利用utl_file来读取文件.

以前写过用external table来加载trace文件,详情参考下面链接.

http://www.cnblogs.com/princessd8251/p/3779145.html

今天要做到是用UTL_FILE包来读取一个directory下面的文件,比如我们的trace文件.

先定义get_trace_file 函数.

-- create directory and varchar2 array
col value new_value user_dump_directory;
select value from v$parameter where name = 'user_dump_dest';
create or replace directory user_dump_dir as '&user_dump_directory';
create or replace type varchar2_array as table of varchar2(4000);
/

-- create get_trace_file1 function
create or replace function get_trace_file1(s_id number default userenv('sid'))
return varchar2_array
pipelined
as
  v_handle    utl_file.file_type;
  v_filename  varchar2(2000);
  v_line      varchar2(4000);
begin
  -- get exact file_name
-- below code can be repaced by a query against v$diag_info if you are on Oracle 11G.
select i.value||'_ora_'||p.spid||decode(t.value,null,'','_'||t.value)||'.trc' into v_filename from v$process p, v$session s, (select value from v$parameter where name = 'instance_name') i, (select value from v$parameter where name = 'tracefile_identifier') t where p.addr = s.paddr and s.sid = s_id; v_handle := utl_file.fopen('USER_DUMP_DIR', v_filename, 'R', 32767); loop begin utl_file.get_line(v_handle, v_line); exception when no_data_found then exit; end; pipe row(v_line); end loop; utl_file.fclose(v_handle); return; end; / -- create get_trace_file2 function create or replace function get_trace_file2(file_name in varchar2) return varchar2_array pipelined as v_handle utl_file.file_type; v_line varchar2(20000); begin v_handle := utl_file.fopen('USER_DUMP_DIR', file_name, 'R', 32767); loop begin utl_file.get_line(v_handle, v_line); exception
when no_data_found then exit; end; pipe row(v_line); end loop; utl_file.fclose(v_handle); return; end; / -- create get_trace_file3 function create or replace function get_trace_file3(dir_name in varchar2, file_name in varchar2) return varchar2_array pipelined as v_handle utl_file.file_type; v_line varchar2(20000); begin v_handle := utl_file.fopen(dir_name, file_name, 'R', 32767); loop begin utl_file.get_line(v_handle, v_line); exception
when no_data_found then exit; end; pipe row(v_line); end loop; utl_file.fclose(v_handle); return; end; /
然后开启10046,并执行一个查询.

alter session set events '10046 trace name context forever, level 8'; select count(*) from t1; alter session set events '10046 trace name context off';
用函数get_trace_file1去查看内容.
select * from table(get_trace_file1); Dump file c:\oracle\admin\ukja10\udump\ukja10_ora_2820.trc Thu Mar 19 15:10:10 2009 ORACLE V10.2.0.1.0 - Production vsnsta=0 vsnsql=14 vsnxtr=3 Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Production With the Partitioning, OLAP and Data Mining options Windows XP Version V5.1 Service Pack 2 CPU : 2 - type 586 Process Affinity : 0x00000000 Memory (Avail/Total): Ph:1481M/3070M, Ph+PgF:3140M/4960M, VA:1359M/2047M Instance name: ukja10 Redo thread mounted by this instance: 1 Oracle process number: 16 Windows thread id: 2820, image: ORACLE.EXE (SHAD) *** ACTION NAME:() 2009-03-19 15:10:10.109 *** MODULE NAME:(SQL*Plus) 2009-03-19 15:10:10.109 *** SERVICE NAME:(UKJA10) 2009-03-19 15:10:10.109 *** SESSION ID:(157.1205) 2009-03-19 15:10:10.109 ===================== PARSING IN CURSOR #1 len=68 dep=0 uid=61 oct=42 lid=61 tim=172367882897 hv=740818757 ad='27e12b14' alter session set events '10046 trace name context forever, level 8' END OF STMT ...

Now I sort the buffer busy waits event by class# like this.

col class# format a10
col elapsed format 99.99

with t as (
  select /*+ materialize */
    column_value as line, 
    instr(column_value, 'ela=') ei, 
    instr(column_value, 'file#=') fi,
    instr(column_value, 'block#=') bi,
    instr(column_value, 'class#=') ci,
    instr(column_value, 'obj#=') oi,
    instr(column_value, 'tim=') ti
  from table(get_trace_file2('trc_1.trc'))
  --from table(get_trace_file2('trc_2.trc'))
  where 
    instr(column_value, 'WAIT #2: nam=''buffer busy waits''') > 0
    --instr(column_value, 'WAIT #11: nam=''buffer busy waits''') > 0
)
select
  class# 
  , count(1) as cnt
  , sum(elapsed)/1000000 as elapsed
from
  (
    select
      substr(line, ei+4, fi-ei-4) as elapsed,
      substr(line, fi+6, bi-fi-6) as file#,
      substr(line, bi+7, ci-bi-7) as block#,
      substr(line, ci+7, oi-ci-7) as class#,
      substr(line, oi+5, ti-oi-5) as obj#,
      substr(line, ti+4) as tim
    from
      t 
  ) x
group by 
  class#
order by 
  2 desc, 3 desc;

What I’m actually doing is:

  1. trc_1.trc file contains the 10046 trace result with 40K extent size in ASSM.
  2. trc_2.trc file contains the 10046 trace result with 10M extent size in ASSM.
  3. 10 concurrent sessions insert into the table with 10046 trace enabled.
  4. I’d like to analyze how extent size affects the pattern of buffer contention.

Here is the result.

--when extent size is 40K
CLASS#     CNT ELAPSED
---------- ---------- -------
8                 285    1.40
1                 215    4.64
4                  42     .01
9                   2     .00
19                  1     .00
33                  1     .00

-- when extent size is 10M
CLASS#     CNT ELAPSED
---------- ---------- -------
8                1456    3.01
1                 420    1.54
4                   5     .00
35                  2     .00
77                  1     .00

See the diffference. With big extent size, we have major buffer contention on 1st level bitmap block(8). With (too) smaller extent size, the major contention is on data block(1).

 
posted @ 2014-07-24 18:38  princessd8251  阅读(412)  评论(0编辑  收藏  举报