[This message is not technical, but educational. Readers interested in
technical info only may want to skip]

Hi, Cary and Gopal,

My last message is misunderstood. Nowadays most DBAs that still use buffer
cache hit ratio as a primary performance tuning method are those that rarely
browse public forums. When we convince them that's a wrong method, we should
not say "Look. I can bump up BCHR to an arbitrary value". If he doesn't think,
he'll say "Indeed. If I can get any value, it must be rubbish". But if he's a
logical person and thinks for a few minutes, he'll say "It's unfair to run that
choose_a_hit_ratio program to get an arbitrary hit ratio and say the method is
wrong, because you can use the same logic to write a program to get an
arbitrary library cache hit ratio, OS in-core inode cache hit ratio or
directory name cache hit..."

My last message is not meant to revive the outdated and probably never correct
tuning method. Instead it's meant to let oracle-l members know that when you
need to convince those DBAs that still use that method, you need to accuse the
BCHR method for correct reason, namely, BCHR does not contain sufficient
information for tuning, not because you can raise its value by constantly
scanning a table in Oracle; you won't be able to convince some stubbon DBAs who
enjoy thinking in a quiet place.

I agree that "It's not the ratio that needs condemning, it's the advice
about..." What I disagree is the wrong educational tool people on public forums
have recently used again and again to show the inadequacy of the BCHR tuning
method.

Yong Huang

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Author: Yong Huang
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