My understanding of block cleanout is that oracle
is flushing transaction information of already committed transactions from the
buffer cache. This can happen in selects, when 10% of the buffer cache is filled
with 'lists' if blocks involved in transactions, or with dml.
i dont understand why this incurs redo? your just
flushing blocks that are no longer needed?
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- Re: RE: why does block cleanout incur redo? Rajesh . Rao
- RE: why does block cleanout incur redo? Cary Millsap
- Re: RE: why does block cleanout incur redo? rgaffuri
- Ryan