Of course, sacred cows make the best steaks (sorry, Gaja).

An excellent example is the age old ideas that the earth was the center of
the universe, that the world was flat, that the Cubs will never win another
World Series (okay...bad example). Knowledge is limited by what we can
currently test. We are always restricted by our physical world (I don't have
a clue as to how I can personally test if the world is indeed round) but
also by what we choose to accept as fact. What happens to indexing
strategies when disk reads are faster than memory access operations? Before
you say, "It will never happen" think about it...Can you predict the future
with absolute certainty?

Even the 'experts' choose to accept certain facts. Look at the scientific
world. Many of the most 'brilliant' ideas now can be proven false. According
to the experts, we only need 5 computers worldwide with 64k of memory. 

I checked by Data Server Internals texts from 1999 and they preach 15% of
rows returned for indexing, and this series is certainly looked upon as the
'expert'. Anyone out there with a more recent version? I wonder what it
says...

IMHO, the bottom line is that many of us are so concerned with just keeping
systems running that we have no time for our own personal research and
development. Until I decided to write an article about rollback segments, I
never applied the scientific method to my understanding of Oracle. Will
application of the method explain everything? Nope, but it will come close.
It requires a lot of time and hard work, something that is a precious
commodity these days, especially in the corporate world. I am very grateful
for people like Cary, Tim, Anjo, Craig, Gaja, Kirti, et.al. who take the
time to say "prove it!" and then perform the experiments and, most
importantly, are willing to share the results with us on this list and at
meetings like IOUG-A.

Dan Fink

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Tuesday, November 12, 2002 2:24 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L


I think the question "Is nothing sacred?" is an interesting one. Lots of
these things we're talking about have been false for a very long time.
It's only that people are finally starting to notice them. Product
changes are often *not* what's driving "new knowledge." In many cases,
the "change" that's taking place is the improvement in the quality of
our conclusions.

"Is nothing sacred?" I think it's perfectly legitimate to confront
people's (and companies') conjectures with scientific data.


Cary Millsap
Hotsos Enterprises, Ltd.
http://www.hotsos.com

Upcoming events:
- Hotsos Clinic, Dec 9-11 Honolulu
- 2003 Hotsos Symposium on OracleR System Performance, Feb 9-12 Dallas
- Jonathan Lewis' Optimising Oracle, Nov 19-21 Dallas


-----Original Message-----
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 12, 2002 10:19 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L

Jesse,

    No, nothing in sacred any more.  Change is the theme of the day.
BTW: did
you experiment with caching these tables in the keep_pool??  I've had
some real
good luck with unindexed tables that are small (in the 1 to 10 block
size) that
get assigned to the keep pool and retained in memory forever.

    Also, BTW: I'll disagree with Cary and Hotsos on the costs of a PIO
vs a
LIO.  In my experience it's not such a clear cut distinction.  Whenever
Oracle
needs a block of data that data must be in memory which means that a PIO
requires 2 LIO's to fulfill the request and on top of that there may be
other
memory management routines that get called if an empty data block in
memory must
be created.  All in all it's a very mixed bag that needs to be
considered case
by case.  I believe that was one of the reasons Oracle allows us to
configure
the cache three ways.  Static, seldomly changed tables in the keep pool.
Large
constantly changing tables in the discard pool.  Also to index or not to
index
are no longer such clear cut item, especially with CBO which loves to
ignore
indexes.

Dick Goulet

____________________Reply Separator____________________
Author: "Jesse; Rich" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date:       11/11/2002 8:58 AM

So, there I am, on 8.1.7.2 (and .4) on HP/UX 11.0, with a process that
runs
20 minutes out of every hour of the day (despite my protests to it's
design).  After it starts having problems (go figure), it becomes a
priority
to speed it up.

Thanks to a 10046 trace, we see that the query taking the most elapsed
time
does FTSs on each of two very small tables (1 block and 4 blocks -- 8K
blocksize).  These tables are not indexed, as per the official Oracle
recommendation.  After reading the excellent Hotsos paper "When to index
a
table" (THANKS, CARY!), I added an index to reduce elapsed time on this
query by 50% (150 to 75 seconds in test), proving to me that the paper
is
valid.  And I've only read to page four!

OK, first I'm taught by Oracle to look at Buffer Cache Hit Ratios as a
measure of performance, then told (and thoroughly convinced) by experts
that
this is bunk.  Now, I found out that the 15% (or 10% or whatever,
depending
on version) ratio of rows returned to total rows in determining when to
use
an index in a query is garbage.

1)  Why is this?

2)  What other pearls of performance wisdom from Oracle Corp should I
completely disregard as false?

I know there's an Oracle Fallacy website somewhere...

It just looks bad on me, our department, and Oracle when, once again,
something I've been preaching to our developers as gospel turns out to
be
completely false.

Maybe I'm grumpy because it's snowing on my leaves right now...  <sigh>


Rich


Rich Jesse                           System/Database Administrator
[EMAIL PROTECTED]              Quad/Tech International, Sussex, WI
USA

Disclaimer:  I only said the Packers would be 12-4 this year -- I never
said
that they couldn't do better!  WOO-HOO!  :)
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