help you tune the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, Oracle provides two PGA advice performance views:
By examining these two views, you no longer need to use an empirical approach to tune the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. Instead, you can use the content of these views to determine how key PGA statistics will be impacted if you change the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
.
In both views, values of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
used for the prediction are derived from fractions and multiples of the current value of that parameter, to assess possible higher and lower values. Values used for the prediction range from 10 MB to a maximum of 256 GB.
Oracle generates PGA advice performance views by recording the workload history and then simulating this history for different values of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. The simulation process happens in the background and continuously updates the workload history to produce the simulation result. You can view the result at any time by querying V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE
or V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE_HISTOGRAM
.
To enable automatic generation of PGA advice performance views, make sure the following parameters are set:
PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, to enable automatic PGA memory management. Set the initial value as described in "Setting PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET Initially".
STATISTICS_LEVEL
. Set this to TYPICAL
(the default) or ALL
; setting this parameter to BASIC
turns off generation of PGA performance advice views.
The content of these PGA advice performance views is reset at instance start-up or when PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is altered.
Note:
Simulation cannot include all factors of real execution, so derived statistics might not exactly match up with real performance statistics. You should always monitor the system after changingPGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, to verify that the new performance is what you expect.This view predicts how the statistics cache
hit
percentage
and over
allocation
count
in V$PGASTAT
will be impacted if you change the value of the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. Example 7-8 shows a typical query of this view:
Example 7-8 Querying V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE
SELECT round(PGA_TARGET_FOR_ESTIMATE/1024/1024) target_mb, ESTD_PGA_CACHE_HIT_PERCENTAGE cache_hit_perc, ESTD_OVERALLOC_COUNT FROM V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE;
The output of this query might look like the following:
TARGET_MB CACHE_HIT_PERC ESTD_OVERALLOC_COUNT ---------- -------------- -------------------- 63 23 367 125 24 30 250 30 3 375 39 0 500 58 0 600 59 0 700 59 0 800 60 0 900 60 0 1000 61 0 1500 67 0 2000 76 0 3000 83 0 4000 85 0
The result of the this query can be plotted as shown in Figure 7-3:
Figure 7-3 Graphical Representation of V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE
The curve shows how the PGA cache
hit
percentage
improves as the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
increases. The shaded zone in the graph is the over
allocation
zone, where the value of the column ESTD_OVERALLOCATION_COUNT
is nonzero. It indicates that PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is too small to even meet the minimum PGA memory needs. If PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is set within the over
allocation
zone, the memory manager will over-allocate memory and actual PGA memory consumed will be more than the limit you set. It is therefore meaningless to set a value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
in that zone. In this particular example PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
should be set to at least 375 MB.
Note:
Even though the theoretical maximum for the PGAcache
hit
percentage
is 100%, there is a practical limit on the maximum size of a work area, which may prevent this theoretical maximum from being reached, even if you further increase PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. This should happen only in large DSS systems where the optimal memory requirement is large and might cause the value of the cache
hit
percentage
to taper off at a lower percentage, like 90%.Beyond the over
allocation
zone, the value of the PGA cache
hit
percentage
increases rapidly. This is due to an increase in the number of work areas which run optimally or one-pass and a decrease in the number of multi-pass executions. At some point, somewhere around 500 MB in this example, there is an inflection in the curve that corresponds to the point where most (probably all) work areas can run optimally or at least one-pass. After this inflection, the cache
hit
percentage
keeps increasing, though at a lower pace, up to the point where it starts to taper off and shows only slight improvement with increase in PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. In Figure 7-3, this happens when PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
reaches 3 GB. At that point, the cache
hit
percentage
is 83% and only improves marginally (by 2%) with one extra gigabyte of PGA memory. In this particular example, 3 GB is probably the optimal value for PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
.
Ideally, PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
should be set at the optimal value, or at least to the maximum value possible in the region beyond the over
allocation
zone. As a rule of thumb, the PGA cache
hit
percentage
should be higher than 60%, because at 60% the system is almost processing double the number of bytes it actually needs to process in an ideal situation. Using this particular example, it makes sense to set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
to at least 500 MB and as close as possible to 3 GB. But the right setting for the parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
really depends on how much memory can be dedicated to the PGA component. Generally, adding PGA memory requires reducing memory for some of the SGA components, like the shared pool or the buffer cache. This is because the overall memory dedicated to the Oracle instance is often bound by the amount of physical memory available on the system. As a result, any decisions to increase PGA memory must be taken in the larger context of the available memory in the system and the performance of the various SGA components (which you monitor with shared pool advisory and buffer cache advisory statistics). If memory cannot be taken away from the SGA, you might consider adding more physical memory to the system.
You can use the following steps as a tuning guideline in tuning PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
:
Set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
so there is no memory over-allocation; avoid setting it in the over-allocation zone. In Example 7-8, PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
should be set to at least 375 MB.
After eliminating over-allocations, aim at maximizing the PGA cache
hit
percentage
, based on your response-time requirement and memory constraints. In Example 7-8, assume you have a limit X on memory you can allocate to PGA.
If this limit X is beyond the optimal value, then you would set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
to the optimal value. After this point, the incremental benefit with higher memory allocation to PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is very small. In Example 7-8, if you have 10 GB to dedicate to PGA, set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
to 3 GB, the optimal value. The remaining 7 GB is dedicated to the SGA.
If the limit X is less than the optimal value, then you would set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
to X. In Example 7-8, if you have only 2 GB to dedicate to PGA, set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
to 2 GB and accept a cache
hit
percentage
of 75%.
Finally, like most statistics collected by Oracle that are cumulative since instance start-up, you can take a snapshot of the view at the beginning and at the end of a time interval. You can then derive the predicted statistics for that time interval as follows:
estd_overalloc_count = (difference in estd_overalloc_count between the two snapshots)
(difference in bytes_processed between the two snapshots) estd_pga_cache_hit_percentage = ----------------------------------------------------------------- (difference in bytes_processed + extra_bytes_rw between the two snapshots )
This view predicts how the statistics displayed by the performance view V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM
will be impacted if you change the value of the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. You can use the dynamic view V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE_HISTOGRAM
to view detailed information on the predicted number of optimal, one-pass and multi-pass work area executions for the set of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
values you use for the prediction.
The V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE_HISTOGRAM
view is identical to the V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM
view, with two additional columns to represent the PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
values used for the prediction. Therefore, any query executed against the V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM
view can be used on this view, with an additional predicate to select the desired value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
.
Example 7-9 Querying V$PGA_TARGET_ADVICE_HISTOGRAM
The following query displays the predicted content of V$SQL_WORKAREA_HISTOGRAM
for a value of the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
set to twice its current value.
SELECT LOW_OPTIMAL_SIZE/1024 low_kb, (HIGH_OPTIMAL_SIZE+1)/1024 high_kb, estd_optimal_executions estd_opt_cnt, estd_onepass_executions estd_onepass_cnt, estd_multipasses_executions estd_mpass_cnt FROM v$pga_target_advice_histogram WHERE pga_target_factor = 2 AND estd_total_executions != 0 ORDER BY 1;
The output of this query might look like the following.
LOW_KB HIGH_KB ESTD_OPTIMAL_CNT ESTD_ONEPASS_CNT ESTD_MPASS_CNT ------ ------- ---------------- ---------------- -------------- 8 16 156107 0 0 16 32 148 0 0 32 64 89 0 0 64 128 13 0 0 128 256 58 0 0 256 512 10 0 0 512 1024 653 0 0 1024 2048 530 0 0 2048 4096 509 0 0 4096 8192 227 0 0 8192 16384 176 0 0 16384 32768 133 16 0 32768 65536 66 103 0 65536 131072 15 47 0 131072 262144 0 48 0 262144 524288 0 23 0
The output shows that increasing PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
by a factor of 2 will allow all work areas under 16 MB to execute in optimal mode.
See Also:
Oracle Database ReferenceStatistics in the V$SYSSTAT
and V$SESSTAT
views show the total number of work areas executed with optimal memory size, one-pass memory size, and multi-pass memory size. These statistics are cumulative since the instance or the session was started.
The following query gives the total number and the percentage of times work areas were executed in these three modes since the instance was started:
SELECT name profile, cnt, decode(total, 0, 0, round(cnt*100/total)) percentage FROM (SELECT name, value cnt, (sum(value) over ()) total FROM V$SYSSTAT WHERE name like 'workarea exec%');
The output of this query might look like the following:
PROFILE CNT PERCENTAGE ----------------------------------- ---------- ---------- workarea executions - optimal 5395 95 workarea executions - onepass 284 5 workarea executions - multipass 0 0
The OLAP_PAGE_POOL_SIZE
initialization parameter specifies (in bytes) the maximum size of the paging cache to be allocated to an OLAP session.
For performance reasons, it is usually preferable to configure a small OLAP paging cache and set a larger default buffer pool with DB_CACHE_SIZE
. An OLAP paging cache of 4 MB is fairly typical, with 2 MB used for systems with limited memory resources.