Dennis & Ferenc,
Your discussion is a good read ...

You guys are able to understand how your applications are working WITH
Oracle, like using RULE/COST optimizer , Table Scans and also how it is
using the Oracle capabilities. I also wanted to know more about the
application running on top of Oracle . Would you guys GUIDE me with some
steps ( may be top 10 and how to do that ) , or you have any document which
you have prepared in the past will be great help for guys like me who wanted
to know more :))-

This LIST is always been a great HELP for me... Happy Thanks giving to YOU
ALL.

Thanks
Madhu
 

-----Original Message-----
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Sent: 11/27/2002 4:28 PM

Ferenc 
   Thanks so much for providing an insight into what you do. Lawson uses
Oracle in quite a simpler method. No joins, just individual table
access. No
table scans, each access is hinted to use a specific index. Crude but
effective. The first issue is that it doesn't use all of Oracle's
capabilities. The second issue is that it provides little opportunity
for
Oracle tuning experts such as yourself. But customers keep pressing for
better use of Oracle, so there is hope yet. ;-)
   Based on what I've seen out of Lawson and wait statistics, I'm
applying
my efforts to reducing physical I/O. I just configured several tables
for
the KEEP and RECYCLE pools.

Dennis Williams
DBA, 40%OCP
Lifetouch, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 


-----Original Message-----
Sent: Wednesday, November 27, 2002 2:20 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L


Dennis

as you know, there is no 'follow these steps to get a better performing 
application' guide when it comes to tuning. An intimate knowledge of
what 
the application does is a must. I sell myself (tried the street corners
but 
was not getting much intrest) as a Siebel performance tuning specialist,
so 
when customers say 'Oh, you are an Oracle DBA !', I respond with 'No, 
Oracle DBA is just one of the things I do in order to get my job done'. 
there are plenty of DBA's out there, (and DBB's too), but understnading
how 
the application (in my case Siebel) works and what it is trying to 
accomplish from a functional perspective helps me to know immediately
what 
is the framework of limitations I can work in. For instance, Siebel is 
written for RBO, so when someone comes spouting partitions and bitmap 
indexes, I buzz them out on try 1.

now for Siebel specific EIM (Enterprise Integration Manager) type tuning
, 
when I see that index range scans are killing me, I try to reduce the
batch 
size first so that it will not have to go through as many records per
value 
(think of a batch size of 20,000 records where it is doing a correlated 
subquery on just the batch_id). Now change this into 100 batches of 200 
rows each, and immediately you have a huge saving in logical IO, since
each 
time excpet the first iteration, the index blocks and table blocks
should 
be found in DBBC (Also see Cary's paper on www.hotsos.com which goes
into 
deeper details on the latches needed and the recursive calls for buffer 
hits.) Other things include looking at SQL where you can see it is using
an 
index to look up a row in the table to get a single value (column). In
this 
case, for a large load, it may be beneficial to recreate this same index

with the column concatenated on the end, and avoid the table lookup 
altogether. Also knowing EXACTLY how RBO works (there are only about 20 
rules and in reality only 5 or 6 get used in an application), will help
you 
to know when it may even be beneficial to DROP an index (gasp ! can he
be 
serious ? Youbetcha ! ). anyway, that is it for today, class dismissed.

Have a great day !

Ferenc Mantfeld

-----Original Message-----
From:   DENNIS WILLIAMS [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Thursday, November 28, 2002 3:40 AM
To:     Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Subject:        RE: Using RECYCLE pool?

Thanks Denny, Connor, and Ferenc for your helpful suggestions.

Ferenc - I particularly appreciated your insights. This is also a
packaged
app where I can't tune the SQL. It does no table scans (long story, but 
that
is the way this app works). My logic is that the biggest wait (85% of
wait)
is "db file sequential read", and the BHR is fairly low, about 80%. So
my
thought is to increase the buffer, and while I was at it, thought I
would
try the KEEP and RECYCLE pools.
   But I find your comment about logical tuning very interesting. Can
you
explain more, in case I'm missing something basic? Thanks.

Dennis Williams
DBA, 40%OCP
Lifetouch, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-----Original Message-----
Sent: Tuesday, November 26, 2002 7:29 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L


Hi Dennis

I try to not think of the pool names as being descriptive of what they
should be allocated for. I regard them as pool 1 (default), of which I
can
configure two other pools, (pool 2 and pool 3).

For Siebel applications (probably works similar for PSOFT [Joe, you in
on
this thread ?] and SAP), knowing the application and what it does, the
repository tables, like the tables that define position based access,
views, responsibilities, position relationships (team-based visibility
in
Siebel), broadcast messages, workflow rules and rule items, I put them
into 
a separate smaller but very frequently accessed pool, knowing they are
going to get hit at least a few times every minute with a few hundred
users 
logged on.

Then I try to identify those tables that DO get FTS, and if I cannot
tune
the query by placing relevant indices (sometimes it is better to have
FTS
than large index range scan to reduce logical IO, the big performance
killer), put these into a separate pool, and leave the rest in default.
Alternatively, the hot smaller tables go into one pool, the indices in
another and the rest of the tables stay in default. There are various
tricks for this. Oracle 9 makes things easier because you can identify
which indexes are beig used, and then not waste your time with the
others.

Just remember, you will get much further distance from reducing logical
IO's than playing with various buffer pools, though there is a minimal
argument for playing with buffer pools, once logical IO's have been
decreased.

Real-life example : using Siebel EIM, by placing EIM tables into
separate
buffer pools, I saw a small advantage, say 5 - 10 % in buffer cache
latch
reduction and more efficient use of cached IO. But after tuning the
structures so that I reduced logical IO's, I saw a 2000% throughput
improvement of EIM, to the amazement of all skeptics on the project
(also
bumped up initrans and ran multiple parallel streams). So prioritize
where
you spend your tuning efforts. Reduction of logical IO = biggest bang
for
buck !

Getting off my soapbox now. Lots to do.
Ciao :

Ferenc Mantfeld

-----Original Message-----
From:   DENNIS WILLIAMS [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Wednesday, November 27, 2002 8:30 AM
To:     Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Subject:        Using RECYCLE pool?

Is anyone using the Oracle RECYCLE buffer pool? What was your criteria
to
select tables? The application I am considering RECYCLE for doesn't
perform
table scans, so that eliminates one common suggestion.

Dennis Williams
DBA
Lifetouch, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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