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You're reading from  Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inJan 2012
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781849682602
Edition1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1)
Ciro Fiorillo
Ciro Fiorillo
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Ciro Fiorillo

Ciro Fiorillo is an IT professional and consultant with experience of more than a decade in different roles (developer, analyst, DBA, project manager, data and software architect) among software industries. He has worked on different technologies and architectures, such as Oracle, SQL Server, Delphi, C# and .NET Framework, C/C++, Java, PHP, COBOL, Fortran, and Tibco. Ciro is currently employed as Lead Software and Data Architect with FinWin Srl, a software house specializing in banking and loans applications. As a freelancer he writes articles for websites and printed magazines about software and computing, participates in workshops, and teaches C++ and Fortran parallel programming with Intel Software tools. Ciro can be reached at ciro@cirofiorillo.com.
Read more about Ciro Fiorillo

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Tuning latches


In this recipe we will see what latches are, and how (and if) we can tune latches. We will discover that we don't tune latches, but we tune resources that can cause issues related to latches.

How to do it...

The following steps will demonstrate how to tune latches:

  1. Connect to the database as SYSDBA:

    CONNECT / AS SYSDBA
    
    
  2. Investigate system events related to latches:

    SELECT
      EVENT, TIME_WAITED, TOTAL_WAITS
    FROM V$SYSTEM_EVENT
    WHERE EVENT LIKE '%latch%';3
    
  3. Query information about willing-to-wait latch requests:

    COL NAME FOR A20
    SELECT * FROM (
     SELECT
       NAME, GETS, MISSES, SLEEPS, SPIN_GETS, WAIT_TIME
     FROM V$LATCH
     ORDER BY GETS DESC
    )
    WHERE ROWNUM < 11;
    
  4. Query information about immediate latch requests:

    COL NAME FOR A40
    SELECT * FROM (
     SELECT
       NAME, IMMEDIATE_GETS, IMMEDIATE_MISSES
     FROM V$LATCH
     ORDER BY IMMEDIATE_GETS DESC
    )
    WHERE ROWNUM < 11;
    

How it works...

In step 2 we query the V$SYSTEM_EVENT dynamic performance view to see if latch contention causes high waits...

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Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook
Published in: Jan 2012Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781849682602

Author (1)

author image
Ciro Fiorillo

Ciro Fiorillo is an IT professional and consultant with experience of more than a decade in different roles (developer, analyst, DBA, project manager, data and software architect) among software industries. He has worked on different technologies and architectures, such as Oracle, SQL Server, Delphi, C# and .NET Framework, C/C++, Java, PHP, COBOL, Fortran, and Tibco. Ciro is currently employed as Lead Software and Data Architect with FinWin Srl, a software house specializing in banking and loans applications. As a freelancer he writes articles for websites and printed magazines about software and computing, participates in workshops, and teaches C++ and Fortran parallel programming with Intel Software tools. Ciro can be reached at ciro@cirofiorillo.com.
Read more about Ciro Fiorillo