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Home -> Community -> Usenet -> comp.databases.oracle -> Re: Defragmentation of Oracle 91 files on W2000 server
"RAK" <rakrak_at_NOSPAMattglobal.net> wrote in message
news:1baa02d4cc23c672a0858aed226907d6_at_news.teranews.com...
> A client is testing a system on Oracle 9i and Win 2000 (why not 10g and
> 2003 etc? dont ask, long story).
>
> Performance was poor. Among other issues, we discovered that the Oracle
> datafiles are badly fragmented. This is fragmentation in the Windows sense
> of the physical file being all over the disk, not the Oracles internal
file
> fragmentation.
> Each Oracle DB file is typically in several thousand fragments (I have no
> idea how it got that bad and finding out would take too long). The defrag
> program reports 112 files, 260GB total disk space, and an impressive
234,000
> file fragments.
>
> The problem: so far they cannot defragment the Oracle data & index files.
>
> They have just tried to defragment the disk which works for other files
not
> for the Oracle files (*.ora). They tried using Diskeeper and PerfectDisk
> with the same result.
> They tried the defragment-at-boot-time options with these programs, i.e.
to
> do the defrag before oracle starts up and perhaps prevents the ora files
> being moved. Still no good.
>
> There is plenty of spare space (36%) on the disks which are NTFS RAID5.
>
> Seems a silly problem, there must be an easy answer....?
> I am not an Oracle DBA by the way, but a general consultant looking at
this
> along with some other issues.
>
>
>
1. Shutdown the database normally. 2. Backup all the files on the disk. 3. format the drive(s). 4. restore the files to the disk. 5. Startup the database.
I had a similar experience and no amount of defrag stuff would help. I finally had to format the drive and that wiped out hte fragmented master boot record and I could have a defragged disk. Jim Received on Tue May 11 2004 - 15:17:45 CDT
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