Re: question on initrans
Date: Wed, 12 May 2021 10:31:18 -0500
Message-ID: <CAN5iexGdkjEFcXO9gzWA+TjuQKJs0gh3tZZ48sy9LFuqJr2bHw_at_mail.gmail.com>
Pap-
ASM manages the storage at the host level and ASSM manages the storage at
Segment level.
On the other hand, Freelists maintain the list of blocks which are eligible
for INSERTs in non ASSM managed extents.
With ASSM, there are no freelists as the insert eligible blocks are managed
by bitmap blocks in segment headers.
BTW you mention you are encountering Buffer Busy Waits and this could be
totally a different issue altogether.
-Gopal
On Tue, May 11, 2021 at 10:41 PM Pap <oracle.developer35_at_gmail.com> wrote:
> Thank you so much for this detailed explanation.
Within the segments, you have extents and ASSM manages extents (allocation,
size etc)
ITLs manage block level concurrency issues.
There are multiple levels of bitmap blocks (Level 1 - Leaf BMB/ Level 2 -
Branch BMB and Level 3 (root BMB)) in a tree foramt manages the space
inside the segments.
Most of these things are automated and seldom require any changes. You can
still set PCTFREE here as that is honored.
PCTUSED used to decide when to link/unlink the blocks from the freelist
chain. This is replaced by different groupings in ASSM.
In this case, you have to reduce the block level concurrency - (rather than
improving it with ITL fixes).
You can either increase the PCTFREE to higher values or use Jonathan
Lewis's trick (minimize_records_per_block).
>
> If I get it correctly, it's the ASM tablespace(which we do have) manages
> the dynamic increase and decrease of ITL or initrans based on concurrency
> so we don't' need to set them explicitly. Also it should be looked into
> only if by we see the ITL related waits. Correct if my understanding is
> correct. As you mentioned in case of high concurrency we may need to
> increase pctfree to higher value, will that not automatically managed by
> ASM and also in such cases do we see any other waits or same ITL waits will
> be seen in AWR?
>
> Is freelists also managed dynamically as above and no need manually to be
> set to higher on a ASM? (Note-Actually we are encountering buffer busy
> waits during high activity period and the object it's pointing to is table
> followed by index.)
>
>
> Regards
> Pap
>
> On Wed, 12 May 2021, 8:20 am K Gopalakrishnan, <kaygopal_at_gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Pap-
>>
>> The parameter INITRANS - defines number of ITL (Interested Transaction
>> Lists) slots _initially_ created during new blocks allocation to the
>> segment.
>> Any transaction that is interested in conducting DMLs on that block,
>> should fill in some details about that transaction.
>> This includes setting the Transaction ID, Undo Block Address, Lock Byte ,
>> Cleanout System Change Number and Free Space Credit.
>> The row level locking in Oracle is implemented with the help of these ITL
>> information as well.
>>
>> In other words, treat ITL like your parking space in the office space.
>> Anyone entering the office must park their car in the parking space
>> allotted.
>> You can park your car in the allotted space or any free space in that
>> building. Alloted parking spaces are fixed ITLs during the creation of the
>> block.
>> If allocated parking space is full, you park in the free space in the
>> building. Once you use this free space, this space will never return data
>> storage, only for ITLs.
>> This defaults to 2 per table and 3 per index IIRC, but DBA_TABLES still
>> show the default as 1 per table and 2 per index.
>> You can quickly validate this by simple block dumps.
>>
>> Note that the ITLs can be created when there is enough space (~24 bytes
>> per ITL) in the variable header space in the data block.
>> So when there is a demand for additional transaction slots, oracle
>> automatically creates ITL slots subject to free space in the block.
>> If there is no space in the block , you might see contention for ITLs and
>> you will see ITL waits in the session_wait views.
>>
>> There are some internal validations in oracle to limit the variable part
>> of the block header that can not exceed 50% of the block size.
>> i.e you can not create 50 ITLs if the block size is 2K. (50 ITLs require
>> 50x24=1200+ bytes which is clearly over 50% of the block size).
>> There are many other checks similar to these as well to stop the abuse :)
>>
>> Also the requirement of such high ITL depends on the number of active
>> rows per block.
>> If the block itself has less than 50 rows, you would neer need 50 ITLs
>> for that block.
>> Similar to parking slot analogy, you would not need more parking spots
>> than the number of residents.
>> Readers (aka visitors) do not need any ITL entries to record their
>> transactions.
>>
>> You do not need to manually set the ITLs, as ITLs will be created on the
>> need basis.
>> If there is an issue with the ITLs , you will clearly see this in the
>> session_waits.
>> Also segment_stats has specific metrics to show the objects with ITL
>> contention.
>> If you are not seeing any of this in the DB, this recommendation from
>> oracle is totally irrelevant.
>> So 50 ITLs (per table & 100 ITLs on their indexes) seems such a waste of
>> block space.
>>
>> There are much better mechanisms to handle this. If you suspect such a
>> high rate of concurrency,
>> please set the PCTFREE to a higher number (say 15%) so that additional
>> ITLs can be created when required.
>> The space reserved with PCTFREE can not be used for INSERTS. They are
>> used for ITL expansion and updates.
>>
>> -Gopal
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, May 11, 2021 at 11:47 AM Pap <oracle.developer35_at_gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> This database was recently moved from HP to exadata X7 and the DB
>>> version also migrated from 11.2.0.4 to 19.9.0.0.0. It's an OLTP database.
>>> In the past we saw some contention and got a recommendation from Oracle to
>>> set INITRANS value of certain objects(both table and indexes) to as high
>>> as 50. And now the team is thinking to set the initrans value to ~10 for
>>> almost all the objects(~around ~200+ objects). Want to understand , what is
>>> the negative side of setting it to this non default value considering this
>>> is an OLTP database exposed to many concurrent DML/query and we
>>> encounter "buffer busy waits" many times?
>>>
>>> Regards
>>> Pap
>>>
>>
-- http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-lReceived on Wed May 12 2021 - 17:31:18 CEST