23 Performing Application Tracing
This chapter explains what end-to-end application tracing is, and how to generate and read trace files.
This chapter contains the following topics:
See Also:
SQL*Plus User's Guide and Reference to learn about the use of Autotrace to trace and tune SQL*Plus statements
23.1 Overview of End-to-End Application Tracing
End-to-end application tracing can identify the source of an excessive database workload, such as a high load SQL statement, by client identifier, service, module, action, session, instance, or an entire database.
In multitier environments, the middle tier routes a request from an end client to different database sessions, making it difficult to track a client across database sessions. End-to-end application tracing is an infrastructure that uses a client ID to uniquely trace a specific end-client through all tiers to the database and provides information about the operation that an end client is performing in the database.
This section contains the following topics:
23.1.1 Purpose of End-to-End Application Tracing
End-to-end application tracing simplifies diagnosing performance problems in multitier environments.
For example, you can identify the source of an excessive database workload, such as a high-load SQL statement, and contact the user responsible. Also, a user having problems can contact you. You can then identify what this user session is doing at the non-CDB or PDB level
End-to-end application tracing also simplifies management of application workloads by tracking specific modules and actions in a service. The module and action names are set by the application developer. For example, you would use the SET_MODULE
and SET_ACTION
procedures in the DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO
package to set these values in a PL/SQL program.
End-to-end application tracing can identify workload problems in a database for:
-
Client identifier
Specifies an end user based on the logon ID, such as
HR.HR
-
Service
Specifies a group of applications with common attributes, service level thresholds, and priorities; or a single application, such as
ACCTG
for an accounting application -
Module
Specifies a functional block, such as Accounts Receivable or General Ledger, of an application
-
Action
Specifies an action, such as an
INSERT
orUPDATE
operation, in a module -
Session
Specifies a session based on a given database session identifier (SID), on the local instance
-
Instance
Specifies a given database instance based on the instance name
-
Container
Specifies the container in a CDB
23.1.2 End-to-End Application Tracing in a Multitenant Environment
Starting in Oracle Database 12c Release 2 (12.2), when you are connected to a container in a CDB, new V$
views enable read access to trace files that are specific to the container.
The primary use cases are as follows:
-
CDB administrators must view traces from a specific PDB.
The
V$DIAG_TRACE_FILE
view lists all trace files in the ADR trace directory that contain trace data from a specific PDB.V$DIAG_TRACE_FILE_CONTENTS
displays the contents of the trace files. -
PDB administrators must view traces from a specific PDB.
You can use SQL Trace to collect diagnostic data for the SQL statements executing in a PDB application. The trace data includes SQL tracing (event 10046) and optimizer tracing (event 10053). Using
V$
views, developers can access only SQL or optimizer trace records without accessing the entire trace file.
To enable users and tools to determine which PDB is associated with a file or a part of a file, PDB annotations exist in trace files, incident dumps, and log files. The PDB information is part of the structured metadata that is stored in the .trm
file for each trace file. Each record captures the following attributes:
-
CON_ID
, which is the ID of the container associated with the data -
CON_UID
, which is the unique ID of the container -
NAME
, which is the name of the container
See Also:
23.1.3 Tools for End-to-End Application Tracing
The SQL Trace facility and TKPROF are two basic performance diagnostic tools that can help you accurately assess the efficiency of the SQL statements an application runs.
For best results, use these tools with EXPLAIN PLAN
rather than using EXPLAIN PLAN
alone. After tracing information is written to files, you can consolidate this data with the TRCSESS utility, and then diagnose it with TKPROF or SQL Trace.
The recommended interface for end-to-end application tracing is Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control (Cloud Control). Using Cloud Control, you can view the top consumers for each consumer type, and enable or disable statistics gathering and SQL tracing for specific consumers. If Cloud Control is unavailable, then you can manage this feature using the DBMS_MONITOR
APIs.
This section contains the following topics:
See Also:
Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for information about the DBMS_MONITOR
, DBMS_SESSION
, DBMS_SERVICE
, and DBMS_APPLICATION_INFO
packages
23.1.3.1 Overview of the SQL Trace Facility
The SQL Trace facility provides performance information on individual SQL statements.
SQL Trace generates the following statistics for each statement:
-
Parse, execute, and fetch counts
-
CPU and elapsed times
-
Physical reads and logical reads
-
Number of rows processed
-
Misses on the library cache
-
User name under which each parse occurred
-
Each commit and rollback
-
Wait event data for each SQL statement, and a summary for each trace file
If the cursor for the SQL statement is closed, then SQL Trace also provides row source information that includes:
-
Row operations showing the actual execution plan of each SQL statement
-
Number of rows, number of consistent reads, number of physical reads, number of physical writes, and time elapsed for each operation on a row
Although you can enable the SQL Trace facility for a session or an instance, Oracle recommends that you use the DBMS_SESSION
or DBMS_MONITOR
packages instead. When the SQL Trace facility is enabled for a session or for an instance, performance statistics for all SQL statements executed in a user session or in the instance are placed into trace files. Using the SQL Trace facility can affect performance and may result in increased system overhead, excessive CPU usage, and inadequate disk space.
The TRCSESS command-line utility consolidates tracing information from several trace files based on specific criteria, such as session or client ID.
See Also:
-
"TRCSESS"
-
"Enabling End-to-End Application Tracing" to learn how to use the
DBMS_SESSION
orDBMS_MONITOR
packages to enable SQL tracing for a session or an instance
23.1.3.2 Overview of TKPROF
To format the contents of the trace file and place the output into a readable output file, run the TKPROF program.
TKPROF can also do the following:
-
Create a SQL script that stores the statistics in the database
-
Determine the execution plans of SQL statements
TKPROF reports each statement executed with the resources it has consumed, the number of times it was called, and the number of rows which it processed. This information enables you to locate those statements that are using the greatest resource. With baselines available, you can assess whether the resources used are reasonable given the work done.
23.2 Enabling Statistics Gathering for End-to-End Tracing
To gather the appropriate statistics using PL/SQL, you must enable statistics gathering for client identifier, service, module, or action using procedures in DBMS_MONITOR
.
The default level is the session-level statistics gathering. Statistics gathering is global for the database and continues after a database instance is restarted.
You can gather statistics by the following criteria:
23.2.1 Enabling Statistics Gathering for a Client ID
The procedure CLIENT_ID_STAT_ENABLE
enables statistics gathering for a given client ID, whereas the procedure CLIENT_ID_STAT_DISABLE
disables it.
You can view client identifiers in the CLIENT_IDENTIFIER
column in V$SESSION
.
Assumptions
This tutorial assumes that you want to enable and then disable statistics gathering for the client with the ID oe.oe
.
To enable and disable statistics gathering for a client identifier:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and then connect to the database with the appropriate privileges.
-
Enable statistics gathering for
oe.oe
.For example, run the following command:
EXECUTE DBMS_MONITOR.CLIENT_ID_STAT_ENABLE(client_id => 'OE.OE');
-
Disable statistics gathering for
oe.oe
.For example, run the following command:
EXECUTE DBMS_MONITOR.CLIENT_ID_STAT_DISABLE(client_id => 'OE.OE');
23.2.2 Enabling Statistics Gathering for Services, Modules, and Actions
The procedure SERV_MOD_ACT_STAT_ENABLE
enables statistic gathering for a combination of service, module, and action, whereas the procedure SERV_MOD_ACT_STAT_DISABLE
disables statistic gathering for a combination of service, module, and action.
When you change the module or action using the preceding DBMS_MONITOR
procedures, the change takes effect when the next user call is executed in the session. For example, if a module is set to module1
in a session, and if the module is reset to module2
in a user call in the session, then the module remains module1
during this user call. The module is changed to module2
in the next user call in the session.
Assumptions
This tutorial assumes that you want to gather statistics as follows:
-
For the
ACCTG
service -
For all actions in the
PAYROLL
module -
For the
INSERT ITEM
action within theGLEDGER
module
To enable and disable statistics gathering for a service, module, and action:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and then connect to the database with the appropriate privileges.
-
Enable statistics gathering for the desired service, module, and action.
For example, run the following commands:
BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.SERV_MOD_ACT_STAT_ENABLE( service_name => 'ACCTG' , module_name => 'PAYROLL' ); END; BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.SERV_MOD_ACT_STAT_ENABLE( service_name => 'ACCTG' , module_name => 'GLEDGER' , action_name => 'INSERT ITEM' ); END;
-
Disable statistic gathering for the previously specified combination of service, module, and action.
For example, run the following command:
BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.SERV_MOD_ACT_STAT_DISABLE( service_name => 'ACCTG' , module_name => 'GLEDGER' , action_name => 'INSERT ITEM' ); END;
23.3 Enabling End-to-End Application Tracing
To enable tracing for client identifier, service, module, action, session, instance or database, execute the appropriate procedures in the DBMS_MONITOR
package.
With the criteria that you provide, specific trace information is captured in a set of trace files and combined into a single output trace file. You can enable tracing for specific diagnosis and workload management by the following criteria:
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide for information about how to locate trace files
23.3.1 Enabling Tracing for a Client Identifier
To enable tracing globally for the database for a specified client identifier, use the DBMS_MONITOR.CLIENT_ID_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure.
The CLIENT_ID_TRACE_DISABLE
procedure disables tracing globally for the database for a given client identifier.
Assumptions
This tutorial assumes the following:
-
OE.OE
is the client identifier for which SQL tracing is to be enabled. -
You want to include wait information in the trace.
-
You want to exclude bind information from the trace.
To enable and disable tracing for a client identifier:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and then connect to the database with the appropriate privileges.
-
Enable tracing for the client.
For example, execute the following program:
BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.CLIENT_ID_TRACE_ENABLE( client_id => 'OE.OE' , waits => true , binds => false ); END;
-
Disable tracing for the client.
For example, execute the following command:
EXECUTE DBMS_MONITOR.CLIENT_ID_TRACE_DISABLE(client_id => 'OE.OE');
23.3.2 Enabling Tracing for a Service, Module, and Action
The DBMS_MONITOR.SERV_MOD_ACT_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure enables SQL tracing for a specified combination of service name, module, and action globally for a database, unless the procedure specifies a database instance name.
The SERV_MOD_ACT_TRACE_DISABLE
procedure disables the trace at all enabled instances for a given combination of service name, module, and action name globally.
Assumptions
This tutorial assumes the following:
-
You want to enable tracing for the service
ACCTG
. -
You want to enable tracing for all actions for the combination of the
ACCTG
service and thePAYROLL
module. -
You want to include wait information in the trace.
-
You want to exclude bind information from the trace.
-
You want to enable tracing only for the
inst1
instance.
To enable and disable tracing for a service, module, and action:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and then connect to the database with the appropriate privileges.
-
Enable tracing for the service, module, and actions.
For example, execute the following command:
BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.SERV_MOD_ACT_TRACE_ENABLE( service_name => 'ACCTG' , module_name => 'PAYROLL' , waits => true , binds => false , instance_name => 'inst1' ); END;
-
Disable tracing for the service, module, and actions.
For example, execute the following command:
BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.SERV_MOD_ACT_TRACE_DISABLE( service_name => 'ACCTG' , module_name => 'PAYROLL' , instance_name => 'inst1' ); END;
23.3.3 Enabling Tracing for a Session
The SESSION_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure enables the trace for a given database session identifier (SID) on the local instance.
Whereas the DBMS_MONITOR
package can only be invoked by a user with the DBA role, users can also enable SQL tracing for their own session by invoking the DBMS_SESSION.SESSION_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure, as in the following example:
BEGIN
DBMS_SESSION.SESSION_TRACE_ENABLE(
waits => true
, binds => false);
END;
Assumptions
This tutorial assumes the following:
-
You want to log in to the database with administrator privileges.
-
User
OE
has one active session. -
You want to temporarily enable tracing for the
OE
session. -
You want to include wait information in the trace.
-
You want to exclude bind information from the trace.
To enable and disable tracing for a session:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and then log in to the database with the administrator privileges.
-
Determine the session ID and serial number values for the session to trace.
For example, query
V$SESSION
as follows:SELECT SID, SERIAL#, USERNAME FROM V$SESSION WHERE USERNAME = 'OE'; SID SERIAL# USERNAME ---------- ---------- ------------------------------ 27 60 OE
-
Use the values from the preceding step to enable tracing for a specific session.
For example, execute the following program to enable tracing for the
OE
session, where thetrue
argument includes wait information in the trace and thefalse
argument excludes bind information from the trace:BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.SESSION_TRACE_ENABLE( session_id => 27 , serial_num => 60 , waits => true , binds => false); END;
-
Disable tracing for the session.
The
SESSION_TRACE_DISABLE
procedure disables the trace for a given database session identifier (SID) and serial number. For example:BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.SESSION_TRACE_DISABLE( session_id => 27 , serial_num => 60); END;
23.3.4 Enabling Tracing for the Instance or Database
The DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure overrides all other session-level traces, but is complementary to the client identifier, service, module, and action traces. Tracing is enabled for all current and future sessions.
All new sessions inherit the wait and bind information specified by this procedure until you call the DATABASE_TRACE_DISABLE
procedure. When you invoke this procedure with the instance_name
parameter, the procedure resets the session-level SQL trace for the named instance. If you invoke this procedure without the instance_name
parameter, then the procedure resets the session-level SQL trace for the entire database.
Prerequisites
You must have administrative privileges to execute the DATABASE_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure.
Assumptions
This tutorial assumes the following:
-
You want to enable tracing for all SQL the
inst1
instance. -
You want wait information to be in the trace.
-
You do not want bind information in the trace.
To enable and disable tracing for a session:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and then log in to the database with the necessary privileges.
-
Call the
DATABASE_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure to enable SQL tracing for a given instance or an entire database.For example, execute the following program, where the
true
argument specifies that wait information is in the trace, and thefalse
argument specifies that no bind information is in the trace:BEGIN DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_ENABLE( waits => true , binds => false , instance_name => 'inst1' ); END;
-
Disable tracing for the session.
The
SESSION_TRACE_DISABLE
procedure disables the trace. For example, the following program disables tracing forinst1
:EXECUTE DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_DISABLE(instance_name => 'inst1');
To disable the session-level SQL tracing for an entire database, invoke the
DATABASE_TRACE_DISABLE
procedure without specifying theinstance_name
parameter:EXECUTE DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_DISABLE();
23.4 Generating Output Files Using SQL Trace and TKPROF
This section explains the basic procedure for using SQL Trace and TKPROF.
The procedure for generating output files is as follows:
-
Set initialization parameters for trace file management.
See "Step 1: Setting Initialization Parameters for Trace File Management".
-
Enable the SQL Trace facility for the desired session, and run the application. This step produces a trace file containing statistics for the SQL statements issued by the application.
-
Run TKPROF to translate the trace file created in Step 2 into a readable output file. This step can optionally create a SQL script that you can use to store the statistics in a database.
-
Optionally, run the SQL script produced in Step 3 to store the statistics in the database.
This section contains the following topics:
23.4.1 Step 1: Setting Initialization Parameters for Trace File Management
To enable trace files, you must ensure that specific initialization parameters are set.
When the SQL Trace facility is enabled for a session, Oracle Database generates a trace file containing statistics for traced SQL statements for that session. When the SQL Trace facility is enabled for an instance, Oracle Database creates a separate trace file for each process.
To set initialization parameters for trace file management:
-
Check the settings of the
TIMED_STATISTICS
,MAX_DUMP_FILE_SIZE
, andDIAGNOSTIC_DEST
initialization parameters, as indicated in "Table 23-1".Table 23-1 Initialization Parameters to Check Before Enabling SQL Trace
Parameter Description DIAGNOSTIC_DEST
Specifies the location of the Automatic Diagnostic Repository (ADR) Home. The diagnostic files for each database instance are located in this dedicated directory.
MAX_DUMP_FILE_SIZE
When the SQL Trace facility is enabled at the database instance level, every call to the database writes a text line in a file in the operating system's file format. The maximum size of these files in operating system blocks is limited by this initialization parameter. The default is
UNLIMITED
.TIMED_STATISTICS
Enables and disables the collection of timed statistics, such as CPU and elapsed times, by the SQL Trace facility, and the collection of various statistics in the
V$
views.If
STATISTICS_LEVEL
is set toTYPICAL
orALL
, then the default value ofTIMED_STATISTICS
istrue
. IfSTATISTICS_LEVEL
is set toBASIC
, then the default value ofTIMED_STATISTICS
isfalse
.Enabling timing causes extra timing calls for low-level operations. This is a dynamic parameter. It is also a session parameter.
-
Devise a way of recognizing the resulting trace file.
Be sure you know how to distinguish the trace files by name. You can tag trace files by including in your programs a statement such as
SELECT
. You can then trace each file back to the process that created it.program_name
' FROM DUALYou can also set the
TRACEFILE_IDENTIFIER
initialization parameter to specify a custom identifier that becomes part of the trace file name. For example, you can addmy_trace_id
to subsequent trace file names for easy identification with the following:ALTER SESSION SET TRACEFILE_IDENTIFIER = 'my_trace_id';
-
If the operating system retains multiple versions of files, then ensure that the version limit is high enough to accommodate the number of trace files you expect the SQL Trace facility to generate.
-
If the generated trace files can be owned by an operating system user other than yourself, then ensure that you have the necessary permissions to use TKPROF to format them.
See Also:
-
Oracle Database Reference to learn about the
DIAGNOSTIC_DEST
,STATISTICS_LEVEL
,TIMED_STATISTICS
, andTRACEFILE_IDENTIFIER
initialization parameters -
Oracle Database Administrator’s Guide to learn how to control the trace file size
23.4.2 Step 2: Enabling the SQL Trace Facility
You can enable the SQL Trace facility at the instance or session level.
The package to use depends on the level:
-
Database instance
Use
DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_ENABLE
procedure to enable tracing, andDBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_DISABLE
procedure to disable tracing. -
Database session
Use
DBMS_SESSION.SET_SQL_TRACE
procedure to enable tracing (true
) or disable tracing (false
).Note:
Because running the SQL Trace facility increases system overhead, enable it only when tuning SQL statements, and disable it when you are finished.
To enable and disable tracing at the database instance level:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and connect to the database with administrator privileges.
-
Enable tracing at the database instance level.
The following example enables tracing for the
orcl
instance:EXEC DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_ENABLE(INSTANCE_NAME => 'orcl');
-
Execute the statements to be traced.
-
Disable tracing for the database instance.
The following example disables tracing for the
orcl
instance:EXEC DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_DISABLE(INSTANCE_NAME => 'orcl');
To enable and disable tracing at the session level:
-
Start SQL*Plus, and connect to the database with the desired credentials.
-
Enable tracing for the current session.
The following example enables tracing for the current session:
EXEC DBMS_SESSION.SET_SQL_TRACE(sql_trace => true);
-
Execute the statements to be traced.
-
Disable tracing for the current session.
The following example disables tracing for the current session:
EXEC DBMS_SESSION.SET_SQL_TRACE(sql_trace => false);
See Also:
Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference to learn about DBMS_MONITOR.DATABASE_TRACE_ENABLE
23.4.3 Step 3: Generating Output Files with TKPROF
TKPROF accepts as input a trace file produced by the SQL Trace facility, and it produces a formatted output file. TKPROF can also generate execution plans.
After the SQL Trace facility has generated trace files, you can:
-
Run TKPROF on each individual trace file, producing several formatted output files, one for each session.
-
Concatenate the trace files, and then run TKPROF on the result to produce a formatted output file for the entire instance.
-
Run the TRCSESS command-line utility to consolidate tracing information from several trace files, then run TKPROF on the result.
TKPROF does not report COMMIT
and ROLLBACK
statements recorded in the trace file.
Note:
The following SQL statements are truncated to 25 characters in the SQL Trace file:
SET ROLE
GRANT
ALTER USER
ALTER ROLE
CREATE USER
CREATE ROLE
Example 23-1 TKPROF Output
SELECT * FROM emp, dept
WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno;
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
---- ------- ------- --------- -------- -------- ------- ------
Parse 1 0.16 0.29 3 13 0 0
Execute 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Fetch 1 0.03 0.26 2 2 4 14
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
Parsing user id: (8) SCOTT
Rows Execution Plan
------- --------------------------------------------------- 14 MERGE JOIN
4 SORT JOIN
4 TABLE ACCESS (FULL) OF 'DEPT'
14 SORT JOIN
14 TABLE ACCESS (FULL) OF 'EMP'
For this statement, TKPROF output includes the following information:
-
The text of the SQL statement
-
The SQL Trace statistics in tabular form
-
The number of library cache misses for the parsing and execution of the statement.
-
The user initially parsing the statement.
-
The execution plan generated by
EXPLAIN PLAN
.
TKPROF also provides a summary of user level statements and recursive SQL calls for the trace file.
23.4.4 Step 4: Storing SQL Trace Facility Statistics
You might want to keep a history of the statistics generated by the SQL Trace facility for an application, and compare them over time.
TKPROF
can generate a SQL script that creates a table and inserts rows of statistics into it. This script contains the following:
-
A
CREATE TABLE
statement that creates an output table namedTKPROF_TABLE
. -
INSERT
statements that add rows of statistics, one for each traced SQL statement, toTKPROF_TABLE
.
After running TKPROF
, run this script to store the statistics in the database.
This section contains the following topics:
23.4.4.1 Generating the TKPROF Output SQL Script
When you run TKPROF
, use the INSERT
parameter to specify the name of the generated SQL script.
If you omit the INSERT
parameter, then TKPROF
does not generate a script.
23.4.4.2 Editing the TKPROF Output SQL Script
After TKPROF
has created the SQL script, you might want to edit the script before running it.
If you have created an output table for previously collected statistics, and if you want to add new statistics to this table, then remove the CREATE TABLE
statement from the script. The script then inserts the new rows into the existing table. If you have created multiple output tables, perhaps to store statistics from different databases in different tables, then edit the CREATE TABLE
and INSERT
statements to change the name of the output table.
23.4.4.3 Querying the Output Table
After you have created the output table, query using a SELECT
statement.
The following CREATE TABLE
statement creates the TKPROF_TABLE
:
CREATE TABLE TKPROF_TABLE (
DATE_OF_INSERT DATE,
CURSOR_NUM NUMBER,
DEPTH NUMBER,
USER_ID NUMBER,
PARSE_CNT NUMBER,
PARSE_CPU NUMBER,
PARSE_ELAP NUMBER,
PARSE_DISK NUMBER,
PARSE_QUERY NUMBER,
PARSE_CURRENT NUMBER,
PARSE_MISS NUMBER,
EXE_COUNT NUMBER,
EXE_CPU NUMBER,
EXE_ELAP NUMBER,
EXE_DISK NUMBER,
EXE_QUERY NUMBER,
EXE_CURRENT NUMBER,
EXE_MISS NUMBER,
EXE_ROWS NUMBER,
FETCH_COUNT NUMBER,
FETCH_CPU NUMBER,
FETCH_ELAP NUMBER,
FETCH_DISK NUMBER,
FETCH_QUERY NUMBER,
FETCH_CURRENT NUMBER,
FETCH_ROWS NUMBER,
CLOCK_TICKS NUMBER,
SQL_STATEMENT LONG);
Most output table columns correspond directly to the statistics that appear in the formatted output file. For example, the PARSE_CNT
column value corresponds to the count statistic for the parse step in the output file.
The columns in the following table help you identify a row of statistics.
Table 23-2 TKPROF_TABLE Columns for Identifying a Row of Statistics
Column | Description |
---|---|
|
This is the SQL statement for which the SQL Trace facility collected the row of statistics. Because this column has data type |
|
This is the date and time when the row was inserted into the table. This value is different from the time when the SQL Trace facility collected the statistics. |
|
This indicates the level of recursion at which the SQL statement was issued. For example, a value of 0 indicates that a user issued the statement. A value of 1 indicates that Oracle Database generated the statement as a recursive call to process a statement with a value of 0 (a statement issued by a user). A value of n indicates that Oracle Database generated the statement as a recursive call to process a statement with a value of n-1. |
|
This identifies the user issuing the statement. This value also appears in the formatted output file. |
|
Oracle Database uses this column value to keep track of the cursor to which each SQL statement was assigned. |
The output table does not store the statement's execution plan. The following query returns the statistics from the output table. These statistics correspond to the formatted output shown in "Example 23-7".
SELECT * FROM TKPROF_TABLE;
Sample output appears as follows:
DATE_OF_INSERT CURSOR_NUM DEPTH USER_ID PARSE_CNT PARSE_CPU PARSE_ELAP
-------------- ---------- ----- ------- --------- --------- ----------
21-DEC-2017 1 0 8 1 16 22
PARSE_DISK PARSE_QUERY PARSE_CURRENT PARSE_MISS EXE_COUNT EXE_CPU
---------- ----------- ------------- ---------- --------- -------
3 11 0 1 1 0
EXE_ELAP EXE_DISK EXE_QUERY EXE_CURRENT EXE_MISS EXE_ROWS FETCH_COUNT
-------- -------- --------- ----------- -------- -------- -----------
0 0 0 0 0 0 1
FETCH_CPU FETCH_ELAP FETCH_DISK FETCH_QUERY FETCH_CURRENT FETCH_ROWS
--------- ---------- ---------- ----------- ------------- ----------
2 20 2 2 4 10
SQL_STATEMENT
---------------------------------------------------------------------
SELECT * FROM EMP, DEPT WHERE EMP.DEPTNO = DEPT.DEPTNO
23.5 Guidelines for Interpreting TKPROF Output
While TKPROF
provides a useful analysis, the most accurate measure of efficiency is the performance of the application. At the end of the TKPROF
output is a summary of the work that the process performed during the period that the trace was running.
This section contains the following topics:
23.5.1 Guideline for Interpreting the Resolution of Statistics
Timing statistics have a resolution of one hundredth of a second. Therefore, any operation on a cursor that takes a hundredth of a second or less might not be timed accurately.
Keep the time limitation in mind when interpreting statistics. In particular, be careful when interpreting the results from simple queries that execute very quickly.
23.5.2 Guideline for Recursive SQL Statements
Recursive SQL is additional SQL that Oracle Database must issue to execute a SQL statement issued by a user.
Conceptually, recursive SQL is “side-effect SQL.” For example, if a session inserts a row into a table that has insufficient space to hold that row, then the database makes recursive SQL calls to allocate the space dynamically. The database also generates recursive calls when data dictionary information is not available in memory and so must be retrieved from disk.
If recursive calls occur while the SQL Trace facility is enabled, then TKPROF
produces statistics for the recursive SQL statements and marks them clearly as recursive SQL statements in the output file. You can suppress the listing of Oracle Database internal recursive calls (for example, space management) in the output file by setting the SYS
command-line parameter to NO
. The statistics for a recursive SQL statement are included in the listing for that statement, not in the listing for the SQL statement that caused the recursive call. So, when you are calculating the total resources required to process a SQL statement, consider the statistics for that statement and those for recursive calls caused by that statement.
Note:
Recursive SQL statistics are not included for SQL-level operations.
23.5.3 Guideline for Deciding Which Statements to Tune
You must determine which SQL statements use the most CPU or disk resource.
If the TIMED_STATISTICS
parameter is enabled, then you can find high CPU activity in the CPU
column. If TIMED_STATISTICS
is not enabled, then check the QUERY
and CURRENT
columns.
With the exception of locking problems and inefficient PL/SQL loops, neither the CPU time nor the elapsed time is necessary to find problem statements. The key is the number of block visits, both query (that is, subject to read consistency) and current (that is, not subject to read consistency). Segment headers and blocks that are going to be updated are acquired in current mode, but all query and subquery processing requests the data in query mode. These are precisely the same measures as the instance statistics CONSISTENT GETS
and DB BLOCK GETS
. You can find high disk activity in the disk
column.
The following listing shows TKPROF
output for one SQL statement as it appears in the output file:
SELECT *
FROM emp, dept
WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno;
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
---- ------- ------- --------- -------- -------- ------- ------
Parse 11 0.08 0.18 0 0 0 0
Execute 11 0.23 0.66 0 3 6 0
Fetch 35 6.70 6.83 100 12326 2 824
------------------------------------------------------------------
total 57 7.01 7.67 100 12329 8 826
Misses in library cache during parse: 0
If it is acceptable to have 7.01 CPU seconds and to retrieve 824 rows, then you need not look any further at this trace output. In fact, a major use of TKPROF
reports in a tuning exercise is to eliminate processes from the detailed tuning phase.
The output indicates that 10 unnecessary parse call were made (because 11 parse calls exist for this single statement) and that array fetch operations were performed. More rows were fetched than there were fetches performed. A large gap between CPU
and elapsed
timings indicates Physical I/Os.
See Also:
23.5.4 Guidelines for Avoiding Traps in TKPROF Interpretation
When interpreting TKPROF
output, it helps to be aware of common traps.
This section contains the following topics:
23.5.4.1 Guideline for Avoiding the Argument Trap
If you are not aware of the values being bound at run time, then it is possible to fall into the argument trap.
EXPLAIN PLAN
cannot determine the type of a bind variable from the text of SQL statements, and it always assumes that the type is VARCHAR
. If the bind variable is actually a number or a date, then TKPROF
can cause implicit data conversions, which can cause inefficient plans to be executed. To avoid this situation, experiment with different data types in the query, and perform the conversion yourself.
23.5.4.2 Guideline for Avoiding the Read Consistency Trap
Without knowing that an uncommitted transaction had made a series of updates to a column, it is difficult to see why so many block visits would be incurred.
Such cases are not normally repeatable. If the process were run again, it is unlikely that another transaction would interact with it in the same way.
SELECT name_id
FROM cq_names
WHERE name = 'FLOOR';
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
---- ----- --- ------- ---- ----- ------- ----
Parse 1 0.10 0.18 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Fetch 1 0.11 0.21 2 101 0 1
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
Parsing user id: 01 (USER1)
Rows Execution Plan
---- --------- ----
0 SELECT STATEMENT
1 TABLE ACCESS (BY ROWID) OF 'CQ_NAMES'
2 INDEX (RANGE SCAN) OF 'CQ_NAMES_NAME' (NON_UNIQUE)
23.5.4.3 Guideline for Avoiding the Schema Trap
In some cases, an apparently straightforward indexed query looks at many database blocks and accesses them in current mode.
The following example shows an extreme (and thus easily detected) example of the schema trap:
SELECT name_id
FROM cq_names
WHERE name = 'FLOOR';
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
-------- ------- -------- --------- ------- ------ ------- ----
Parse 1 0.06 0.10 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.02 0.02 0 0 0 0
Fetch 1 0.23 0.30 31 31 3 1
Misses in library cache during parse: 0
Parsing user id: 02 (USER2)
Rows Execution Plan
------- ---------------------------------------------------
0 SELECT STATEMENT
2340 TABLE ACCESS (BY ROWID) OF 'CQ_NAMES'
0 INDEX (RANGE SCAN) OF 'CQ_NAMES_NAME' (NON-UNIQUE)
Two statistics suggest that the query might have been executed with a full table scan: the current mode block visits, and the number of rows originating from the Table Access row source in the plan. The explanation is that the required index was built after the trace file had been produced, but before TKPROF
had been run. Generating a new trace file gives the following data:
SELECT name_id
FROM cq_names
WHERE name = 'FLOOR';
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
----- ------ ------ -------- ----- ------ ------- -----
Parse 1 0.01 0.02 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Fetch 1 0.00 0.00 0 2 0 1
Misses in library cache during parse: 0
Parsing user id: 02 (USER2)
Rows Execution Plan
------- ---------------------------------------------------
0 SELECT STATEMENT
1 TABLE ACCESS (BY ROWID) OF 'CQ_NAMES'
2 INDEX (RANGE SCAN) OF 'CQ_NAMES_NAME' (NON-UNIQUE)
In the correct version, the parse call took 10 milliseconds of CPU time and 20 milliseconds of elapsed time, but the query apparently took no time to execute and perform the fetch. These anomalies arise because the clock tick of 10 milliseconds is too long relative to the time taken to execute and fetch the data. In such cases, it is important to get many executions of the statements, so that you have statistically valid numbers.
23.5.4.4 Guideline for Avoiding the Time Trap
In some cases, a query takes an inexplicably long time.
For example, the following update of 7 rows executes in 19 seconds:
UPDATE cq_names
SET ATTRIBUTES = lower(ATTRIBUTES)
WHERE ATTRIBUTES = :att
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
-------- ------- -------- --------- -------- -------- ------- ----------
Parse 1 0.06 0.24 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.62 19.62 22 526 12 7
Fetch 0 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
Parsing user id: 02 (USER2)
Rows Execution Plan
------- ---------------------------------------------------
0 UPDATE STATEMENT
2519 TABLE ACCESS (FULL) OF 'CQ_NAMES'
The explanation is interference from another transaction. In this case, another transaction held a shared lock on the table cq_names
for several seconds before and after the update was issued. It takes experience to diagnose that interference effects are occurring. On the one hand, comparative data is essential when the interference is contributing only a short delay (or a small increase in block visits in the previous example). However, if the interference contributes only modest overhead, and if the statement is essentially efficient, then its statistics may not require analysis.
23.6 Application Tracing Utilities
The Oracle tracing utilities are TKPROF and TRCSESS.
This section describes the syntax and semantics for the following utilities:
23.6.1 TRCSESS
The TRCSESS utility consolidates trace output from selected trace files based on user-specified criteria.
After TRCSESS merges the trace information into a single output file, TKPROF can process the output file. This section contains the following topics:
23.6.1.1 Purpose
TRCSESS is useful for consolidating the tracing of a particular session for performance or debugging purposes.
Tracing a specific session is usually not a problem in the dedicated server model because one process serves a session during its lifetime. You can see the trace information for the session from the trace file belonging to the server process. However, in a shared server configuration, a user session is serviced by different processes over time. The trace for the user session is scattered across different trace files belonging to different processes, which makes it difficult to get a complete picture of the life cycle of a session.
23.6.1.2 Guidelines
You must specify one of the session
, clientid
, service
, action
, or module
options.
If you specify multiple options, then TRCSESS consolidates all trace files that satisfy the specified criteria into the output file.
23.6.1.3 Syntax
trcsess [output=output_file_name]
[session=session_id]
[clientid=client_id]
[service=service_name]
[action=action_name]
[module=module_name]
[trace_files]
23.6.1.4 Options
TRCSESS supports a number of command-line options.
Argument | Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies the file where the output is generated. If this option is not specified, then the utility writes to standard output. |
|
Consolidates the trace information for the session specified. The session identifier is a combination of session index and session serial number, such as |
|
Consolidates the trace information for the specified client ID. |
|
Consolidates the trace information for the specified service name. |
|
Consolidates the trace information for the specified action name. |
|
Consolidates the trace information for the specified module name. |
|
Lists the trace file names, separated by spaces, in which TRCSESS should look for trace information. You can use the wildcard character ( |
23.6.1.5 Examples
This section demonstrates common TRCSESS use cases.
Example 23-2 Tracing a Single Session
This sample output of TRCSESS shows the container of traces for a particular session. In this example, the session index and serial number equals 21.2371
. All files in current directory are taken as input.
trcsess session=21.2371
Example 23-3 Specifying Multiple Trace Files
The following example specifies two trace files:
trcsess session=21.2371 main_12359.trc main_12995.trc
The sample output is similar to the following:
[PROCESS ID = 12359]
*** 2014-04-02 09:48:28.376
PARSING IN CURSOR #1 len=17 dep=0 uid=27 oct=3 lid=27 tim=868373970961 hv=887450622 ad='22683fb4'
select * from cat
END OF STMT
PARSE #1:c=0,e=339,p=0,cr=0,cu=0,mis=0,r=0,dep=0,og=4,tim=868373970944
EXEC #1:c=0,e=221,p=0,cr=0,cu=0,mis=0,r=0,dep=0,og=4,tim=868373971411
FETCH #1:c=0,e=791,p=0,cr=7,cu=0,mis=0,r=1,dep=0,og=4,tim=868373972435
FETCH #1:c=0,e=1486,p=0,cr=20,cu=0,mis=0,r=6,dep=0,og=4,tim=868373986238
*** 2014-04-02 10:03:58.058
XCTEND rlbk=0, rd_only=1
STAT #1 id=1 cnt=7 pid=0 pos=1 obj=0 op='FILTER '
STAT #1 id=2 cnt=7 pid=1 pos=1 obj=18 op='TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID OBJ$ '
STAT #1 id=3 cnt=7 pid=2 pos=1 obj=37 op='INDEX RANGE SCAN I_OBJ2 '
STAT #1 id=4 cnt=0 pid=1 pos=2 obj=4 op='TABLE ACCESS CLUSTER TAB$J2 '
STAT #1 id=5 cnt=6 pid=4 pos=1 obj=3 op='INDEX UNIQUE SCAN I_OBJ# '
[PROCESS ID=12995]
*** 2014-04-02 10:04:32.738
Archiving is disabled
23.6.2 TKPROF
The TKPROF program formats the contents of the trace file and places the output into a readable output file.
TKPROF can also do the following:
-
Create a SQL script that stores the statistics in the database
-
Determine the execution plans of SQL statements
Note:
If the cursor for a SQL statement is not closed, then TKPROF output does not automatically include the actual execution plan of the SQL statement. In this situation, use the
EXPLAIN
option with TKPROF to generate an execution plan.
TKPROF reports each statement executed with the resources it has consumed, the number of times it was called, and the number of rows which it processed.
This section contains the following topics:
23.6.2.1 Purpose
TKPROF can locate statements that are consuming the greatest resources.
With baselines available, you can assess whether the resources used are reasonable given the work performed.
23.6.2.2 Guidelines
The input and output files are the only required arguments.
If you invoke TKPROF without arguments, then the tool displays online help.
23.6.2.3 Syntax
tkprof input_file output_file
[ waits=yes|no ]
[ sort=option ]
[ print=n ]
[ aggregate=yes|no ]
[ insert=filename3 ]
[ sys=yes|no ]
[ table=schema.table ]
[ explain=user/password ]
[ record=filename4 ]
[ width=n ]
23.6.2.4 Options
TKPROF supports a number of command-line options.
Table 23-3 TKPROF Arguments
Argument | Description |
---|---|
|
Specifies the input file, a trace file containing statistics produced by the SQL Trace facility. This file can be either a trace file produced for a single session, or a file produced by concatenating individual trace files from multiple sessions. |
|
Specifies the file to which |
|
Specifies whether to record summary for any wait events found in the trace file. Valid values are |
|
Sorts traced SQL statements in descending order of specified sort option before listing them in the output file. If multiple options are specified, then the output is sorted in descending order by the sum of the values specified in the sort options. If you omit this parameter, then
|
|
Lists only the first integer sorted SQL statements from the output file. If you omit this parameter, then |
|
If you specify |
|
Creates a SQL script that stores the trace file statistics in the database. |
|
Enables and disables the listing of SQL statements issued by the user |
|
Specifies the schema and name of the table into which The specified user must be able to issue This option enables multiple users to run
If no plan table exists, then |
|
Determines the execution plan for each SQL statement in the trace file and writes these execution plans to the output file.
Note: Trace files generated immediately after instance startup contain data that reflects the activity of the startup process. In particular, they reflect a disproportionate amount of I/O activity as caches in the system global area (SGA) are filled. For the purposes of tuning, ignore such trace files. |
|
Creates a SQL script with the specified |
|
An integer that controls the output line width of some |
23.6.2.5 Output
This section explains the TKPROF output.
This section contains the following topics:
23.6.2.5.1 Identification of User Issuing the SQL Statement in TKPROF
TKPROF
lists the user ID of the user issuing each SQL statement.
If the SQL Trace input file contained statistics from multiple users, and if the statement was issued by multiple users, then TKPROF
lists the ID of the last user to parse the statement. The user ID of all database users appears in the data dictionary in the column ALL_USERS
.USER_ID
.
23.6.2.5.2 Tabular Statistics in TKPROF
TKPROF lists the statistics for a SQL statement returned by the SQL Trace facility in rows and columns.
Each row corresponds to one of three steps of SQL statement processing. Statistics are identified by the value of the CALL
column. See Table 23-4.
Table 23-4 CALL Column Values
CALL Value | Meaning |
---|---|
|
Translates the SQL statement into an execution plan, including checks for proper security authorization and checks for the existence of tables, columns, and other referenced objects. |
|
Actual execution of the statement by Oracle Database. For |
|
Retrieves rows returned by a query. Fetches are only performed for |
The other columns of the SQL Trace facility output are combined statistics for all parses, executions, and fetches of a statement. The sum of query
and current
is the total number of buffers accessed, also called Logical I/Os (LIOs). See Table 23-5.
Table 23-5 SQL Trace Statistics for Parses, Executes, and Fetches.
SQL Trace Statistic | Meaning |
---|---|
|
Number of times a statement was parsed, executed, or fetched. |
|
Total CPU time in seconds for all parse, execute, or fetch calls for the statement. This value is zero (0) if |
|
Total elapsed time in seconds for all parse, execute, or fetch calls for the statement. This value is zero (0) if |
|
Total number of data blocks physically read from the data files on disk for all parse, execute, or fetch calls. |
|
Total number of buffers retrieved in consistent mode for all parse, execute, or fetch calls. Usually, buffers are retrieved in consistent mode for queries. |
|
Total number of buffers retrieved in current mode. Buffers are retrieved in current mode for statements such as |
Statistics about the processed rows appear in the ROWS
column. The column shows the number of rows processed by the SQL statement. This total does not include rows processed by subqueries of the SQL statement. For SELECT
statements, the number of rows returned appears for the fetch step. For UPDATE
, DELETE
, and INSERT
statements, the number of rows processed appears for the execute step.
Note:
The row source counts are displayed when a cursor is closed. In SQL*Plus, there is only one user cursor, so each statement executed causes the previous cursor to be closed; therefore, the row source counts are displayed. PL/SQL has its own cursor handling and does not close child cursors when the parent cursor is closed. Exiting or reconnecting causes the counts to be displayed.
23.6.2.5.3 Library Cache Misses in TKPROF
TKPROF also lists the number of library cache misses resulting from parse and execute steps for each SQL statement.
These statistics appear on separate lines following the tabular statistics. If the statement resulted in no library cache misses, then TKPROF
does not list the statistic. In "Examples", the statement resulted in one library cache miss for the parse step and no misses for the execute step.
23.6.2.5.4 Row Source Operations in TKPROF
In the TKPROF output, row source operations show the number of rows processed for each operation executed on the rows, and additional row source information, such as physical reads and writes.
Table 23-6 Row Source Operations
Row Source Operation | Meaning |
---|---|
|
Consistent reads performed by the row source. |
|
Physical reads performed by the row source |
|
Physical writes performed by the row source |
|
Time in microseconds |
In the following sample TKPROF
output, note the cr
, r
, w
, and time
values under the Row Source Operation column:
Rows Row Source Operation
------- ---------------------------------------------------
0 DELETE (cr=43141 r=266947 w=25854 time=60235565 us)
28144 HASH JOIN ANTI (cr=43057 r=262332 w=25854 time=48830056 us)
51427 TABLE ACCESS FULL STATS$SQLTEXT (cr=3465 r=3463 w=0 time=865083 us)
647529 INDEX FAST FULL SCAN STATS$SQL_SUMMARY_PK
(cr=39592 r=39325 w=0 time=10522877 us) (object id 7409)
23.6.2.5.5 Wait Event Information in TKPROF
If wait event information exists, then the TKPROF
output includes a section on wait events.
Output looks similar to the following:
Elapsed times include waiting on following events:
Event waited on Times Waited Max. Wait Total Waited
--------------------------- ------------ --------- ------------
db file sequential read 8084 0.12 5.34
direct path write 834 0.00 0.00
direct path write temp 834 0.00 0.05
db file parallel read 8 1.53 5.51
db file scattered read 4180 0.07 1.45
direct path read 7082 0.00 0.05
direct path read temp 7082 0.00 0.44
rdbms ipc reply 20 0.00 0.01
SQL*Net message to client 1 0.00 0.00
SQL*Net message from client 1 0.00 0.00
In addition, wait events are summed for the entire trace file at the end of the file.
To ensure that wait events information is written to the trace file for the session, run the following SQL statement:
ALTER SESSION SET EVENTS '10046 trace name context forever, level 8';
23.6.2.6 Examples
This section demonstrates common TKPROF use cases.
Example 23-4 Printing the Most Resource-Intensive Statements
If you are processing a large trace file using a combination of SORT
parameters and the PRINT
parameter, then you can produce a TKPROF
output file containing only the highest resource-intensive statements. The following statement prints the 10 statements in the trace file that have generated the most physical I/O:
TKPROF ora53269.trc ora53269.prf SORT = (PRSDSK, EXEDSK, FCHDSK) PRINT = 10
Example 23-5 Generating a SQL Script
This example runs TKPROF
, accepts a trace file named examp12_jane_fg_sqlplus_007.trc
, and writes a formatted output file named outputa.prf
:
TKPROF examp12_jane_fg_sqlplus_007.trc OUTPUTA.PRF EXPLAIN=hr
TABLE=hr.temp_plan_table_a INSERT=STOREA.SQL SYS=NO SORT=(EXECPU,FCHCPU)
This example is likely to be longer than a single line on the screen, and you might need to use continuation characters, depending on the operating system.
Note the other parameters in this example:
-
The
EXPLAIN
value causesTKPROF
to connect as the userhr
and use theEXPLAIN PLAN
statement to generate the execution plan for each traced SQL statement. You can use this to get access paths and row source counts.Note:
If the cursor for a SQL statement is not closed, then
TKPROF
output does not automatically include the actual execution plan of the SQL statement. In this situation, you can use theEXPLAIN
option withTKPROF
to generate an execution plan. -
The
TABLE
value causesTKPROF
to use the tabletemp_plan_table_a
in the schemascott
as a temporary plan table. -
The
INSERT
value causesTKPROF
to generate a SQL script namedSTOREA
.SQL
that stores statistics for all traced SQL statements in the database. -
The
SYS
parameter with the value ofNO
causesTKPROF
to omit recursive SQL statements from the output file. In this way, you can ignore internal Oracle Database statements such as temporary table operations. -
The
SORT
value causesTKPROF
to sort the SQL statements in order of the sum of the CPU time spent executing and the CPU time spent fetching rows before writing them to the output file. For greatest efficiency, always useSORT
parameters.
Example 23-6 TKPROF Header
This example shows a sample header for the TKPROF report.
TKPROF: Release 12.1.0.0.2
Copyright (c) 1982, 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Trace file: /disk1/oracle/log/diag/rdbms/orcla/orcla/trace/orcla_ora_917.trc
Sort options: default
***************************************************************************
count = number of times OCI procedure was executed
cpu = cpu time in seconds executing
elapsed = elapsed time in seconds executing
disk = number of physical reads of buffers from disk
query = number of buffers gotten for consistent read
current = number of buffers gotten in current mode (usually for update)
rows = number of rows processed by the fetch or execute call
***************************************************************************
Example 23-7 TKPROF Body
This example shows a sample body for a TKPROF report.
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Parse 1 0.01 0.00 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Fetch 0 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
total 2 0.01 0.00 0 0 0 0
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
Optimizer mode: FIRST_ROWS
Parsing user id: 44
Elapsed times include waiting on following events:
Event waited on Times Max. Wait Total Waited
---------------------------------------- Waited ---------- ------------
SQL*Net message to client 1 0.00 0.00
SQL*Net message from client 1 28.59 28.59
********************************************************************************
select condition
from
cdef$ where rowid=:1
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Parse 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Fetch 1 0.00 0.00 0 2 0 1
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
total 3 0.00 0.00 0 2 0 1
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
Optimizer mode: CHOOSE
Parsing user id: SYS (recursive depth: 1)
Rows Row Source Operation
------- ---------------------------------------------------
1 TABLE ACCESS BY USER ROWID OBJ#(31) (cr=1 r=0 w=0 time=151 us)
********************************************************************************
SELECT last_name, job_id, salary
FROM employees
WHERE salary =
(SELECT max(salary) FROM employees)
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Parse 1 0.02 0.01 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Fetch 2 0.00 0.00 0 15 0 1
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
total 4 0.02 0.01 0 15 0 1
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
Optimizer mode: FIRST_ROWS
Parsing user id: 44
Rows Row Source Operation
------- ---------------------------------------------------
1 TABLE ACCESS FULL EMPLOYEES (cr=15 r=0 w=0 time=1743 us)
1 SORT AGGREGATE (cr=7 r=0 w=0 time=777 us)
107 TABLE ACCESS FULL EMPLOYEES (cr=7 r=0 w=0 time=655 us)
Elapsed times include waiting on following events:
Event waited on Times Max. Wait Total Waited
---------------------------------------- Waited ---------- ------------
SQL*Net message to client 2 0.00 0.00
SQL*Net message from client 2 9.62 9.62
********************************************************************************
********************************************************************************
delete
from stats$sqltext st
where (hash_value, text_subset) not in
(select --+ hash_aj
hash_value, text_subset
from stats$sql_summary ss
where ( ( snap_id < :lo_snap
or snap_id > :hi_snap
)
and dbid = :dbid
and instance_number = :inst_num
)
or ( dbid != :dbid
or instance_number != :inst_num)
)
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Parse 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 29.60 60.68 266984 43776 131172 28144
Fetch 0 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
total 2 29.60 60.68 266984 43776 131172 28144
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
Misses in library cache during execute: 1
Optimizer mode: CHOOSE
Parsing user id: 22
Rows Row Source Operation
------- ---------------------------------------------------
0 DELETE (cr=43141 r=266947 w=25854 time=60235565 us)
28144 HASH JOIN ANTI (cr=43057 r=262332 w=25854 time=48830056 us)
51427 TABLE ACCESS FULL STATS$SQLTEXT (cr=3465 r=3463 w=0 time=865083 us)
647529 INDEX FAST FULL SCAN STATS$SQL_SUMMARY_PK
(cr=39592 r=39325 w=0 time=10522877 us) (object id 7409)
Elapsed times include waiting on following events:
Event waited on Times Max. Wait Total Waited
---------------------------------------- Waited ---------- ------------
db file sequential read 8084 0.12 5.34
direct path write 834 0.00 0.00
direct path write temp 834 0.00 0.05
db file parallel read 8 1.53 5.51
db file scattered read 4180 0.07 1.45
direct path read 7082 0.00 0.05
direct path read temp 7082 0.00 0.44
rdbms ipc reply 20 0.00 0.01
SQL*Net message to client 1 0.00 0.00
SQL*Net message from client 1 0.00 0.00
********************************************************************************
Example 23-8 TKPROF Summary
This example that shows a summary for the TKPROF report.
OVERALL TOTALS FOR ALL NON-RECURSIVE STATEMENTS
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Parse 4 0.04 0.01 0 0 0 0
Execute 5 0.00 0.04 0 0 0 0
Fetch 2 0.00 0.00 0 15 0 1
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
total 11 0.04 0.06 0 15 0 1
Misses in library cache during parse: 4
Misses in library cache during execute: 1
Elapsed times include waiting on following events:
Event waited on Times Max. Wait Total Waited
---------------------------------------- Waited ---------- ------------
SQL*Net message to client 6 0.00 0.00
SQL*Net message from client 5 77.77 128.88
OVERALL TOTALS FOR ALL RECURSIVE STATEMENTS
call count cpu elapsed disk query current rows
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Parse 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Execute 1 0.00 0.00 0 0 0 0
Fetch 1 0.00 0.00 0 2 0 1
------- ------ -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
total 3 0.00 0.00 0 2 0 1
Misses in library cache during parse: 1
5 user SQL statements in session.
1 internal SQL statements in session.
6 SQL statements in session.
********************************************************************************
Trace file: main_ora_27621.trc
Trace file compatibility: 9.00.01
Sort options: default
1 session in tracefile.
5 user SQL statements in trace file.
1 internal SQL statements in trace file.
6 SQL statements in trace file.
6 unique SQL statements in trace file.
76 lines in trace file.
128 elapsed seconds in trace file.
23.7 Views for Application Tracing
You can use data dictionary and V$
views to monitor tracing.
This section includes the following topics:
23.7.1 Views Relevant for Trace Statistics
You can display the statistics that have been gathered with the following V$
and DBA
views.
Table 23-7 Diagnostic Views
View | Description |
---|---|
DBA_ENABLED_AGGREGATIONS |
Accumulated global statistics for the currently enabled statistics |
V$CLIENT_STATS |
Accumulated statistics for a specified client identifier |
V$SERVICE_STATS |
Accumulated statistics for a specified service |
V$SERV_MOD_ACT_STATS |
Accumulated statistics for a combination of specified service, module, and action |
V$SERVICEMETRIC |
Accumulated statistics for elapsed time of database calls and for CPU use |
V$DIAG_TRACE_FILE |
Information about all trace files in ADR for the current container |
V$DIAG_APP_TRACE_FILE |
Information about all trace files that contain application trace data (SQL_TRACE or OPTIMIZER_TRACE event data) in ADR for the current container
|
V$DIAG_TRACE_FILE_CONTENTS |
Trace data in the trace files in ADR |
V$DIAG_SQL_TRACE_RECORDS |
SQL_TRACE data in the trace files in ADR
|
V$DIAG_OPT_TRACE_RECORDS |
Optimizer trace event data in the trace files in ADR |
V$DIAG_SESS_SQL_TRACE_RECORDS |
SQL_TRACE data in the trace files in ADR for the current user session
|
V$DIAG_SESS_OPT_TRACE_RECORDS |
Optimizer trace event data in the trace files in ADR for the current user session |
V$DIAG_ALERT_EXT |
Contents of the XML-based alert log in ADR for the current container |
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for information about V$
and data dictionary views
23.7.2 Views Related to Enabling Tracing
A Cloud Control report or the DBA_ENABLED_TRACES
view can display outstanding traces.
In the DBA_ENABLED_TRACES
view, you can determine detailed information about how a trace was enabled, including the trace type. The trace type specifies whether the trace is enabled for client identifier, session, service, database, or a combination of service, module, and action.