Performance issue - contention
I am having to performance test an application written in HTMLDB. I am using software that emulates use by a number of users concurrently. Performance is fine on the application until it reaches a certain number of users and then it degardes catestrophically.
Inspecting the database when this happens, I find that after about 50 users, wait time which had previously been a small proportion of each connection becomes over 80%.
Closer inspection reveals excessive contention caused by latches on the shared pool. Inspection of the SQLAREA contains a large number of items which to all intents and purposes seem identical. Bind variables are being used, but the statements do not seem to be recognised. Has any body got any suggestions?
I am after a steady degradation in performance with loading rather than a catestrophic collapse.
user482142,
Can you show examples of statements that seem identical but result in re-parsing?
Sergio
Similar Messages
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Performance issues with class loader on Windows server
We are observing some performance issues in our application. We are Using weblogic 11g with Java6 on a windows 2003 server
The thread dumps indicate many threads are waiting in queue for the native file methods:
"[ACTIVE] ExecuteThread: '106' for queue: 'weblogic.kernel.Default (self-tuning)'" RUNNABLE
java.io.WinNTFileSystem.getBooleanAttributes(Native Method)
java.io.File.exists(Unknown Source)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.ClasspathClassFinder.getFileSource(ClasspathClassFinder.java:398)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.ClasspathClassFinder.getSourcesInternal(ClasspathClassFinder.java:347)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.ClasspathClassFinder.getSource(ClasspathClassFinder.java:316)
weblogic.application.io.ManifestFinder.getSource(ManifestFinder.java:75)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.MultiClassFinder.getSource(MultiClassFinder.java:67)
weblogic.application.utils.CompositeWebAppFinder.getSource(CompositeWebAppFinder.java:71)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.MultiClassFinder.getSource(MultiClassFinder.java:67)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.MultiClassFinder.getSource(MultiClassFinder.java:67)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.CodeGenClassFinder.getSource(CodeGenClassFinder.java:33)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.GenericClassLoader.findResource(GenericClassLoader.java:210)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.GenericClassLoader.getResourceInternal(GenericClassLoader.java:160)
weblogic.utils.classloaders.GenericClassLoader.getResource(GenericClassLoader.java:182)
java.lang.ClassLoader.getResourceAsStream(Unknown Source)
javax.xml.parsers.SecuritySupport$4.run(Unknown Source)
java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
javax.xml.parsers.SecuritySupport.getResourceAsStream(Unknown Source)
javax.xml.parsers.FactoryFinder.findJarServiceProvider(Unknown Source)
javax.xml.parsers.FactoryFinder.find(Unknown Source)
javax.xml.parsers.DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance(Unknown Source)
org.ajax4jsf.context.ResponseWriterContentHandler.<init>(ResponseWriterContentHandler.java:48)
org.ajax4jsf.context.ViewResources$HeadResponseWriter.<init>(ViewResources.java:259)
org.ajax4jsf.context.ViewResources.processHeadResources(ViewResources.java:445)
org.ajax4jsf.application.AjaxViewHandler.renderView(AjaxViewHandler.java:193)
org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.RenderResponseExecutor.execute(RenderResponseExecutor.java:41)
org.apache.myfaces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.render(LifecycleImpl.java:140)
On googling this seems to be an issue with java file handling on windows servers and I couldn't find a solution yet. Any recommendation or pointer is appreciatedHi shubhu,
I just analyzed your partial Thread Dump data, the problem is that the ajax4jsf framework ResponseWriterContentHandler triggers internally a new instance of the DocumentBuilderFactory; every time; triggering heavy IO contention because of Class loader / JAR file search operations.
Too many of these IO operations under heavy load will create excessive contention and severe performance degradation; regardless of the OS you are running your JVM on.
Please review the link below and see if this is related to your problem.. This is a known issue in JBOSS JIRA when using RichFaces / ajaxJSF.
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/JBPAPP-6166
Regards,
P-H
http://javaeesupportpatterns.blogspot.com/ -
Performance Issues with 10.6.7 and External USB Drives
I've had a few performance issues come up with the latest 10.6.7 that seem to be related to external USB drives. I have a 2TB USB drive tha I have my iMovie content on this drive and after 10.6.7 update, iMovie is almost unusable. Finder even seems slow when browsing files on this drive as well. It seems like any access to the drive is delayed in all applications. Before the update, the performance was acceptable, but now it almost unusable. Most of the files on this drive are large dv files.
Anyone else experience this?Matt,
If you want help, please start your own thread here:
http://discussions.apple.com/forum.jspa?forumID=1339&start=0
And if your previous thread you aren't getting sufficient help for your iPhone, post a new topic here:
http://discussions.apple.com/forum.jspa?forumID=1139
You'll get a wider audience, and won't confuse the original poster. Performance issues can be caused by numerous issues as outlined in my FAQ*
http://www.macmaps.com/Macosxspeed.html
If every person who had a performance issue posted to this thread, we'd never find a solution for the initial poster. Let's isolate each case one by one. It is NOT necessarily the same issue, even if the symptoms are the same. There are numerous contributing factors at work with computers, and if we don't isolate them, we'll never get to the root cause. -
Performance issues with Homesharing?
I have a Time Capsule as the base station for my wireless network, then 2 Airport Express setup to extend the network around the house, an iMac i7 as the main iTunes Library and couple of iPads, and a couple of Apple TVs. Everything has the latest software, but I have several performance issues with Home sharing. I've done several tests making sure nothing is taking additional bandwidth, so here are the list of issues:
1) With nothing else running, trying playing a movie via home sharing in an iPad 2 which is located on my iMac, it stops and I have to keep pressing the play button over and over again. I typically see that the iPad tries to download part of the movie first and then starts playing so that it deals with the bandwidth, but in many cases it doesn't.
2) When trying to play any iTunes content (movies, music, photos, etc) from my Apple TV I can see my computer library, but when I go in on any of the menus, it says there's no content. I have to reboot the Apple TV and then problem fixed. I's just annoying that I have to reboot.
3) When watching a Netflix movie on my iPad and with Airplay I send the sound to some speakers via Airplay through an Airport Express. At time I lose the connection to the speakers.
I've complained about Wifi's instability, but here I tried to keep everything with Apples products to avoid any compatibility issues and stay within N wireless technology, which I understood it was much more stable.
Has anyone some suggestions?Hi,
you should analyze the db after you have loaded the tables.
Do you use sequences to generate PKs? Do you have a lot of indexex and/or triggers on the tables?
If yes:
make sure your sequence caches (alter sequence s cache 10000)
Drop all unneeded indexes while loading and disable trigger if possible.
How big is your Redo Log Buffer? When loading a large amount of data it may be an option to enlarge this buffer.
Do you have more then one DBWR Process? Writing parallel can speed up things when a checkpoint is needed.
Is it possible using a direct load? Or do you already direct load?
Dim -
Performance issues with Imac intel 2011 27 inch..
I have an 2011 imac 3,4 GHz Intel Core i7 with 16 GB 1333 MHz DDR3 RAM.
Since a few months i noticed performance issues with FCPX, where before it would run through video it shows sometimes the color ball. Now the computer is slow in starting up and shutting down also. Ran disk utility but to no avail. I am now considering reinstalling mavericks.
But I ran etrecheck.
here are the results, please who can help me? I use this computer to edit and about everything else.
copied:
Problem description:
slow start and slow quit of computer. Performance issues with fcpx and other programms.
EtreCheck version: 2.1.8 (121)
Report generated 6 maart 2015 21:49:31 CET
Download EtreCheck from http://etresoft.com/etrecheck
Click the [Click for support] links for help with non-Apple products.
Click the [Click for details] links for more information about that line.
Hardware Information: ℹ️
iMac (27-inch, Mid 2011) (Technical Specifications)
iMac - model: iMac12,2
1 3.4 GHz Intel Core i7 CPU: 4-core
16 GB RAM Upgradeable
BANK 0/DIMM0
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
BANK 1/DIMM0
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
BANK 0/DIMM1
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
BANK 1/DIMM1
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
Bluetooth: Old - Handoff/Airdrop2 not supported
Wireless: en1: 802.11 a/b/g/n
Video Information: ℹ️
AMD Radeon HD 6970M - VRAM: 1024 MB
iMac 2560 x 1440
System Software: ℹ️
OS X 10.9.4 (13E28) - Time since boot: 0:7:46
Disk Information: ℹ️
WDC WD1001FALS-403AA0 disk1 : (1 TB)
EFI (disk1s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB
MacintoshHD2 (disk1s2) /Volumes/MacintoshHD2 : 999.86 GB (152.18 GB free)
APPLE SSD TS256C disk0 : (251 GB)
EFI (disk0s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB
MacintoshHD (disk0s2) / : 250.14 GB (62.78 GB free)
Recovery HD (disk0s3) <not mounted> [Recovery]: 650 MB
HL-DT-STDVDRW GA32N
USB Information: ℹ️
Apple Inc. FaceTime HD Camera (Built-in)
Mitsumi Electric Hub in Apple Extended USB Keyboard
Logitech USB-PS/2 Optical Mouse
Mitsumi Electric Apple Extended USB Keyboard
Western Digital Ext HDD 1021 2 TB
EFI (disk2s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB
datavideo (disk2s2) /Volumes/datavideo : 1.37 TB (133.89 GB free)
prive (disk2s3) /Volumes/prive : 627.23 GB (68.13 GB free) - 7 errors
Apple Inc. BRCM2046 Hub
Apple Inc. Bluetooth USB Host Controller
Lexar USB_3_0 Reader
Seagate Expansion Desk 3 TB
EFI (disk3s1) <not mounted> : 315 MB
downloads (disk3s2) /Volumes/downloads : 249.18 GB (138.35 GB free)
BackUpBro (disk3s3) /Volumes/BackUpBro : 2.75 TB (1.03 TB free)
Apple Internal Memory Card Reader
Apple Computer, Inc. IR Receiver
Thunderbolt Information: ℹ️
Apple Inc. thunderbolt_bus
G-Technology G-RAID with Thunderbolt
Configuration files: ℹ️
/etc/sysctl.conf - Exists
Gatekeeper: ℹ️
Mac App Store and identified developers
Kernel Extensions: ℹ️
/Applications/Toast 11 Titanium/Spin Doctor.app
[not loaded] com.hzsystems.terminus.driver (4) [Click for support]
/Library/Extensions
[not loaded] com.Avid.driver.AvidDX (5.9.1 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.iokit.driver (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.iokit.framebufferdriver (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.multibridge.iokit.driver (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.driver.BlackmagicIO (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
/Library/Extensions/DeckLink_Driver.kext/Contents/PlugIns
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.firmware (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
/System/Library/Extensions
[not loaded] at.obdev.nke.LittleSnitch (3876 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.SafeNet.driver.Sentinel (7.5.2) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.master (5.9.1 - SDK 10.6) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.roxio.BluRaySupport (1.1.6) [Click for support]
/System/Library/Extensions/PACESupportFamily.kext/Contents/PlugIns
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.leopard (5.9.1 - SDK 10.4) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.panther (5.9.1 - SDK 10.-1) [Click for support]
[loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.snowleopard (5.9.1 - SDK 10.6) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.tiger (5.9.1 - SDK 10.4) [Click for support]
/Users/[redacted]/Library/Services/ToastIt.service/Contents/MacOS
[not loaded] com.roxio.TDIXController (2.0) [Click for support]
Startup Items: ℹ️
Digidesign Mbox 2: Path: /Library/StartupItems/Digidesign Mbox 2
DigidesignLoader: Path: /Library/StartupItems/DigidesignLoader
Startup items are obsolete in OS X Yosemite
Problem System Launch Agents: ℹ️
[running] com.paragon.NTFS.notify.plist [Click for support]
Launch Agents: ℹ️
[not loaded] com.adobe.AAM.Updater-1.0.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.adobe.CS4ServiceManager.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.ApplicationManager.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.backgroundservicesmanager.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.dmfsupportsvc.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.interplay.dmfservice.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.interplay.editortranscode.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.transcodeserviceworker.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.blackmagic-design.DesktopVideoFirmwareUpdater.plist [Click for support]
[failed] com.brother.LOGINserver.plist [Click for support] [Click for details]
[loaded] com.paragon.updater.plist [Click for support]
[failed] com.teamviewer.teamviewer.plist [Click for support] [Click for details]
[failed] com.teamviewer.teamviewer_desktop.plist [Click for support]
Launch Daemons: ℹ️
[loaded] com.adobe.fpsaud.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.adobe.SwitchBoard.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.adobe.versioncueCS4.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.AMCUninstaller.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.avid.interplay.editorbroker.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.avid.interplay.editortranscodestatus.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.XPCService.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.blackmagic-design.DesktopVideoHelper.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.blackmagic-design.streaming.BMDStreamingServer.plist [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.digidesign.fwfamily.helper.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.edb.launchd.postgresql-8.4.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.microsoft.office.licensing.helper.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.noiseindustries.FxFactory.FxPlug.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.noiseindustries.FxFactory.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.paceap.eden.licensed.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.teamviewer.Helper.plist [Click for support]
[failed] com.teamviewer.teamviewer_service.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] jp.co.canon.MasterInstaller.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] PACESupport.plist [Click for support]
User Login Items: ℹ️
iTunesHelper Programma Hidden (/Applications/iTunes.app/Contents/MacOS/iTunesHelper.app)
Internet Plug-ins: ℹ️
Default Browser: Version: 537 - SDK 10.9
OfficeLiveBrowserPlugin: Version: 12.2.6 [Click for support]
AdobePDFViewerNPAPI: Version: 11.0.0 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
FlashPlayer-10.6: Version: 16.0.0.305 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
Silverlight: Version: 5.1.30514.0 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
Flash Player: Version: 16.0.0.305 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
QuickTime Plugin: Version: 7.7.3
iPhotoPhotocast: Version: 7.0 - SDK 10.8
SharePointBrowserPlugin: Version: 14.0.0 [Click for support]
AdobePDFViewer: Version: 11.0.0 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
EPPEX Plugin: Version: 10.0 [Click for support]
JavaAppletPlugin: Version: 14.9.0 - SDK 10.7 Check version
User internet Plug-ins: ℹ️
Google Earth Web Plug-in: Version: 7.0 [Click for support]
Audio Plug-ins: ℹ️
DVCPROHDAudio: Version: 1.3.2
3rd Party Preference Panes: ℹ️
Blackmagic Desktop Video [Click for support]
DigidesignMbox2 [Click for support]
Digidesign Mbox 2 Pro [Click for support]
Flash Player [Click for support]
Paragon NTFS for Mac ® OS X [Click for support]
Time Machine: ℹ️
Skip System Files: NO
Mobile backups: OFF
Auto backup: NO - Auto backup turned off
Volumes being backed up:
MacintoshHD: Disk size: 250.14 GB Disk used: 187.36 GB
downloads: Disk size: 249.18 GB Disk used: 110.84 GB
Destinations:
G-RAID with Thunderbolt [Local]
Total size: 8.00 TB
Total number of backups: 6
Oldest backup: 2014-04-08 14:24:41 +0000
Last backup: 2014-09-24 21:58:28 +0000
Size of backup disk: Excellent
Backup size 8.00 TB > (Disk size 499.32 GB X 3)
Top Processes by CPU: ℹ️
2% Google Chrome
1% WindowServer
0% opendirectoryd
0% mds
0% dpd
Top Processes by Memory: ℹ️
206 MB mds_stores
172 MB com.apple.IconServicesAgent
155 MB Google Chrome
137 MB Dock
113 MB Google Chrome Helper
Virtual Memory Information: ℹ️
10.02 GB Free RAM
4.36 GB Active RAM
1.35 GB Inactive RAM
1.44 GB Wired RAM
1.24 GB Page-ins
0 B Page-outs
Diagnostics Information: ℹ️
Mar 6, 2015, 09:37:26 PM Self test - passed
Mar 6, 2015, 08:15:56 PM /Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports/Mail_2015-03-06-201556_[redacted].hangProblem description:
disk problems
EtreCheck version: 2.1.8 (121)
Report generated 7 maart 2015 14:16:18 CET
Download EtreCheck from http://etresoft.com/etrecheck
Click the [Click for support] links for help with non-Apple products.
Click the [Click for details] links for more information about that line.
Hardware Information: ℹ️
iMac (27-inch, Mid 2011) (Technical Specifications)
iMac - model: iMac12,2
1 3.4 GHz Intel Core i7 CPU: 4-core
16 GB RAM Upgradeable
BANK 0/DIMM0
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
BANK 1/DIMM0
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
BANK 0/DIMM1
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
BANK 1/DIMM1
4 GB DDR3 1333 MHz ok
Bluetooth: Old - Handoff/Airdrop2 not supported
Wireless: en1: 802.11 a/b/g/n
Video Information: ℹ️
AMD Radeon HD 6970M - VRAM: 1024 MB
iMac 2560 x 1440
System Software: ℹ️
OS X 10.9.4 (13E28) - Time since boot: 0:19:51
Disk Information: ℹ️
WDC WD1001FALS-403AA0 disk1 : (1 TB)
EFI (disk1s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB
MacintoshHD2 (disk1s2) /Volumes/MacintoshHD2 : 999.86 GB (152.18 GB free)
APPLE SSD TS256C disk0 : (251 GB)
EFI (disk0s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB
MacintoshHD (disk0s2) / : 250.14 GB (62.97 GB free)
Recovery HD (disk0s3) <not mounted> [Recovery]: 650 MB
HL-DT-STDVDRW GA32N
HGST HDS724040ALE640 disk2 : (4 TB)
EFI (disk2s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB
disk2s2 (disk2s2) <not mounted> : 4.00 TB
Boot OS X (disk2s3) <not mounted> : 134 MB - one error
HGST HDS724040ALE640 disk3 : (4 TB)
EFI (disk3s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB
disk3s2 (disk3s2) <not mounted> : 4.00 TB
Boot OS X (disk3s3) <not mounted> : 134 MB
USB Information: ℹ️
Mitsumi Electric Hub in Apple Extended USB Keyboard
Logitech USB-PS/2 Optical Mouse
Mitsumi Electric Apple Extended USB Keyboard
Apple Inc. BRCM2046 Hub
Apple Inc. Bluetooth USB Host Controller
Apple Inc. FaceTime HD Camera (Built-in)
Lexar USB_3_0 Reader
Seagate Expansion Desk 3 TB
EFI (disk5s1) <not mounted> : 315 MB
downloads (disk5s2) /Volumes/downloads : 249.18 GB (138.35 GB free)
BackUpBro (disk5s3) /Volumes/BackUpBro : 2.75 TB (1.03 TB free)
Apple Computer, Inc. IR Receiver
Apple Internal Memory Card Reader
Thunderbolt Information: ℹ️
Apple Inc. thunderbolt_bus
G-Technology G-RAID with Thunderbolt
Configuration files: ℹ️
/etc/sysctl.conf - Exists
Gatekeeper: ℹ️
Mac App Store and identified developers
Kernel Extensions: ℹ️
/Applications/Toast 11 Titanium/Spin Doctor.app
[not loaded] com.hzsystems.terminus.driver (4) [Click for support]
/Library/Extensions
[not loaded] com.Avid.driver.AvidDX (5.9.1 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.iokit.driver (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.iokit.framebufferdriver (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.multibridge.iokit.driver (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.driver.BlackmagicIO (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
/Library/Extensions/DeckLink_Driver.kext/Contents/PlugIns
[not loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.firmware (10.1.4 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
/System/Library/Extensions
[not loaded] at.obdev.nke.LittleSnitch (3876 - SDK 10.8) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.SafeNet.driver.Sentinel (7.5.2) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.master (5.9.1 - SDK 10.6) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.roxio.BluRaySupport (1.1.6) [Click for support]
/System/Library/Extensions/PACESupportFamily.kext/Contents/PlugIns
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.leopard (5.9.1 - SDK 10.4) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.panther (5.9.1 - SDK 10.-1) [Click for support]
[loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.snowleopard (5.9.1 - SDK 10.6) [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.paceap.kext.pacesupport.tiger (5.9.1 - SDK 10.4) [Click for support]
/Users/[redacted]/Library/Services/ToastIt.service/Contents/MacOS
[not loaded] com.roxio.TDIXController (2.0) [Click for support]
Startup Items: ℹ️
Digidesign Mbox 2: Path: /Library/StartupItems/Digidesign Mbox 2
DigidesignLoader: Path: /Library/StartupItems/DigidesignLoader
Startup items are obsolete in OS X Yosemite
Problem System Launch Agents: ℹ️
[running] com.paragon.NTFS.notify.plist [Click for support]
Launch Agents: ℹ️
[not loaded] com.adobe.AAM.Updater-1.0.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.adobe.CS4ServiceManager.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.avid.ApplicationManager.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.avid.backgroundservicesmanager.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.dmfsupportsvc.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.interplay.dmfservice.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.interplay.editortranscode.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.transcodeserviceworker.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.blackmagic-design.DesktopVideoFirmwareUpdater.plist [Click for support]
[failed] com.brother.LOGINserver.plist [Click for support] [Click for details]
[loaded] com.paragon.updater.plist [Click for support]
[failed] com.teamviewer.teamviewer.plist [Click for support] [Click for details]
[failed] com.teamviewer.teamviewer_desktop.plist [Click for support]
Launch Daemons: ℹ️
[loaded] com.adobe.fpsaud.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.adobe.SwitchBoard.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.adobe.versioncueCS4.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.avid.AMCUninstaller.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.avid.interplay.editorbroker.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.avid.interplay.editortranscodestatus.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.blackmagic-design.desktopvideo.XPCService.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.blackmagic-design.DesktopVideoHelper.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.blackmagic-design.streaming.BMDStreamingServer.plist [Click for support]
[not loaded] com.digidesign.fwfamily.helper.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.edb.launchd.postgresql-8.4.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.microsoft.office.licensing.helper.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.noiseindustries.FxFactory.FxPlug.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.noiseindustries.FxFactory.plist [Click for support]
[running] com.paceap.eden.licensed.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] com.teamviewer.Helper.plist [Click for support]
[failed] com.teamviewer.teamviewer_service.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] jp.co.canon.MasterInstaller.plist [Click for support]
[loaded] PACESupport.plist [Click for support]
User Login Items: ℹ️
iTunesHelper Programma Hidden (/Applications/iTunes.app/Contents/MacOS/iTunesHelper.app)
Internet Plug-ins: ℹ️
Default Browser: Version: 537 - SDK 10.9
OfficeLiveBrowserPlugin: Version: 12.2.6 [Click for support]
AdobePDFViewerNPAPI: Version: 11.0.0 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
FlashPlayer-10.6: Version: 16.0.0.305 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
Silverlight: Version: 5.1.30514.0 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
Flash Player: Version: 16.0.0.305 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
QuickTime Plugin: Version: 7.7.3
iPhotoPhotocast: Version: 7.0 - SDK 10.8
SharePointBrowserPlugin: Version: 14.0.0 [Click for support]
AdobePDFViewer: Version: 11.0.0 - SDK 10.6 [Click for support]
EPPEX Plugin: Version: 10.0 [Click for support]
JavaAppletPlugin: Version: 14.9.0 - SDK 10.7 Check version
User internet Plug-ins: ℹ️
Google Earth Web Plug-in: Version: 7.0 [Click for support]
Audio Plug-ins: ℹ️
DVCPROHDAudio: Version: 1.3.2
3rd Party Preference Panes: ℹ️
Blackmagic Desktop Video [Click for support]
DigidesignMbox2 [Click for support]
Digidesign Mbox 2 Pro [Click for support]
Flash Player [Click for support]
Paragon NTFS for Mac ® OS X [Click for support]
Time Machine: ℹ️
Skip System Files: NO
Mobile backups: OFF
Auto backup: NO - Auto backup turned off
Volumes being backed up:
MacintoshHD: Disk size: 250.14 GB Disk used: 187.17 GB
downloads: Disk size: 249.18 GB Disk used: 110.83 GB
Destinations:
G-RAID with Thunderbolt [Local]
Total size: 8.00 TB
Total number of backups: 6
Oldest backup: 2014-04-08 14:24:41 +0000
Last backup: 2014-09-24 21:58:28 +0000
Size of backup disk: Excellent
Backup size 8.00 TB > (Disk size 499.32 GB X 3)
Top Processes by CPU: ℹ️
2% WindowServer
1% fontd
0% firefox
0% AvidApplicationManager
0% AppleSpell
Top Processes by Memory: ℹ️
498 MB firefox
241 MB mds_stores
172 MB com.apple.IconServicesAgent
137 MB Dock
100 MB java
Virtual Memory Information: ℹ️
12.33 GB Free RAM
2.39 GB Active RAM
1.11 GB Inactive RAM
1.34 GB Wired RAM
934 MB Page-ins
0 B Page-outs
Diagnostics Information: ℹ️
Mar 7, 2015, 01:56:19 PM Self test - passed
Mar 6, 2015, 08:15:56 PM /Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports/Mail_2015-03-06-201556_[redacted].hang -
Performance Issues with Folio format in Ipad.
Hello everyone! My FIRST post here!!!
I work with educational games and I'm facing performance issues with games that I've made in HTML5 to play in Ipad. I tried to import them to the format folio in DPS (Adobe Digital Publishing Suite). However when I import the HTML game into Indesign and try to preview it in Adobe content viewer, the game doesn't open or works without perform properly (there is a lag that doesn't let you play the game with a little of fun).
The games that I've created have a memory use max of 35mb and weighs 30mb max.
Does anyone know what's happen and what I can do to fix that performance issue?
Thanks a lot!Moved to DPS
-
Performance issue in DB need help with analysing this ADDM report
Hi,
My environment:
Os: RHEL5U3 / 11.1.0.7 64 bit / R12.1.1 64 bit
Issue:
Few days are am facing serious of performance problem in our Production instance. Normally the issue will occur 5 to 10 minutes occasionally per day. At the time of issue we not able to access the EBS application its taking time to load. But backend all the oracle, listener and apps services are up and running. No locks at table and session level. Cpu and memory usage is normal.
We have monitored using "Enterprise Manager" for this issue and we found the wait session present more in Active session tab. At this time EBS application is not able access its loading too time. After some time the in Active session tab the wait session came normal and when we try to access the EBS application its working fine.
We try to find the cause of the issue by running addm report. But am not able to understand what its says. Kindly suggests me
ADDM Report for Task 'TASK_42656'
Analysis Period
AWR snapshot range from 14754 to 14755.
Time period starts at 17-APR-12 11.00.22 AM
Time period ends at 17-APR-12 12.00.33 PM
Analysis Target
Database 'PRD' with DB ID 1789440879.
Database version 11.1.0.7.0.
ADDM performed an analysis of instance PRD, numbered 1 and hosted at
advgrpdb.advgroup.ae.
Activity During the Analysis Period
Total database time was 18674 seconds.
The average number of active sessions was 5.17.
Summary of Findings
Description Active Sessions Recommendations
Percent of Activity
1 Top SQL by DB Time 3.43 | 66.33 5
2 Buffer Busy 2.52 | 48.81 5
3 Buffer Busy 1.39 | 26.81 2
4 Log File Switches .91 | 17.56 1
5 Buffer Busy .56 | 10.87 2
6 Undersized SGA .38 | 7.37 1
7 Commits and Rollbacks .28 | 5.42 1
8 Undo I/O .18 | 3.53 0
9 CPU Usage .13 | 2.57 1
10 Top SQL By I/O .11 | 2.21 1
Findings and Recommendations
Finding 1: Top SQL by DB Time
Impact is 3.43 active sessions, 66.33% of total activity.
SQL statements consuming significant database time were found.
Recommendation 1: SQL Tuning
Estimated benefit is 1.59 active sessions, 30.8% of total activity.
Action
Investigate the SQL statement with SQL_ID "a49xsqhv0h31b" for possible
performance improvements.
Related Object
SQL statement with SQL_ID a49xsqhv0h31b.
SELECT R.Conc_Login_Id, R.Request_Id, R.Phase_Code, R.Status_Code,
P.Application_ID, P.Concurrent_Program_ID, P.Concurrent_Program_Name,
R.Enable_Trace, R.Restart, DECODE(R.Increment_Dates, 'Y', 'Y', 'N'),
R.NLS_Compliant, R.OUTPUT_FILE_TYPE, E.Executable_Name,
E.Execution_File_Name, A2.Basepath, DECODE(R.Stale, 'Y', 'C',
P.Execution_Method_Code), P.Print_Flag, P.Execution_Options,
DECODE(P.Srs_Flag, 'Y', 'Y', 'Q', 'Y', 'N'), P.Argument_Method_Code,
R.Print_Style, R.Argument_Input_Method_Code, R.Queue_Method_Code,
R.Responsibility_ID, R.Responsibility_Application_ID, R.Requested_By,
R.Number_Of_Copies, R.Save_Output_Flag, R.Printer, R.Print_Group,
R.Priority, U.User_Name, O.Oracle_Username,
O.Encrypted_Oracle_Password, R.Cd_Id, A.Basepath,
A.Application_Short_Name, TO_CHAR(R.Requested_Start_Date,'YYYY/MM/DD
HH24:MI:SS'), R.Nls_Language, R.Nls_Territory,
R.Nls_Numeric_Characters, DECODE(R.Parent_Request_ID, NULL, 0,
R.Parent_Request_ID), R.Priority_Request_ID, R.Single_Thread_Flag,
R.Has_Sub_Request, R.Is_Sub_Request, R.Req_Information,
R.Description, R.Resubmit_Time, TO_CHAR(R.Resubmit_Interval),
R.Resubmit_Interval_Type_Code, R.Resubmit_Interval_Unit_Code,
TO_CHAR(R.Resubmit_End_Date,'YYYY/MM/DD HH24:MI:SS'),
Decode(E.Execution_File_Name, NULL, 'N', Decode(E.Subroutine_Name,
NULL, Decode(E.Execution_Method_Code, 'I', 'Y', 'J', 'Y', 'N'),
'Y')), R.Argument1, R.Argument2, R.Argument3, R.Argument4,
R.Argument5, R.Argument6, R.Argument7, R.Argument8, R.Argument9,
R.Argument10, R.Argument11, R.Argument12, R.Argument13, R.Argument14,
R.Argument15, R.Argument16, R.Argument17, R.Argument18, R.Argument19,
R.Argument20, R.Argument21, R.Argument22, R.Argument23, R.Argument24,
R.Argument25, X.Argument26, X.Argument27, X.Argument28, X.Argument29,
X.Argument30, X.Argument31, X.Argument32, X.Argument33, X.Argument34,
X.Argument35, X.Argument36, X.Argument37, X.Argument38, X.Argument39,
X.Argument40, X.Argument41, X.Argument42, X.Argument43, X.Argument44,
X.Argument45, X.Argument46, X.Argument47, X.Argument48, X.Argument49,
X.Argument50, X.Argument51, X.Argument52, X.Argument53, X.Argument54,
X.Argument55, X.Argument56, X.Argument57, X.Argument58, X.Argument59,
X.Argument60, X.Argument61, X.Argument62, X.Argument63, X.Argument64,
X.Argument65, X.Argument66, X.Argument67, X.Argument68, X.Argument69,
X.Argument70, X.Argument71, X.Argument72, X.Argument73, X.Argument74,
X.Argument75, X.Argument76, X.Argument77, X.Argument78, X.Argument79,
X.Argument80, X.Argument81, X.Argument82, X.Argument83, X.Argument84,
X.Argument85, X.Argument86, X.Argument87, X.Argument88, X.Argument89,
X.Argument90, X.Argument91, X.Argument92, X.Argument93, X.Argument94,
X.Argument95, X.Argument96, X.Argument97, X.Argument98, X.Argument99,
X.Argument100, R.number_of_arguments, C.CD_Name,
NVL(R.Security_Group_ID, 0), NVL(R.org_id, 0) FROM
fnd_concurrent_requests R, fnd_concurrent_programs P, fnd_application
A, fnd_user U, fnd_oracle_userid O, fnd_conflicts_domain C,
fnd_concurrent_queues Q, fnd_application A2, fnd_executables E,
fnd_conc_request_arguments X WHERE R.Status_code = 'I' And
((R.OPS_INSTANCE is null) or (R.OPS_INSTANCE = -1) or
(R.OPS_INSTANCE =
decode(:dcp_on,1,FND_CONC_GLOBAL.OPS_INST_NUM,R.OPS_INSTANCE))) And
R.Request_ID = X.Request_ID(+) And R.Program_Application_Id =
P.Application_Id(+) And R.Concurrent_Program_Id =
P.Concurrent_Program_Id(+) And R.Program_Application_Id =
A.Application_Id(+) And P.Executable_Application_Id =
E.Application_Id(+) And P.Executable_Id =
E.Executable_Id(+) And P.Executable_Application_Id =
A2.Application_Id(+) And R.Requested_By = U.User_Id(+) And R.Cd_Id
= C.Cd_Id(+) And R.Oracle_Id = O.Oracle_Id(+) And Q.Application_Id =
:q_applid And Q.Concurrent_Queue_Id = :queue_id And (P.Enabled_Flag
is NULL OR P.Enabled_Flag = 'Y') And R.Hold_Flag = 'N' And
R.Requested_Start_Date <= Sysdate And ( R.Enforce_Seriality_Flag =
'N' OR ( C.RunAlone_Flag = P.Run_Alone_Flag And (P.Run_Alone_Flag =
'N' OR Not Exists (Select Null From Fnd_Concurrent_Requests Sr
Where Sr.Status_Code In ('R', 'T') And Sr.Enforce_Seriality_Flag =
'Y' And Sr.CD_id = C.CD_Id)))) And Q.Running_Processes <=
Q.Max_Processes And R.Rowid = :reqname And
((P.Execution_Method_Code != 'S' OR
(R.PROGRAM_APPLICATION_ID,R.CONCURRENT_PROGRAM_ID) IN
((0,98),(0,100),(0,31721),(0,31722),(0,31757))) AND
((R.PROGRAM_APPLICATION_ID,R.CONCURRENT_PROGRAM_ID) NOT IN
((510,40112),(510,40113),(510,41497),(510,41498),(530,41859),(530,418
60),(535,41492),(535,41493),(535,41494)))) FOR UPDATE OF
R.status_code NoWait
Rationale
SQL statement with SQL_ID "a49xsqhv0h31b" was executed 4686 times and
had an average elapsed time of 1.2 seconds.
Rationale
Waiting for event "buffer busy waits" in wait class "Concurrency"
accounted for 85% of the database time spent in processing the SQL
statement with SQL_ID "a49xsqhv0h31b".
Rationale
Waiting for event "log file switch (checkpoint incomplete)" in wait
class "Configuration" accounted for 9% of the database time spent in
processing the SQL statement with SQL_ID "a49xsqhv0h31b".
Recommendation 3: SQL Tuning
Estimated benefit is .56 active sessions, 10.91% of total activity.
Action
Investigate the SQL statement with SQL_ID "5d7957yktf3nn" for possible
performance improvements.
Related Object
SQL statement with SQL_ID 5d7957yktf3nn.
UPDATE ICX_SESSIONS SET TIME_OUT = :B2 WHERE SESSION_ID = :B1
Rationale
SQL statement with SQL_ID "5d7957yktf3nn" was executed 266 times and had
an average elapsed time of 7.6 seconds.
Rationale
Waiting for event "buffer busy waits" in wait class "Concurrency"
accounted for 86% of the database time spent in processing the SQL
statement with SQL_ID "5d7957yktf3nn".
Rationale
Waiting for event "log file switch (checkpoint incomplete)" in wait
class "Configuration" accounted for 7% of the database time spent in
processing the SQL statement with SQL_ID "5d7957yktf3nn".
Finding 2: Buffer Busy
Impact is 2.52 active sessions, 48.81% of total activity.
Read and write contention on database blocks was consuming significant
database time.
Recommendation 1: Application Analysis
Estimated benefit is 1.42 active sessions, 27.44% of total activity.
Action
Trace the cause of object contention due to SELECT statements in the
application using the information provided.
Related Object
Database object with ID 34562.
Rationale
The SELECT statement with SQL_ID "a49xsqhv0h31b" was significantly
affected by "buffer busy" waits.
Related Object
SQL statement with SQL_ID a49xsqhv0h31b.
SELECT R.Conc_Login_Id, R.Request_Id, R.Phase_Code, R.Status_Code,
P.Application_ID, P.Concurrent_Program_ID, P.Concurrent_Program_Name,
R.Enable_Trace, R.Restart, DECODE(R.Increment_Dates, 'Y', 'Y', 'N'),
R.NLS_Compliant, R.OUTPUT_FILE_TYPE, E.Executable_Name,
E.Execution_File_Name, A2.Basepath, DECODE(R.Stale, 'Y', 'C',
P.Execution_Method_Code), P.Print_Flag, P.Execution_Options,
DECODE(P.Srs_Flag, 'Y', 'Y', 'Q', 'Y', 'N'), P.Argument_Method_Code,
R.Print_Style, R.Argument_Input_Method_Code, R.Queue_Method_Code,
R.Responsibility_ID, R.Responsibility_Application_ID, R.Requested_By,
R.Number_Of_Copies, R.Save_Output_Flag, R.Printer, R.Print_Group,
R.Priority, U.User_Name, O.Oracle_Username,
O.Encrypted_Oracle_Password, R.Cd_Id, A.Basepath,
A.Application_Short_Name, TO_CHAR(R.Requested_Start_Date,'YYYY/MM/DD
HH24:MI:SS'), R.Nls_Language, R.Nls_Territory,
R.Nls_Numeric_Characters, DECODE(R.Parent_Request_ID, NULL, 0,
R.Parent_Request_ID), R.Priority_Request_ID, R.Single_Thread_Flag,
R.Has_Sub_Request, R.Is_Sub_Request, R.Req_Information,
R.Description, R.Resubmit_Time, TO_CHAR(R.Resubmit_Interval),
R.Resubmit_Interval_Type_Code, R.Resubmit_Interval_Unit_Code,
TO_CHAR(R.Resubmit_End_Date,'YYYY/MM/DD HH24:MI:SS'),
Decode(E.Execution_File_Name, NULL, 'N', Decode(E.Subroutine_Name,
NULL, Decode(E.Execution_Method_Code, 'I', 'Y', 'J', 'Y', 'N'),
'Y')), R.Argument1, R.Argument2, R.Argument3, R.Argument4,
R.Argument5, R.Argument6, R.Argument7, R.Argument8, R.Argument9,
R.Argument10, R.Argument11, R.Argument12, R.Argument13, R.Argument14,
R.Argument15, R.Argument16, R.Argument17, R.Argument18, R.Argument19,
R.Argument20, R.Argument21, R.Argument22, R.Argument23, R.Argument24,
R.Argument25, X.Argument26, X.Argument27, X.Argument28, X.Argument29,
X.Argument30, X.Argument31, X.Argument32, X.Argument33, X.Argument34,
X.Argument35, X.Argument36, X.Argument37, X.Argument38, X.Argument39,
X.Argument40, X.Argument41, X.Argument42, X.Argument43, X.Argument44,
X.Argument45, X.Argument46, X.Argument47, X.Argument48, X.Argument49,
X.Argument50, X.Argument51, X.Argument52, X.Argument53, X.Argument54,
X.Argument55, X.Argument56, X.Argument57, X.Argument58, X.Argument59,
X.Argument60, X.Argument61, X.Argument62, X.Argument63, X.Argument64,
X.Argument65, X.Argument66, X.Argument67, X.Argument68, X.Argument69,
X.Argument70, X.Argument71, X.Argument72, X.Argument73, X.Argument74,
X.Argument75, X.Argument76, X.Argument77, X.Argument78, X.Argument79,
X.Argument80, X.Argument81, X.Argument82, X.Argument83, X.Argument84,
X.Argument85, X.Argument86, X.Argument87, X.Argument88, X.Argument89,
X.Argument90, X.Argument91, X.Argument92, X.Argument93, X.Argument94,
X.Argument95, X.Argument96, X.Argument97, X.Argument98, X.Argument99,
X.Argument100, R.number_of_arguments, C.CD_Name,
NVL(R.Security_Group_ID, 0), NVL(R.org_id, 0) FROM
fnd_concurrent_requests R, fnd_concurrent_programs P, fnd_application
A, fnd_user U, fnd_oracle_userid O, fnd_conflicts_domain C,
fnd_concurrent_queues Q, fnd_application A2, fnd_executables E,
fnd_conc_request_arguments X WHERE R.Status_code = 'I' And
((R.OPS_INSTANCE is null) or (R.OPS_INSTANCE = -1) or
(R.OPS_INSTANCE =
decode(:dcp_on,1,FND_CONC_GLOBAL.OPS_INST_NUM,R.OPS_INSTANCE))) And
R.Request_ID = X.Request_ID(+) And R.Program_Application_Id =
P.Application_Id(+) And R.Concurrent_Program_Id =
P.Concurrent_Program_Id(+) And R.Program_Application_Id =
A.Application_Id(+) And P.Executable_Application_Id =
E.Application_Id(+) And P.Executable_Id =
E.Executable_Id(+) And P.Executable_Application_Id =
A2.Application_Id(+) And R.Requested_By = U.User_Id(+) And R.Cd_Id
= C.Cd_Id(+) And R.Oracle_Id = O.Oracle_Id(+) And Q.Application_Id =
:q_applid And Q.Concurrent_Queue_Id = :queue_id And (P.Enabled_Flag
is NULL OR P.Enabled_Flag = 'Y') And R.Hold_Flag = 'N' And
R.Requested_Start_Date <= Sysdate And ( R.Enforce_Seriality_Flag =
'N' OR ( C.RunAlone_Flag = P.Run_Alone_Flag And (P.Run_Alone_Flag =
'N' OR Not Exists (Select Null From Fnd_Concurrent_Requests Sr
Where Sr.Status_Code In ('R', 'T') And Sr.Enforce_Seriality_Flag =
'Y' And Sr.CD_id = C.CD_Id)))) And Q.Running_Processes <=
Q.Max_Processes And R.Rowid = :reqname And
((P.Execution_Method_Code != 'S' OR
(R.PROGRAM_APPLICATION_ID,R.CONCURRENT_PROGRAM_ID) IN
((0,98),(0,100),(0,31721),(0,31722),(0,31757))) AND
((R.PROGRAM_APPLICATION_ID,R.CONCURRENT_PROGRAM_ID) NOT IN
((510,40112),(510,40113),(510,41497),(510,41498),(530,41859),(530,418
60),(535,41492),(535,41493),(535,41494)))) FOR UPDATE OF
R.status_code NoWait
UPDATE ICX_SESSIONS SET LAST_CONNECT = SYSDATE WHERE SESSION_ID = :B1
Recommendation 1: Schema Changes
Estimated benefit is .03 active sessions, .62% of total activity.
Action
Consider rebuilding the TABLE "APPLSYS.FND_LOGIN_RESP_FORMS" with object
ID 34651 using a higher value for PCTFREE.
Related Object
Database object with ID 34651.
Rationale
The UPDATE statement with SQL_ID "cqc5crhxxt36t" was significantly
affected by "buffer busy" waits.
Related Object
SQL statement with SQL_ID cqc5crhxxt36t.
UPDATE FND_LOGIN_RESP_FORMS FLRF SET END_TIME = SYSDATE WHERE
FLRF.LOGIN_ID = :B2 AND FLRF.LOGIN_RESP_ID = :B1 AND FLRF.END_TIME IS
NULL AND (FLRF.FORM_ID, FLRF.FORM_APPL_ID) = (SELECT F.FORM_ID,
F.APPLICATION_ID FROM FND_FORM F, FND_APPLICATION A WHERE F.FORM_NAME
= :B4 AND F.APPLICATION_ID = A.APPLICATION_ID AND
A.APPLICATION_SHORT_NAME = :B3 )
Symptoms That Led to the Finding:
Wait class "Concurrency" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is 2.53 active sessions, 48.87% of total activity.
Finding 4: Log File Switches
Impact is .91 active sessions, 17.56% of total activity.
Log file switch operations were consuming significant database time while
waiting for checkpoint completion.
This problem can be caused by use of hot backup mode on tablespaces. DML to
tablespaces in hot backup mode causes generation of additional redo.
Recommendation 1: Database Configuration
Estimated benefit is .91 active sessions, 17.56% of total activity.
Action
Verify whether incremental shipping was used for standby databases.
Symptoms That Led to the Finding:
Wait class "Configuration" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is .91 active sessions, 17.63% of total activity.
Finding 5: Buffer Busy
Impact is .56 active sessions, 10.87% of total activity.
A hot data block with concurrent read and write activity was found. The block
belongs to segment "ICX.ICX_SESSIONS" and is block 243489 in file 36.
Recommendation 1: Application Analysis
Estimated benefit is .56 active sessions, 10.87% of total activity.
Action
Investigate application logic to find the cause of high concurrent read
and write activity to the data present in this block.
Related Object
Database block with object number 37562, file number 36 and block
number 243489.
Rationale
The SQL statement with SQL_ID "5d7957yktf3nn" spent significant time on
"buffer busy" waits for the hot block.
Related Object
SQL statement with SQL_ID 5d7957yktf3nn.
UPDATE ICX_SESSIONS SET TIME_OUT = :B2 WHERE SESSION_ID = :B1
Rationale
The SQL statement with SQL_ID "326up1aym56dd" spent significant time on
"buffer busy" waits for the hot block.
Related Object
SQL statement with SQL_ID 326up1aym56dd.
UPDATE ICX_SESSIONS SET LAST_CONNECT = SYSDATE WHERE SESSION_ID = :B1
Recommendation 2: Schema Changes
Estimated benefit is .56 active sessions, 10.87% of total activity.
Action
Consider rebuilding the TABLE "ICX.ICX_SESSIONS" with object ID 37562
using a higher value for PCTFREE.
Related Object
Database object with ID 37562.
Symptoms That Led to the Finding:
Wait class "Concurrency" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is 2.53 active sessions, 48.87% of total activity.
Finding 6: Undersized SGA
Impact is .38 active sessions, 7.37% of total activity.
The SGA was inadequately sized, causing additional I/O or hard parses.
The value of parameter "sga_target" was "4096 M" during the analysis period.
Recommendation 1: Database Configuration
Estimated benefit is .12 active sessions, 2.33% of total activity.
Action
Increase the size of the SGA by setting the parameter "sga_target" to
4608 M.
Symptoms That Led to the Finding:
Wait class "User I/O" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is .7 active sessions, 13.57% of total activity.
Hard parsing of SQL statements was consuming significant database time.
Impact is .13 active sessions, 2.51% of total activity.
Contention for latches related to the shared pool was consuming
significant database time.
Impact is 0 active sessions, .03% of total activity.
Wait class "Concurrency" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is 2.53 active sessions, 48.87% of total activity.
Finding 7: Commits and Rollbacks
Impact is .28 active sessions, 5.42% of total activity.
Waits on event "log file sync" while performing COMMIT and ROLLBACK operations
were consuming significant database time.
Recommendation 1: Host Configuration
Estimated benefit is .28 active sessions, 5.42% of total activity.
Action
Investigate the possibility of improving the performance of I/O to the
online redo log files.
Rationale
The average size of writes to the online redo log files was 163 K and
the average time per write was 68 milliseconds.
Symptoms That Led to the Finding:
Wait class "Commit" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is .28 active sessions, 5.42% of total activity.
Finding 8: Undo I/O
Impact is .18 active sessions, 3.53% of total activity.
Undo I/O was a significant portion (26%) of the total database I/O.
No recommendations are available.
Symptoms That Led to the Finding:
The throughput of the I/O subsystem was significantly lower than
expected.
Impact is .08 active sessions, 1.46% of total activity.
Wait class "User I/O" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is .7 active sessions, 13.57% of total activity.
Finding 9: CPU Usage
Impact is .13 active sessions, 2.57% of total activity.
Time spent on the CPU by the instance was responsible for a substantial part
of database time.
Recommendation 1: SQL Tuning
Estimated benefit is .13 active sessions, 2.57% of total activity.
Finding 10: Top SQL By I/O
Impact is .11 active sessions, 2.21% of total activity.
Individual SQL statements responsible for significant user I/O wait were
found.
Recommendation 1: SQL Tuning
Estimated benefit is .11 active sessions, 2.22% of total activity.
Action
Run SQL Tuning Advisor on the SQL statement with SQL_ID "b3pnc5yctv2z5".
Related Object
SQL statement with SQL_ID b3pnc5yctv2z5.
INSERT INTO ZX_TRANSACTION_LINES_GT( APPLICATION_ID ,ENTITY_CODE
,EVENT_CLASS_CODE ,TRX_ID ,TRX_LEVEL_TYPE ,TRX_LINE_ID ,LINE_CLASS
,LINE_LEVEL_ACTION ,TRX_LINE_TYPE ,TRX_LINE_DATE
,LINE_AMT_INCLUDES_TAX_FLAG ,LINE_AMT ,TRX_LINE_QUANTITY ,UNIT_PRICE
,PRODUCT_ID ,PRODUCT_ORG_ID ,UOM_CODE ,PRODUCT_CODE ,SHIP_TO_PARTY_ID
,SHIP_FROM_PARTY_ID ,BILL_TO_PARTY_ID ,BILL_FROM_PARTY_ID
,SHIP_FROM_PARTY_SITE_ID ,BILL_FROM_PARTY_SITE_ID
,SHIP_TO_LOCATION_ID ,SHIP_FROM_LOCATION_ID ,BILL_TO_LOCATION_ID
,SHIP_THIRD_PTY_ACCT_ID ,SHIP_THIRD_PTY_ACCT_SITE_ID ,HISTORICAL_FLAG
,TRX_LINE_CURRENCY_CODE ,TRX_LINE_CURRENCY_CONV_DATE
,TRX_LINE_CURRENCY_CONV_RATE ,TRX_LINE_CURRENCY_CONV_TYPE
,TRX_LINE_MAU ,TRX_LINE_PRECISION ,HISTORICAL_TAX_CODE_ID
,TRX_BUSINESS_CATEGORY ,PRODUCT_CATEGORY ,PRODUCT_FISC_CLASSIFICATION
,LINE_INTENDED_USE ,PRODUCT_TYPE ,USER_DEFINED_FISC_CLASS
,ASSESSABLE_VALUE ,INPUT_TAX_CLASSIFICATION_CODE ,ACCOUNT_CCID
,BILL_THIRD_PTY_ACCT_ID ,BILL_THIRD_PTY_ACCT_SITE_ID ,TRX_LINE_NUMBER
,TRX_LINE_DESCRIPTION ,PRODUCT_DESCRIPTION ,USER_UPD_DET_FACTORS_FLAG
,DEFAULTING_ATTRIBUTE1 ) SELECT :B4 ,:B3 ,:B2
,PRL.REQUISITION_HEADER_ID ,:B1 ,PRL.REQUISITION_LINE_ID ,'INVOICE'
,NVL(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE,'UPDATE') ,'ITEM'
,NVL(PRL.NEED_BY_DATE, SYSDATE) ,'N' ,NVL(PRL.AMOUNT,
PRL.UNIT_PRICE*PRL.QUANTITY) ,PRL.QUANTITY ,PRL.UNIT_PRICE
,PRL.ITEM_ID ,(SELECT FSP.INVENTORY_ORGANIZATION_ID FROM
FINANCIALS_SYSTEM_PARAMS_ALL FSP WHERE FSP.ORG_ID=PRL.ORG_ID)
,(SELECT MUM.UOM_CODE FROM MTL_UNITS_OF_MEASURE MUM WHERE
MUM.UNIT_OF_MEASURE=PRL.UNIT_MEAS_LOOKUP_CODE) ,MSIB.SEGMENT1
,PRL.DESTINATION_ORGANIZATION_ID ,PV.PARTY_ID ,PRH.ORG_ID
,PV.PARTY_ID ,PVS.PARTY_SITE_ID ,PVS.PARTY_SITE_ID
,PRL.DELIVER_TO_LOCATION_ID ,(SELECT HZPS.LOCATION_ID FROM
HZ_PARTY_SITES HZPS WHERE HZPS.PARTY_SITE_ID = PVS.PARTY_SITE_ID)
,(SELECT LOCATION_ID FROM HR_ALL_ORGANIZATION_UNITS WHERE
ORGANIZATION_ID=PRH.ORG_ID) ,PRL.VENDOR_ID ,PRL.VENDOR_SITE_ID ,NULL
,NVL(PRL.CURRENCY_CODE, :B9 ) ,NVL2(PRL.CURRENCY_CODE, PRL.RATE_DATE,
SYSDATE) ,NVL2(PRL.CURRENCY_CODE, PRL.RATE, :B8 )
,NVL2(PRL.CURRENCY_CODE, PRL.RATE_TYPE, :B7 )
,FC.MINIMUM_ACCOUNTABLE_UNIT ,NVL(FC.PRECISION, 2) ,NULL
,DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.TRX_BUSINESS_CATEGORY, NULL),
NULL ) ,DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.PRODUCT_CATEGORY, NULL), NULL )
,DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.PRODUCT_FISC_CLASSIFICATION,
NULL), NULL ) ,DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.LINE_INTENDED_USE, NULL), NULL )
,DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.PRODUCT_TYPE, NULL), NULL )
,DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.USER_DEFINED_FISC_CLASS, NULL),
NULL ) ,DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.ASSESSABLE_VALUE, NULL), NULL )
,DECODE(:B6 , 'REQIMPORT', PRL.TAX_NAME,
DECODE(PRL.TAX_ATTRIBUTE_UPDATE_CODE, 'CREATE',
NVL2(PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID, ZXLDET.INPUT_TAX_CLASSIFICATION_CODE,
NULL), NULL ) ) ,NVL((SELECT PRD.CODE_COMBINATION_ID FROM
PO_REQ_DISTRIBUTIONS_ALL PRD WHERE PRD.REQUISITION_LINE_ID =
PRL.REQUISITION_LINE_ID AND ROWNUM = 1), MSIB.EXPENSE_ACCOUNT )
,PV.VENDOR_ID ,PVS.VENDOR_SITE_ID ,PRL.LINE_NUM ,PRL.ITEM_DESCRIPTION
,PRL.ITEM_DESCRIPTION ,(SELECT 'Y' FROM DUAL WHERE :B6 = 'REQIMPORT'
AND PRL.TAX_NAME IS NOT NULL) ,PRL.DESTINATION_ORGANIZATION_ID FROM
PO_REQUISITION_HEADERS_ALL PRH, PO_REQUISITION_LINES_ALL PRL,
ZX_LINES_DET_FACTORS ZXLDET, PO_VENDORS PV, PO_VENDOR_SITES_ALL PVS,
MTL_SYSTEM_ITEMS_B MSIB, FND_CURRENCIES FC WHERE
PRH.REQUISITION_HEADER_ID = :B5 AND PRH.REQUISITION_HEADER_ID =
PRL.REQUISITION_HEADER_ID AND ZXLDET.APPLICATION_ID(+) = :B4 AND
ZXLDET.ENTITY_CODE(+) = :B3 AND ZXLDET.EVENT_CLASS_CODE(+) = :B2 AND
ZXLDET.TRX_LEVEL_TYPE(+) = :B1 AND ZXLDET.TRX_LINE_ID(+) =
PRL.PARENT_REQ_LINE_ID AND PV.VENDOR_ID(+) = PRL.VENDOR_ID AND
PVS.VENDOR_SITE_ID(+) = PRL.VENDOR_SITE_ID AND
MSIB.INVENTORY_ITEM_ID(+) = PRL.ITEM_ID AND MSIB.ORGANIZATION_ID(+) =
PRL.ORG_ID AND FC.CURRENCY_CODE(+) = PRL.CURRENCY_CODE AND
NVL(PRL.MODIFIED_BY_AGENT_FLAG, 'N') = 'N' AND NVL(PRL.CANCEL_FLAG,
'N') = 'N' AND NVL(PRL.CLOSED_CODE, 'OPEN') <> 'FINALLY CLOSED' AND
PRL.LINE_LOCATION_ID IS NULL AND PRL.AT_SOURCING_FLAG IS NULL
Rationale
SQL statement with SQL_ID "b3pnc5yctv2z5" was executed 3 times and had
an average elapsed time of 138 seconds.
Rationale
Average time spent in User I/O wait events per execution was 137
seconds.
Symptoms That Led to the Finding:
Wait class "User I/O" was consuming significant database time.
Impact is .7 active sessions, 13.57% of total activity.
Additional Information
Miscellaneous Information
Wait class "Application" was not consuming significant database time.
Wait class "Network" was not consuming significant database time.
Session connect and disconnect calls were not consuming significant database
time.
The database's maintenance windows were active during 100% of the analysis
period.
Regards
AthishFew days are am facing serious of performance problem in our Production instanceFor production issues, please log a SR.
Was this working before? If yes, any changes been done recently?
Do you have the statistics collected up to date?
Please see these docs.
AutoInvoice Performance Issue When Processing Tax [ID 1059275.1]
R12 : System Hangs When Attempting To Save Blanket Release After Applying Patch 11817843 [ID 1333336.1]
Thanks,
Hussein -
Short dump due to performance issue
Hi all,
I am facing performance issue in my sandbox. Below is the content of short dump.
Short text
Unable to fulfil request for 805418 bytes of memory space.
What happened?
Each transaction requires some main memory space to process
application data. If the operating system cannot provide any more
space, the transaction is terminated.
What can you do?
Try to find out (e.g. by targetted data selection) whether the
transaction will run with less main memory.
If there is a temporary bottleneck, execute the transaction again.
If the error persists, ask your system administrator to check the
following profile parameters:
o ztta/roll_area (1.000.000 - 15.000.000)
Classic roll area per user and internal mode
usual amount of roll area per user and internal mode
o ztta/roll_extension (10.000.000 - 500.000.000)
Amount of memory per user in extended memory (EM)
o abap/heap_area_total (100.000.000 - 1.500.000.000)
Amount of memory (malloc) for all users of an application
server. If several background processes are running on
one server, temporary bottlenecks may occur.
Pls help me to resolve this issue
Regards,
Kalyani
Edited by: kalyani usa on Jan 9, 2008 9:04 PMHi Rob Burbank,
I am pasting the transaction I found in the dump
Transaction......... "SESSION_MANAGER "
Transactions ID..... "4783E5B027A73C1EE10000000A200A17"
Program............. "SAPMSYST"
Screen.............. "SAPMSYST 0500"
Screen line......... 16
Also i am pasting the screenshot of ST02
Nametab (NTAB) 0
Table definition 99,22 6.799 3.591 62,97 20.000 12.591 62,96 0 8.761
Field definition 99,06 31.563 345 1,15 20.000 13.305 66,53 244 7.420
Short NTAB 99,22 3.625 2.590 86,33 5.000 3.586 71,72 0 1.414
Initial records 52,50 6.625 3.408 56,80 5.000 249 4,98 817 5.568
0
program 99,58 300.000 1.212 0,42 75.000 67.561 90,08 7.939 46.575
CUA 99,08 3.000 211 8,84 1.500 1.375 91,67 23.050 846
Screen 99,46 4.297 1.842 45,00 2.000 1.816 90,80 81 963
Calendar 100,00 488 401 85,14 200 111 55,50 0 89
OTR 100,00 4.096 3.281 100,00 2.000 2.000 100,00 0
0
Tables 0
Generic Key 99,69 29.297 2.739 9,87 5.000 177 3,54 57 56.694
Single record 89,24 10.000 63 0,64 500 468 93,60 241 227.134
0
Export/import 76,46 50.000 40.980 83,32 2.000 2.676
Exp./ Imp. SHM 97,82 4.096 3.094 94,27 2.000 1.999 99,95 0
SAP Memory Curr.Use % CurUse[KB] MaxUse[KB] In Mem[KB] OnDisk[KB] SAPCurCach HitRatio %
Roll area 0,16 432 18.672 131.072 131.072 IDs 98,11
Page area 0,19 496 187.616 65.536 196.608 Statement 95,00
Extended memory 9,89 151.552 1.531.904 1.531.904 0 0,00
Heap memory 0 0 1.953.045 0
0,00
Regards,
Kalyani -
While creating Billing, system is very slow..performance issue
Hi,
While creating Billing, system is very slow. How can I debugg and provide the analysis where is the exact problem.
This is showing performance issue.
Waiting for kind response.
Best Regards,
Padhy
Moderator Message : Duplicate post locked.
Edited by: Vinod Kumar on May 12, 2011 10:59 AMhi,
Chk the links
http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw04/helpdata/en/4a/e71f39488fee0ce10000000a114084/content.htm
Re: How to create Secondary Index?
How may secondary indices I can create on the ODS?
Deletion of ODS index
Ramesh -
Performance issue of BI reports in SAP Enterprise portal
Dear Friends,
We have integrated BI reports with SAP Enterprise portal 7.0.Reports are running properly But the issue is reports are taking more time to dispsaly its content and leading it to performance effect.
In Bex ( BI side) reports performance is little better than SAP EP platform. BI Team also looking for ways to improve performance at BI side.
Could you please share your valuable ideas to improve the performance at SAP EP side also ..
Thanks and Regards
Ratnakar ReddyHi ratnakar,
The first step is to identify which component is causing the performance problem. Run your report in the portal but try appending the string &PROFILING=X in the end of the URL. This will generate BI statistics which you can use to see which component (Java stack, ABAP stack, Database) is causing the performance issue.
Hope this helps. -
QUERY PERFORMANCE AND DATA LOADING PERFORMANCE ISSUES
WHAT ARE QUERY PERFORMANCE ISSUES WE NEED TO TAKE CARE PLEASE EXPLAIN AND LET ME KNOW T CODES...PLZ URGENT
WHAT ARE DATALOADING PERFORMANCE ISSUES WE NEED TO TAKE CARE PLEASE EXPLAIN AND LET ME KNOW T CODES PLZ URGENT
WILL REWARD FULL POINT S
REGARDS
GURUBW Back end
Some Tips -
1)Identify long-running extraction processes on the source system. Extraction processes are performed by several extraction jobs running on the source system. The run-time of these jobs affects the performance. Use transaction code SM37 Background Processing Job Management to analyze the run-times of these jobs. If the run-time of data collection jobs lasts for several hours, schedule these jobs to run more frequently. This way, less data is written into update tables for each run and extraction performance increases.
2)Identify high run-times for ABAP code, especially for user exits. The quality of any custom ABAP programs used in data extraction affects the extraction performance. Use transaction code SE30 ABAP/4 Run-time Analysis and then run the analysis for the transaction code RSA3 Extractor Checker. The system then records the activities of the extraction program so you can review them to identify time-consuming activities. Eliminate those long-running activities or substitute them with alternative program logic.
3)Identify expensive SQL statements. If database run-time is high for extraction jobs, use transaction code ST05 Performance Trace. On this screen, select ALEREMOTE user and then select SQL trace to record the SQL statements. Identify the time-consuming sections from the results. If the data-selection times are high on a particular SQL statement, index the DataSource tables to increase the performance of selection (see no. 6 below). While using ST05, make sure that no other extraction job is running with ALEREMOTE user.
4)Balance loads by distributing processes onto different servers if possible. If your site uses more than one BW application server, distribute the extraction processes to different servers using transaction code SM59 Maintain RFC Destination. Load balancing is possible only if the extraction program allows the option
5)Set optimum parameters for data-packet size. Packet size affects the number of data requests to the database. Set the data-packet size to optimum values for an efficient data-extraction mechanism. To find the optimum value, start with a packet size in the range of 50,000 to 100,000 and gradually increase it. At some point, you will reach the threshold at which increasing packet size further does not provide any performance increase. To set the packet size, use transaction code SBIW BW IMG Menu on the source system. To set the data load parameters for flat-file uploads, use transaction code RSCUSTV6 in BW.
6)Build indexes on DataSource tables based on selection criteria. Indexing DataSource tables improves the extraction performance, because it reduces the read times of those tables.
7)Execute collection jobs in parallel. Like the Business Content extractors, generic extractors have a number of collection jobs to retrieve relevant data from DataSource tables. Scheduling these collection jobs to run in parallel reduces the total extraction time, and they can be scheduled via transaction code SM37 in the source system.
8). Break up your data selections for InfoPackages and schedule the portions to run in parallel. This parallel upload mechanism sends different portions of the data to BW at the same time, and as a result the total upload time is reduced. You can schedule InfoPackages in the Administrator Workbench.
You can upload data from a data target (InfoCube and ODS) to another data target within the BW system. While uploading, you can schedule more than one InfoPackage with different selection options in each one. For example, fiscal year or fiscal year period can be used as selection options. Avoid using parallel uploads for high volumes of data if hardware resources are constrained. Each InfoPacket uses one background process (if scheduled to run in the background) or dialog process (if scheduled to run online) of the application server, and too many processes could overwhelm a slow server.
9). Building secondary indexes on the tables for the selection fields optimizes these tables for reading, reducing extraction time. If your selection fields are not key fields on the table, primary indexes are not much of a help when accessing data. In this case it is better to create secondary indexes with selection fields on the associated table using ABAP Dictionary to improve better selection performance.
10)Analyze upload times to the PSA and identify long-running uploads. When you extract the data using PSA method, data is written into PSA tables in the BW system. If your data is on the order of tens of millions, consider partitioning these PSA tables for better performance, but pay attention to the partition sizes. Partitioning PSA tables improves data-load performance because it's faster to insert data into smaller database tables. Partitioning also provides increased performance for maintenance of PSA tables for example, you can delete a portion of data faster. You can set the size of each partition in the PSA parameters screen, in transaction code SPRO or RSCUSTV6, so that BW creates a new partition automatically when a threshold value is reached.
11)Debug any routines in the transfer and update rules and eliminate single selects from the routines. Using single selects in custom ABAP routines for selecting data from database tables reduces performance considerably. It is better to use buffers and array operations. When you use buffers or array operations, the system reads data from the database tables and stores it in the memory for manipulation, improving performance. If you do not use buffers or array operations, the whole reading process is performed on the database with many table accesses, and performance deteriorates. Also, extensive use of library transformations in the ABAP code reduces performance; since these transformations are not compiled in advance, they are carried out during run-time.
12)Before uploading a high volume of transaction data into InfoCubes, activate the number-range buffer for dimension IDs. The number-range buffer is a parameter that identifies the number of sequential dimension IDs stored in the memory. If you increase the number range before high-volume data upload, you reduce the number of reads from the dimension tables and hence increase the upload performance. Do not forget to set the number-range values back to their original values after the upload. Use transaction code SNRO to maintain the number range buffer values for InfoCubes.
13)Drop the indexes before uploading high-volume data into InfoCubes. Regenerate them after the upload. Indexes on InfoCubes are optimized for reading data from the InfoCubes. If the indexes exist during the upload, BW reads the indexes and tries to insert the records according to the indexes, resulting in poor upload performance. You can automate the dropping and regeneration of the indexes through InfoPackage scheduling. You can drop indexes in the Manage InfoCube screen in the Administrator Workbench.
14)IDoc (intermediate document) archiving improves the extraction and loading performance and can be applied on both BW and R/3 systems. In addition to IDoc archiving, data archiving is available for InfoCubes and ODS objects.
Hope it Helps
Chetan
@CP.. -
Performance issue showing read by other session Event
Hi All,
we are having a severe performance issue in my database when we are running batch jobs.
This was a new database(11.2.0.2) and we are testing the performance by running some batch jobs. These batch jobs included some inserts and updates.
I am seeing read by other session in top 5 timed events and cache buffers chains in Latch Miss Sources section.
Please help me to solve this out.
Inst Num Startup Time Release RAC
1 27-Feb-12 09:03 11.2.0.2.0 NO
Platform CPUs Cores Sockets Memory(GB)
Linux x86 64-bit 8 8 8 48.00
Snap Id Snap Time Sessions Curs/Sess
Begin Snap: 5605 29-Feb-12 03:00:27 63 4.5
End Snap: 5614 29-Feb-12 12:00:47 63 4.3
Elapsed: 540.32 (mins)
DB Time: 1,774.23 (mins)
Cache Sizes Begin End
~~~~~~~~~~~ ---------- ----------
Buffer Cache: 1,952M 1,952M Std Block Size: 16K
Shared Pool Size: 1,024M 1,024M Log Buffer: 18,868K
Load Profile Per Second Per Transaction Per Exec Per Call
~~~~~~~~~~~~ --------------- --------------- ---------- ----------
DB Time(s): 3.3 0.8 0.02 0.05
DB CPU(s): 1.1 0.3 0.01 0.02
Redo size: 55,763.8 13,849.3
Logical reads: 23,906.6 5,937.4
Block changes: 325.7 80.9
Physical reads: 665.6 165.3
Physical writes: 40.4 10.0
User calls: 60.7 15.1
Parses: 10.6 2.6
Hard parses: 1.1 0.3
W/A MB processed: 0.6 0.2
Logons: 0.1 0.0
Executes: 151.2 37.6
Rollbacks: 0.0 0.0
Transactions: 4.0
Instance Efficiency Percentages (Target 100%)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Buffer Nowait %: 99.94 Redo NoWait %: 100.00
Buffer Hit %: 97.90 In-memory Sort %: 100.00
Library Hit %: 98.06 Soft Parse %: 90.16
Execute to Parse %: 92.96 Latch Hit %: 100.00
Parse CPU to Parse Elapsd %: 76.71 % Non-Parse CPU: 98.57
Shared Pool Statistics Begin End
Memory Usage %: 89.38 87.96
% SQL with executions>1: 97.14 95.15
% Memory for SQL w/exec>1: 96.05 92.46
Top 5 Timed Foreground Events
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Avg
wait % DB
Event Waits Time(s) (ms) time Wait Class
db file sequential read 14,092,706 65,613 5 61.6 User I/O
DB CPU 34,819 32.7
read by other session 308,534 1,260 4 1.2 User I/O
direct path read 97,454 987 10 .9 User I/O
db file scattered read 71,870 910 13 .9 User I/O
Host CPU (CPUs: 8 Cores: 8 Sockets: 8)
~~~~~~~~ Load Average
Begin End %User %System %WIO %Idle
0.43 0.36 13.7 0.6 9.7 85.7
Instance CPU
~~~~~~~~~~~~
% of total CPU for Instance: 13.5
% of busy CPU for Instance: 94.2
%DB time waiting for CPU - Resource Mgr: 0.0
Memory Statistics
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Begin End
Host Mem (MB): 49,152.0 49,152.0
SGA use (MB): 3,072.0 3,072.0
PGA use (MB): 506.5 629.1
% Host Mem used for SGA+PGA: 7.28 7.53
Time Model Statistics
-> Total time in database user-calls (DB Time): 106453.8s
-> Statistics including the word "background" measure background process
time, and so do not contribute to the DB time statistic
-> Ordered by % or DB time desc, Statistic name
Statistic Name Time (s) % of DB Time
sql execute elapsed time 105,531.1 99.1
DB CPU 34,818.8 32.7
parse time elapsed 714.7 .7
hard parse elapsed time 684.8 .6
PL/SQL execution elapsed time 161.9 .2
PL/SQL compilation elapsed time 44.2 .0
connection management call elapsed time 16.9 .0
hard parse (sharing criteria) elapsed time 10.2 .0
hard parse (bind mismatch) elapsed time 9.4 .0
sequence load elapsed time 2.9 .0
repeated bind elapsed time 0.5 .0
failed parse elapsed time 0.0 .0
DB time 106,453.8
background elapsed time 1,753.9
background cpu time 61.7
Operating System Statistics
-> *TIME statistic values are diffed.
All others display actual values. End Value is displayed if different
-> ordered by statistic type (CPU Use, Virtual Memory, Hardware Config), Name
Statistic Value End Value
BUSY_TIME 3,704,415
IDLE_TIME 22,203,740
IOWAIT_TIME 2,517,864
NICE_TIME 3
SYS_TIME 145,696
USER_TIME 3,557,758
LOAD 0 0
RSRC_MGR_CPU_WAIT_TIME 0
VM_IN_BYTES 358,813,045,760
VM_OUT_BYTES 29,514,830,848
PHYSICAL_MEMORY_BYTES 51,539,607,552
NUM_CPUS 8
NUM_CPU_CORES 8
NUM_CPU_SOCKETS 8
GLOBAL_RECEIVE_SIZE_MAX 4,194,304
GLOBAL_SEND_SIZE_MAX 1,048,586
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_DEFAULT 87,380
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_MAX 4,194,304
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_MIN 4,096
TCP_SEND_SIZE_DEFAULT 16,384
TCP_SEND_SIZE_MAX 4,194,304
TCP_SEND_SIZE_MIN 4,096
Operating System Statistics -
Snap Time Load %busy %user %sys %idle %iowait
29-Feb 03:00:27 0.4 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
29-Feb 04:00:35 1.4 11.9 11.2 0.6 88.1 14.3
29-Feb 05:00:41 1.7 13.8 13.2 0.6 86.2 15.8
29-Feb 06:00:48 1.5 14.0 13.5 0.6 86.0 12.3
29-Feb 07:01:00 1.8 16.3 15.8 0.5 83.7 10.4
29-Feb 08:00:12 2.6 23.2 22.5 0.6 76.8 12.6
29-Feb 09:00:26 1.3 16.6 16.0 0.5 83.4 5.7
29-Feb 10:00:33 1.2 13.8 13.3 0.5 86.2 2.0
29-Feb 11:00:43 1.3 14.5 14.0 0.5 85.5 3.8
29-Feb 12:00:47 0.4 4.9 4.2 0.7 95.1 10.6
Foreground Wait Class
-> s - second, ms - millisecond - 1000th of a second
-> ordered by wait time desc, waits desc
-> %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
-> Captured Time accounts for 97.9% of Total DB time 106,453.79 (s)
-> Total FG Wait Time: 69,415.64 (s) DB CPU time: 34,818.79 (s)
Avg
%Time Total Wait wait
Wait Class Waits -outs Time (s) (ms) %DB time
User I/O 14,693,843 0 69,222 5 65.0
DB CPU 34,819 32.7
Commit 40,629 0 119 3 0.1
System I/O 26,504 0 57 2 0.1
Network 1,945,010 0 11 0 0.0
Other 125,200 99 4 0 0.0
Application 2,673 0 2 1 0.0
Concurrency 3,059 0 1 0 0.0
Configuration 31 19 0 15 0.0
Foreground Wait Events
-> s - second, ms - millisecond - 1000th of a second
-> Only events with Total Wait Time (s) >= .001 are shown
-> ordered by wait time desc, waits desc (idle events last)
-> %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
Avg
%Time Total Wait wait Waits % DB
Event Waits -outs Time (s) (ms) /txn time
db file sequential read 14,092,706 0 65,613 5 108.0 61.6
read by other session 308,534 0 1,260 4 2.4 1.2
direct path read 97,454 0 987 10 0.7 .9
db file scattered read 71,870 0 910 13 0.6 .9
db file parallel read 35,001 0 372 11 0.3 .3
log file sync 40,629 0 119 3 0.3 .1
control file sequential re 26,504 0 57 2 0.2 .1
direct path read temp 14,499 0 49 3 0.1 .0
direct path write temp 9,186 0 28 3 0.1 .0
SQL*Net message to client 1,923,973 0 5 0 14.7 .0
SQL*Net message from dblin 1,056 0 5 5 0.0 .0
Disk file operations I/O 8,848 0 2 0 0.1 .0
ASM file metadata operatio 36 0 2 54 0.0 .0
SQL*Net break/reset to cli 2,636 0 1 1 0.0 .0
ADR block file read 472 0 1 1 0.0 .0
os thread startup 8 0 1 74 0.0 .0
SQL*Net more data to clien 17,656 0 1 0 0.1 .0
asynch descriptor resize 123,852 100 0 0 0.9 .0
local write wait 110 0 0 4 0.0 .0
utl_file I/O 55,635 0 0 0 0.4 .0
log file switch (private s 8 0 0 52 0.0 .0
cursor: pin S wait on X 2 0 0 142 0.0 .0
enq: KO - fast object chec 13 0 0 20 0.0 .0
PX Deq: Slave Session Stat 248 0 0 1 0.0 .0
enq: RO - fast object reus 18 0 0 11 0.0 .0
latch: cache buffers chain 2,511 0 0 0 0.0 .0
latch: shared pool 195 0 0 1 0.0 .0
CSS initialization 12 0 0 8 0.0 .0
PX qref latch 54 100 0 2 0.0 .0
SQL*Net more data from cli 995 0 0 0 0.0 .0
SQL*Net more data from dbl 300 0 0 0 0.0 .0
kksfbc child completion 1 100 0 56 0.0 .0
library cache: mutex X 244 0 0 0 0.0 .0
PX Deq: Signal ACK RSG 124 0 0 0 0.0 .0
undo segment extension 6 100 0 7 0.0 .0
PX Deq: Signal ACK EXT 124 0 0 0 0.0 .0
library cache load lock 3 0 0 9 0.0 .0
ADR block file write 45 0 0 1 0.0 .0
CSS operation: action 12 0 0 2 0.0 .0
reliable message 28 0 0 1 0.0 .0
CSS operation: query 72 0 0 0 0.0 .0
latch: row cache objects 14 0 0 1 0.0 .0
enq: SQ - contention 17 0 0 0 0.0 .0
latch free 32 0 0 0 0.0 .0
buffer busy waits 52 0 0 0 0.0 .0
enq: PS - contention 16 0 0 0 0.0 .0
enq: TX - row lock content 6 0 0 1 0.0 .0
SQL*Net message to dblink 1,018 0 0 0 0.0 .0
cursor: pin S 23 0 0 0 0.0 .0
latch: cache buffers lru c 8 0 0 0 0.0 .0
SQL*Net message from clien 1,923,970 0 944,508 491 14.7
jobq slave wait 66,732 100 33,334 500 0.5
Streams AQ: waiting for me 6,481 100 32,412 5001 0.0
wait for unread message on 32,858 98 32,411 986 0.3
PX Deq: Execution Msg 1,448 0 190 131 0.0
PX Deq: Execute Reply 1,196 0 74 62 0.0
HS message to agent 228 0 4 19 0.0
single-task message 42 0 4 97 0.0
PX Deq Credit: send blkd 904 0 2 3 0.0
PX Deq Credit: need buffer 205 0 1 3 0.0
Foreground Wait Events
-> s - second, ms - millisecond - 1000th of a second
-> Only events with Total Wait Time (s) >= .001 are shown
-> ordered by wait time desc, waits desc (idle events last)
-> %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
Avg
%Time Total Wait wait Waits % DB
Event Waits -outs Time (s) (ms) /txn time
PX Deq: Table Q Normal 4,291 0 1 0 0.0
PX Deq: Join ACK 124 0 0 1 0.0
PX Deq: Parse Reply 124 0 0 0 0.0
KSV master wait 256 0 0 0 0.0
Latch Miss Sources
-> only latches with sleeps are shown
-> ordered by name, sleeps desc
NoWait Waiter
Latch Name Where Misses Sleeps Sleeps
ASM map operation freeli kffmTranslate2 0 2 0
DML lock allocation ktadmc 0 2 0
FOB s.o list latch ksfd_allfob 0 2 2
In memory undo latch ktiFlushMe 0 5 0
In memory undo latch ktichg: child 0 3 0
PC and Classifier lists No latch 0 6 0
Real-time plan statistic keswxAddNewPlanEntry 0 20 20
SQL memory manager worka qesmmIRegisterWorkArea:1 0 1 1
active service list kswslogon: session logout 0 23 12
active service list kswssetsvc: PX session swi 0 6 1
active service list kswsite: service iterator 0 1 0
archive process latch kcrrgpll 0 3 3
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr_2 0 1,746 573
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr: fast path (cr pin 0 1,024 2,126
cache buffers chains kcbgcur_2 0 60 8
cache buffers chains kcbchg1: kslbegin: bufs no 0 16 3
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr: fast path 0 14 20
cache buffers chains kcbzibmlt: multi-block rea 0 10 0
cache buffers chains kcbrls_2 0 9 53
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr: kslbegin shared 0 8 1
cache buffers chains kcbrls_1 0 7 84
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr: kslbegin excl 0 6 14
cache buffers chains kcbnew: new latch again 0 6 0
cache buffers chains kcbzgb: scan from tail. no 0 6 0
cache buffers chains kcbzwb 0 5 8
cache buffers chains kcbgcur: fast path (shr) 0 3 0
cache buffers chains kcbget: pin buffer 0 3 0
cache buffers chains kcbzhngcbk2_1 0 1 0
cache buffers lru chain kcbzgws 0 19 0
cache buffers lru chain kcbo_link_q 0 3 0
call allocation ksuxds 0 14 10
call allocation ksudlp: top call 0 2 3
enqueue hash chains ksqgtl3 0 2 1
enqueue hash chains ksqrcl 0 1 2
enqueues ksqgel: create enqueue 0 1 0
object queue header oper kcbo_unlink_q 0 5 2
object queue header oper kcbo_sw_buf 0 2 0
object queue header oper kcbo_link_q 0 1 2
object queue header oper kcbo_switch_cq 0 1 2
object queue header oper kcbo_switch_mq_bg 0 1 4
parallel query alloc buf kxfpbalo 0 1 1
process allocation ksucrp:1 0 2 0
process queue reference kxfpqrsnd 0 1 0
qmn task queue latch kwqmnmvtsks: delay to read 0 1 0
redo allocation kcrfw_redo_gen: redo alloc 0 17 0
row cache objects kqreqd: reget 0 6 0
row cache objects kqrpre: find obj 0 6 13
row cache objects kqrso 0 2 0
row cache objects kqreqd 0 1 2
row cache objects kqrpre: init complete 0 1 1
shared pool kghalo 0 199 106
shared pool kghupr1 0 39 109
shared pool kghfre 0 18 19
shared pool kghalp 0 7 29
space background task la ktsj_grab_task 0 21 27
Mutex Sleep Summary
-> ordered by number of sleeps desc
Wait
Mutex Type Location Sleeps Time (ms)
Library Cache kglhdgn2 106 338 12
Library Cache kgllkc1 57 259 10
Library Cache kgllkdl1 85 123 21
Cursor Pin kkslce [KKSCHLPIN2] 70 286
Library Cache kglget2 2 31 1
Library Cache kglhdgn1 62 31 2
Library Cache kglpin1 4 26 1
Library Cache kglpnal1 90 18 0
Library Cache kglpndl1 95 15 2
Library Cache kgllldl2 112 6 0
Library Cache kglini1 32 1 0
-------------------------------------------------------------Thanks in advance.Hi,
Thanks for reply.
I provided one hour report.
Inst Num Startup Time Release RAC
1 27-Feb-12 09:03 11.2.0.2.0 NO
Platform CPUs Cores Sockets Memory(GB)
Linux x86 64-bit 8 8 8 48.00
Snap Id Snap Time Sessions Curs/Sess
Begin Snap: 5606 29-Feb-12 04:00:35 63 3.7
End Snap: 5607 29-Feb-12 05:00:41 63 3.6
Elapsed: 60.11 (mins)
DB Time: 382.67 (mins)
Cache Sizes Begin End
~~~~~~~~~~~ ---------- ----------
Buffer Cache: 1,952M 1,952M Std Block Size: 16K
Shared Pool Size: 1,024M 1,024M Log Buffer: 18,868K
Load Profile Per Second Per Transaction Per Exec Per Call
~~~~~~~~~~~~ --------------- --------------- ---------- ----------
DB Time(s): 6.4 0.8 0.03 0.03
DB CPU(s): 1.0 0.1 0.00 0.00
Redo size: 84,539.3 10,425.6
Logical reads: 23,345.6 2,879.1
Block changes: 386.5 47.7
Physical reads: 1,605.0 197.9
Physical writes: 7.1 0.9
User calls: 233.9 28.9
Parses: 4.0 0.5
Hard parses: 0.1 0.0
W/A MB processed: 0.1 0.0
Logons: 0.1 0.0
Executes: 210.9 26.0
Rollbacks: 0.0 0.0
Transactions: 8.1
Instance Efficiency Percentages (Target 100%)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Buffer Nowait %: 99.62 Redo NoWait %: 100.00
Buffer Hit %: 95.57 In-memory Sort %: 100.00
Library Hit %: 99.90 Soft Parse %: 98.68
Execute to Parse %: 98.10 Latch Hit %: 99.99
Parse CPU to Parse Elapsd %: 32.08 % Non-Parse CPU: 99.90
Shared Pool Statistics Begin End
Memory Usage %: 89.25 89.45
% SQL with executions>1: 96.79 97.52
% Memory for SQL w/exec>1: 95.67 96.56
Top 5 Timed Foreground Events
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Avg
wait % DB
Event Waits Time(s) (ms) time Wait Class
db file sequential read 3,054,464 17,002 6 74.0 User I/O
DB CPU 3,748 16.3
read by other session 199,603 796 4 3.5 User I/O
direct path read 46,301 439 9 1.9 User I/O
db file scattered read 21,113 269 13 1.2 User I/O
Host CPU (CPUs: 8 Cores: 8 Sockets: 8)
~~~~~~~~ Load Average
Begin End %User %System %WIO %Idle
1.45 1.67 13.2 0.6 15.8 86.2
Instance CPU
~~~~~~~~~~~~
% of total CPU for Instance: 13.0
% of busy CPU for Instance: 94.7
%DB time waiting for CPU - Resource Mgr: 0.0
Memory Statistics
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Begin End
Host Mem (MB): 49,152.0 49,152.0
SGA use (MB): 3,072.0 3,072.0
PGA use (MB): 513.5 467.7
% Host Mem used for SGA+PGA: 7.29 7.20
Time Model Statistics
-> Total time in database user-calls (DB Time): 22960.5s
-> Statistics including the word "background" measure background process
time, and so do not contribute to the DB time statistic
-> Ordered by % or DB time desc, Statistic name
Statistic Name Time (s) % of DB Time
sql execute elapsed time 22,835.9 99.5
DB CPU 3,748.4 16.3
parse time elapsed 15.4 .1
hard parse elapsed time 14.3 .1
PL/SQL execution elapsed time 7.5 .0
PL/SQL compilation elapsed time 6.0 .0
connection management call elapsed time 1.6 .0
sequence load elapsed time 0.4 .0
hard parse (sharing criteria) elapsed time 0.0 .0
repeated bind elapsed time 0.0 .0
failed parse elapsed time 0.0 .0
DB time 22,960.5
background elapsed time 238.1
background cpu time 4.9
Operating System Statistics
-> *TIME statistic values are diffed.
All others display actual values. End Value is displayed if different
-> ordered by statistic type (CPU Use, Virtual Memory, Hardware Config), Name
Statistic Value End Value
BUSY_TIME 396,506
IDLE_TIME 2,483,725
IOWAIT_TIME 455,495
NICE_TIME 0
SYS_TIME 16,163
USER_TIME 380,052
LOAD 1 2
RSRC_MGR_CPU_WAIT_TIME 0
VM_IN_BYTES 95,646,943,232
VM_OUT_BYTES 1,686,059,008
PHYSICAL_MEMORY_BYTES 51,539,607,552
NUM_CPUS 8
NUM_CPU_CORES 8
NUM_CPU_SOCKETS 8
GLOBAL_RECEIVE_SIZE_MAX 4,194,304
GLOBAL_SEND_SIZE_MAX 1,048,586
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_DEFAULT 87,380
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_MAX 4,194,304
TCP_RECEIVE_SIZE_MIN 4,096
TCP_SEND_SIZE_DEFAULT 16,384
TCP_SEND_SIZE_MAX 4,194,304
TCP_SEND_SIZE_MIN 4,096
Operating System Statistics -
Snap Time Load %busy %user %sys %idle %iowait
29-Feb 04:00:35 1.4 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
29-Feb 05:00:41 1.7 13.8 13.2 0.6 86.2 15.8
Foreground Wait Class
-> s - second, ms - millisecond - 1000th of a second
-> ordered by wait time desc, waits desc
-> %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
-> Captured Time accounts for 97.6% of Total DB time 22,960.46 (s)
-> Total FG Wait Time: 18,651.75 (s) DB CPU time: 3,748.35 (s)
Avg
%Time Total Wait wait
Wait Class Waits -outs Time (s) (ms) %DB time
User I/O 3,327,253 0 18,576 6 80.9
DB CPU 3,748 16.3
Commit 23,882 0 69 3 0.3
System I/O 1,035 0 3 3 0.0
Network 842,393 0 2 0 0.0
Other 10,120 99 0 0 0.0
Configuration 3 0 0 58 0.0
Application 264 0 0 1 0.0
Concurrency 1,482 0 0 0 0.0
Foreground Wait Events
-> s - second, ms - millisecond - 1000th of a second
-> Only events with Total Wait Time (s) >= .001 are shown
-> ordered by wait time desc, waits desc (idle events last)
-> %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
Avg
%Time Total Wait wait Waits % DB
Event Waits -outs Time (s) (ms) /txn time
db file sequential read 3,054,464 0 17,002 6 104.5 74.0
read by other session 199,603 0 796 4 6.8 3.5
direct path read 46,301 0 439 9 1.6 1.9
db file scattered read 21,113 0 269 13 0.7 1.2
log file sync 23,882 0 69 3 0.8 .3
db file parallel read 4,727 0 68 14 0.2 .3
control file sequential re 1,035 0 3 3 0.0 .0
SQL*Net message to client 840,792 0 2 0 28.8 .0
direct path read temp 95 0 2 18 0.0 .0
local write wait 79 0 0 4 0.0 .0
Disk file operations I/O 870 0 0 0 0.0 .0
ASM file metadata operatio 4 0 0 50 0.0 .0
log file switch (private s 3 0 0 58 0.0 .0
ADR block file read 36 0 0 3 0.0 .0
enq: RO - fast object reus 5 0 0 16 0.0 .0
latch: cache buffers chain 1,465 0 0 0 0.1 .0
SQL*Net break/reset to cli 256 0 0 0 0.0 .0
asynch descriptor resize 10,059 100 0 0 0.3 .0
SQL*Net more data to clien 1,510 0 0 0 0.1 .0
enq: KO - fast object chec 3 0 0 8 0.0 .0
SQL*Net more data from cli 91 0 0 0 0.0 .0
latch: shared pool 14 0 0 0 0.0 .0
ADR block file write 5 0 0 1 0.0 .0
reliable message 8 0 0 0 0.0 .0
direct path write temp 1 0 0 2 0.0 .0
SQL*Net message from clien 840,794 0 68,885 82 28.8
jobq slave wait 7,365 100 3,679 499 0.3
Streams AQ: waiting for me 721 100 3,605 5000 0.0
wait for unread message on 3,648 98 3,603 988 0.1
KSV master wait 20 0 0 0 0.0
Background Wait Events
-> ordered by wait time desc, waits desc (idle events last)
-> Only events with Total Wait Time (s) >= .001 are shown
-> %Timeouts: value of 0 indicates value was < .5%. Value of null is truly 0
Avg
%Time Total Wait wait Waits % bg
Event Waits -outs Time (s) (ms) /txn time
log file parallel write 29,353 0 83 3 1.0 34.8
db file parallel write 5,753 0 17 3 0.2 6.9
db file sequential read 1,638 0 15 9 0.1 6.1
control file sequential re 5,142 0 13 2 0.2 5.4
os thread startup 140 0 8 58 0.0 3.4
control file parallel writ 1,440 0 8 6 0.0 3.4
log file sequential read 304 0 8 26 0.0 3.3
db file scattered read 214 0 2 9 0.0 .8
ASM file metadata operatio 1,199 0 1 1 0.0 .3
direct path write 35 0 0 6 0.0 .1
direct path read 41 0 0 5 0.0 .1
kfk: async disk IO 6 0 0 9 0.0 .0
Disk file operations I/O 1,266 0 0 0 0.0 .0
ADR block file read 16 0 0 2 0.0 .0
read by other session 3 0 0 8 0.0 .0
Log archive I/O 2 0 0 10 0.0 .0
log file sync 3 0 0 5 0.0 .0
asynch descriptor resize 341 100 0 0 0.0 .0
CSS initialization 1 0 0 6 0.0 .0
log file single write 4 0 0 1 0.0 .0
latch: redo allocation 3 0 0 1 0.0 .0
ADR block file write 5 0 0 1 0.0 .0
LGWR wait for redo copy 45 0 0 0 0.0 .0
CSS operation: query 6 0 0 0 0.0 .0
CSS operation: action 1 0 0 1 0.0 .0
SQL*Net message to client 420 0 0 0 0.0 .0
rdbms ipc message 47,816 39 61,046 1277 1.6
DIAG idle wait 7,200 100 7,200 1000 0.2
Space Manager: slave idle 1,146 98 5,674 4951 0.0
class slave wait 284 0 3,983 14026 0.0
dispatcher timer 61 100 3,660 60006 0.0
Streams AQ: qmn coordinato 258 50 3,613 14003 0.0
Streams AQ: qmn slave idle 130 0 3,613 27789 0.0
Streams AQ: waiting for ti 7 71 3,608 515430 0.0
wait for unread message on 3,605 100 3,606 1000 0.1
pmon timer 1,201 100 3,604 3001 0.0
smon timer 15 73 3,603 240207 0.0
ASM background timer 754 0 3,602 4777 0.0
shared server idle wait 120 100 3,601 30006 0.0
SQL*Net message from clien 554 0 4 7 0.0
KSV master wait 101 0 0 2 0.0
Wait Event Histogram
-> Units for Total Waits column: K is 1000, M is 1000000, G is 1000000000
-> % of Waits: value of .0 indicates value was <.05%; value of null is truly 0
-> % of Waits: column heading of <=1s is truly <1024ms, >1s is truly >=1024ms
-> Ordered by Event (idle events last)
% of Waits
Total
Event Waits <1ms <2ms <4ms <8ms <16ms <32ms <=1s >1s
ADR block file read 52 73.1 1.9 9.6 13.5 1.9
ADR block file write 10 100.0
ADR file lock 12 100.0
ARCH wait for archivelog l 3 100.0
ASM file metadata operatio 1203 97.3 .5 .7 .3 .2 .9
CSS initialization 1 100.0
CSS operation: action 1 100.0
CSS operation: query 6 83.3 16.7
Disk file operations I/O 2118 95.4 4.5 .1
LGWR wait for redo copy 45 100.0
Log archive I/O 2 100.0
SQL*Net break/reset to cli 256 99.6 .4
SQL*Net message to client 839.9 100.0 .0
SQL*Net more data from cli 91 100.0
SQL*Net more data to clien 1503 100.0
asynch descriptor resize 10.4K 100.0
buffer busy waits 2 100.0
control file parallel writ 1440 5.7 35.1 24.0 16.3 12.0 5.5 1.5
control file sequential re 6177 69.4 7.5 5.9 8.1 7.1 1.7 .3
db file parallel read 4727 1.7 3.2 3.2 10.1 46.6 33.3 1.8
db file parallel write 5755 42.3 21.3 18.6 11.2 4.6 1.4 .5
db file scattered read 21.5K 8.4 4.3 11.9 18.9 26.3 25.3 4.9
db file sequential read 3053. 28.7 15.1 11.1 17.9 21.5 5.4 .3 .0
direct path read 46.3K 9.9 8.8 18.5 21.7 22.8 15.7 2.7
direct path read temp 95 9.5 9.5 23.2 49.5 8.4
direct path write 35 11.4 31.4 17.1 22.9 11.4 2.9 2.9
direct path write temp 1 100.0
enq: KO - fast object chec 3 66.7 33.3
enq: RO - fast object reus 5 20.0 20.0 20.0 20.0 20.0
kfk: async disk IO 6 50.0 16.7 16.7 16.7
latch free 3 100.0
latch: cache buffers chain 1465 100.0
latch: cache buffers lru c 1 100.0
latch: object queue header 2 100.0
latch: redo allocation 3 33.3 33.3 33.3
latch: row cache objects 2 100.0
latch: shared pool 15 93.3 6.7
local write wait 79 35.4 34.2 21.5 8.9
log file parallel write 29.4K 47.8 21.7 11.9 9.9 6.8 1.6 .3
log file sequential read 304 6.3 3.0 3.6 10.2 23.4 24.3 29.3
log file single write 4 25.0 75.0
log file switch (private s 3 100.0
log file sync 23.9K 40.9 28.0 12.9 9.7 6.7 1.5 .3
os thread startup 140 100.0
read by other session 199.6 37.1 19.9 12.9 13.1 13.8 3.1 .2
reliable message 8 100.0
ASM background timer 755 2.9 .4 .1 .1 .3 .1 .3 95.8
DIAG idle wait 7196 100.0
KSV master wait 121 88.4 2.5 3.3 2.5 .8 .8 1.7
SQL*Net message from clien 840.1 97.1 1.8 .5 .2 .2 .1 .0 .1
Space Manager: slave idle 1147 .1 .5 99.4
Streams AQ: qmn coordinato 258 49.6 .4 50.0
Streams AQ: qmn slave idle 130 .8 99.2
Streams AQ: waiting for me 721 100.0
Streams AQ: waiting for ti 7 28.6 42.9 28.6
class slave wait 283 39.9 2.5 2.5 3.5 4.9 9.2 15.2 22.3
dispatcher timer 60 100.0
jobq slave wait 7360 .0 .0 .0 99.9
pmon timer 1201 100.0
rdbms ipc message 47.8K 2.7 31.6 17.4 1.1 1.1 .9 20.9 24.3
Wait Event Histogram DB/Inst: I2KPROD/I2KPROD Snaps: 5606-5607
-> Units for Total Waits column: K is 1000, M is 1000000, G is 1000000000
-> % of Waits: value of .0 indicates value was <.05%; value of null is truly 0
-> % of Waits: column heading of <=1s is truly <1024ms, >1s is truly >=1024ms
-> Ordered by Event (idle events last)
% of Waits
Total
Event Waits <1ms <2ms <4ms <8ms <16ms <32ms <=1s >1s
shared server idle wait 120 100.0
smon timer 16 6.3 93.8
wait for unread message on 7250 .1 99.9
Latch Miss Sources
-> only latches with sleeps are shown
-> ordered by name, sleeps desc
NoWait Waiter
Latch Name Where Misses Sleeps Sleeps
In memory undo latch ktichg: child 0 1 0
active service list kswslogon: session logout 0 2 0
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr_2 0 1,123 483
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr: fast path (cr pin 0 496 1,131
cache buffers chains kcbrls_2 0 5 6
cache buffers chains kcbgcur_2 0 4 0
cache buffers chains kcbgtcr: fast path 0 3 1
cache buffers chains kcbzwb 0 2 4
cache buffers chains kcbchg1: kslbegin: bufs no 0 1 0
cache buffers chains kcbnew: new latch again 0 1 0
cache buffers chains kcbrls_1 0 1 6
cache buffers chains kcbzgb: scan from tail. no 0 1 0
cache buffers lru chain kcbzgws 0 1 0
object queue header oper kcbo_switch_cq 0 1 0
object queue header oper kcbo_switch_mq_bg 0 1 2
redo allocation kcrfw_redo_gen: redo alloc 0 3 0
row cache objects kqrpre: find obj 0 1 1
row cache objects kqrso 0 1 0
shared pool kghalo 0 13 3
shared pool kghupr1 0 4 15
shared pool kghalp 0 1 0
space background task la ktsj_grab_task 0 2 2
------------------------------------------------------------- -
Strange performance issue with 3510/3511 SAM-FS disk cache
Hi there!
I'm running a small SAM-QFS environment and have some strange performance issue on the disk storage part, which somebody here might be able to explain.
Configuration: one 3510, dual controller, RAID-5 9+1, one hot spare and one disk not configured for whatever reason. The R5 logical drive hosts a 150GB LUN for SAM-QFS metadata (mm in SAM-FS speak) and a 1TB LUN for data (mr in SAM-FS speak). Further, there are two small LUNs (2GB, 100GB) for some other purpose. Those two LUNs have nearly no I/O. All disks are SUN146G. Host connection is 2GBit, multipathing enabled and working.
Then the disk cache became too small, and the customer added a 3511 expansion unit with SUN300G disks. One logical drive is a RAID-1, 1+1, used for NetBackup catalog. The other is a RAID-5, 8+1, providing two LUNs: 260GB SAM-FS metadata (mm) and 1.999TB SAM-FS data (mr).
For SAM-FS, the LUNs form two file systems: one "residing" in the 3510, the other "residing" in the 3511 expansion. Cabling is according to the manual and checked several times by several independant people. Operating system is Solaris 10, hardware is a V880.
The problem we observe: SAM-FS I/O on LUNs on disks inside the 3510 is fine. With iostat, I see 100MB/s read and 50MB/s write at the same time. On the SAM-FS file system which is running on the two LUNs in the 3511, the limit seems to be at 40MB/s read/write. Both SAM-FS file systems are configured the same in regards of block size.
In case I have activity on both SAM-FS file systems, I see 100MB/s+ on the LUN running inside the controller shelf and another 40MB/s on the disk runnin in the 3511 expansion chassis. So, the controller is easily capable of handling 150MB/s.
Cache settings in the 3510 controller are default I think (wasn't installed by me), batteries are fine.
Is this 40MB/s we experience a limitation by the expansion shelf? Don't think so. Anybody has any ideas on this? What parameters to check or to change? Any hint appreciated. I can also provide further details if needed. Thank you.
wolfgangSUN300G disks sound like 300GB FC disks.
Depending on how many files are in the SAMFS file system, sharing the mm and mr devices on the same RAID array can be a pretty horrible idea. In my opinion and experience, it's almost always better to NEVER put more than one LUN on a RAID array. Period. Putting more than one LUN on an array results in IO contention on that array. And large, unnaturally configured (9+1? Why?) RAID arrays will have problems from the start.
What are the block sizes used on the RAID arrays? It wouldn't surprise me to see that the RAID array on the expansion tray has a very large block size. Larger block sizes are, in general, not better. Especially for SAMFS metadata - which IIRC is something like 8k or 16k blocks.
I suspect what is happening is most of the metadata updates are going to the mm device on the new array, contending with the IO operations on the file data.
How much space is left on each mm device? What does "iostat -sndxz 2" show when you're having the IO problems? -
Performance issue with Jdeveloper
Hi Guys,
I am experiencing strange performance issue with Jdeveloper 10.1.3.3.0.4157. There are many other threads regarding the performance issue in this forum, but the problem I have is a little bit different.
I have two computers: one is Athlon 3200+ with Vista and another one is P4 dual core 6400 with XP (service pack 2). Both of them have 2GB memory.
I am running the same simple project on both computer, but only the one with Vista has the problem. The problem is very similar to the problem mentioned in the thread:
Re: IDE has become extremely slow?
But it's much worse. It only happens only on JSF pages. Basically, any operations on the JSF pages are very slow. Loading the page, changing the attributes of a button in source editor, or even clicking the items in the design view take forever to run.
The first weird thing is that it may use 100% CPU, but it never recover, which means the 100% CPU usage never stops or when it stops, the Jdeveloper stops responding.
The second weird thing is that the project is not big. Actually, it's very small. The problem started to happen since last week. There are not big changes during the period. The only thing I can say is that we created two more JSF pages.
The third weird thing is that the same project never happened on the P4+XP box. When I open the project on the P4+XP box, it’s always fast and no CPU spike.
Any advises are welcome!
Thanks,
StevenHi Guys,
I re-made a simple test project for this problem and now I now always reproduce the problem in JDeveloper on both system (XP & Vista). Everytime I open this jspx file in the source editor and try to scroll up/down the source file, or manually delete an attribute, JDeveloepr will hang and the CPU usage is 0%.
Here is the content of the test file:
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='windows-1252'?>
<jsp:root xmlns:jsp="http://java.sun.com/JSP/Page" version="2.0"
xmlns:h="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html"
xmlns:f="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core"
xmlns:af="http://xmlns.oracle.com/adf/faces"
xmlns:afh="http://xmlns.oracle.com/adf/faces/html">
<jsp:output omit-xml-declaration="true" doctype-root-element="HTML"
doctype-system="http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"
doctype-public="-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"/>
<jsp:directive.page contentType="text/html;charset=windows-1252"/>
<f:view>
<afh:html binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.html1}" id="html1">
<afh:head title="streettypedetail"
binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.head1}" id="head1">
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
content="text/html; charset=windows-1252"/>
</afh:head>
<afh:body binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.body1}" id="body1">
<af:messages binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.messages1}"
id="messages1"/>
<h:form binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.form1}" id="form1">
<af:panelForm binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.panelForm1}"
id="panelForm1">
<af:inputText value="#{bindings.streetTypeID.inputValue}"
label="#{bindings.streetTypeID.label}"
required="#{bindings.streetTypeID.mandatory}"
columns="#{bindings.streetTypeID.displayWidth}"
binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.inputText1}"
id="inputText1">
<af:validator binding="#{bindings.streetTypeID.validator}"/>
</af:inputText>
<af:inputText value="#{bindings.description.inputValue}"
label="#{bindings.description.label}"
required="#{bindings.description.mandatory}"
columns="#{bindings.description.displayWidth}"
binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.inputText2}"
id="inputText2">
<af:validator binding="#{bindings.description.validator}"/>
</af:inputText>
<af:inputText value="#{bindings.abbr.inputValue}"
label="#{bindings.abbr.label}"
required="#{bindings.abbr.mandatory}"
columns="#{bindings.abbr.displayWidth}"
binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.inputText3}"
id="inputText3">
<af:validator binding="#{bindings.abbr.validator}"/>
</af:inputText>
<f:facet name="footer">
<h:panelGroup binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.panelGroup1}"
id="panelGroup1">
<af:commandButton text="Save"
binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.saveButton}"
id="saveButton"
actionListener="#{bindings.mergeEntity.execute}"
action="#{userState.retrieveReturnNavigationRule}"
disabled="#{!bindings.mergeEntity.enabled}"
partialSubmit="false">
<af:setActionListener from="#{true}"
to="#{userState.refresh}"/>
</af:commandButton>
<af:commandButton text="Cancel"
binding="#{backing_streettypedetail.cancelButton}"
action="#{userState.retrieveReturnNavigationRule}"
id="cancelButton">
<af:setActionListener from="#{false}"
to="#{userState.refresh}"/>
</af:commandButton>
</h:panelGroup>
</f:facet>
</af:panelForm>
</h:form>
</afh:body>
</afh:html>
</f:view>
<!--oracle-jdev-comment:auto-binding-backing-bean-name:backing_streettypedetail-->
</jsp:root>
Can anybody take a look at the file and let me know what's wrong with it?
Thanks in advance.
Steven -
Performance issues -- related to printing
Hi All,
I am haviing production system performance issues related to printing. endusers are telling the printing is slow for almost printers. We are having more that 40 to 50 printers in landscape.
As per my primary investigation I didnt find any issues in TSP01 & TSP02 tables. But I can see the table TST01 and TST03 table having many number of entries (more that lakh). I dont have idead about this table. Is ther eany thing related to this table where the print causes slowness or any other factors also makes this printing issue .. Please advice ..
thanks in advanceHai,
Check the below link...
http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/en/c1/1cca3bdcd73743e10000000a114084/content.htm
http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/en/fc/04ca3bb6f8c21de10000000a114084/frameset.htm
http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw70/helpdata/en/86/1ccb3b560f194ce10000000a114084/content.htm
TemSe cannot administer objects that require more than two gigabytes of storage space, regardless of whether the objects are stored in the database or in the file system. Spool requests of a size greater than two gigabytes must therefore be split into several smaller requests.
It is enough if you perform the regular background jobs and Temse consistency checks for the tables.
This will help in controlling the capacity problems.
If you change the profile parameter rspo/store_location parameter value to 'G' this will make the performance better. The disadvantages are TemSe data must be backed up and restored separately from the database using operating system tools, In the event of problems, it can be difficult to restore consistency between the data held in files and the TemSeu2019s object management in the database. Also you have take care of the Hard disk requirements because in some cases, spool data may occupy several hundred megabytes of disk storage. If you use the G option, you must ensure that enough free disk space is available for spool data.
Regards,
Yoganand.V
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