Of course, BCHR was already obsolete in 7.3.  ;)





"Grabowy, Chris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 10/03/2002 08:18 AM
 Please respond to ORACLE-L

 
        To:     Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        cc: 
        Subject:        RE: Performance monitoring


Sort of putting on my devil's advocate hat...

- "perhaps" the document is old and just hasn't been updated.  A lot of 
the documentation that we have lying around is marked as 7.3, we just 
haven't had the time to update them, since were overwhelmed with real 
work, and can't hire additional DBAs.
- some Oracle sites still believe in the myths and ratio based tuning.  It 
can be difficult to convince a client that their long practiced tuning 
methodology is "obsolete".  So for your specific case, perhaps they have 
dealt with these types of clients in the past so they "tread lightly".

It will be interesting to see how the hosting company responds to your 
explanations.

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2002 9:39 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L


we're hiring a hosting company to manage and monitor our production
apps... they handed me their spreadsheet of Oracle "things" to
monitor... I finally found "wait events" on that list. Buffer cache hit
ratios were high on the list and flagged as "critical"

nuh uh, didn't have time to gently explain (with the two by four) that
that was going to be unacceptable. But I will have loads of time
tomorrow. What scares me is that this list was compiled by
"experienced" DBAs.

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Buffer Cache Hit Ratio?
> 
> What's that?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> "Inka Bezdziecka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  10/02/2002 08:03 AM
>  Please respond to ORACLE-L
> 
> 
>         To:     Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>         cc: 
>         Subject:        RE: Performance monitoring
> 
> 
> Well ...
>  if you need short reports, look for:
> 
> 1. waits
> 2. buffer cache hit ratio
> 3. dictionary hit ratio
> 4. library hit ratio
> 5. latches
> 6. parsing/execution ratio
> 7. data file i/o 
> 8. shared pool memory distribution
> 9. session contention
> 10. session memory usage
> 
> inka
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2002 7:08 AM
> To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
> 
> 
> Thak's Mark
> 
> I agreed, but they have gotten an idea to get only couple
> "most important" measurements from db, because they don't want
> to have a huge reports with all possible statistics. Very 
> understandable, but as You wrote, there isn't any absolutely top ten.
> 
> In any case, I have to do this (stupid) list, so give Your best shot,
> please.
> 
> t.Jorma
> Ps. I heard, that Dave Ensor from BMC, has once presented that
>     kind of list? 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> Sent: 02 October, 2002 12:23
> To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
> 
> 
> Jorma,
> 
> Performance tuning is a complex subject.  There really isn't a list
> of
> 10 things to watch for.  Every system is different.
> 
> I would (attempt to) summarize tuning by these five steps:
> 
> 1.)  Have a capacity/performance target in mind.  If you don't know
> where you're going, how will you know if you have gotten there?
> 
> 2.)  Monitor your response times as load increases.  Can you achieve
> your response time target at the specified load?  If so, you're done,
> successful test, congratulations.  If not, continue to next step.
> 
> 3.)  Actively monitor what's going on in the database, while it's
> happening.  It's always easier to see it in real time than just
> looking
> at random StatsPack snapshots taken at 5 or 10 or 15 minute
> intervals. 
> (Not that I'm saying StatsPack shouldn't be collected.  I'm just
> saying
> don't rely on StatsPack as your only source of info about the
> database.)  The V$ Wait Interface is your friend.  If you're not
> familiar with it, go to http://www.hotsos.com/ and get Mogens
> Norgaard's
> paper, Introducing the V$ Wait Interface.  Where is the database
> spending it's time?  What's the bottleneck?  If you identify a few
> trouble sessions, you may want to dive deeper w/ some 10046 traces at
> level 8 on specific sessions.  You almost certainly do NOT want to do
> this instance wide.
> 
> 4.)  Once you have some indication as to what's going on in the
> database, you need to see how the system is doing overall.  On most
> flavors of *nix, where I'm comfortable, sar (System Activity
> Reporter)
> is an excellent tool.  Use it to determine if you have any systemwide
> CPU, memory, or I/O contention.  (Other OSes almost certainly have
> similar utilities.)
> 
> 5.)  Address the biggest bottleneck.  This is where it can't be
> summarized in a simple step.  You need to understand the bottleneck,
> so
> that you can understand how to tune it.  If may be latch contention. 
> Depending on the latch, it could be poorly tuned SQL, or lack of bind
> variables, or simple CPU capacity limits, or a whole host of things. 
> I/O contention?  Could be anything from poorly designed and/or
> configured RAID array to poorly tuned SQL, or who knows what. 
> Determine
> the cause of the biggest bottleneck and minimize or eliminate it.
> 
> 
> There you have it, Mark's Simplified Performance Tuning, in five easy
> steps! ;-)
> 
> -Mark
> 
> 
> 
> On Wed, 2002-10-02 at 02:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Ave !
> > 
> > I like to hear Your opinion about the most importat
> > issues, what should be monitored from the database (8.1.7, SUN)
> during
> > perfomance testing. The purpose in this case, is limit the
> > monitoring to concern only about 10 most important ones.
> > 
> > I have difficulties to make my mind to pick up the right ones, so
> > if You had to have made similar kind of decisions or have opinions,
> > please let me know.
> > 
> > TIA
> > Jorma
> > -----------------------------------------------------------------
> > Name:     Jorma Vuorio                  Phone:  +358-9-7180 67759
> > Company:  Nokia Business Infrastucture  Fax:    +358-9-7180 67465
> > Address:  P.O.Box 321, FIN-00045 NOKIA GROUP, FINLAND 
> > Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]        Mobile: +358-50-486 8043
> > -----------------------------------------------------------------
> -- 
> --
> Mark J. Bobak
> Oracle DBA
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> "It is not enough to have a good mind.  The main thing is to use it
> well."
>                  -- Rene Descartes
> -- 
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