RE: Sudden occurrence of SHARED_POOL LATCH waits - DB up since 4/3/2018
Date: Fri, 1 Jun 2018 09:11:05 -0400
Message-ID: <018401d3f9a9$ffe14920$ffa3db60$_at_rsiz.com>
What Tim said, but ALSO, I have seen the oscillation of a couple granules back and forth when it is a close call which is needed more for fairly simple stuff.
Bump them both up to the higher (or more), this only requires a couple granules, and turn auto off. (If this is your problem).
mwf
From: oracle-l-bounce_at_freelists.org [mailto:oracle-l-bounce_at_freelists.org] On Behalf Of Tim Gorman
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2018 2:17 PM
To: dombrooks_at_hotmail.com; christopherdtaylor1994_at_gmail.com
Cc: ORACLE-L
Subject: Re: Sudden occurrence of SHARED_POOL LATCH waits - DB up since 4/3/2018
Chris,
Is auto SGA management enabled? That is, is either SGA_TARGET > 0 or MEMORY_TARGET > 0?
If so, please consider examining the log of auto SGA management in V$SGA_RESIZE_OPS view?
As described in my presentation <http://evdbt.com/download/presentation-rdbms-forensics-troubleshooting-using-ash/> and white paper <http://evdbt.com/download/paper-rdbms-forensics-troubleshooting-using-ash/> on "RDBMS Forensics: Troubleshooting Using ASH", there is a situation in some applications, particularly analytic or data mart applications, where huge complex SQL or PL/SQL cursors cause rapid expansion of the Shared Pool during parse, and then equally rapid expansion of the Buffer Cache during subsequent execution and fetch. Adjusting the size of the Shared Pool requires the Shared Pool latch, so thrashing space between the Buffer Cache and the Shared Pool is almost certain to result in that latch becoming a bottleneck, as described in the presentation.
Jonathan Lewis also discusses this phenomenon in a related posting HERE <https://jonathanlewis.wordpress.com/2007/04/16/sga-resizing/> .
Anyway, my solution for the thrashing was to determine a "floor" value for the parameter SHARED_POOL_SIZE based on the historic average size of "__shared_pool_size" as recorded in the AWR view DBA_HIST_PARAMETERS, and set SHARED_POOL_SIZE to that "floor" value, preventing the Shared Pool from being made smaller than that value. The basic idea is to permit auto SGA management to adjust occasionally, but not thrash.
Please let us know what you find, and I hope this helps?
Thanks!
-Tim
On 5/31/18 11:39, Dominic Brooks wrote:
Am I out of touch or is that an exceedingly large shared pool?
Sent from my iPhone
On 31 May 2018, at 18:05, Chris Taylor <christopherdtaylor1994_at_gmail.com> wrote:
version 12.1
Linux x86-64
Event
Waits
Total Wait Time (sec)
Wait Avg(ms)
% DB time
Wait Class
latch: shared pool
402,269
103.4K
256.95
29.5
Concurrency
DB CPU 100.3K
28.6
latch free
362,927
42.2K
116.26
12.0
Other
Background:
We've got a database with 4TB of RAM and a 260GB shared pool. Everything was running normally until 2 nights ago when a regularly scheduled job that does TONS of DDL suddenly blew up the shared pool.
Trying to query x$ksmsp for shared pool sizes is also causing huge amounts of latch waits.
When these jobs aren't running, the db is working normally. Starting just one of the jobs brings back the shared pool latching problem immediately.
I'm thinking the shared pool is heavily fragmented but am looking for additional queries or views I can use to diagnose shared pool problems. We're not running into any shared pool errors as far as memory allocations.
This query hangs and causes huge contention:
select ksmchcls "ChnkClass",
sum(ksmchsiz) "SumChunkTypeMem",
Max(ksmchsiz) "LargstChkofThisTyp",
count(1) "NumOfChksThisType",
round((sum(ksmchsiz)/tot_sp_mem.totspmem),2)*100||'%' "PctTotSPMem"
from x$ksmsp,
(select sum(ksmchsiz) TotSPMem from x$ksmsp) tot_sp_mem
group by ksmchcls, tot_sp_mem.TotSPMem
order by 5;
This query runs fine and seems to indicate there is plenty of reserve space:
select free_space, round(avg_free_size,2) as avg_free_size,free_count,max_free_size,used_space, round(avg_used_size,2) as avg_used_size, used_count, max_used_size, requests, request_misses, last_miss_size,
request_failures, last_failure_size, aborted_request_threshold, aborted_requests
from v$shared_pool_reserved
/
FREE_SPACE AVG_FREE_SIZE FREE_COUNT MAX_FREE_SIZE USED_SPACE AVG_USED_SIZE USED_COUNT MAX_USED_SIZE REQUESTS REQUEST_MISSES LAST_MISS_SIZE REQUEST_FAILURES LAST_FAILURE_SIZE ABORTED_REQUEST_THRESHOLD ABORTED_REQUESTS 13435398168
236538.7
16023
27316040
319665968
5627.92
40777
1048552
10903867
0
0
0
0
2147483647
0
The Jobs in question do PARTITION EXCHANGES for many, many sites with temp tables that are built as part of the job.
The DB has been up since: 04/03/2018 07:12:23 and the last 2 days are the first time this has been seen and is repeatable by restarting any one of the jobs (there are 8 total)
Thinking about flushing the shared pool (or restarting db off hours) as a test to see if it resolves the issue (like throwing a grenade into a anthill resolves a problem with ants...not the best approach but might be effective)
Any thoughts/comments/insults?
Thanks,
Chris
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Received on Fri Jun 01 2018 - 15:11:05 CEST