RE: CPU rounding

From: <Joel.Patterson_at_crowley.com>
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2011 07:27:20 -0500
Message-ID: <C95D75DD2E01DD4D81124D104D317ACA1B8BAEF874_at_JAXMSG01.crowley.com>


column value format 999999999999.999999999999

I get 4 zeroes before the decimal on 11.2.0.1 251290000.000000000000

I get 0 zeroes before decimal on 10.2.0.4 56729894.000000000000

Joel Patterson
Database Administrator
904 727-2546
-----Original Message-----
From: oracle-l-bounce_at_freelists.org [mailto:oracle-l-bounce_at_freelists.org] On Behalf Of Gerry Miller Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2011 4:13 AM To: gerry_at_millerandbowman.com
Cc: Oracle-L Group
Subject: Re: CPU rounding

Hi

I hate to bang on about this but I am no nearer to a solution.

We have 3 Solaris 10 boxes running 11.2.0.2 Enterprise Edition and the problem exists on all 3 and I would like to ask anyone with the same configuration out there to run:

    SELECT value FROM v$sess_time_model WHERE stat_name = 'DB CPU'; and tell me if the results are rounded to centiseconds, that is, all end with 4 zeroes.

Thanks

Gerry

Gerry Miller wrote:
> Hi,
> Can any one help me get to the bottom of this?
>
> We have two Solaris servers one hosting Oracle 10.1 and the other 11.2. The
> CPU stats on the 11g box are rounded to centiseconds while on 10g they are
> inmicroseconds:
>
> Example:
> In 11g: select value from v$sys_time_model where stat_name = 'DB CPU';
> VALUE
> -----------
> 27089090000
>
> In 10g: select value from v$sys_time_model where stat_name = 'DB CPU';
> VALUE
> -------------
> 1373214613234
>
> It is the same in v$sess_time_model and I suspect it is an OS setting that
> isat the root of the issue.
>
>
> Regards
>
> Gerry Miller
>
> --
> http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-l
>
>
>
>

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Received on Thu Nov 17 2011 - 06:27:20 CST

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