Friday, 11 November 2011

To calculate size of Undo tablespace and Undo Retention?



Traditionally transaction undo information was stored in Rollback Segments until a commit or rollback statement was issued, at which point it was made available for overlaying.
Best of all, automatic undo management allows the DBA to specify how long undo information should be retained after commit, preventing "snapshot too old" errors on long running queries.
This is done by setting the UNDO_RETENTION parameter.  The default is 900 seconds (5 minutes), and you can set this parameter to guarantee that Oracle keeps undo logs for extended periods of time.
All you need to do is create an undo tablespace and set UNDO_MANAGEMENT = AUTO.
However it is worth to tune the following important parameters
  1. The size of the UNDO tablespace
  2. The UNDO_RETENTION parameter
Calculate UNDO_RETENTION for given UNDO Tablespace
You can choose to allocate a specific size for the UNDO tablespace and then set the UNDO_RETENTION parameter to an optimal value according to the UNDO size and the database activity. If your disk space is limited and you do not want to allocate more space than necessary to the UNDO tablespace, this is the way to proceed. The following query will help you to optimize the UNDO_RETENTION parameter:

            
Because these following queries use the V$UNDOSTAT statistics, run the queries only after the database has been running with UNDO for a significant and representative time !!!


Actual Undo Size

SELECT SUM(a.bytes) "UNDO_SIZE"
  FROM v$datafile a,
       v$tablespace b,
       dba_tablespaces c
WHERE c.contents = ‘UNDO’
   AND c.status = ‘ONLINE’
   AND b.name = c.tablespace_name
   AND a.ts# = b.ts#;

UNDO_SIZE
---------------
209715200

Undo Blocks per Second

SELECT MAX(undoblks/((end_time-begin_time)*3600*24))
"UNDO_BLOCK_PER_SEC"
FROM v$undostat; 

UNDO_BLOCK_PER_SEC
------------------------------
        3.12166667

DB Block Size

SELECT TO_NUMBER(value) "DB_BLOCK_SIZE [KByte]"
FROM v$parameter
WHERE name = ‘db_block_size’;

DB_BLOCK_SIZE [Byte]
----------------------------
                4096

Optimal Undo Retention

209′715′200 / (3.12166667 * 4′096) = 16′401 [Sec]

Using Inline Views, you can do all in one query!

SELECT d.undo_size/(1024*1024) "ACTUAL UNDO SIZE [MByte]",
       SUBSTR(e.value,1,25) "UNDO RETENTION [Sec]",
       ROUND((d.undo_size / (to_number(f.value) *
g.undo_block_per_sec))) "OPTIMAL UNDO RETENTION [Sec]"
  FROM (
       SELECT SUM(a.bytes) undo_size
          FROM v$datafile a,
               v$tablespace b,
               dba_tablespaces c
         WHERE c.contents = ‘UNDO’
           AND c.status = ‘ONLINE’
           AND b.name = c.tablespace_name
           AND a.ts# = b.ts#
       ) d,
v$parameter e,
v$parameter f,
(
       SELECT MAX(undoblks/((end_time-begin_time)*3600*24))
undo_block_per_sec
         FROM v$undostat
       ) g
WHERE e.name = ‘undo_retention’
  AND f.name = ‘db_block_size’

ACTUAL UNDO SIZE [MByte] 
----------------------------------
200

UNDO RETENTION [Sec]
-----------------------------
10800

OPTIMAL UNDO RETENTION [Sec]
-----------------------------------------
16401

Calculate Needed UNDO Size for given Database Activity

If you are not limited by disk space, then it would be better to choose the UNDO_RETENTION time that is best for you (for FLASHBACK, etc.). Allocate the appropriate size to the UNDO tablespace according to the database activity:

Again, all in one query:

SELECT d.undo_size/(1024*1024) "ACTUAL UNDO SIZE [MByte]",
       SUBSTR(e.value,1,25) "UNDO RETENTION [Sec]",
       (TO_NUMBER(e.value) * TO_NUMBER(f.value) *
       g.undo_block_per_sec) / (1024*1024)
      "NEEDED UNDO SIZE [MByte]"
  FROM (
       SELECT SUM(a.bytes) undo_size
         FROM v$datafile a,
              v$tablespace b,
              dba_tablespaces c
        WHERE c.contents = ‘UNDO’
          AND c.status = ‘ONLINE’
          AND b.name = c.tablespace_name
          AND a.ts# = b.ts#
       ) d,
      v$parameter e,
       v$parameter f,
       (
       SELECT MAX(undoblks/((end_time-begin_time)*3600*24))
         undo_block_per_sec
         FROM v$undostat
       ) g
 WHERE e.name = ‘undo_retention’
  AND f.name = ‘db_block_size’
/

ACTUAL UNDO SIZE [MByte]
------------------------
200

UNDO RETENTION [Sec]
-----------------------------
10800

NEEDED UNDO SIZE [MByte]
----------------------------------
131.695313

The previous query may return a "NEEDED UNDO SIZE" that is less than the "ACTUAL UNDO SIZE". If this is the case, you may be wasting space. You can choose to resize your UNDO tablespace to a lesser value or increase your UNDO_RETENTION parameter to use the additional space.

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