Maximizing the Performance of the Oracle E-Business Suite
Ahmed Alomari
Applications Performance Group
Oracle Corporation
Session id: 40191
Agenda
Architecture Application Services Tier
– Forms– Reports– Concurrent Manager– Apache
Mod PL/SQL Jserv/JVM
– Portal– Discoverer
Agenda (continued) Network Performance Data Server Tier
– 9iR2 New Features– New tablespace model
Application Tuning Q & A
Architecture
Java Server Pages (JSP)
Forms
Reports
Discoverer
Concurrent Manager
Servlet Engine
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Portal Real Application Clusters (RAC)
Data Server Tier TNS (Net8)
JDBC (Thin)
PL/SQL Gateway
http
Application Tier
Clients
Application Services Tier
Forms– Deploy with socket mode for internal users:
connectMode=socket (appsweb.cfg)– Enable Forms Dead Client Detection
Value specified in minutes Terminates f60webmx processes for dead
clients. FORMS60_TIMEOUT=10
– Disable Forms Abnormal Termination Handler FORMS60_CATCHTERM=0
Application Services Tier
Forms– Upgrade to Forms Patchset 10 or higher
Forms patchset 7 (6.0.8.16.X) introduced a regression which affects scalability (bug 2269913). Results in Forms generating invalid SQL. Fixed in Forms patchset 10 (6.0.8.19.X).
Refer to MetaLink document 125767.1 for Forms patchset upgrades.
– Disable Cancel Query Set the Profile “FND: Enable Cancel Query” to No.
Application Services Tier
Forms– Ensure users are optimally utilizing the
professional Forms interfaces. Avoid Blind queries Provide selective criteria in Find windows and
LOVs. Avoid opening and closing forms across
transactions. Users which need to switch responsibility in
order to complete a business transaction should instead keep the relevant Forms open.
Application Services Tier
Forms (Tracing)– If the form is slow, or a specific flow in the Form
is slow, first generate a complete SQL trace using the Trace menu in Help-Diagnostics.
– If the SQL trace does not account for the majority of the response time experienced by the user, then generate a Forms Runtime Diagnostics (FRD) Trace.
Application Services Tier
Forms (Tracing – SQL Trace)
Application Services Tier
Forms (Tracing – FRD Trace)– Logon to Applications 11i with the following
parameters appended to the URL: play=&record=collect&log=/tmp/oeform.trc
– Navigate through the flows which you would like to trace.
– Exit from Oracle Applications completely.– Review the trace file from the application server
(/tmp/oeform.trc).
Application Services Tier
Reports– Ensure users provide selective parameters to
the standard Reports.– Review the Report output:
Number of rows returned to the report. Number of report pages.
– SQL Trace can be generated by enabling the “Enable Trace” flag in the Concurrent Program Definition Form.
Application Services Tier Reports (Tracing)
– If the SQL trace for the report does not account for the elapsed time of the request, then generate a Reports trace by appending tracing parameters the to command line.
– ar60run … … TRACEFILE=<file> TRACE_OPTS=(<trace options>) TRACEMODE=trace_replace|trace_append
– The following are the trace options:– TRACE_ALL : log all possible trace information in the trace file. (DEFAULT)– TRACE_APP : log trace information on all the report objects in the trace file.– TRACE_BRK : list breakpoints in the trace file.– TRACE_ERR : list error messages and warnings in the trace file.– TRACE_PLS : log trace information on all the PL/SQL objects in the trace file.– TRACE_PRF : log performance statistics in the trace file.– TRACE_SQL : log trace information on all the SQL in the trace file.– TRACE_TMS : enter a timestamp for each entry in the trace file.
Application Services Tier Reports (Trace Output)
Report: /u02/appl/fnd/11.5.0/reports/US/FNDSCURS.rdf Logged onto server: Username: . . . . . . . .
23:59:57 APP ... ( Generic Graphical Object B_SECURITY_GROUP_NAME123:59:57 APP ... ) Generic Graphical Object B_SECURITY_GROUP_NAME123:59:57 APP ... ( Generic Graphical Object B_USER_NAME1. . . . . . . . +-------------------------------------+ | Report Builder Profiler statistics | +-------------------------------------+
TOTAL ELAPSED Time: 2243.04 seconds
Reports Time: 1196.62 seconds (53.34% of TOTAL)
ORACLE Time: 1046.41 seconds (46.65% of TOTAL)
UPI: 1046.00 seconds SQL: 0.40 seconds
TOTAL CPU Time used by process: 904.71 seconds
Application Services Tier Concurrent Manager
– Avoid enabling an excessive number of standard or specialized managers.
– Use specialization rules and work shifts to bind specific jobs to specific time windows. Helps avoid scheduling resource intensive batch
requests during peak activity.– For jobs which spawn parallel workers such as
Auto Invoice or Payroll, set the sleep time of the Conflict Resolution Manager (CRM) to null (i.e. 10 seconds). The default value is 60 seconds.
Application Services Tier
Concurrent Manager– Database Resource Manager Integration
Define Resource Consumer Groups and associate specific concurrent programs with a resource group.
Allows an administrator to constrain the amount of CPU resources used by a concurrent program.
Resource Groups can also be defined for online users using the profile “FND: Resource Consumer Group”.
Application Services Tier Concurrent Manager
– Transaction Managers Used for Inventory Transactions as well as other
synchronous online processing. Ensure enough transaction managers exist to service the
request load. Set the profile “Concurrent:Wait for Available TM” to 1
(second). Set “TP:INV Transaction processing mode” to “On-line
processing” for small inventory requests from the UI. Set the sleep time on the transaction managers to a low
number (< 5 seconds) for high volume requests. Transaction Managers can also be traced.
Application Services Tier Concurrent Manager (Enabling Trace)
Application Services Tier Apache
– On UNIX, Apache is process based (httpd), and mods such as mod PL/SQL run within the process address space of the httpd processes.
– On Windows, Apache is multi-threaded (Apache.exe).– Tune the number of processes and number of clients
(httpds.conf): MinSpareServers 5 MaxSpareServers 10 StartServers 5 MaxClients 512
Application Services Tier Apache
– Minimize levels of logging (httpds.conf): LogLevel warn SSLLogLevel warn
– Enable Caching of non-HTML resources including images, style sheets, and Java script. Caches content in the browser cache.
Reduces network round-trips (non SSL) Reduces network bandwidth utilization (SSL)
Included in AutoConfig templates in 11.5.8.
Application Services Tier
Apache – Enable Caching of non-HTML resources (httpd.conf
or apps.conf)
<Directory "<physical_path_corresponding_to_the_alias_/OA_HTML/>">
#enable the generation of the Expires header for files under /OA_HTML/
ExpiresActive On
#expire images one month after last client access
ExpiresByType image/gif "access plus 1 month"
#expire stylesheets one week after the last client access
ExpiresByType text/css "access plus 1 weeks"
#expire javascript libraries one day after the last client access
ExpiresByType text/javascript "access plus 1 days“
ExpiresByType application/x-javascript "access plus 1 day"
</Directory>
Application Services Tier
Apache – Review Apache Access Log file to ensure images
are being satisfied from the browser cache. Http code 200 (request for document) Http code 304 (request for time stamp)
130.35.127.106 - - [23/Oct/2002:19:00:21 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/FNDINVDT.gif HTTP/1.1" 200 821130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:38:23 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/FNDINVDT.gif HTTP/1.1" 304 -130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:38:23 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/FNDWATHS.gif HTTP/1.1" 200 190130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:38:23 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/FNDREDPT.gif HTTP/1.1" 200 70130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:39:23 -0700] "GET /OA_HTML/OA.jsp?page=/oracle/apps/icx/por/rcv/pages/ReceivingHomePage&OAHP=ICXPOR_MENU&OASF=ICXPOR_RCV_HOME_PAGE&dbc=ap107fam_ipdev11i&language_code=US&transactionid=70A5819F04C0F411 HTTP/1.1" 200 14130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:39:34 -0700] "GET /servlets/PoolMonitor?jvm HTTP/1.1" 200 7954130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:41:03 -0700] "GET /OA_HTML/US/ICXINDEX_ipdev11i.htm HTTP/1.1" 304 -130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:41:03 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/logo.gif HTTP/1.1" 304 -130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:41:03 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/appslogo.gif HTTP/1.1" 304 -130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:41:03 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/FNDJLFRL.gif HTTP/1.1" 304 -130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:41:03 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/FNDINVDT.gif HTTP/1.1" 304 -130.35.127.106 - - [25/Oct/2002:14:41:03 -0700] "GET /OA_MEDIA/FNDJLFRR.gif HTTP/1.1" 304 -
Application Services Tier
Apache Mod PL/SQL– Configure a dedicated mod PL/SQL Listener
Improves performance and scalability Significantly reduces overall number of
sessions/connections. Reduces latency of web requests. Improves cursor sharing.
Documented in “Oracle 9i Application Server Using the PL/SQL Gateway Release 1 (v1.0.2.2)” http://technet.oracle.com/docs/products/ias/doc_library/
1022doc_otn/apps.102/a90099/apptroub.htm#634180
Application Services Tier
Apache Mod PL/SQL (dedicated listener)
1. For the main Listener running on Port 7000, edit the file $IAS_HOME/Apache/modplsql/cfg/plsql.conf as follows:
Disable the mod PL/SQL service from the main listener by commenting out the lines between the two Location parameters as follows:
# <Location /pls> # SetHandler pls_handler # Order deny,allow # Allow from all # </Location>
Comment out the following line as follows:
# LoadModule plsql_module /d1/ias/Apache/modplsql/bin/modplsql.so
Application Services Tier
Apache Mod PL/SQL (dedicated listener)
2. Configure the main listener to forward all mod_plsql requests to the dedicated mod PL/SQL listener by adding the following line:
ProxyPass /pls/ http://sechost.us.oracle.com:8888/pls/
For the dedicated mod PL/SQL Listener running on Port 8888, configure each DAD to override the default CGI environment variables in order to allow redirects. Edit the file $IAS_HOME/Apache/modplsql/cfg/wdbsvr.app and add the following line for each DAD:
cgi_env_list=SERVER_NAME=mainhost.us.oracle.com,SERVER_PORT=7000,HOST=mainhost.us.oracle.com:7000
Application Services Tier Apache Jserv / JVM
– Minimize Jserv logging log=true log.channel.warning=true log.file=/d1/ias/Apache/Jserv/logs/jserv_7000.log
– Disable auto reload in production environments: autoreload.classes=false autoreload.file=false
– Use Jserv Auto Load Balancing Configure Multiple Zones. Provides higher availability and improves scalability.
Application Services Tier
Apache Jserv / JVM– Upgrade to the latest JDK (1.3.1_09).– Do not disable hotspot or the JIT (i.e.
–DCOMPILER=NONE or –Xint).– Enable verbose GC in order to optimally tune the
heap sizes based on the GC traffic. Minor Collections Major Collections Elapsed Time of GC
Application Services Tier
Apache Jserv / JVM– Enable Verbose GC Output
Overload wrapper.bin with a shell wrapper in order to redirect stdout to a file.
Existing:wrapper.bin=/d13/jdk/jdk1.3.1/bin/java
Change To:Wrapper.bin=/d13/scripts/java.sh
java.sh:=========
/d13/jdk/jdk1.3.1/bin/java -verbosegc $* >> /d2/logs/java.log
Application Services Tier
Apache Jserv / JVM (Verbose GC Output)
/d2/logs/java.log:
[GC 30460K->1369K(510848K), 0.1135695 secs][Full GC 15135K->1686K(510848K), 0.2700469 secs][GC 32123K->2131K(510848K), 0.0203634 secs][GC 32595K->2130K(510848K), 0.0113639 secs][GC 32593K->2171K(510848K), 0.0129179 secs][GC 32635K->2419K(510848K), 0.0567306 secs][GC 32881K->3157K(510848K), 0.2906981 secs][GC 33620K->3197K(510848K), 0.0320023 secs][GC 33661K->3218K(510848K), 0.0103013 secs][GC 33674K->3309K(510848K), 0.0487887 secs][GC 33769K->3532K(510848K), 0.0531514 secs][GC 33983K->3784K(510848K), 0.0552549 secs][GC 34248K->4056K(510848K), 0.0624969 secs][GC 34520K->4404K(510848K), 0.0555575 secs][GC 34868K->4828K(510848K), 0.0587044 secs][GC 35292K->5242K(510848K), 0.0945290 secs]
Application Services Tier
Apache Jserv / JVM– Utilize the verbose GC output to tune the JVM
heaps (-Xmx and –Xms) accordingly.– Review the frequency of collections, especially
major collections (i.e. Full GC). Start with:
-Xms256M and –Xmx512M
-XX:NewSize=60M -XX:MaxNewSize=120M
Application Services Tier
Apache Jserv / JVM– Process Identification (V$SESSION)
Specify the property –DCLIENT_PROCESSID in the JVM startup shell script.
Existing:wrapper.bin=/d13/jdk1.3.1/bin/java
Change To:Wrapper.bin=/d13/scripts/java.sh
java.sh:=========#!/bin/sh/d13/jdk1.3.1/bin/java -verbosegc -DCLIENT_PROCESSID=$$ $* >> /d2/logs/java.log
Application Services Tier
Apache Jserv / JVM– Process Identification (V$SESSION)
Allows you to map the JDBC session from v$session to a particular JVM process.
SID MACHINE PROCESS MODULE LOGON---- ------------------------- ------------ ------------------ ----------------- 41 aptier1.us.oracle.com 28806 JDBC Thin Client 09/07/03 23:26:43 42 aptier2.us.oracle.com 1723 JDBC Thin Client 09/07/03 23:27:01 43 aptier3.us.oracle.com 3201 JDBC Thin Client 09/07/03 23:28:15 44 aptier1.us.oracle.com 28807 JDBC Thin Client 09/07/03 23:29:17. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
aptier1{apps_a}-> ps -ef | grep 28806
apps_a 28806 28561 0 23:26:39 pts/20 0:00 /bin/sh ./java.shapps_a 28807 28806 53 23:26:40 pts/20 8:55 /jdk1.3.1_09/bin/../bin/sparc/native_threads/java
Application Services Tier Java Server Pages (JSPs)
– Precompile the JSPs to avoid dynamic compilation. Users experience poor performance for the initial page
loads. Potential deadlocks if multiple users attempt to compile
the same JSP. Potential JVM death due to OutOfMemoryException
during concurrent compilation. MetaLink Document 215268.1 provides the instructions
and the patch reference for an automated script to perform the precompilation. ojspCompile Script
Application Services Tier
Java Server Pages (JSPs)– Use a separate JVM to perform the JSP
compilation.
root.properties:
servlet.oracle.jsp.JspServlet.initArgs=translate_params=true, unsafe_reload=false, page_repository_root=/appl_top/115/common/html/jsp/pagecache, alias_translation=true,developer_mode=false, javaccmd=/usr/jdk131/bin/javac,send_error=true
Application Services Tier
Portal Tuning– Tune the number of content fetcher threads for
PPE (poolSize). Default is 25.– Adjust the fetch request timeout (requesttime).– Adjust the fetch connection request timeout (stall).
zone.properties:
servlet.page.initArgs=poolSize=50 servlet.page.initArgs=requesttime=200 servlet.page.initArgs=stall=100
Application Services Tier
Portal Tuning– Ensure that the mod PL/SQL cache is enabled and
sized appropriately:
$APACHE_TOP/modplsql/cfg/cache.cfg:
[PLSQL Cache]enabled=yestotal_size=100000000cleanup_size=75000000cleanup_interval=86400;
[Cookie Cache]enabled=yestotal_size=25000000cleanup_size=15000000cleanup_interval=86400max_size = 0
Application Services Tier Discoverer 4i Viewer Tuning
– Disable Query Prediction by setting QPPEnable=0 in pref.txt.– Set ObjectsAlwaysAccessible=1 to avoid extra workbook
SQL validation, and related dictionary SQL.– Set the Query Governor option “Limit retrieved query data to:”
to 100 rows.– Set the option “After opening a worksheet:” to “Don’t run
query.”– Ensure Custom workbooks define mandatory parameters.
Network Performance Network performance is often neglected. Networks with poor latency or low bandwidth
impacts user response time. Can also impact concurrent programs if the
network between the application tier and data server tier is not optimal.
A direct switch should be used between the application tier and data server tier– Latency should ideally be ~2-3ms per round-trip.
Network Performance Use the ping command to determine the latency of requests. Vary
the packet size to determine the average latency. Do not use the default ping packet size of 32 bytes.
D:\>ping ap626sun.us.oracle.com -l 2048
Pinging ap626sun.us.oracle.com [139.185.128.27] with 2048 bytes of data:
Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=2048 time=371ms TTL=252Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=2048 time=330ms TTL=252Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=2048 time=361ms TTL=252Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=2048 time=360ms TTL=252
D:\>ping ap626sun.us.oracle.com -l 512
Pinging ap626sun.us.oracle.com [139.185.128.27] with 512 bytes of data:
Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=512 time=231ms TTL=252Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=512 time=210ms TTL=252Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=512 time=231ms TTL=252Reply from 139.185.128.27: bytes=512 time=220ms TTL=252
Network Performance Use the ping command to determine the latency between the
application server and the data server. Use a packet size of 2K since this the default size for SQL*Net traffic.
aptierhost{applmgr}-2-> ping -s dbtierhost 2048
PING dbtierhost.us.oracle.com: 2048 data bytes2056 bytes from dbtierhost.us.oracle.com (144.25.76.250): icmp_seq=0. time=1. ms2056 bytes from dbtierhost.us.oracle.com (144.25.76.250): icmp_seq=1. time=1. ms2056 bytes from dbtierhost.us.oracle.com (144.25.76.250): icmp_seq=2. time=1. ms2056 bytes from dbtierhost.us.oracle.com (144.25.76.250): icmp_seq=3. time=1. ms2056 bytes from dbtierhost.us.oracle.com (144.25.76.250): icmp_seq=4. time=1. ms2056 bytes from dbtierhost.us.oracle.com (144.25.76.250): icmp_seq=5. time=1. Ms
---- dbtierhost.us.oracle.com PING Statistics----6 packets transmitted, 6 packets received, 0% packet lossround-trip (ms) min/avg/max = 1/1/1
Network Performance
Measure the sustained bandwidth on both the client network (i.e. desktops) as well as the application-tiers.
Use traceroute utility to determine number of hops and impact on latency.
Monitor network statistics including packet rates, error rates, collisions, etc.. using tools such as netstat –i.
Data Server Tier
Refer to the MetaLink document 216205.1 “Database Initialization Parameters and Configuration for Oracle Applications 11i”.
– Ensure mandatory parameters are set correctly. Optimally configure the buffer cache and shared pool as per the
workload and the number of users:– [typical configuration for 2,000 Apps users]
db_block_buffers=800,000 shared_pool_size=2000M
A poorly sized buffer cache results in excessive buffer gets and physical I/O.
A poorly sized shared pool results in library cache and shared pool latch contention due to reloads and lack of space.
Data Server Tier Quick I/O improves performance and scalability
by simulating raw devices, and avoiding file system cache traffic for the DB files.
Use locally managed temp files (uniform) for the temporary tablespace.
Install Stats Pack and use spauto.sql to automate hourly snapshots.
Stats Pack reports can be used to trend transaction rates and business flows.
Data Server Tier
Stats Pack Report (Instance Summary)STATSPACK report for
DB Name DB Id Instance Inst Num Release Cluster Host------------ ----------- ------------ -------- ----------- ------- ------------GSIAP 317772662 gsi1ap 1 9.2.0.1.0 YES agsidbs1
Snap Id Snap Time Sessions Curs/Sess Comment ------- ------------------ -------- --------- -------------------Begin Snap: 503400 11-Nov-02 11:00:01 ####### .0 End Snap: 503405 11-Nov-02 16:00:04 ####### .0 Elapsed: 300.05 (mins)
Cache Sizes (end)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Buffer Cache: 5,313M Std Block Size: 8K Shared Pool Size: 2,864M Log Buffer: 1,024K
. . . . . . . . . . . .
Data Server Tier
Stats Pack Report (Instance Summary)Load Profile~~~~~~~~~~~~ Per Second Per Transaction --------------- --------------- Redo size: 462,767.56 26,266.16 Logical reads: 54,537.81 3,095.50 Block changes: 3,237.12 183.74 Physical reads: 2,403.22 136.40 Physical writes: 272.19 15.45 User calls: 518.96 29.46 Parses: 223.29 12.67 Hard parses: 1.26 0.07 Sorts: 199.15 11.30 Logons: 1.85 0.11 Executes: 1,566.48 88.91 Transactions: 17.62
% Blocks changed per Read: 5.94 Recursive Call %: 88.46 Rollback per transaction %: 3.18 Rows per Sort: 102.78. . . . . . . . . . . .
Data Server Tier Stats Pack Report (Instance Summary)Instance Efficiency Percentages (Target 100%)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Buffer Nowait %: 99.90 Redo NoWait %: 100.00 Buffer Hit %: 96.03 In-memory Sort %: 99.96 Library Hit %: 99.87 Soft Parse %: 99.44 Execute to Parse %: 85.75 Latch Hit %: 99.82Parse CPU to Parse Elapsd %: 69.57 % Non-Parse CPU: 97.34
Shared Pool Statistics Begin End ------ ------ Memory Usage %: 90.55 76.14 % SQL with executions>1: 66.70 75.37 % Memory for SQL w/exec>1: 60.86 71.08
Top 5 Timed Events~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ % TotalEvent Waits Time (s) Ela Time-------------------------------------------- ------------ ----------- --------db file sequential read 16,187,270 134,274 31.12CPU time 110,764 25.67global cache cr request 21,410,811 66,129 15.33db file scattered read 3,184,765 23,571 5.46KJC: Wait for msg sends to complete 10,722,532 20,446 4.74
Data Server Tier Stats Pack Report (Wait Events) Avg Total Wait wait WaitsEvent Waits Timeouts Time (s) (ms) /txn---------------------------- ------------ ---------- ---------- ------ --------db file sequential read 16,187,270 0 134,274 8 51.0global cache cr request 21,410,811 56,241 66,129 3 67.5db file scattered read 3,184,765 0 23,571 7 10.0KJC: Wait for msg sends to c 10,722,532 194,069 20,446 2 33.8row cache lock 74,583 5,842 17,796 239 0.2wait for unread message on b 73,977 4,624 13,054 176 0.2SQL*Net more data to client 6,021,483 0 8,873 1 19.0enqueue 114,204 19,898 7,427 65 0.4buffer busy global CR 516,382 18 4,735 9 1.6buffer busy waits 434,054 192 3,857 9 1.4direct path read 1,239,648 0 3,226 3 3.9inactive session 1,774 1,774 1,784 1006 0.0latch free 242,171 19,203 1,694 7 0.8db file parallel read 121,670 0 1,280 11 0.4direct path write 1,270,008 0 1,110 1 4.0log file sync 604,002 244 1,097 2 1.9SQL*Net message from dblink 20,365 0 1,080 53 0.1
Data Server Tier Review Latch Free waits in the Stats Pack reports. Latch contention is often a symptom due to a legitimate
problem such as non-sharable SQL, sub-optimal SQL which performs full table or full index scans, dynamic object creation/removal, etc..
Review the latch Statistics section of the Stats Pack report to determine the hot latches.
Enable tracing for a few of the sessions waiting on the latch as well as the holder to determine the actual cause.
Data Server Tier Stats Pack Report (Expensive SQL) CPU Elapsd Physical Reads Executions Reads per Exec %Total Time (s) Time (s) Hash Value--------------- ------------ -------------- ------ -------- --------- ---------- 3,413,015 1 3,413,015.0 7.9 1970.29 6716.03 976039043Module: ALECDCSELECT distinct ooha.order_number , fu.user_name , rac.customer_name , to_char(wctc.last_update_date, 'DD-MON-YY hh24:mi') , DECODE(SUBSTR(wctc.comments, 1, 21), 'NOTE: This Order-Line', wctc.process_flag || ': manually screened', DECODE(wctc.process_flag ,'101','101: host u
2,229,632 1 2,229,632.0 5.2 2115.49 35448.22 1280227044Module: ALECDCselect distinct pv.segment1 , nvl(pv.vendor_name_alt, pv.vendor_name) , ai.invoice_num , hr.name , '[email protected]' from po_vendors pv , ap_invoices_all ai , ap_holds_all ah , hr_organization_units hr where ai.payment_status_flag||''='Y' and
1,990,002 1 1,990,002.0 4.6 2321.34 23934.41 4063073269Module: OKILOADDRBEGIN OKI_REFRESH_PUB.REFRESH_ADDRS( :errbuf, :rc ); END;
Data Server Tier Monitor CPU and Memory Utilization Monitor paging Monitor I/O statistics, including service times. Review Stats Pack reports and correlate top
SQL to the business flows. Review expensive custom SQL
Data Server Tier Gathering Statistics
– Do not gather statistics excessively on entire schemas or the entire database such as nightly or weekly.
– Do not gather statistics on permanent objects during peak intervals. Gathering statistics invalidates cursors Gathering statistics requires dictionary and object
level locks. Plans are not likely to change if the data distribution
has not changed.
Data Server Tier Gathering Statistics
– For tables which are growing at a rapid rate, gather statistics only on those tables.
– Use only FND_STATS or the Gather Schema and Gather Table Statistics Concurrent Programs Do NOT USE the analyze nor dbms_stats command
directly. It is not supported, and results in sub-optimal plans.
– Review the table and index statistics for the objects which appear in the top SQL section of Stats Pack.
Data Server Tier Verifying the Statistics SQL> set serveroutput onSQL> exec apps.fnd_stats.verify_stats ('ONT','OE_ORDER_LINES_ALL');===================================================================================================Table OE_ORDER_LINES_ALL===================================================================================================last analyzed sample_size num_rows blocks10-28-2002 21:48 2607722 26077220 2385380 Index name last analyzed num_rows LB DK LB/key DB/key CF----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------OE_ORDER_LINES_N1 10-28-2002 21:10 25576780 91790 263415 1 29 7652470OE_ORDER_LINES_N10 10-28-2002 21:10 19823770 75010 256561 1 27 7130580. . . . . . . . . .OE_ORDER_LINES_N2 10-28-2002 21:10 25728720 107860 1470664 1 12 18595490OE_ORDER_LINES_N3 10-28-2002 21:10 26092490 80870 10468 7 2184 22866190OE_ORDER_LINES_N5 10-28-2002 21:10 0 0 0 0 0 0OE_ORDER_LINES_N6 10-28-2002 21:10 155669 592 152764 1 1 79814OE_ORDER_LINES_N7 10-28-2002 21:10 82116 310 5030 1 6 34641OE_ORDER_LINES_N9 10-28-2002 21:10 2185597 8988 1795102 1 1 1467499OE_ORDER_LINES_U1 10-28-2002 21:10 26056680 85380 26056680 1 1 15242720----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Histogram StatsSchema Table Name Status last analyzed Column NameONT OE_ORDER_LINES_ALL present 28-10-2002 21:48 OPEN_FLAG
Data Server Tier 9iR2 New Features
– Auto memory manager Pga_aggregate_target can be set to tune the PGA for the entire
instance. Automatically tunes hash area and sort area sizes Returns unused memory to the OS.
– System Managed Undo No more ORA-1555s!!! Set undo_retention to the length of the longest running request.
– Auto Segment Tablespace Management No need to manually set Freelist, freelist groups, pctused. A
bitmap is used to automatically scale the segment related parameters.
Data Server Tier 9iR2 New Features
– PL/SQL Native Compilation Improves PL/SQL execution performance. Improves scalability by removing a lot of stress off of
the shared pool.
Data Server Tier
New Tablespace Model for the eBusiness Suite:– Consolidate the number of tablespaces from 400 tablespaces
to 10.– Optimizes performance via the wide stripe model.– Ideal for customers migrating to RAC or migrating to raw
devices.– Uniform extents, locally managed
No more fragmentation!– Migration script can be used to migrate a schema at a time.
Data Server Tier New Tablespace Model for the eBusiness Suite:
– Objects are classified by object type and access patterns:
Transaction tables Transaction indexes Reference/SEED Interface Summary Management Archive NoLogging Queue Media Temporary Undo System Total = 12 Tablespaces
Data Server Tier Email [email protected] for information
on the migration guide and utility. Migration timings: (complete migration)
– 1.2 Terabyte customer DB 20 hours New size of DB after migration (850 GB).
– 250 GB customer DB 4 hours New size of DB after migration (150 GB).
Application Tuning
Review the Metalink note “Recommended Performance Patches for the Oracle E-Business Suite”, 244040.1.– Recommended performance patches for all the
modules are consolidated in this note.
Application Tuning Workflow
– When starting background engines via Concurrent Manager, set the Process Stuck parameter to No.
– Start a separate background engine to handle stuck processes with a very low frequency such as once or twice a day.
– Use deferred activities to improve online response times and facilitate asynchronous processing for flows such as Scheduling, PO Document Approval, etc..
Application Tuning Order Management
– OM Pack H contains numerous performance fixes including Pricing performance fixes.
– OM Bulk Import (Pack H) ~20,000 lines per hour per worker.
– Ensure that the profile “OM: Debug Level” is set to zero (0).
– Ensure that the profile “QP: Debug” is set to “N”.
Application Tuning Payroll
– Tune the number of threads, chunk size and the buffer sizes (pay_action_parameters): THREADS=25 CHUNK_SIZE = 20 BAL BUFFER SIZE=550 EE BUFFER SIZE =550 RR BUFFER SIZE =550 COST BUFFER SIZE=550
– Set threads to 1.5-2.0 times the number of data server processors.
– Set LOW_VOLUME=N to enable optimal plans.
Application Tuning OA Framework Applications
– Upgrade to 5.7 if running an earlier release of OA Framework. Refer to MetaLink document 139863.1 (“Configuring and
Troubleshooting the Self Service Framework with Oracle Applications”).
– Pool Monitor can be used to monitor the resource utilization Application Module Pool
View Objects Memory Utilization JVM Properties https://<hostname>/servlet/OAAppModPoolMonitor
Application Tuning OA Framework Applications (Pool Monitor)
Application Tuning OA Framework Applications (Pool Monitor)
Application Tuning (OA)
Tracing Self-Service Applications– Set profile FND : Diagnostics to Yes at user level – Login to Self Service as the above user– Click on Diagnostics icon at the top of page– Select ‘Set Trace Level’ and click Go– Select the desired trace level and click Save– Perform the activity that you want to trace– Exit application
Application Tuning (OA)
Application Tuning AOLJ Connection Pool (dbc configuration)
– $FND_TOP/secure/<hostname_sid>.dbc Number of DB connections used by the Java based Self-
Service Applications. FND_JDBC_MAX_CONNECTIONS: 300
Tune FND_JDBC_MAX_CONNECTIONS as per the amount of transaction concurrency (per JVM).
AOLJ automatically decays idle connections and resizes the pool.
Disable sanity checks in production environments FND_JDBC_USABLE_CHECK=false FND_JDBC_PLSQL_RESET=false
Application Tuning AOLJ Connection Pool (dbc configuration)
– Patch 2566387 allows the use of service names in the configuration: New dbc parameter APPS_JDBC_URL
Used in place of DB_HOST, DB_NAME, DB_PORT
Useful for automatic connection load balancing
APPS_JDBC_URL=jdbc:oracle:thin:@(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS_LIST=(LOAD_BALANCE=ON)(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=ap201ops)(PORT=1526))(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=TCP)(HOST=ap202ops)(PORT=1526)))(CONNECT_DATA=(SERVICE_NAME=opsperf)))
Application Tuning Connection Pool Status (AoljDbcPoolStatus.jsp)
Application Tuning Connection Pool Status
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