Which version of Oracle ? 8.1 or 9.2 ?

It could make a difference because of
the 'free split' change in code that appeared
in 9.2.


I don't recall the error I got - but some time
back I was working on a partition exchange
strategy and testing the effects of tablespace
corruption in mid-exchange. One of the scenarios
I built managed to leave me with a partition in
a non-existent tablespace, but the partition could
not be dropped because it didn't exist. Clearly
some form of dictionary corruption on partition
maintenance - so there are some oddities to
be cleaned.

It might also be an idea to check of the OCI
program manages to hold a cursor open
that should have been invalidated on the split.
Is it possible that when suspended, the
program then pushed its current data set into
a partition/data segment that simply did not
exist in the data dictionary ?


Can you add a little detail about the structure of
the PT and its missing elements.  Do you have
multiple partitions per day, with some giving 8103
when queried by name; or is it one partition per
day, but queries which extend into the gap give
the 8103 ?

Have you tried running with a level 4 on 10046
yet to see the actual dictionary accesses that
Oracle attempts when looking for the critical
data (probably have to bounce the database to
get the best effects here); of checked the contents
of the obj$, and related tables around the object
numbers and data object numbers of the damaged
bits to see if there is any data there that does not
fit the pattern ?


I tend to disagree with your comment about splitting
on the fly being silly, by the way - as soon as Oracle
introduced MAXVALUE, they introduced an implicit
requirement either for an unbreakable mechanism
for doing a split in real-time, or for a mechanism for
shunting data above the current high_value into a
holding table.  (Requiring end-user code to handle
rogue data would otherwise introduce a significant
overhead on processing times).




Regards

Jonathan Lewis
http://www.jlcomp.demon.co.uk

Coming soon a new one-day tutorial:
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____England______January 21/23


The CO-operative Oracle Users' FAQ
http://www.jlcomp.demon.co.uk/faq/ind_faq.html





-----Original Message-----
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 17 December 2002 23:14


A program inserts via OCI DirectPath telemetry data into a time-based
partition every 30 seconds, each insert acquiring an exclusive lock on
the table.  The users decided to further split the partition receiving
the inserts by time.  Each of the new partitions is stale, by that I
mean their high values are all previous to the present data.   The
split was done on December 4th carved out partitions for November 26,
27, 28, 29, and 30.  While the split is going on, the program
buffered the next inserts.  Once the split is done the program
continues its inserts into the original partition.  (During the split
Oracle acquires locks which  prevent data manipulation)

I realize that splitting a partition on the fly like this is a silly
thing to do.  It was never going to be part of the production system.
However I was not sure if doing so would work.  We tried it and the
result may have been  data dictionary corruption; i.e.,  ORA-8103
errors.  Data in the November 26, November 27, about 22.5 hours of
November 28, November 29, November 30  and the input partition remain
visible.  It's only the 1/5 hours of the November 28th partition which
is inaccessible.  In a way it's very much like a block corruption
problem.    Some additional information:  all objects in the database
are valid, all indexes are usable, besides there were no indexes
involved in the split operation.  DBV  reports no problem with any of
the database files.


Oracle support also blames it on the split activity.  I am anxious
because there is a big push to put this system into production.  I
need to be sure the corruption was caused by the split.  We won't be
that silly again.  Unfortunately the corruption was not discovered
immediately afterwards.   The split as the cause is really just a
guess.   Has anyone else seen unexplained 8103 errors after partition
management?


Ian MacGregor
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





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