Oracle® Database Concepts 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14220-02 |
|
|
View PDF |
This chapter discusses the memory architecture of an Oracle instance.
This chapter contains the following topics:
Oracle uses memory to store information such as the following:
Program code
Information about a connected session, even if it is not currently active
Information needed during program execution (for example, the current state of a query from which rows are being fetched)
Information that is shared and communicated among Oracle processes (for example, locking information)
Cached data that is also permanently stored on peripheral memory (for example, data blocks and redo log entries)
The basic memory structures associated with Oracle include:
System Global Area (SGA), which is shared by all server and background processes.
Program Global Areas (PGA), which is private to each server and background process; there is one PGA for each process.
Figure 8-1 illustrates the relationships among these memory structures.
Software code areas are another basic memory structure.
A system global area (SGA) is a group of shared memory structures that contain data and control information for one Oracle database instance. If multiple users are concurrently connected to the same instance, then the data in the instance's SGA is shared among the users. Consequently, the SGA is sometimes called the shared global area.
An SGA and Oracle processes constitute an Oracle instance. Oracle automatically allocates memory for an SGA when you start an instance, and the operating system reclaims the memory when you shut down the instance. Each instance has its own SGA.
The SGA is read/write. All users connected to a multiple-process database instance can read information contained within the instance's SGA, and several processes write to the SGA during execution of Oracle.
The SGA contains the following data structures:
Database buffer cache
Redo log buffer
Shared pool
Java pool
Large pool (optional)
Streams pool
Data dictionary cache
Other miscellaneous information
Part of the SGA contains general information about the state of the database and the instance, which the background processes need to access; this is called the fixed SGA. No user data is stored here. The SGA also includes information communicated between processes, such as locking information.
If the system uses shared server architecture, then the request and response queues and some contents of the PGA are in the SGA.
See Also:
"Introduction to an Oracle Instance" for more information about an Oracle instance
The SGA comprises a number of memory components, which are pools of memory used to satisfy a particular class of memory allocation requests. Examples of memory components include the shared pool (used to allocate memory for SQL and PL/SQL execution), the java pool (used for java objects and other java execution memory), and the buffer cache (used for caching disk blocks). All SGA components allocate and deallocate space in units of granules. Oracle Database tracks SGA memory use in internal numbers of granules for each SGA component.
Granule size is determined by total SGA size. On most platforms, the size of a granule is 4 MB if the total SGA size is less than 1 GB, and granule size is 16MB for larger SGAs. Some platform dependencies arise. For example, on 32-bit Windows, the granule size is 8 M for SGAs larger than 1 GB.
Oracle Database can set limits on how much virtual memory the database uses for the SGA. It can start instances with minimal memory and allow the instance to use more memory by expanding the memory allocated for SGA components, up to a maximum determined by the SGA_MAX_SIZE
initialization parameter. If the value for SGA_MAX_SIZE
in the initialization parameter file or server parameter file (SPFILE
) is less than the sum the memory allocated for all components, either explicitly in the parameter file or by default, at the time the instance is initialized, then the database ignores the setting for SGA_MAX_SIZE
.
For optimal performance in most systems, the entire SGA should fit in real memory. If it does not, and if virtual memory is used to store parts of it, then overall database system performance can decrease dramatically. The reason for this is that portions of the SGA are paged (written to and read from disk) by the operating system. The amount of memory dedicated to all shared areas in the SGA also has performance impact.
The size of the SGA is determined by several initialization parameters. The following parameters have the greatest effect on SGA size:
In previous database releases, a database administrator (DBA) was required to manually specify different SGA component sizes by setting a number of initialization parameters, including the SHARED_POOL_SIZE
, DB_CACHE_SIZE
, JAVA_POOL_SIZE
, and LARGE_POOL_SIZE
parameters. Oracle Database 10g includes the Automatic Shared Memory Management feature which simplifies the SGA memory management significantly. In Oracle Database 10g, a DBA can simply specify the total amount of SGA memory available to an instance using the SGA_TARGET
initialization parameter and the Oracle Database will automatically distribute this memory among various subcomponents to ensure most effective memory utilization.
When automatic SGA memory management is enabled, the sizes of the different SGA components are flexible and can adapt to the needs of a workload without requiring any additional configuration. The database automatically distributes the available memory among the various components as required, allowing the system to maximize the use of all available SGA memory.
Consider a manual configuration in which 1 GB of memory is available for the SGA and distributed to the following initialization parameters:
SHARED_POOL_SIZE=128M DB_CACHE_SIZE=896M
If an application attempts to allocate more than 128 MB of memory from the shared pool, an error is raised that indicates that the available shared pool has been exhausted. There could be free memory in the buffer cache, but this memory is not accessible to the shared pool. You would have to manually resize the buffer cache and the shared pool to work around this problem.
With automatic SGA management, you can simply set the SGA_TARGET
initialization parameter to 1G
. If an application needs more shared pool memory, it can obtain that memory by acquiring it from the free memory in the buffer cache.
Setting a single parameter greatly simplifies the administration task. You specify only the amount of SGA memory that an instance has available and forget about the sizes of individual components. No out of memory errors are generated unless the system has actually run out of memory.
Automatic SGA management can enhance workload performance without requiring any additional resources or manual tuning effort. With manual configuration of the SGA, it is possible that compiled SQL statements frequently age out of the shared pool because of its inadequate size. This can increase the frequency of hard parses, leading to reduced performance. When automatic SGA management is enabled, the internal tuning algorithm monitors the performance of the workload, increasing the shared pool if it determines the increase will reduce the number of parses required.
The SGA_TARGET
initialization parameter reflects the total size of the SGA and includes memory for the following components:
Fixed SGA and other internal allocations needed by the Oracle Database instance
The log buffer
The shared pool
The Java pool
The buffer cache
The keep and recycle buffer caches (if specified)
Nonstandard block size buffer caches (if specified)
The Streams pool
It is significant that SGA_TARGET
includes the entire memory for the SGA, in contrast to earlier releases in which memory for the internal and fixed SGA was added to the sum of the configured SGA memory parameters. Thus, SGA_TARGET
gives you precise control over the size of the shared memory region allocated by the database. If SGA_TARGET
is set to a value greater than SGA_MAX_SIZE
at startup, then the latter is bumped up to accommodate SGA_TARGET
.
Note:
Do not dynamically set or unset theSGA_TARGET
parameter. This should be set only at startup.When you set a value for SGA_TARGET
, Oracle Database 10g automatically sizes the most commonly configured components, including:
The shared pool (for SQL and PL/SQL execution)
The Java pool (for Java execution state)
The large pool (for large allocations such as RMAN backup buffers)
The buffer cache
The Streams pool
You need not set the size of any of these components explicitly. By default the parameters for these components will appear to have values of zero. Whenever a component needs memory, it can request that it be transferred from another component by way of the internal automatic tuning mechanism. This transfer of memory occurs transparently, without user intervention.
The performance of each of these automatically sized components is monitored by the Oracle Database instance. The instance uses internal views and statistics to determine how to distribute memory optimally among the components. As the workload changes, memory is redistributed to ensure optimal performance. To calculate the optimal distribution of memory, the database uses an algorithm that takes into consideration both long-term and short-term trends.
There are a few SGA components whose sizes are not automatically adjusted. The administrator needs to specify the sizes of these components explicitly, if needed by the application. Such components are:
Keep/Recycle buffer caches (controlled by DB_KEEP_CACHE_SIZE
and DB_RECYCLE_CACHE_SIZE
)
Additional buffer caches for non-standard block sizes (controlled by DB_
n
K_CACHE_SIZE
, n
= {2, 4, 8, 16, 32})
The sizes of these components is determined by the administrator-defined value of their corresponding parameters. These values can, of course, be changed any time either using Enterprise Manager or from the command line with an ALTER SYSTEM
statement.
The memory consumed by manually sized components reduces the amount of memory available for automatic adjustment. For example, in the following configuration:
SGA_TARGET = 256M DB_8K_CACHE_SIZE = 32M
The instance has only 224 MB (256 - 32) remaining to be distributed among the automatically sized components.
Oracle Database remembers the sizes of the automatically tuned components across instance shutdowns if you are using a server parameter file (SPFILE
). As a result, the system does need to learn the characteristics of the workload again each time an instance is started. It can begin with information from the past instance and continue evaluating workload where it left off at the last shutdown.
A database administrator expands the SGA use of a component with an ALTER SYSTEM
statement to modify the values of the initialization parameters associated with the respective components. Oracle Database rounds up the newly specified size to the nearest multiple of 16MB and adds or removes granules to meet the target size. The database must have enough free granules to satisfy the request. As long as the current amount of SGA memory is less than SGA_MAX_SIZE
, the database can allocate more granules until the SGA size reaches SGA_MAX_SIZE
.
The granule size that is currently being used for the SGA for each component can be viewed in the view V$SGAINFO
. The size of each component and the time and type of the last resize operation performed on each component can be viewed in the view V$SGA_DYNAMIC_COMPONENTS
. The database maintains a circular buffer of the last 400 resize operations made to SGA components. You can view the circular buffer in the V$SGA_RESIZE_OPS
view.
Note:
If you specify a size for a component that is not a multiple of granule size, then Oracle rounds the specified size up to the nearest multiple. For example, if the granule size is 4 MB and you specifyDB_CACHE_SIZE
as 10 MB, you will actually be allocated 12 MB.See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on allocating memory
Oracle Database 2 Day DBA for information on showing the SGA size with Enterprise Manager
SQL*Plus User's Guide and Reference for information on displaying the SGA size with SQL*Plus
Oracle Database Reference for information on V$SGASTAT
Your Oracle installation or user's guide for information specific to your operating system
The database buffer cache is the portion of the SGA that holds copies of data blocks read from datafiles. All user processes concurrently connected to the instance share access to the database buffer cache.
The database buffer cache and the shared SQL cache are logically segmented into multiple sets. This organization into multiple sets reduces contention on multiprocessor systems.
The buffers in the cache are organized in two lists: the write list and the least recently used (LRU) list. The write list holds dirty buffers, which contain data that has been modified but has not yet been written to disk. The LRU list holds free buffers, pinned buffers, and dirty buffers that have not yet been moved to the write list. Free buffers do not contain any useful data and are available for use. Pinned buffers are currently being accessed.
When an Oracle process accesses a buffer, the process moves the buffer to the most recently used (MRU) end of the LRU list. As more buffers are continually moved to the MRU end of the LRU list, dirty buffers age toward the LRU end of the LRU list.
The first time an Oracle user process requires a particular piece of data, it searches for the data in the database buffer cache. If the process finds the data already in the cache (a cache hit), it can read the data directly from memory. If the process cannot find the data in the cache (a cache miss), it must copy the data block from a datafile on disk into a buffer in the cache before accessing the data. Accessing data through a cache hit is faster than data access through a cache miss.
Before reading a data block into the cache, the process must first find a free buffer. The process searches the LRU list, starting at the least recently used end of the list. The process searches either until it finds a free buffer or until it has searched the threshold limit of buffers.
If the user process finds a dirty buffer as it searches the LRU list, it moves that buffer to the write list and continues to search. When the process finds a free buffer, it reads the data block from disk into the buffer and moves the buffer to the MRU end of the LRU list.
If an Oracle user process searches the threshold limit of buffers without finding a free buffer, the process stops searching the LRU list and signals the DBW0 background process to write some of the dirty buffers to disk.
When the user process is performing a full table scan, it reads the blocks of the table into buffers and puts them on the LRU end (instead of the MRU end) of the LRU list. This is because a fully scanned table usually is needed only briefly, so the blocks should be moved out quickly to leave more frequently used blocks in the cache.
You can control this default behavior of blocks involved in table scans on a table-by-table basis. To specify that blocks of the table are to be placed at the MRU end of the list during a full table scan, use the CACHE
clause when creating or altering a table or cluster. You can specify this behavior for small lookup tables or large static historical tables to avoid I/O on subsequent accesses of the table.
Oracle supports multiple block sizes in a database. The standard block size is used for the SYSTEM
tablespace. You specify the standard block size by setting the initialization parameter DB_BLOCK_SIZE
. Legitimate values are from 2K to 32K.
Optionally, you can also set the size for two additional buffer pools, KEEP
and RECYCLE
, by setting DB_KEEP_CACHE_SIZE
and DB_RECYCLE_CACHE_SIZE
. These three parameters are independent of one another.
The sizes and numbers of non-standard block size buffers are specified by the following parameters:
DB_2K_CACHE_SIZE DB_4K_CACHE_SIZE DB_8K_CACHE_SIZE DB_16K_CACHE_SIZE DB_32K_CACHE_SIZE
Each parameter specifies the size of the cache for the corresponding block size.
Note:
Platform-specific restrictions regarding the maximum block size apply, so some of these sizes might not be allowed on some platforms.DB_BLOCK_SIZE=4096 DB_CACHE_SIZE=1024M DB_2K_CACHE_SIZE=256M DB_8K_CACHE_SIZE=512M
In the preceding example, the parameter DB_BLOCK_SIZE
sets the standard block size of the database to 4K. The size of the cache of standard block size buffers is 1024MB. Additionally, 2K and 8K caches are also configured, with sizes of 256MB and 512MB, respectively.
Note:
TheDB_
n
K_CACHE_SIZE
parameters cannot be used to size the cache for the standard block size. If the value of DB_BLOCK_SIZE
is nK, it is illegal to set DB_
n
K_CACHE_SIZE
. The size of the cache for the standard block size is always determined from the value of DB_CACHE_SIZE
.The cache has a limited size, so not all the data on disk can fit in the cache. When the cache is full, subsequent cache misses cause Oracle to write dirty data already in the cache to disk to make room for the new data. (If a buffer is not dirty, it does not need to be written to disk before a new block can be read into the buffer.) Subsequent access to any data that was written to disk results in additional cache misses.
The size of the cache affects the likelihood that a request for data results in a cache hit. If the cache is large, it is more likely to contain the data that is requested. Increasing the size of a cache increases the percentage of data requests that result in cache hits.
You can change the size of the buffer cache while the instance is running, without having to shut down the database. Do this with the ALTER
SYSTEM
statement. For more information, see "Control of the SGA's Use of Memory".
Use the fixed view V$BUFFER_POOL
to track the sizes of the different cache components and any pending resize operations.
See Also:
Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide for information about tuning the buffer cacheYou can configure the database buffer cache with separate buffer pools that either keep data in the buffer cache or make the buffers available for new data immediately after using the data blocks. Particular schema objects (tables, clusters, indexes, and partitions) can then be assigned to the appropriate buffer pool to control the way their data blocks age out of the cache.
The KEEP
buffer pool retains the schema object's data blocks in memory.
The RECYCLE
buffer pool eliminates data blocks from memory as soon as they are no longer needed.
The DEFAULT
buffer pool contains data blocks from schema objects that are not assigned to any buffer pool, as well as schema objects that are explicitly assigned to the DEFAULT
pool.
The initialization parameters that configure the KEEP
and RECYCLE
buffer pools are DB_KEEP_CACHE_SIZE
and DB_RECYCLE_CACHE_SIZE
.
Note:
Multiple buffer pools are only available for the standard block size. Non-standard block size caches have a singleDEFAULT
pool.See Also:
Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide for more information about multiple buffer pools
Oracle Database SQL Reference for the syntax of the BUFFER_POOL
clause of the STORAGE
clause
The redo log buffer is a circular buffer in the SGA that holds information about changes made to the database. This information is stored in redo entries. Redo entries contain the information necessary to reconstruct, or redo, changes made to the database by INSERT
, UPDATE
, DELETE
, CREATE
, ALTER
, or DROP
operations. Redo entries are used for database recovery, if necessary.
Redo entries are copied by Oracle database processes from the user's memory space to the redo log buffer in the SGA. The redo entries take up continuous, sequential space in the buffer. The background process LGWR writes the redo log buffer to the active redo log file (or group of files) on disk.
See Also:
"Log Writer Process (LGWR)" for more information about how the redo log buffer is written to disk
Oracle Database Backup and Recovery Basics for information about redo log files and groups
The initialization parameter LOG_BUFFER
determines the size (in bytes) of the redo log buffer. In general, larger values reduce log file I/O, particularly if transactions are long or numerous. The default setting is either 512 kilobytes (KB) or 128 KB times the setting of the CPU_COUNT
parameter, whichever is greater.
The shared pool portion of the SGA contains the library cache, the dictionary cache, buffers for parallel execution messages, and control structures.
The total size of the shared pool is determined by the initialization parameter SHARED_POOL_SIZE
. The default value of this parameter is 8MB on 32-bit platforms and 64MB on 64-bit platforms. Increasing the value of this parameter increases the amount of memory reserved for the shared pool.
The library cache includes the shared SQL areas, private SQL areas (in the case of a shared server configuration), PL/SQL procedures and packages, and control structures such as locks and library cache handles.
Shared SQL areas are accessible to all users, so the library cache is contained in the shared pool within the SGA.
Oracle represents each SQL statement it runs with a shared SQL area and a private SQL area. Oracle recognizes when two users are executing the same SQL statement and reuses the shared SQL area for those users. However, each user must have a separate copy of the statement's private SQL area.
A shared SQL area contains the parse tree and execution plan for a given SQL statement. Oracle saves memory by using one shared SQL area for SQL statements run multiple times, which often happens when many users run the same application.
Oracle allocates memory from the shared pool when a new SQL statement is parsed, to store in the shared SQL area. The size of this memory depends on the complexity of the statement. If the entire shared pool has already been allocated, Oracle can deallocate items from the pool using a modified LRU (least recently used) algorithm until there is enough free space for the new statement's shared SQL area. If Oracle deallocates a shared SQL area, the associated SQL statement must be reparsed and reassigned to another shared SQL area at its next execution.
Oracle processes PL/SQL program units (procedures, functions, packages, anonymous blocks, and database triggers) much the same way it processes individual SQL statements. Oracle allocates a shared area to hold the parsed, compiled form of a program unit. Oracle allocates a private area to hold values specific to the session that runs the program unit, including local, global, and package variables (also known as package instantiation) and buffers for executing SQL. If more than one user runs the same program unit, then a single, shared area is used by all users, while each user maintains a separate copy of his or her private SQL area, holding values specific to his or her session.
Individual SQL statements contained within a PL/SQL program unit are processed as described in the previous sections. Despite their origins within a PL/SQL program unit, these SQL statements use a shared area to hold their parsed representations and a private area for each session that runs the statement.
The data dictionary is a collection of database tables and views containing reference information about the database, its structures, and its users. Oracle accesses the data dictionary frequently during SQL statement parsing. This access is essential to the continuing operation of Oracle.
The data dictionary is accessed so often by Oracle that two special locations in memory are designated to hold dictionary data. One area is called the data dictionary cache, also known as the row cache because it holds data as rows instead of buffers (which hold entire blocks of data). The other area in memory to hold dictionary data is the library cache. All Oracle user processes share these two caches for access to data dictionary information.
In general, any item (shared SQL area or dictionary row) in the shared pool remains until it is flushed according to a modified LRU algorithm. The memory for items that are not being used regularly is freed if space is required for new items that must be allocated some space in the shared pool. A modified LRU algorithm allows shared pool items that are used by many sessions to remain in memory as long as they are useful, even if the process that originally created the item terminates. As a result, the overhead and processing of SQL statements associated with a multiuser Oracle system is minimized.
When a SQL statement is submitted to Oracle for execution, Oracle automatically performs the following memory allocation steps:
Oracle checks the shared pool to see if a shared SQL area already exists for an identical statement. If so, that shared SQL area is used for the execution of the subsequent new instances of the statement. Alternatively, if there is no shared SQL area for a statement, Oracle allocates a new shared SQL area in the shared pool. In either case, the user's private SQL area is associated with the shared SQL area that contains the statement.
Note:
A shared SQL area can be flushed from the shared pool, even if the shared SQL area corresponds to an open cursor that has not been used for some time. If the open cursor is subsequently used to run its statement, Oracle reparses the statement, and a new shared SQL area is allocated in the shared pool.Oracle allocates a private SQL area on behalf of the session. The location of the private SQL area depends on the type of connection established for the session.
Oracle also flushes a shared SQL area from the shared pool in these circumstances:
When the ANALYZE
statement is used to update or delete the statistics of a table, cluster, or index, all shared SQL areas that contain statements referencing the analyzed schema object are flushed from the shared pool. The next time a flushed statement is run, the statement is parsed in a new shared SQL area to reflect the new statistics for the schema object.
If a schema object is referenced in a SQL statement and that object is later modified in any way, the shared SQL area is invalidated (marked invalid), and the statement must be reparsed the next time it is run.
If you change a database's global database name, all information is flushed from the shared pool.
The administrator can manually flush all information in the shared pool to assess the performance (with respect to the shared pool, not the data buffer cache) that can be expected after instance startup without shutting down the current instance. The statement ALTER
SYSTEM
FLUSH
SHARED_POOL
is used to do this.
See Also:
"Shared SQL Areas and Private SQL Areas" for more information about the location of the private SQL area
Chapter 6, "Dependencies Among Schema Objects" for more information about the invalidation of SQL statements and dependency issues
Oracle Database SQL Reference for information about using ALTER
SYSTEM
FLUSH
SHARED_POOL
Oracle Database Reference for information about V$SQL
and V$SQLAREA
dynamic views
The database administrator can configure an optional memory area called the large pool to provide large memory allocations for:
Session memory for the shared server and the Oracle XA interface (used where transactions interact with more than one database)
I/O server processes
Oracle backup and restore operations
By allocating session memory from the large pool for shared server, Oracle XA, or parallel query buffers, Oracle can use the shared pool primarily for caching shared SQL and avoid the performance overhead caused by shrinking the shared SQL cache.
In addition, the memory for Oracle backup and restore operations, for I/O server processes, and for parallel buffers is allocated in buffers of a few hundred kilobytes. The large pool is better able to satisfy such large memory requests than the shared pool.
The large pool does not have an LRU list. It is different from reserved space in the shared pool, which uses the same LRU list as other memory allocated from the shared pool.
See Also:
"Shared Server Architecture" for information about allocating session memory from the large pool for the shared server
Oracle Database Application Developer's Guide - Fundamentals for information about Oracle XA
Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide for more information about the large pool, reserve space in the shared pool, and I/O server processes
"Overview of Parallel Execution" for information about allocating memory for parallel execution
Java pool memory is used in server memory for all session-specific Java code and data within the JVM. Java pool memory is used in different ways, depending on what mode the Oracle server is running in.
The Java Pool Advisor statistics provide information about library cache memory used for Java and predict how changes in the size of the Java pool can affect the parse rate. The Java Pool Advisor is internally turned on when statistics_level
is set to TYPICAL
or higher. These statistics reset when the advisor is turned off.
See Also:
Oracle Database Java Developer's GuideIn a single database, you can specify that Streams memory be allocated from a pool in the SGA called the Streams pool. To configure the Streams pool, specify the size of the pool in bytes using the STREAMS_POOL_SIZE
initialization parameter. If a Streams pool is not defined, then one is created automatically when Streams is first used.
If SGA_TARGET
is set, then the SGA memory for the Streams pool comes from the global pool of SGA. If SGA_TARGET
is not set, then SGA for the Streams pool is transferred from the buffer cache. This transfer takes place only after the first use of Streams. The amount transferred is 10% of the shared pool size.
Dynamic SGA provides external controls for increasing and decreasing Oracle's use of physical memory. Together with the dynamic buffer cache, shared pool, and large pool, dynamic SGA allows the following:
The SGA can grow in response to a database administrator statement, up to an operating system specified maximum and the SGA_MAX_SIZE
specification.
The SGA can shrink in response to a database administrator statement, to an Oracle prescribed minimum, usually an operating system preferred limit.
Both the buffer cache and the SGA pools can grow and shrink at runtime according to some internal, Oracle-managed policy.
You can use several initialization parameters to control how the SGA uses memory.
A program global area (PGA) is a memory region that contains data and control information for a server process. It is a nonshared memory created by Oracle when a server process is started. Access to it is exclusive to that server process and is read and written only by Oracle code acting on behalf of it. The total PGA memory allocated by each server process attached to an Oracle instance is also referred to as the aggregated PGA memory allocated by the instance.
See Also:
"Connections and Sessions" for information about sessionsThe content of the PGA memory varies, depending on whether the instance is running the shared server option. But generally speaking, the PGA memory can be classified as follows.
A private SQL area contains data such as bind information and runtime memory structures. Each session that issues a SQL statement has a private SQL area. Each user that submits the same SQL statement has his or her own private SQL area that uses a single shared SQL area. Thus, many private SQL areas can be associated with the same shared SQL area.
The private SQL area of a cursor is itself divided into two areas whose lifetimes are different:
The persistent area, which contains, for example, bind information. It is freed only when the cursor is closed.
The run-time area, which is freed when the execution is terminated.
Oracle creates the runtime area as the first step of an execute request. For INSERT, UPDATE
, and DELETE
statements, Oracle frees the runtime area after the statement has been run. For queries, Oracle frees the runtime area only after all rows are fetched or the query is canceled.
The location of a private SQL area depends on the type of connection established for a session. If a session is connected through a dedicated server, private SQL areas are located in the server process's PGA. However, if a session is connected through a shared server, part of the private SQL area is kept in the SGA.
See Also:
"Overview of the Program Global Areas" for information about the PGA
"Connections and Sessions" for more information about sessions
"SQL Work Areas" for information about SELECT
runtimes during a sort, hash-join, bitmap create, or bitmap merge
The application developer of an Oracle precompiler program or OCI program can explicitly open cursors, or handles to specific private SQL areas, and use them as a named resource throughout the execution of the program. Recursive cursors that Oracle issues implicitly for some SQL statements also use shared SQL areas.
The management of private SQL areas is the responsibility of the user process. The allocation and deallocation of private SQL areas depends largely on which application tool you are using, although the number of private SQL areas that a user process can allocate is always limited by the initialization parameter OPEN_CURSORS
. The default value of this parameter is 50.
A private SQL area continues to exist until the corresponding cursor is closed or the statement handle is freed. Although Oracle frees the runtime area after the statement completes, the persistent area remains waiting. Application developers close all open cursors that will not be used again to free the persistent area and to minimize the amount of memory required for users of the application.
See Also:
"Cursors"For complex queries (for example, decision-support queries), a big portion of the runtime area is dedicated to work areas allocated by memory-intensive operators such as the following:
Sort-based operators (order by, group-by, rollup, window function)
Hash-join
Bitmap merge
Bitmap create
For example, a sort operator uses a work area (sometimes called the sort area) to perform the in-memory sort of a set of rows. Similarly, a hash-join operator uses a work area (also called the hash area) to build a hash table from its left input. If the amount of data to be processed by these two operators does not fit into a work area, then the input data is divided into smaller pieces. This allows some data pieces to be processed in memory while the rest are spilled to temporary disk storage to be processed later. Although bitmap operators do not spill to disk when their associated work area is too small, their complexity is inversely proportional to the size of their work area. Thus, these operators run faster with larger work area.
The size of a work area can be controlled and tuned. Generally, bigger database areas can significantly improve the performance of a particular operator at the cost of higher memory consumption. Optimally, the size of a work area is big enough such to accommodate the input data and auxiliary memory structures allocated by its associated SQL operator. If not, response time increases, because part of the input data must be spilled to temporary disk storage. In the extreme case, if the size of a work area is far too small compared to the input data size, multiple passes over the data pieces must be performed. This can dramatically increase the response time of the operator.
You can automatically and globally manage the size of SQL work areas. The database administrator simply needs to specify the total size dedicated to PGA memory for the Oracle instance by setting the initialization parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. The specified number (for example, 2G) is a global target for the Oracle instance, and Oracle tries to ensure that the total amount of PGA memory allocated across all database server processes never exceeds this target.
Note:
In earlier releases, the database administrator controlled the maximum size of SQL work areas by setting the following parameters:SORT_AREA_SIZE
, HASH_AREA_SIZE
, BITMAP_MERGE_AREA_SIZE
and CREATE_BITMAP_AREA_SIZE
. Setting these parameters is difficult, because the maximum work area size is ideally selected from the data input size and the total number of work areas active in the system. These two factors vary a lot from one work area to another and from one time to another. Thus, the various *_AREA_SIZE
parameters are hard to tune under the best of circumstances.With PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, sizing of work areas for all dedicated sessions is automatic and all *_AREA_SIZE
parameters are ignored for these sessions. At any given time, the total amount of PGA memory available to active work areas on the instance is automatically derived from the parameter PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
. This amount is set to the value of PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
minus the PGA memory allocated by other components of the system (for example, PGA memory allocated by sessions). The resulting PGA memory is then allotted to individual active work areas based on their specific memory requirement.
Note:
The initialization parameterWORKAREA_SIZE_POLICY
is a session- and system-level parameter that can take only two values: MANUAL
or AUTO
. The default is AUTO
. The database administrator can set PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
, and then switch back and forth from auto to manual memory management mode.There are fixed views and columns that provide PGA memory use statistics. Most of these statistics are enabled when PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET
is set.
Statistics on allocation and use of work area memory can be viewed in the following dynamic performance views:
V$SYSSTAT
V$SESSTAT
V$PGASTAT
V$SQL_WORKAREA
V$SQL_WORKAREA_ACTIVE
The following three columns in the V$PROCESS
view report the PGA memory allocated and used by an Oracle process:
PGA_USED_MEM
PGA_ALLOCATED_MEM
PGA_MAX_MEM
Note:
The automatic PGA memory management mode applies to work areas allocated by both dedicated and shared Oracle database servers.See Also:
Oracle Database Reference for information about views
Oracle Database Performance Tuning Guide for information about using these views
Memory allocation depends, in some specifics, on whether the system uses dedicated or shared server architecture. Table 8-1 shows the differences.
Table 8-1 Differences in Memory Allocation Between Dedicated and Shared Servers
Memory Area | Dedicated Server | Shared Server |
---|---|---|
Nature of session memory |
Private |
Shared |
Location of the persistent area |
PGA |
SGA |
Location of part of the runtime area for |
PGA |
PGA |
Location of the runtime area for DML/DDL statements |
PGA |
PGA |
Software code areas are portions of memory used to store code that is being run or can be run. Oracle code is stored in a software area that is typically at a different location from users' programs—a more exclusive or protected location.
Software areas are usually static in size, changing only when software is updated or reinstalled. The required size of these areas varies by operating system.
Software areas are read only and can be installed shared or nonshared. When possible, Oracle code is shared so that all Oracle users can access it without having multiple copies in memory. This results in a saving of real main memory and improves overall performance.
User programs can be shared or nonshared. Some Oracle tools and utilities (such as Oracle Forms and SQL*Plus) can be installed shared, but some cannot. Multiple instances of Oracle can use the same Oracle code area with different databases if running on the same computer.
Note:
The option of installing software shared is not available for all operating systems (for example, on PCs operating Windows).See your Oracle operating system-specific documentation for more information.