David,

You need to see what is taking all the time on the 'slow' machine.

Ask the person with the script to put this at the top of the script
for the next run:

alter session set events '10046 trace name context forever, level 8';

Explanation of level:
-- level 4 is bind values
-- level 8 is waits
-- level 12 is both

This will cause those sessions to generate trace files that show
the wait times, which should be investigated.  There are some
notes on MetaLink that explain how to read these.

You can also use tkprof with these files to generate the execution
plans of all the SQL involved, as well as a nicely formmated summary
of where the time was spent on each statement.

Unless the tkprof output makes the problem obvious, you should probably
still check out the raw trace file for details on where the waits are.

HTH

Jared


On Friday 28 February 2003 13:09, Nguyen, David M wrote:
> Someone writes a SQL script to dump a table on three different database on
> three different Solaris8 machines, he complaines one of machines took 6
> hours to dump a table while other two's only take one hour.  He asks me to
> investigate why.  I log into the machine in question to check I/O
> statistic, memory, CPU usage and found no problem.  What else should I
> check here?
>
> Regards,
> David

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