Posts Tagged internals
Size, Yes Its Different
Posted by Aman Sharma in internals on April 14, 2010
Some times, there is an assumption about things. And as with assumption always, its mostly not true. Still, we do believe on those assumptions and spread them as well , not caring that it may happen that the things are not the way you know them or have read them anywhere! I had a similar sort of discussion few days back with some guys and one of the discussions did end up as a matter of small confusion. This small note is about that confusion’s answer!
I have met many oracle dba’s arguing that the standard block size set at the time of the database creation is the size which is applicable to all the types of the files. So if you have a block size of 8kb, this would be size of your datafiles, control files and also of the log files. This sounds reasonable as well since besides setting the value for the Oracle block size, you don’t have option to mention any other kind of block size as well. So if you are setting a value of it, this should be applicable to all the database files. And this was the topic of discussion as well between me and few delegates! The answer of this doubt is a No actually! Oracle’s standard block size is applicable to only the datafiles. The redo log files and the control files use a different block size. Yes, the block size used by them is not shown in any of the views( things have changed a little from 11.1 onwards) so even if there would be any other value for the blocks, that is not visible. So let’s first check the size used in the datafiles. We shall check the values in 10.2 and 11.1 databases (10201, 11106) running on Windows XP Professional. First data files on 10g,
Connected to: Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Production With the Partitioning, OLAP and Data Mining options SQL> select file#,block_size from V$datafile; FILE# BLOCK_SIZE ---------- ---------- 1 8192 2 8192 3 8192 4 8192 5 8192 6 8192 7 8192 SQL> sho parameter block_size NAME TYPE VALUE ------------------------------------ ----------- ----------- db_block_size integer 8192 SQL>
And now the same for 11.1,
Connected to: Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.1.0.6.0 - Production With the Partitioning, OLAP, Data Mining and Real Application Testing options SQL> select file#, block_size from V$datafile; FILE# BLOCK_SIZE ---------- ---------- 1 8192 2 8192 3 8192 4 8192 5 8192 6 8192 7 8192 7 rows selected. SQL> sho parameter block_size NAME TYPE VALUE ------------------------------------ ----------- ------- db_block_size integer 8192
And this surely matches with what we have set in the parameter DB_BLOCK_SIZE!
Now, the issue is how do we check the block size used by the redo log files? In 10g, there is no provision given by oracle in the external view(s) to see this!
BANNER ---------------------------------------------------------------- Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Prod PL/SQL Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Production CORE 10.2.0.1.0 Production TNS for 32-bit Windows: Version 10.2.0.1.0 - Production NLSRTL Version 10.2.0.1.0 - Production SQL> desc V$log; Name Null? Type ----------------------------------------- -------- -------------------- GROUP# NUMBER THREAD# NUMBER SEQUENCE# NUMBER BYTES NUMBER MEMBERS NUMBER ARCHIVED VARCHAR2(3) STATUS VARCHAR2(16) FIRST_CHANGE# NUMBER FIRST_TIME DATE SQL> desc V$logfile Name Null? Type ----------------------------------------- -------- -------------------- GROUP# NUMBER STATUS VARCHAR2(7) TYPE VARCHAR2(7) MEMBER VARCHAR2(513) IS_RECOVERY_DEST_FILE VARCHAR2(3)
SQL>
But the size is indeed shown in an internal table, X$KCCRT( Kernel Cache Current Redo Thread). I am not going to show all the columns of this table but only that one which would be having the “log block size” .
SQL> select lebsz from X$kccle; LEBSZ ---------- 512 512 512
Yes, this is the size of the redo log block in which the LGWR writes into the log files. So this is indeed not true that the standard block size is applicable to the redo log files. This size basically is picked by Oracle based on the physical block size given by the media. We have the 512byte of the physical block size available and that’s the same is used by the redo log files. Still, you should check this on your own box! Surely enough, there is no need to change this size or play around with it! In 11g(11.1), this is the same output that you would be getting from oracle as there is no change that’s there in 11.1 for this nomenclature. Here is an output from 11.1 system,
BANNER -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.1.0.6.0 - Production PL/SQL Release 11.1.0.6.0 - Production CORE 11.1.0.6.0 Production TNS for 32-bit Windows: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production NLSRTL Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production SQL> select lebsz from x$kccle; LEBSZ ---------- 512 512 512 SQL> desc V$log Name Null? Type ----------------------------------------- -------- ---------------------------- GROUP# NUMBER THREAD# NUMBER SEQUENCE# NUMBER BYTES NUMBER MEMBERS NUMBER ARCHIVED VARCHAR2(3) STATUS VARCHAR2(16) FIRST_CHANGE# NUMBER FIRST_TIME DATE SQL> desc V$logfile Name Null? Type ----------------------------------------- -------- ---------------------------- GROUP# NUMBER STATUS VARCHAR2(7) TYPE VARCHAR2(7) MEMBER VARCHAR2(513) IS_RECOVERY_DEST_FILE VARCHAR2(3)
The output varies a little from 11.2 onwards where to check the redo log block, you won’t need to check any internal table but the same would be shown in the standard V$log. Since I don’t have 11.2 running with me on this machine so here is an excerpt from docs for the same,
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E11882_01/server.112/e10820/dynviews_2030.htm#REFRN30127
You can see a new column sized called BLOCKSIZE which can have two values, 512 or 4096! Hang on a sec, two values? How that’s possible? The answer of that lies in a change that has started to come in the way our hard disks.
The standard physical sector size supported by the hard drives was always 512byte. This was( and still is) the same size of the block that was picked by redo log files as explained above. Since there are more bigger and faster media solutions available now, the hardware vendors have started moving from 512 byte physical block sized disks to 4kb physical block sized disks! Surely enough, this would increase the capability of underlying systems to do a more larger chunk of IOs in both reading and writing. But for this, there remains one hurdle that if the oracle files are still going to be using the 512byte sector sized block, this optimization from the hard disk vendors won’t bear any fruit since the IO would be still limited to the underlying block size of the redo log file which would be still 512byte. To overcome this, from 11.2 onwards, Oracle supports the 4kb sector disk drives and offers two modes of the working, Emulation mode and Native mode for the block size support of the redo log files. You can read about it here,
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E11882_01/server.112/e10881/chapter1.htm#FEATURENO08747
Oracle is capable to detect what’s the size of the physical block offered by the disk and accordingly, the redo log block size is picked up. And this was the right thing to do in the past as well since there was no requirement to do any kind of tuning to this behavior as well as there was no other option available from the physical disk as well. But since now the vendors have started shipping disks with 4kb disks as well, so the support for the same must come both from Oracle and from the operating systems as well. Here is a support note from Microsoft about the same,
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/923332
The same support is offered by Oracle from 11.2 onwards where two new clauses are introduced for the same, sector_size and blocksize. The SECTOR_SIZE clause is added while you are working with the ASM(without ACFS) i.e. when you are creating a diskgroup, you can mention that what would be the size of the block used by that disk group. Oracle docs explain this in a good manner here,
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E11882_01/server.112/e10500/asmdiskgrps.htm#OSTMG10203
The BLOCKSIZE support is offered from 11.2 while creating the log files. Now, you can mention that what should be the size of the redo log block on the underlying disk which supports either 4kb or 512 byte sized sector. If you are going to use 512 byte sized sector on a 4kb sector disk, this would be a non-good approach actually. So if you do know that you have a disk supporting 4kb sized sector, its advisable to use the same while creating the redo log files as well. For the same, 11.2 docs have this section added,
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E11882_01/server.112/e10595/onlineredo002.htm#ADMIN12891
Emulation mode is the mode where the physical block size offered by the vendor is 4kb but the sized used by the redo log files is still 512byte only. This would be considered as a logical size where 8 logical sectors of 512 byte would map to one physical sector of 4096 bytes. As I said above, this would be a non-good approach. The better option would be to use the same size at both disk and within the file. There is another type of the mode offered called Native mode where the logical and physical size of the sector would be the same.
Oracle recommends that the block size used by the redo logs should match with the physical sector and the size of the data block should be either equivalent of multiple of the physical sector size. This optimization does “not” get applied to the control files which won’t experience any chance in their working since they don’t use either the standard block size or the redo log block size. Didn’t I say so already
?
Unlike the redo log and data files, control files use a standard block size of 16kb irrespective of what is offered from the media. Again, this is not shown from the standard control file views so we need to go a step ahead and check the table, X$KCCCF( Kernel Cache Current Control File). Let’s check this table on both 10.2 and 11.1 versions,
SQL> select * from V$version; BANNER ---------------------------------------------------------------- Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Prod PL/SQL Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Production CORE 10.2.0.1.0 Production TNS for 32-bit Windows: Version 10.2.0.1.0 - Production NLSRTL Version 10.2.0.1.0 - Production SQL> select cfbsz from X$kcccf; CFBSZ ---------- 16384 16384 16384 SQL> sho parameter control NAME TYPE VALUE ------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------ control_file_record_keep_time integer 7 control_files string E:\ORACLE\PRODUCT\10.2.0\ORADA TA\ORCL\CONTROL01.CTL, E:\ORAC LE\PRODUCT\10.2.0\ORADATA\ORCL \CONTROL02.CTL, E:\ORACLE\PROD UCT\10.2.0\ORADATA\ORCL\CONTRO L03.CTL
What we are seeing is that there are three control files in my db and all are using 16kb as the block size. Let’s check on 11.1 now,
SQL> select * from V$version; BANNER -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.1.0.6.0 - Production PL/SQL Release 11.1.0.6.0 - Production CORE 11.1.0.6.0 Production TNS for 32-bit Windows: Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production NLSRTL Version 11.1.0.6.0 - Production SQL> select cfbsz from x$kcccf; CFBSZ ---------- 16384 16384 16384 SQL> sho parameter control NAME TYPE VALUE ------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------ control_file_record_keep_time integer 7 control_files string E:\APP\ARISTADBA\ORADATA\ORCL1 11G\CONTROL01.CTL, E:\APP\ARIS TADBA\ORADATA\ORCL111G\CONTROL 02.CTL, E:\APP\ARISTADBA\ORADA TA\ORCL111G\CONTROL03.CTL control_management_pack_access string DIAGNOSTIC+TUNING
Which shows the same output with 3 files and a 16kb block size! This is sort of hardcoded only and won’t change even if you are going to use a disk which supports variable sector sizes.
To conclude, its good to believe on rumors but its more better to check their authentication since 9/10 times, rumors are just what they are, rumors! Sounds like a great punch line right
!
Special thanks to Jared for pointing and correcting a typo in the post
Select For Update A DML, Yes It Is….
Posted by Aman Sharma in internals on August 27, 2009
Okay, if you think that what the heck, this guy didn’t know this much even, well, its true. I didn’t know or to save myself, I would say, I did know what Select For Updat does , like it locks the rows and so on, but didn’t relate to the redo part. So when I came to know about it reading this thread(thanks to Mark) today I tested it out, it appears to be true. So before I would forget about it, I thought to store it here. If you already knew, refresh your memories, if not , keep it in memory
.
A Select statement is merely meant to select the data from the table, that’s it, plain and simple. It doesn’t do anything else. It doesn’t generate any undo and redo in normal conditions but for a delayed block cleanout, it may generate redo as well. There are no locks which are acquired by it , there is nothing which gets changed. Yes it may look for the Snapshot Blocks if there are DMLs happening on the data which it is looking for but that’s it. Other than all this, it behaves properly
.
Select for update statement, is a cousin of Select only but it is not that simple as like its sibling. With For Update added , Oracle has to make sure that the candidate rows must be locked. And this means, for all the rows being effected, the lock byte of them would get locked , including the segment also whose row we are going to hit. This means, Select For Update is actually not just a select statement but its a DML which actually would start a transaction, lock the rows, generate redo for changing their lock records and also would require a rollback explicitly given to get those locks released. Have a look,
<code>
SQL> select * from v$version;
BANNER
—————————————————————-
Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0 – Prod
PL/SQL Release 10.2.0.1.0 – Production
CORE 10.2.0.1.0 Production
TNS for Linux: Version 10.2.0.1.0 – Production
NLSRTL Version 10.2.0.1.0 – Production
SQL> create table testredo as select * from all_objects;
Table created.
SQL> set autot trace stat
SQL> select * from testredo;
49714 rows selected.
Statistics
———————————————————-
288 recursive calls
0 db block gets
4041 consistent gets
683 physical reads
0 redo size
5337330 bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
36839 bytes received via SQL*Net from client
3316 SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
0 sorts (memory)
0 sorts (disk)
49714 rows processed
SQL> /
49714 rows selected.
Statistics
———————————————————-
0 recursive calls
0 db block gets
3956 consistent gets
0 physical reads
0 redo size
5337330 bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
36839 bytes received via SQL*Net from client
3316 SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
0 sorts (memory)
0 sorts (disk)
49714 rows processed
</code>
There was no requirement for running the same select twice, I just ran it to ensure me that nothing fishy is going on
.
So there is no redo with the normal select. Let’s try out For Update now,
<code>
SQL> select * from testredo for update;
49714 rows selected.
Statistics
———————————————————-
771 recursive calls
50738 db block gets
4862 consistent gets
1 physical reads
10369188 redo size
4444384 bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
36839 bytes received via SQL*Net from client
3316 SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
4 sorts (memory)
0 sorts (disk)
49714 rows processed
WHOOOAAA! There is a lot of redo. Let’s see if there is some transaction record that we have got,
SQL> select * from V$locked_object;
XIDUSN XIDSLOT XIDSQN OBJECT_ID SESSION_ID
———- ———- ———- ———- ———-
ORACLE_USERNAME OS_USER_NAME PROCESS
—————————— —————————— ————
LOCKED_MODE
———–
9 8 364 52533 159
AMAN oracle 4989
3
SQL> select xidusn,xidslot,xidsqn from V$transaction;
XIDUSN XIDSLOT XIDSQN
———- ———- ———-
9 8 364
SQL>
</code>
So there is indeed a transaction which got recorded and there is surely a lock that’s there on the object also. Let’s finish it off,
<code>
SQL>roll;
Rollback Complete
SQL> select * from V$locked_object;
no rows selected
SQL> select * from V$transaction;
no rows selected
SQL> set autot trace stat
SQL> select * from testredo;
49714 rows selected.
Statistics
———————————————————-
0 recursive calls
0 db block gets
3956 consistent gets
1 physical reads
0 redo size
5337330 bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
36839 bytes received via SQL*Net from client
3316 SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
0 sorts (memory)
0 sorts (disk)
49714 rows processed
SQL>
</code>
So we are back to from where we started.
A small but good learning , at least for me, thanks to Mark and Charles for their explanation over the the original thread.
Conclusion, think more deeply about something. At times, just knowing about the concept is not enough
. And yes, just for the record, select for update is a DML statement, not just a normal select , that’s the actual conclusion right
!
Fixed Table Definitions, A New Learning….
Posted by Aman Sharma in internals on March 5, 2009
Whenever I used to find out the info of any fixed table(x$) I used to do this by a workaround. I used to set the trace, run the query and see the table’s name. For example, if we are looking for the V$log’s fixed table name so I would do something like that ,
SQL> select * from V$log;
Execution Plan
———————————————————-
Plan hash value: 2536105608
——————————————————————————–
————
| Id | Operation | Name | Rows | Bytes | Cost (%CPU)
| Time |
——————————————————————————–
————
| 0 | SELECT STATEMENT | | 1 | 185 | 0 (0)
| 00:00:01 |
| 1 | NESTED LOOPS | | 1 | 185 | 0 (0)
| 00:00:01 |
|* 2 | FIXED TABLE FULL | X$KCCLE | 1 | 136 | 0 (0)
| 00:00:01 |
|* 3 | FIXED TABLE FIXED INDEX| X$KCCRT (ind:1) | 1 | 49 | 0 (0)
| 00:00:01 |
——————————————————————————–
————
A New Learning, IMU & Private Redo Strand….
Posted by Aman Sharma in internals on February 11, 2009
There are very few things that I know but there are tons of things which I don’t know. I came across one more such thing like this few days ago when this question (http://forums.oracle.com/forums/thread.jspa?messageID=2713561�) came over OTN. Interestingly, what the OP mentioned was indeed true and I was not having a clue what’s going on. Like most of the times, JL had an answer to the puzzle and he gave a lead. This blog post is not about any “new” invention that I have done. Its merely a collection of my understanding about a new mechanism in >10g SGAs. So with this note ,let’s get the party started.
Dirty Buffers & Redo Log Buffer
In Oracle buffer cache, buffers stay in multiple states. When a buffer is not changed and is just available for use, it’s a clean buffer. When the buffer encounters a change, the buffer status is marked as Dirty buffer. This status is used by Oracle to provide read-consistancy for the other users who would access the same buffer but when the transaction is alive. In simple terms, a dirty buffer is that one who got an image in it which is not the one when it was brought into the cache. Oracle maintains for this dirty buffer, CR(consistent read) buffers aka snapshot blocks which provide read conistancy for the others.
The change vectors for this buffer are also logged in the redo log buffer before they get applied to the actual buffers(write ahead logging) , using which Oracle maintains this assurance that no matter what, if we have the data in the log buffer, its safe. The data in the log buffer is written by LGWR to the redo log files. Once there, its permanently saved and hence protected against any crash.
In order to log changes in the log buffer, oracle typically follows this process
1) A calculation is done that how much space would be needed in the log buffer.
2) Server process acquires Redo Copy Latch. This is used for making the announcement that some redo will be copied into the log buffer.
3) Acquires Redo Allocation Latch. This is the actual latch which will allocate the space in the log buffer.
4) Redo Allocation Latch is released after the space is acquired in the log buffer.
5) Redo copy latch is used to copy the redo change vectors in the log buffers.
6) Redo copy latch is released.
After the copy is copy is complete and applying them over the buffers in the buffer cache, depending upon various conditions, LGWR may start writing the contents into the log files. How many latches we have got have at the moment for our database can be seen from V$latch_childeren. Here is an output from my 11gr1 machine.
1 select latch#,child#,name from V$latch_children
2* where name like ‘%redo%’ order by 1,2
SQL> /
LATCH# CHILD# NAME
———- ———- —————————————————————-
169 1 redo copy
169 2 redo copy
169 3 redo copy
169 4 redo copy
170 1 redo allocation
170 2 redo allocation
170 3 redo allocation
170 4 redo allocation
170 5 redo allocation
170 6 redo allocation
170 7 redo allocation
170 8 redo allocation
170 9 redo allocation
170 10 redo allocation
170 11 redo allocation
170 12 redo allocation
170 13 redo allocation
170 14 redo allocation
170 15 redo allocation
170 16 redo allocation
170 17 redo allocation
170 18 redo allocation
170 19 redo allocation
170 20 redo allocation
24 rows selected.
With heavy processing, lots of redo being generated, there may be a contention over the redo allocation latches. So for this purpose, there was a parameter Log_parallelism( http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B10501_01/server.920/a96536/ch1105.htm#REFRN10099) in 9i which could be used to make the redo generation go more faster. This would separate the log buffer into further small buffers. This parameter is only till 9i and from 10.1 onwards its deprecated(http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B28359_01/server.111/b28300/changes.htm#UPGRD12575) as in 10g, the mechanism is changed ( and is the actual topic of this post) which handles the excessive redo workload.
So the moral of the story so far comes up is that when we change some thing in the buffer cache, the change is protected in the log buffer. To do this two latches are majorly used. The changes in the log buffer are protected in the physical log files by LGWR.
You must be thinking that that is this the replica of docs or what? Well certainly, it’s the basics and I thought before I forget all this, I must write it down and this talks about the terms which will be coming up a little later in the post. So chill J. Told you its not any new invention but collection
.
What’s Wrong With All This
Well actually nothing much. This is some this which is happening since the inception of Oracle I believe. Some things came and go but in nutshell things remained the same. This allocation of latches and other stuff did prove to be fine but as they all good things come to an end, this also needed some modifications. As with the workloads being more heavy and with much bigger databases and higher transaction rates, it becomes too tough to manage the redo allocations using latches. Clearly for the reasons that are well documented in PT guide that with lots of redo, the latches required to copy the redo data in the log buffer come under contention and so does the LGWR process too. There is a workaround to invoke multiple slaves for LGWR for heavy systems but that too is not some thing which is not recommended as long as not fully benchmarked. Surely there are tons of guidelines that are there for users in order to make transactions small, have a good media where redo can stay and so on but they can be applied to a certain level. So there was a need for things to be modified from the grass root level and that’s what happened in 10g(10.1) onwards.
A Strange Output
With the Dirty Buffers discussion given above, you must be clear about the idea about them. So here is small table creation and modification and we would see some dirty buffers getting created,
SQL> select * from V$version;
BANNER
——————————————————————————–
Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.1.0.6.0 – Production
PL/SQL Release 11.1.0.6.0 – Production
CORE 11.1.0.6.0 Production
TNS for 32-bit Windows: Version 11.1.0.6.0 – Production
NLSRTL Version 11.1.0.6.0 – Production
SQL> alter system flush buffer_cache;
System altered.
SQL> create table t(a number)
2 /
Table created.
SQL> SELECT b.status, object_name, object_type, dirty “Dirty” FROM v$bh b, dba_objects o
2 WHERE b.objd = o.data_object_id AND o.owner = ‘AMAN’ and object_name=’T’;
STATUS OBJECT_NAME
———- ———————————————————————————–
———
OBJECT_TYPE D
——————- -
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
SQL> insert into t values(1);
1 row created.
SQL> SELECT b.status, object_name, object_type, dirty “Dirty” FROM v$bh b, dba_objects o
2 WHERE b.objd = o.data_object_id AND o.owner = ‘AMAN’ and object_name=’T’;
STATUS OBJECT_NAME
———- ———————————————————————————–
———
OBJECT_TYPE D
——————- -
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE N
xcur T
TABLE N
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE N
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE N
xcur T
TABLE N
8 rows selected.
SQL>
SQL> commit;
Commit complete.
SQL> SELECT b.status, object_name, object_type, dirty “Dirty” FROM v$bh b, dba_objects o
2 WHERE b.objd = o.data_object_id AND o.owner = ‘AMAN’ and object_name=’T’;
STATUS OBJECT_NAME
———- —————————————————————————–
———
OBJECT_TYPE D
——————- -
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
xcur T
TABLE Y
8 rows selected.
SQL>
Well if you have seen the output with a little care, you must have seen that even when we have given the dmp(insert in this case) there were no buffers which were marked dirty. Oracle did acquire some buffers to keep our changes but they were not marked dirty. But when we issued commit, all the buffers were marked dirty. Why so?
The New SGA Of IMU/ Private Redo Strands
Due to the reasons mentioned above for the allocation and redo latch contentions, from 10.1 onwards, Oracle has introduced private redo allocation areas and In memory Undo.
IMU(In Memory Undo)
With the same reason that Oracle needs to protect redo, it also has to protect Undo to make sure that the block’s old contents are also saved. This would require an access to the blocks and than later on change the transaction table to make the changes logged. The transaction records can be seen from V$transaction. In order to access undo segment header blocks directly, we can also check X$KTUXE and for the base table of V$transaction, X$KTCXB can be used. From oracle 10g onwards, Oracle does use the Undo blocks but makes them available in private memory areas which are specifically created in the Shared Pool. Each pool is containing Undo data of a transaction. Undo data is updated into the segment header but not into the undo blocks. For maintaining them, in the shared pool , memory areas are configured which are used to protect the undo that is coming up. These are controlled by two parameters _in_memory_undo and _imu_pools. Both can be seen from the base tables x$ksppi and x$ksppcv2
SQL> l
1 select KSPFTCTXDVL,kspftctxdf,ksppinm
2 from x$ksppcv2 a,x$ksppi b
3* where a.indx=b.indx and b.ksppinm like ‘%imu%’
SQL> column KSPFTCTXDVL format a10
SQL> /
KSPFTCTXDV KSPFTC KSPPINM
———- —— —————————————————
2 TRUE _simulator_upper_bound_multiple
16 TRUE _simulator_pin_inval_maxcnt
10240 TRUE _simulator_lru_rebalance_thresh
5 TRUE _simulator_lru_rebalance_sizthr
8192 TRUE _simulator_bucket_mindelta
8 TRUE _simulator_lru_scan_count
10 TRUE _simulator_internal_bound
1024 TRUE _simulator_reserved_obj_count
4096 TRUE _simulator_reserved_heap_count
2 TRUE _simulator_sampling_factor
0 TRUE _simulate_mem_transfer
0 TRUE _db_writer_flush_imu
0 TRUE _minimum_giga_scn
1800 TRUE _log_simultaneous_copies
d:\oracle\ FALSE _allow_error_simulation
flash_reco
very_area
SLFLUSH TRUE _gc_policy_minimum
FALSE TRUE _gc_maximum_bids
TRUE TRUE _minimum_db_flashback_retention
600 TRUE _recursive_imu_transactions
TRUE TRUE _smu_error_simulation_site
TRUE TRUE _smu_error_simulation_type
0 TRUE _imu_pools
10 TRUE _minimum_blocks_to_shrink
TRUE TRUE _minimum_extents_to_shrink
RUN_TIME TRUE _plsql_minimum_cache_hit_percent
25 rows selected.
And
SQL> l
1 select KSPFTCTXDVL,kspftctxdf,KSPFTCTXVL,KSPFTCTXIS,ksppinm
2 from x$ksppcv2 a,x$ksppi b
3* where a.indx=b.indx and b.ksppinm like ‘%undo%’
SQL> /
KSPFTCTXDV KSPFTC KSPFTCTXVL KSPFTC KSPPINM
———- —— ———- —— ——————–
FALSE TRUE FALSE FALSE _gc_undo_affinity
AUTO TRUE AUTO FALSE _gc_dissolve_undo_af
finity
TRUE TRUE TRUE FALSE _gc_initiate_undo_af
finity
0 TRUE 0 FALSE _gc_undo_block_disk_
reads
TRUE FALSE _undo_block_compress
ion
TRUE FALSE undo_management
TRUE FALSE undo_tablespace
100 TRUE 100 FALSE _collect_undo_stats
0 TRUE 0 FALSE _undo_debug_mode
0 TRUE 0 FALSE _verify_undo_quota
TRUE FALSE _in_memory_undo
FALSE TRUE FALSE FALSE _undo_autotune
FALSE TRUE FALSE FALSE undo_retention
0 TRUE 0 FALSE _undo_debug_usage
0 TRUE 0 FALSE _smon_undo_seg_resca
n_limit
0 TRUE 0 FALSE _optimizer_undo_cost
_change
TRUE TRUE TRUE FALSE _optimizer_undo_chan
ges
17 rows selected.
Each pool is maintained by a latch and that is called “in memory undo latch”. They can be seen from V$latch_children
SQL> select name from V$latch_children where name like ‘%undo%’;
NAME
—————————————————————-
undo global data
undo global data
undo global data
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
In memory undo latch
21 rows selected.
We can see that in the shared pool, regarding Undo,there are several structures available.
SQL> select pool,name from V$sgastat where pool=’shared pool’ and lower(name) like ‘%undo%’;
POOL NAME
———— ————————–
shared pool UNDO INFO SEGMENTED ARRAY
KCB undo bitvec
Undo Meta Data
Auto tune undo info
UNDO INFO
KTI-UNDO
UNDO INFO HASH
UNDO STAT INFO
The IMU pools are allocated in the shared pool. The data that we change gets copied to these pools from a latch called In memory Undo latch. We can see it here from V$latch,
SQL> select name from V$latch where name like ‘%undo%’;
NAME
—————————————————————-
undo global data
corrupted undo seg lock
In memory undo latch
When we modify the data, oracle doesn’t apply the data to the data blocks immediately but It allocates the data in the IMU pools in the shared pool with the help of this IMU latch. This mechanism avoids the pinning of the Undo segment header block and also to the undo data blocks which are otherwise used immediately when the transaction starts. Now they are only used when the transaction commits. The data is in the pool and from there only it gets copied to the buffer cache. As each pool is assigned to one transaction and is maintained by an individual latch, the mechanism works well to reduce the contention. I am still not clear that with a very very heavy OLTP environment, what would happen? Are the pools increased at that time or not, or some thing else happens, I am not sure.
The IMU pools are also described in the X$ktifp. The size of the pools are 65kb and can be seen as follows,
SQL> select ktifpno,ktifppsi from x$ktifp;
KTIFPNO KTIFPPSI
———- ———-
0 65535
1 65535
2 65535
3 65535
4 65535
5 65535
6 65535
7 65535
8 65535
9 65535
10 65535
KTIFPNO KTIFPPSI
———- ———-
11 65535
12 65535
13 65535
14 65535
15 65535
16 65535
17 65535
18 rows selected.
So there are 18 pools allocated and are of 65kb each in size. This undo data is “flushed” to the undo segments when the pools are full. This write happens in the batch format. There are events when the data in the IMU pools gets flushed. These events are mentioned in the base table x$ktiff. We can see the reasons here,
SQL> l
1 select KTIFFCAT, KTIFFFLC
2* from x$ktiff
SQL> /
KTIFFCAT KTIFFFLC
—————————————- ———-
Undo pool overflow flushes 1
Stack cv flushes 9
Multi-block undo flushes 0
Max. chgs flushes 2
NTP flushes 0
Contention flushes 9
Redo pool overflow flushes 0
Logfile space flushes 0
Multiple persistent buffer flushes 0
Bind time flushes 0
Rollback flushes 335
Commit flushes 1570
Recursive txn flushes 2
Redo only CR flushes 0
Ditributed txn flushes 0
Set txn use rbs flushes 0
Bitmap state change flushes 21
Presumed commit violation 0
Securefile direct-write lob update flush 0
es
19 rows selected.
We can see with simple DML that data is being changed and IMU is being flushed.
In session 1, I made a table,
C:\Documents and Settings\Aman>sqlplus / as sysdba
SQL*Plus: Release 11.1.0.6.0 – Production on Sat Aug 30 11:42:21 2008
Copyright (c) 1982, 2007, Oracle. All rights reserved.
Connected to:
Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.1.0.6.0 – Production
With the Partitioning, Oracle Label Security, OLAP, Data Mining,
Oracle Database Vault and Real Application Testing options
SQL> create table a as select * from dba_objects;
Table created.
SQL>
And in session 2(the same session from where we saw the events),
SQL> /
KTIFFCAT KTIFFFLC
—————————————- ———-
Undo pool overflow flushes 1
Stack cv flushes 9
Multi-block undo flushes 0
Max. chgs flushes 2
NTP flushes 0
Contention flushes 9
Redo pool overflow flushes 0
Logfile space flushes 0
Multiple persistent buffer flushes 0
Bind time flushes 0
Rollback flushes 338
Commit flushes 1592
Recursive txn flushes 2
Redo only CR flushes 0
Ditributed txn flushes 0
Set txn use rbs flushes 0
Bitmap state change flushes 21
Presumed commit violation 0
Securefile direct-write lob update flush 0
es
19 rows selected.
And in session 1,
SQL> select n.name, s.value from v$statname n, v$sesstat s
2 where n.statistic# = s.statistic#
3 and s.sid = (select sid from v$mystat where rownum = 1)
4 and n.name in (’IMU Flushes’,’IMU commits’);
NAME VALUE
—————————————————————- ———-
IMU commits 0
IMU Flushes 0
SQL>
We do some change in the data in session 1,
SQL> insert into a select * from a;
68864 rows created.
SQL> select n.name, s.value from v$statname n, v$sesstat s
2 where n.statistic# = s.statistic#
3 and s.sid = (select sid from v$mystat where rownum = 1)
4 and n.name in (’IMU Flushes’,’IMU commits’);
NAME VALUE
—————————————————————- ———-
IMU commits 0
IMU Flushes 1
And we have got a flush happened as the data generated is too much big. Lets see in session 2,
SQL> /
KTIFFCAT KTIFFFLC
—————————————- ———-
Undo pool overflow flushes 1
Stack cv flushes 9
Multi-block undo flushes 0
Max. chgs flushes 2
NTP flushes 0
Contention flushes 9
Redo pool overflow flushes 1
Logfile space flushes 0
Multiple persistent buffer flushes 0
Bind time flushes 0
Rollback flushes 353
Commit flushes 1654
Recursive txn flushes 2
Redo only CR flushes 0
Ditributed txn flushes 0
Set txn use rbs flushes 0
Bitmap state change flushes 21
Presumed commit violation 0
Securefile direct-write lob update flush 0
es
19 rows selected.
After some more changes in session 1,
SQL> insert into a select * from a;
137728 rows created.
SQL> where n.statistic# = s.statistic#
SP2-0734: unknown command beginning “where n.st…” – rest of line ignored.
SQL> select n.name, s.value from v$statname n, v$sesstat s
2 where n.statistic# = s.statistic#
3 and s.sid = (select sid from v$mystat where rownum = 1)
4 and n.name in (’IMU Flushes’,’IMU commits’);
NAME VALUE
—————————————————————- ———-
IMU commits 0
IMU Flushes 1
SQL> commit;
Commit complete.
SQL> select n.name, s.value from v$statname n, v$sesstat s
2 where n.statistic# = s.statistic#
3 and s.sid = (select sid from v$mystat where rownum = 1)
4 and n.name in (’IMU Flushes’,’IMU commits’);
NAME VALUE
—————————————————————- ———-
IMU commits 0
IMU Flushes 1
SQL>
We see again session 1,
SQL> /
KTIFFCAT KTIFFFLC
—————————————- ———-
Undo pool overflow flushes 1
Stack cv flushes 9
Multi-block undo flushes 0
Max. chgs flushes 2
NTP flushes 0
Contention flushes 10
Redo pool overflow flushes 1
Logfile space flushes 0
Multiple persistent buffer flushes 0
Bind time flushes 0
Rollback flushes 359
Commit flushes 1688
Recursive txn flushes 2
Redo only CR flushes 0
Ditributed txn flushes 0
Set txn use rbs flushes 0
Bitmap state change flushes 21
Presumed commit violation 0
Securefile direct-write lob update flush 0
es
19 rows selected.
SQL>
This is worth to mention that the same kind of mechanism was introduced by Oracle earlier with the help of Discrete Transaction Management,http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B10501_01/server.920/a96524/c17trans.htm#421
But this didn’t work out too well as the DTM used to pin the data blocks during the transaction. When the transaction used to get committed than the data was written to the redo logs. In private redo, no pinning of the data blocks is done. Hence they are much better than DTM. DTM is obsolete now.
Private Redo Strands( Private Redo )
Earlier there was a single redo allocation latch available for the entire log buffer. This was a major contention point as till the time one won’t be able to pin the latch, he wont be able to write his changed redo vectors in the log buffer. From 10.1 onwards, the log buffer is broken in to smaller sub-buffers called Private Redo Strands(shown in the x$kcrfstrand). These are also allocated in the shared pool. These all are written by redo allocation latches. There are allocation latches now for each private strand. The data when changed now, doesn’t contend to go into the log buffer as like before but goes into the private redo strands and from there, it goes into the log buffer when the buffer pools become full or when the transaction is committed. We can see the private strands shown in the shared pool from the V$sgastat
SQL> select name,pool from V$sgastat
2 where name like ‘%private%’;
NAME POOL
————————– ————
private strands shared pool
KCB private handles shared pool
At log file switch , when the data is still is in the Private redo strands, lgwr may wait to get the flush done by DBWR. Hence the event, log file switch (private strand flush incomplete) may occur. See the doc note for it,
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B19306_01/server.102/b14237/waitevents003.htm#sthref3117
This is controlled by the parameter _log_parallelism which is a dynamic and hidden parameter in 10g. The value depends on the cpu_count parameter. Oracle starts with 2 strands.
The benefit of private redo strand is also for the same reason that this would make the LGWR less busy and also the contention over the redo allocation latches will decrease.
Reference:
www.tanelpoder.com/files/Oracle_Performance_Scalability_10g_11g.pdf
http://www.fortunecity.com/skyscraper/oracle/699/orahtml/hayden/discrete.html

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