Book Image

Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook

By : Ciro Fiorillo
Book Image

Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook

By: Ciro Fiorillo

Overview of this book

Oracle's Database offers great performance, scalability, and many features for DBAs and developers. Due to a wide choice of technologies, successful applications are good candidates to run into performance issues and when a problem arises it's very difficult to identify the cause and the right solution to the problem. The Oracle Database 11g R2 Performance Tuning Cookbook helps DBAs and developers to understand every aspect of Oracle Database that can affect performance. You will be guided through implementing the correct solution in a proactive way before problems arise, and how to diagnose issues on your Oracle database-based solutions. This fast-paced book offers solutions starting from application design and development, through the implementation of well-performing applications, to the details of deployment and delivering best-performance databases. With this book you will quickly learn to apply the right methodology to tune the performance of an Oracle Database, and to optimize application design and SQL and PL/SQL code. By following the real-world examples you will see how to store your data in correct structures and access and manipulate them at a lightning speed. You will learn to speed up sort operations, hack the optimizer and the data loading process, and diagnose and tune memory, I/O, and contention issues. The purpose of this cookbook is to provide concise recipes, which will help you to build and maintain a very high-speed Oracle Database environment.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Tuning redo logs


In this recipe, we will see how to monitor redo logs.

How to do it...

The following steps will demonstrate monitoring of redo logs:

  1. Connect to the database as SYSDBA:

    CONNECT / AS SYSDBA
    
  2. Verify possible problems by inspecting the V$SYSTEM_EVENT dynamic performance view:

    SELECT EVENT, TOTAL_WAITS, TIME_WAITED FROM V$SYSTEM_EVENT
    WHERE EVENT LIKE 'log file%';
    
  3. Query the data dictionary about the redo log files:

    COL MEMBER FOR A40
    SELECT * FROM V$LOGFILE;
    CLEAR COL
    
  4. Query the data dictionary about redo log details:

    SELECT * FROM V$LOG;
    
  5. Query the historical log switch data:

    SELECT * FROM V$LOG_HISTORY ORDER BY RECID;
    

How it works...

In step 2, we query the V$SYSTEM_EVENT dynamic performance view to inspect problems related to redo logs. In the following screenshot, we can see the results obtained on a test database:

The important events to be observed are log file sync and log file parallel write. Often, a high value for the latter statistic is not evidence of a problem. It indicates...