Oracle Performance Tuning Tools
Oracle Performance Tuning Tools
Performance tools can examine execution strategies and can be used for SQL tuning, the tools can give you a good estimate of resource usage used by the queries.
The common tuning tools are
- explain plan - lets you see the execution plan used by the query
- autotrace - automatically produces an execution plan when you execute any SQL.
- SQL trace - traces the execution of SQL statements
- TKPROF - formats the trace files into a readable form
- dbms_monitor - setup up end-to-end tracing
- Statspack - performance diagnosis tool
- AWR - automatic load repository
The explain plan lets you see the execution plan used by the optimizer when it executed your query, it is idea when you are using hints as you can see if the hint is being used or not. The output of the explain plan goes into a table called plan_table, the explain plan out will tell you
- The tables used in the query and the order in which they are accessed
- The operations performed on the output of each step of the plan.
- The specific access and join methods used for each table mentioned
- The cost of each operation.
To create your own explain plan you must execute a oracle script which will create the plan table where the output of the explain plan is stored.
Setting up explain plan | @$ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/admin/utlxplan.sql |
Creating the EXPLAIN plan | explain plan for select * from employees where lname = 'valle'; |
Display explain plan |
select * from plan_table (dbms_xplan.display); Note: i have used the dbms_xplan package in the above statement |
When reading the plan there are some principle to consider
- Each step in the plan returns output in the form of a set of rows to the parent step
- Read the plan outward starting from the line that is indented the most
- If two operations are at the same level in terms of indentation, read the top one first
- The numbering of the steps in the plan is misleading, start reading the plan output from inside out, read the most indented operations first
example |
select statement
|
Autotrace
The autotrace facility enables you to produce explain plans automatically when you execute a SQL statement. make sure that the plan table has been created (see above regarding running script utlxplan.sql).
Set privilege |
grant plustrace to vallep; Note: you can also grant to public |
Turn off | set autotrace off |
Turn on |
set autotrace on Note: this turns on explain and statistics |
Turn on explain | set autotrace {on|off|trace[only]} explain |
Turn on statistics | set autotrace {on|off|trace[only]} statistics |
Traceonly | set autotrace traceonly |
SQL Trace and TKPROF
SQL trace helps you trace the execution of SQL statements, TKPROF formats the output from the trace into a readable format. SQL trace enables you to track the following variables in a SQL statement
- CPU and elapsed times
- Parsed and execution counts for each SQL statement
- Number of physical and logical reads
- Execution plan for all the SQL statements
- Library cache hit ratios
The explain plan gives you important information regarding the access path that the optimizer used, the SQL trace gives you the breakdown of the resources used CPU and I/O.
Collecting trace statistics imposes a performance penalty, you can control the collection of statistics by two parameters
Turn on statistics collection | alter system set statistics_level = typical; alter system set statistics_level = all; |
Turn off statistics collection | alter system set statistics_level = basic; |
Turn on timed statistics |
alter system set time_statistics = true; Note: default is set to false, even if the statistics_level is set to basic (off) time statistics will be collected |
You can turn on tracing for both the session or instance level, remember that turning on for the instance will use a lot of disk space and system resources.
Instance | alter system set sql_trace = true; alter system set sql_trace = false; |
Session |
alter session set sql_trace = true; dbms_system.set_sql_trace_in_session(<sid><serial#>,true); |
The trace will create a file located in the user_dump_dest and will format the file as db_name_ora_nnnnn.trc, the file size will generally be much larger in size that other files in this area.
TKPROF uses the trace file along with the following parameters
FILENAME | input trace file |
EXPLAIN | the explain plan for the SQL statement |
RECORD | creates a SQL script with all the nonrecursive SQL statements |
WAITS | Records a summary of wait events |
SORT | Presents sort data based on one or more items |
TABLE | The name of the table TKPROF temporarily puts the executions plans |
SYS | Enables and disables listing SQL statements issued by SYS |
Lists only a specified number of SQL statements instead of all statements | |
INSERT | Creates scripts that stores the trace information in the database. |
TKPROF examples |
tkprof finance_ora_16340.trc test.txt sys=no explain=y Note: the output will be dumped into the test.txt file |
End-to-End Tracing
By using a new attribute client_identifier you can trace a users session through multiple database sessions. you use the package dbms_monitor or OEM to setup the tracing. You require three attributes to trace the session
- Client Identifier
- Service Name
- Combination of service name, module name and action name.
Below is an example on how to use the end-to-end tracing
setup the service name, module name, action name and the client id |
dbms_monitor.serv_mod_act_trace_enable ( dbms_monitor.client_id_trace_enable ( |
set the UID using a trigger |
create or replace trigger logon_trigger |
Obtain the sid and serial# | dbms_monitor.session_trace_enable ( session_id => 111, serial_num => 23, waits => true, binds => false ); |
Combine the multiple trace files in one file | c:\> trcsess output="vallep.trc" service="myservice" module="batch_job" action="batch_insert" |
run TKPROF against the consolidated file |
c:\> tkprof vallep.trc output=vallep.rpt sort=(EXELA, PRSELA, FCHELA) Note: there are many options to the sort parameter please see the Oracle documentation for more information. EXELA - elapsed time executing |
Inefficient SQL
You can use the view v$sql to find inefficient SQL code, the view gathers important information regarding the disk reads and memory reads for a SQL statement. This view holds information on statements since startup, it also ages out older statements. The view will give you information on the following
- rows_processed - total number of rows processed by the statement
- sql_text - the SQL text of the statement (first 1,000 characters)
- buffer_gets - total number of logical reads (high CPU use)
- disk_reads - total number of disk reads (high I/O use)
- sorts - number of sort for the statement (high sort ratios)
- cpu_time - total parse and execution time
- elapsed_time - elapsed parse and execution time
- parse_calls - combined soft and hard parse calls
- executions - number of times the statement was executed
- loads - number of times the statement was flushed out of the shared pool then reloaded
- sharable_memory - total memory used by the shared cursor
- persistant_memory - total persistent memory used by the cursor
- runtime_memory - total runtime memory used by the cursor
High disk reads | select sql_text, executions, buffer_gets, disk_reads from v$sql where buffer_gets > 100000 or disk_reads > 100000 order by buffer_gets + 100 * disk_reads desc; |
High disk reads and parsed calls and row processed | select sql_text, rows_processed, buffer_gets, disk_reads, parsed_calls from v$sql where buffer_gets > 100000 or disk_reads > 100000 order by buffer_gets + 100 * disk_reads desc; |
TOP 5 CU time and elapsed time | select sql_text, executions, round(elapsed_time/1000000, 2) elapsed_seconds, round(cpu_time/1000000, 2) cpu_secs from (select * from v£sql order by elapsed_time desc) where rownum < 6; |
SQL Tuning Advisor
When you have identified bad SQL, you can use the SQL tuning advisor to perform an in depth analysis to come up with a better execution plan.
See the Advisors for more detailed information.
Statspack
Statspack is a diagnostic tool that captures and stores the V$ table information and allows you generate reports at a later date, although it has been replaced with AWR many dba's still use this tool, I will only give a brief overview of this tool as you will more than likely start using the AWR tool as its now Oracle preferred method of collecting statistics.
To install statspack you simply run the following as sys with sysdba privilege "$oracle_home\rdbms\admin\spcreate.sql", you can use "spdrop.sql" to remove it. The install script will ask you three pieces of information
- The PERFSTAT user password
- The default tablespace that you will use for the PERFSTAT schema
- The default temporary tablespace that you will use for the PERFSTAT schema
Once the installation has finished check the "spcpkg.lis" file for any errors, the below commands can be run to obtain snapshots and generate reports.
Create snapshot | exec statspack.snap |
Run report |
@$oracle_home\rdbms\admin\spreport.sql Note: when you run the report it will ask for two snapshot points to compare. |
AWR
See AWR for more information on how to setup and how to run reports.