10 Oracle Transactional Event Queue and Advanced Queuing Views
These topics describe the Transactional Event Queue (TxEventQ) and AQ Advanced Queuing (AQ) administrative interface views.
Note:
All views not detailed in the following sections are described in the Oracle Database Reference.
Oracle TxEventQ Views
Oracle AQ Views
- 
                     V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE_STAT: Memory Management for Sharded Queues 
- 
                     V$AQ_SHARDED_SUBSCRIBER_STAT: Sharded Queue Subscriber Statistics 
- 
                     V$AQ_REMOTE_DEQUEUE_AFFINITY: Dequeue Affinity Instance List 
- 
                     ALL_QUEUE_TABLES: Queue Tables Accessible to the Current User 
- 
                     ALL_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers for Queues Where User Has Queue Privileges 
- 
                     USER_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS: User Transformation Functions 
- 
                     AQ$INTERNET_USERS: Oracle Database Advanced Queuing Agents Registered for Internet Access 
- 
                     V$BUFFERED_SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers for All Buffered Queues in the Instance 
- 
                     V$BUFFERED_PUBLISHERS: All Buffered Publishers in the Instance 
- 
                     V$PERSISTENT_QUEUES: All Active Persistent Queues in the Instance 
- 
                     V$PERSISTENT_SUBSCRIBERS: All Active Subscribers of the Persistent Queues in the Instance 
- 
                     V$PERSISTENT_PUBLISHERS: All Active Publishers of the Persistent Queues in the Instance 
- 
                     V$PROPAGATION_SENDER: Buffer Queue Propagation Schedules on the Sending (Source) Side 
- 
                     V$PROPAGATION_RECEIVER: Buffer Queue Propagation Schedules on the Receiving (Destination) Side 
- 
                     V$SUBSCR_REGISTRATION_STATS: Diagnosability of Notifications 
- 
                     V$AQ_JOB_COORDINATOR: Performance Statistics per Coordinator 
DBA_QUEUE_TABLES: All Queue Tables in Database
This view contains information about the owner instance for a queue table.
A queue table can contain multiple queues. In this case, each queue in a queue table has the same owner instance as the queue table. The DBA_QUEUE_TABLES columns are the same as those in ALL_QUEUE_TABLES.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about DBA_QUEUE_TABLES.
                        
USER_QUEUE_TABLES: Queue Tables in User Schema
This view is the same as DBA_QUEUE_TABLES with the exception that it only shows queue tables in the user's schema. 
                  
USER_QUEUE_TABLES does not contain a column for OWNER.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about USER_QUEUE_TABLES.
                        
ALL_QUEUE_TABLES: Queue Tables Accessible to the Current User
This view describes queue tables accessible to the current user.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about ALL_QUEUE_TABLES.
                        
DBA_QUEUES: All Queues in Database
The DBA_QUEUES view specifies operational characteristics for every queue in a database.
                  
 Its columns are the same as those ALL_QUEUES. Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) introduces a new column SHARDED with data type VARCHAR2(5). The value for this column is TRUE for sharded queue, otherwise FALSE.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about DBA_QUEUES.
                        
USER_QUEUES: Queues In User Schema
The USER_QUEUES view is the same as DBA_QUEUES with the exception that it only shows queues in the user's schema.
                  
Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) introduces a new column SHARDED with data type VARCHAR2(5). The value for this column is TRUE for sharded queue, otherwise FALSE.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about USER_QUEUES.
                        
ALL_QUEUES: Queues for Which User Has Any Privilege
The ALL_QUEUES view describes all queues on which the current user has enqueue or dequeue privileges.
                  
 If the user has any Advanced Queuing system privileges, like MANAGE ANY QUEUE, ENQUEUE ANY QUEUE or DEQUEUE ANY QUEUE, this view describes all queues in the database. Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) introduces a new column SHARDED with data type VARCHAR2(5). The value for this column is TRUE for sharded queue, otherwise FALSE.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about ALL_QUEUES.
                        
DBA_QUEUE_SCHEDULES: All Propagation Schedules
The DBA_QUEUE_SCHEDULES view describes all the current schedules in the database for propagating messages.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about DBA_QUEUE_SCHEDULES.
                        
USER_QUEUE_SCHEDULES: Propagation Schedules in User Schema
The USER_QUEUE_SCHEDULES view is the same as DBA_QUEUE_SCHEDULES with the exception that it only shows queue schedules in the user's schema.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about USER_QUEUE_SCHEDULES.
                        
QUEUE_PRIVILEGES: Queues for Which User Has Queue Privilege
The QUEUE_PRIVILEGES view describes queues for which the user is the grantor, grantee, or owner.
                  
 It also shows queues for which an enabled role on the queue is granted to PUBLIC.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about QUEUE_PRIVILEGES.
                        
AQ$<Queue_Table_Name>: Messages in Queue Table
The AQ$<Queue_Table_Name> view describes the queue table in which message data is stored.
                  
This view is automatically created with each queue table and should be used for querying the queue data. The dequeue history data (time, user identification and transaction identification) is only valid for single-consumer queues.
In a queue table that is created with the compatible parameter set to '8.1' or higher, messages that were not dequeued by the consumer are shown as "UNDELIVERABLE". You can dequeue these messages by msgid. If the Oracle Database Advanced Queuing queue process monitor is running, then the messages are eventually moved to an exception queue. You can dequeue these messages from the exception queue with an ordinary dequeue. 
                     
A multiconsumer queue table created without the compatible parameter, or with the compatible parameter set to '8.0', does not display the state of a message on a consumer basis, but only displays the global state of the message.
                     
Note:
Queues created in a queue table with compatible set to 8.0 (referred to in this guide as 8.0-style queues) are deprecated in Oracle Database Advanced Queuing 10g Release 2 (10.2). Oracle recommends that any new queues you create be 8.1-style or newer and that you migrate existing 8.0-style queues at your earliest convenience.
                        
When a message is dequeued using the REMOVE mode, DEQ_TIME, DEQ_USER_ID, and DEQ_TXN_ID are updated for the consumer that dequeued the message.
                     
You can use MSGID and ORIGINAL_MSGID to chain propagated messages. When a message with message identifier m1 is propagated to a remote queue, m1 is stored in the ORIGINAL_MSGID column of the remote queue.
                     
Beginning with Oracle Database 10g, AQ$Queue_Table_Name includes buffered messages. For buffered messages, the value of MSG_STATE is one of the following:
                     
- 
                           IN MEMORYBuffered messages enqueued by a user 
- 
                           DEFERREDBuffered messages enqueued by a capture process 
- 
                           SPILLEDUser-enqueued buffered messages that have been spilled to disk 
- 
                           DEFERRED SPILLEDCapture-enqueued buffered messages that have been spilled to disk 
- 
                           BUFFERED EXPIREDExpired buffered messages 
For JMS Sharded Queues, the columns RETRY_COUNT, EXCEPTION_QUEUE_OWNER, EXCEPTION_QUEUE, PROPAGATED_MSGID, SENDER_NAME, SENDER_ADDRESS, SENDER_PROTOCOL, ORIGINAL_MSGID, ORIGINAL_QUEUE_NAME, ORIGINAL_QUEUE_OWNER, EXPIRATION_REASON are always NULL.
                     
For JMS Sharded Queues, this view shows messages only for durable subscribers because non durable subscribers are session specific. The view returns data from the in-memory Sharded Queue message cache if available, otherwise from the values on disk. A user is required to be one of the following in order to query from AQ$<queue_name> view for Sharded Queues:
                     
- 
                           user is the owner 
- 
                           user has "dequeue" privilege on queue 
- 
                           user has "dequeue any queue" privilege 
The view has the following difference for Sharded Queues for 12c and future releases:
- 
                           MSG_PRIORITYis defined asNUMBER(38)
- 
                           MSG_STATEin a queue table does not haveBUFFERED_EXPIREDhence the max length ofUNDELIVERABLEis taken as length gotMSG_STATE.
- 
                           EXPIRATIONis defined asTIMESTAMP(6) WITH TIME ZONEin a queue table.
- 
                           USER_DATAcolumn is defined using a decode onUSERDATA_RAWandUSERDATA_BLOBwithUTL_RAW.CAST_TO_VARCHAR2.
- 
                           CONSUMER_NAMEis defined asVARCHAR2(128)
Table 10-1 AQ$<Queue_Table_Name> View
| Column | Datatype | NULL | For JMS Sharded Queues 12c Release 1 (12.1) | Description | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 
 | 
 | - | Queue name | |
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | |
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | |
| 
 | 
 | 
 | Unique identifier of the message | |
| 
 | 
 | - | User-provided correlation identifier | |
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Message priority | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Message state. 12c Release 1 (12.1) queue table doesnt have  | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Time in date format at which the message in waiting state would become ready. Equals  | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Time as a timestamp format at which the message in waiting state would become ready. Equals  | |
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Number of seconds in which the message expires after being  | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Enqueue time | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Enqueue time | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Enqueue user ID | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Enqueue user name | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Enqueue transaction ID | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Dequeue time | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Dequeue time | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Dequeue user ID | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Dequeue user name | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Dequeue transaction ID | |
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Number of retries | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Exception queue schema | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Exception queue name | 
| 
 | - | - | User data.  | |
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Name of the agent enqueuing the message (valid only for 8.1-compatible queue tables) | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Queue name and database name of the source (last propagating) queue (valid only for 8.1-compatible queue tables). The database name is not specified if the source queue is in the local database. | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Protocol for sender address (reserved for future use and valid only for 8.1-compatible queue tables) | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Message ID of the message in the source queue (valid only for 8.1-compatible queue tables) | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Name of the agent receiving the message (valid only for 8.1-compatible multiconsumer queue tables) | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Queue name and database link name of the agent receiving the message.The database link name is not specified if the address is in the local database. The address is  | |
| 
 | 
 | - | Protocol for address of receiving agent (valid only for 8.1-compatible queue tables) | |
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Message ID of the message in the queue of the receiving agent (valid only for 8.1-compatible queue tables) | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Name of the queue the message came from | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Owner of the queue the message came from | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
 | Reason the message came into exception queue. Possible values are  | 
Note:
A message is moved to an exception queue if RETRY_COUNT is greater than MAX_RETRIES. If a dequeue transaction fails because the server process dies (including ALTER SYSTEM KILL SESSION) or SHUTDOWN ABORT on the instance, then RETRY_COUNT is not incremented.
                        
AQ$<Queue_Table_Name_S>: Queue Subscribers
The AQ$<Queue_Table_Name_S> view provides information about subscribers for all the queues in any given queue table.
                  
 It shows subscribers created by users with DBMS_AQADM.ADD_SUBSCRIBER and subscribers created for the apply process to apply user-created events. It also displays the transformation for the subscriber, if it was created with one. It is generated when the queue table is created. 
                     
This view provides functionality that is equivalent to the DBMS_AQADM.QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS() procedure. For these queues, Oracle recommends that the view be used instead of this procedure to view queue subscribers. This view is created only for 8.1-compatible queue tables.
                     
Table 10-2 AQ$<Queue_Table_Name_S> View
| Column | Datatype | NULL | Description | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 
 | 
 | 
 | Name of queue for which subscriber is defined | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Name of agent | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Address of agent | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Protocol of agent | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Name of the transformation (can be null) | 
AQ$<Queue_Table_Name_R>: Queue Subscribers and Their Rules
The AQ$<Queue_Table_Name_R> view displays only the subscribers based on rules for all queues in a given queue table, including the text of the rule defined by each subscriber.
                  
It also displays the transformation for the subscriber, if one was specified. It is generated when the queue table is created.
This view is created only for 8.1-compatible queue tables.
Table 10-3 AQ$<Queue_Table_Name_R> View
| Column | Datatype | NULL | Description | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 
 | 
 | 
 | Name of queue for which subscriber is defined | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Name of agent | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Address of agent | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Protocol of agent | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Text of defined rule | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Set of rules | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Name of the transformation (can be null) | 
AQ$Queue_Name_R: Queue Subscribers and Their Rules for Multi-consumer Queue
This table shows queue subscribers and their rules for multi-consumer queue.
Table 10-4 AQ$Queue_Name_R: Queue Subscribers and Their Rules for Multi-consumer Queue
| Column | Datatype | NULL | 
|---|---|---|
| 
 | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
AQ$Queue_Name_S: Queue Subscribers and Their Rules for Multi-consumer Queue
This table shows queue subscribers and their rules for multi-consumer queue.
Table 10-5 AQ$Queue_Name_S: Queue Subscribers and Their Rules for Multi-consumer Queue
| Column | Datatype | NULL | 
|---|---|---|
| 
 | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
| 
 | 
 | - | 
DBA_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS: All Queue Subscribers in Database
The DBA_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS view returns a list of all subscribers on all queues in the database. 
                  
Its columns are the same as those in ALL_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about DBA_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS.
                        
USER_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS: Queue Subscribers in User Schema
The USER_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS view returns a list of subscribers on queues in the schema of the current user.
                  
 Its columns are the same as those in ALL_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS except that it does not contain the OWNER column.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about USER_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS.
                        
ALL_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers for Queues Where User Has Queue Privileges
The ALL_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS view returns a list of subscribers to queues that the current user has privileges to dequeue from.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about ALL_QUEUE_SUBSCRIBERS.
                        
DBA_TRANSFORMATIONS: All Transformations
The DBA_TRANSFORMATIONS view displays all the transformations in the database. 
                  
These transformations can be specified with Advanced Queue operations like enqueue, dequeue and subscribe to automatically integrate transformations in messaging. This view is accessible only to users having DBA privileges.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about DBA_TRANSFORMATIONS.
                        
DBA_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS: All Transformation Functions
The DBA_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS view displays the transformation functions for all the transformations in the database.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about DBA_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS.
                        
USER_TRANSFORMATIONS: User Transformations
The USER_TRANSFORMATIONS view displays all the transformations owned by the user.
                  
 To view the transformation definition, query USER_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about USER_TRANSFORMATIONS.
                        
USER_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS: User Transformation Functions
The USER_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS view displays the transformation functions for all the transformations of the user.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about USER_ATTRIBUTE_TRANSFORMATIONS.
                        
DBA_SUBSCR_REGISTRATIONS: All Subscription Registrations
The DBA_SUBSCR_REGISTRATIONS view lists all the subscription registrations in the database.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about DBA_SUBSCR_REGISTRATIONS.
                        
USER_SUBSCR_REGISTRATIONS: User Subscription Registrations
The USER_SUBSCR_REGISTRATIONS view lists the subscription registrations in the database for the current user.
                  
 Its columns are the same as those in DBA_SUBSCR_REGISTRATIONS.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about USER_SUBSCR_REGISTRATIONS.
                        
AQ$INTERNET_USERS: Oracle Database Advanced Queuing Agents Registered for Internet Access
The AQ$INTERNET_USERS view provides information about the agents registered for Internet access to Oracle Database Advanced Queuing. It also provides the list of database users that each Internet agent maps to.
                  
Table 10-6 AQ$INTERNET_USERS View
| Column | Datatype | NULL | Description | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 
 | 
 | - | Name of the Oracle Database Advanced Queuing Internet agent | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Name of database user that this Internet agent maps to | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Indicates whether this agent is allowed to access Oracle Database Advanced Queuing through HTTP ( | 
| 
 | 
 | - | Indicates whether this agent is allowed to access Oracle Database Advanced Queuing through FTP (always  | 
V$AQ: Number of Messages in Different States in Database
The V$AQ view provides information about the number of messages in different states for the whole database.
                  
In a Oracle Real Application Clusters environment, each instance keeps its own Oracle Database Advanced Queuing statistics information in its own System Global Area (SGA), and does not have knowledge of the statistics gathered by other instances. When a GV$AQ view is queried by an instance, all other instances funnel their Oracle Database Advanced Queuing statistics information to the instance issuing the query.
                     
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ.
                        
V$BUFFERED_QUEUES: All Buffered Queues in the Instance
The V$BUFFERED_QUEUES view displays information about all buffered queues in the instance. There is one row per queue.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$BUFFERED_QUEUES.
                        
V$BUFFERED_SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers for All Buffered Queues in the Instance
The V$BUFFERED_SUBSCRIBERS view displays information about the subscribers for all buffered queues in the instance. There is one row per subscriber per queue.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$BUFFERED_SUBSCRIBERS.
                        
V$BUFFERED_PUBLISHERS: All Buffered Publishers in the Instance
The V$BUFFERED_PUBLISHERS view displays information about all buffered publishers in the instance.
                  
There is one row per queue per sender. The values are reset to zero when the database (or instance in an Oracle RAC environment) restarts.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$BUFFERED_PUBLISHERS.
                        
V$PERSISTENT_QUEUES: All Active Persistent Queues in the Instance
The V$PERSISTENT_QUEUES view displays information about all active persistent queues in the database since the queues' first activity time.
                  
There is one row per queue. The rows are deleted when the database (or instance in an Oracle RAC environment) restarts.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$PERSISTENT_QUEUES.
                        
V$PERSISTENT_QMN_CACHE: Performance Statistics on Background Tasks for Persistent Queues
The V$PERSISTENT_QMN_CACHE view displays detailed statistics about all background activities relating to all queue tables in the database. 
                  
There is one row per queue table. The values are reset when the database (or instance in an Oracle RAC environment) restarts.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$PERSISTENT_QMN_CACHE.
                        
V$PERSISTENT_SUBSCRIBERS: All Active Subscribers of the Persistent Queues in the Instance
The V$PERSISTENT_SUBSCRIBERS view displays information about all active subscribers of the persistent queues in the database. 
                  
There is one row per instance per queue per subscriber. The rows are deleted when the database (or instance in an Oracle RAC environment) restarts.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$PERSISTENT_SUBSCRIBERS.
                        
V$PERSISTENT_PUBLISHERS: All Active Publishers of the Persistent Queues in the Instance
The V$PERSISTENT_PUBLISHERS view displays information about all active publishers of the persistent queues in the database. 
                  
There is one row per instance per queue per publisher. The rows are deleted when the database (or instance in an Oracle RAC environment) restarts.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$PERSISTENT_PUBLISHERS.
V$PROPAGATION_SENDER: Buffer Queue Propagation Schedules on the Sending (Source) Side
The V$PROPAGATION_SENDER view displays information about buffer queue propagation schedules on the sending (source) side.
                  
The values are reset to zero when the database (or instance in a Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) environment) restarts, when propagation migrates to another instance, or when an unscheduled propagation is attempted.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$PROPAGATION_SENDER .
                        
V$PROPAGATION_RECEIVER: Buffer Queue Propagation Schedules on the Receiving (Destination) Side
The V$PROPAGATION_RECEIVER view displays information about buffer queue propagation schedules on the receiving (destination) side.
                  
The values are reset to zero when the database (or instance in a Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) environment) restarts, when propagation migrates to another instance, or when an unscheduled propagation is attempted.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$PROPAGATION_RECEIVER.
                        
V$SUBSCR_REGISTRATION_STATS: Diagnosability of Notifications
The V$SUBSCR_REGISTRATION_STATS view provides information for diagnosability of notifications.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$SUBSCR_REGISTRATION_STATS.
                        
V$METRICGROUP: Information About the Metric Group
This V$METRICGROUP view displays information about the metric group for each of the four major Streams components: capture, propagation, apply, and queue.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$METRICGROUP.
                        
V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE_STAT: Memory Management for Sharded Queues
The V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE_STAT view displays statistics about memory management for sharded queues in streams_pool within the System Global Area (SGA). Sharded queue uses streams_pool in units of subshards. Thus columns of this view shows statistics at subshard  level  irrespective of the queue. This view shows statistics across all sharded queues.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE_STAT.
                        
Note:
Some of the above mentioned columns will be used by sharded queue memory advisor during analysis.V$AQ_SHARDED_SUBSCRIBER_STAT: Sharded Queue Subscriber Statistics
The V$AQ_SHARDED_SUBSCRIBER_STAT view displays statistical information about the subscribers of sharded queues. This statistics is used by the memory advisor.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_SHARDED_SUBSCRIBER_STAT.
                        
V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE_ADVICE: Simulated Metrics
The V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE_ADVICE view shows simulated metrics for a range of potential message cache sizes. This view assists in cache sizing by providing information in form of metrics as described below.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE_ADVICE.
                        
V$AQ_REMOTE_DEQUEUE_AFFINITY: Dequeue Affinity Instance List
The V$AQ_REMOTE_DEQUEUE_AFFINITY view lists the dequeue affinity instance of the subscribers not dequeuing locally from the shard's owner instance. Cross instance message forwarding is used for these subscribers.
                  
V$AQ_BACKGROUND_COORDINATOR: Performance Statistics for AQ's Master Background Coordinator Process (AQPC)
The V$AQ_BACKGROUND_COORDINATOR view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. 
                  
This view lists performance statistics for the Oracle Database Advanced Queuing master background coordinator process (AQPC).
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_BACKGROUND_COORDINATOR.
                        
V$AQ_JOB_COORDINATOR: Performance Statistics per Coordinator
The V$AQ_JOB_COORDINATOR view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards.
                  
This view lists performance statistics per coordinator, for every AQ coordinator controlled by the AQ's Master coordinator.
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_JOB_COORDINATOR.
                        
V$AQ_SERVER_POOL: Performance Statistics for all Servers
The V$AQ_SERVER_POOL view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. This view lists performance statistics for all the servers in the pool.
                  
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_SERVER_POOL.
                        
V$AQ_CROSS_INSTANCE_JOBS: Cross Process Jobs Description
The V$AQ_CROSS_INSTANCE_JOBS view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. This view describes each of the cross process jobs.
                  
Each job serves for forwarding messages for a shard from source instance to destination instance for a set of subscribers.
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_CROSS_INSTANCE_JOBS.
                        
V$AQ_IPC_ACTIVE_MSGS
V$AQ_IPC_ACTIVE_MSGS displays information about long and priority messages being processed by slaves and the short message being processed by the master.
                  
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_IPC_ACTIVE_MSGS.
                        
V$AQ_IPC_MSG_STATS
V$AQ_IPC_MSG_STATS displays cumulative statistics for each message class, for example., cumulative calls, average pending/processing time, and last failure.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_IPC_MSG_STATS.
                        
V$AQ_IPC_PENDING_MSGS
V$AQ_IPC_PENDING_MSGS displays information about pending messages, present in the local master context.
See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_IPC_PENDING_MSGS.
                        
V$AQ_NONDUR_REGISTRATIONS: Non-Durable Registrations
The V$AQ_NONDUR_REGISTRATIONS view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. This view provides information about non-durable subscriptions.
                  
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_NONDUR_REGISTRATIONS.
                        
V$AQ_NOTIFICATION_CLIENTS: Secure OCI Client Connections
The V$AQ_NOTIFICATION_CLIENTS view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. This view displays performance statistics for secure OCI client connections.
                  
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_NOTIFICATION_CLIENTS.
                        
V$AQ_SUBSCRIBER_LOAD: Durable Subscribers
The V$AQ_SUBSCRIBER_LOAD view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. This view describes the load of all subscribers of sharded queues in terms of latency at every instance in an Oracle RAC environment.
                  
Latency denotes the predicted amount of time (in seconds) required from the current time to drain all the messages for that subscriber at each respective instance. The latency calculation considers past enqueue/dequeue rates and future enqueue/dequeue rates based on history.
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_SUBSCRIBER_LOAD.
                        
V$AQ_NONDUR_SUBSCRIBER: Non-Durable Subscribers
The V$AQ_NONDUR_SUBSCRIBER view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. V$AQ_NONDUR_SUBSCRIBER provides information about non-durable subscribers on sharded queues.
                  
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_NONDUR_SUBSCRIBER.
                        
V$AQ_NONDUR_SUBSCRIBER_LWM: LWM of Non Durable Subscriber
The V$AQ_NONDUR_SUBSCRIBER_LWM view is applicable for Oracle Database 12c Release 1 (12.1) onwards. The LWM of a non durable subscriber is a combination of shard, priority and LWM (sub-shard).
                  
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_NONDUR_SUBSCRIBER_LWM.
                        
V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE: Performance Statistics
The V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE view provides performance statistics of the message cache for sharded queues at the subshard level in the instance.
                  
See Also::
Oracle Database Reference for more information about V$AQ_MESSAGE_CACHE.