Oracle Enterprise Manager Getting Started with the Oracle Standard Management Pack
Release 9.0.1

Part Number A88749-02

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7
Using Oracle TopSessions

This chapter discusses the following Oracle TopSessions topics:

Overview of Oracle TopSessions

You can use Performance Manager to assist you in identifying performance bottlenecks within your system and database environment. The TopSessions chart displays database sessions that are contributing most heavily to database activity. You can display various details for these sessions, including the SQL statements, and resource usage.

You can obtain an overview of session activity by displaying the top sessions sorted by a statistic of your choosing. For any given session you can then drill down for more detail, or if you choose, you can terminate the session using the Kill Session option.

The TopSessions chart provides a methodology for identifying and correcting certain database performance problems. For example, when sudden file I/O load is detected, you can first identify the sessions contributing most to the problem and then isolate the executing SQL statements in user applications for those sessions. You can then analyze the SQL explain plans for those SQL statements to determine how best to resolve the problem.

Once populated with data, the TopSessions chart includes a multi-column list of summary information for each session connected to the database instance or for each of the top n sessions as measured by the selected sort statistic.

You can also access the TopSessions chart from the Enterprise Manager console by selecting TopSessions from the Diagnostics Pack tool drawer. You can access information about individual sessions via drill downs from this chart.

The TopSessions chart displays the sessions sorted by the statistic specified on the Options tab of the TopSessions property sheet. By using the Set Options button in the toolbar the chart can be customized to show only the items of interest and the sort criteria can be changed. You can specify the number of sessions to display on the Options tab as well. See "Customizing the Session Information You Display" for more information about customizing the TopSessions display.

You can re-sort the sessions by clicking on the statistic column you want to use as the sort criterion. Clicking on the column header toggles the sort order in descending or ascending order. This changes only the display sort order and has no effect on the top "n" sorting/reduction done by selecting the sort item in the Options page.

The File, View, Collection, Tools and Help menus are the same as those in the chart window for Performance Manager. The Drilldown menu is customized to reflect some of the tasks specific to TopSessions.

Before You Use the Oracle TopSessions Chart

Before you can use the TopSessions chart on pre-Oracle 9i databases, you must first run a SQL script that defines the OEM_MONITOR role which contains all the privileges required to use the Diagnostics Pack products. Granting the
OEM_MONITOR role is the best way to ensure that a user has the correct privileges to use the TopSessions functions. The OEM_MONITOR role has been granted more privileges in the 9i version that help to provide better functionality and performance.

For 9i databases, the SQL script, catsnmp.sql, is run by default as part of the 9i database creation process. For all versions of the database prior to 9i, you must manually run a SQL script to define the OEM_MONITOR role and create the necessary views.

For versions 8.1.5, 8.1.6, and 8.1.7 of the database, you must run the script
catsnmp_8i.sql. For versions 8.0.5 and 8.0.6 of the database, you must run the script catsnmp_80.sql. For version 7.3.4 of the database, you must run script
catsnmp_734.sql. The selected script must be executed by a user with SYS privileges.

The sql files are located in the Oracle home of the Oracle Enterprise Manager installation, $ORACLE_HOME/SYSMAN/ADMIN. You must run the appropriate version of the SQL script manually on all pre-9i databases.

The OEM_MONITOR role must be granted to any user wishing to use the Oracle Diagnostics Pack. Performance Manager does not require any of these new views in order to run, but if you attach to a database that does not have the views, or your process does not have the required privileges, or the OEM_MONITOR role does not exist, then an informational message displays.

Displaying the TopSessions Chart

You can display the TopSessions chart from the Oracle Enterprise Manager console, from the Start menu, or from within Performance Manager.

Displaying the TopSessions Chart from the Console

You can display the TopSessions chart from the Oracle Enterprise Manager console in any of the following ways:


Starting TopSessions from the Start Menu

On the Start menu, follow the path: Start=>Programs=>
ORACLE - $Oracle _Home=>Standard Management Pack=>TopSessions.


Note:

ORACLE_HOME represents the home directory in which the Standard Management Pack is installed. 


When you launch TopSessions from the Start menu, a database logon dialog box appears. By default, you are connected to the database via Direct Connect, allowing the application to run in Standalone mode. You can change the connection details from the logon dialog to connect to an OMS if you choose.

Displaying TopSessions in Performance Manager

You can display the TopSessions chart from within Performance Manager by following these steps:

  1. Point to the database for which you want to display TopSessions in the Performance Manager navigator and then choose TopSessions from the list of available charts.

    The Data Tab appears in the right-side pane.

  2. Choose the data sources from the list that appears in the top panel of the Data Tab.
  3. Select the collection types you want to display from the list at the bottom panel of the Data Tab.
  4. To filter the sessions you want to display, click on the Session Filtering Tab. Filtering allows you to reduce the number of sessions returned by specifying criteria that a session must meet in order to be considered part of the sample set. For more information about the Session Filtering function, see "Session Filtering Options Page".
  5. To limit the number of data sources and to set the sort order for the chart, click on the Options Tab.
  6. To display the TopSessions chart, click on the Show Chart button at the bottom of the panel.
  7. To record the chart activity, click on the Record Chart button at the bottom of the panel to bring up the Recording Parameters dialog box.

By default, the top n sessions in the main display are sorted by the session logical reads statistic. If you want to change the sort statistic and/or the statistic filter, choose Options on the Session menu. This displays the Options property sheet, on which you can customize the session information displayed in the main display. See "Customizing the Session Information You Display" for more information about using the Options property sheet.

Figure 7-1 shows the Oracle TopSessions chart.

Figure 7-1 Oracle TopSessions Chart


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Text description of the illustration topsmain.gif

As Figure 7-1 shows, the Oracle TopSessions chart includes the following components:

The following sections describe each of these components.

Oracle TopSessions Menu Bar

The menu bar of the Oracle TopSessions chart includes the following pull-down menus:

File Menu

The File menu on the Charts display window has the following options:

View Menu

The View menu on the Charts display window has the following options:

Collection Menu

The Collection menu on the Charts display window has the following options:

Drilldown Menu

The Drilldown menu shows the same items available from the Performance Manager chart window as well as available drilldowns for the selected sessions. The drilldowns available depend on the tools available on your system. If you choose Session Details from the Drilldown menu when no session is selected in the TopSessions chart, Performance Manager displays the Select Data Source dialog box where you can select from a list of data sources. After you choose the data sources, the Session Details window appears.

The Drilldown menu in the TopSessions chart also includes items specific to TopSessions. You can end a user session that you select on the TopSessions chart by choosing Kill Session from the Drilldown menu. When you kill a session, the session is removed from the chart. If a Session Detail window is open when you kill its session, the Session Detail window stops refreshing and reports an error.


Note:

If the Tuning Pack is installed, Current SQL and Explain Plan appear on the Drilldown menu. 


The Drilldown menu on the TopSessions chart has the following options:

Help Menu

The Help menu items allow you to obtain help on Oracle TopSessions chart items or property sheets.

Toolbar

The toolbar of the Oracle TopSessions chart contains icons representing certain Oracle TopSessions menu items, including the following:

Print Screen

Prints the displayed chart.

Report Chart

Generates a report for the displayed chart. When you click the Report Chart button, a chart report in HTML format is automatically created and saved for you. Performance Manager allows you to preview the report by displaying it on your screen.

Chart Type

Changes the current display to the chart type you select from the drop-down list. You can select a bar chart, pie chart, strip chart, or table chart. Bar charts show discrete measurements at the current time. Pie charts show the relationship or proportions of parts to a whole. Strip charts show trends or changes in data over a period of time. When you first display a Strip chart, you will notice the addition over time of tics at the bottom of the chart. Each point represents a polling event. Table charts present text information, or a large number of instances, in a format that is easy to review.

Horizontal Orientation

Changes the chart orientation to horizontal.

Vertical Orientation

Changes the chart orientation to vertical.

Refresh Rate

Allows you to set the time between collections. The time can be set in hours, minutes, and seconds.

Pause Chart

Allows you to stop the collection for a chart displayed in the chart window.

Resume Chart

Allows you restart the collection of a chart displayed in the chart window.

Options

Allows you to choose the data sources, data, sort criteria, and number of rows to display for the collection.

Historical Data

Displays the Oracle Capacity Planner Database Logon dialog box. Supply the user name, password, and service information as needed. Once you have logged into Capacity Planner, you can display historical data for this chart or start collecting historical data.

Start Recording

Starts recording the current TopSessions Chart.

Stop Recording

Stops recording the current TopSessions Chart.

Help on Chart

Displays help about the TopSessions chart.

Overview of Session Activity

Once populated with data, the Oracle TopSessions chart includes a multi-column list of summary information for each session connected to the database instance, or for each of the top n sessions, as measured by the selected sort statistic listed in Table 7-1.

Table 7-1 TopSessions Sort Statistics
Sort Statistic  Description 

Recursive CPU 

Amount of CPU used for parsing row cache statements such as lookups in the data dictionary, executing triggers, and PL/SQL. 

Parse CPU 

Amount of CPU time spent parsing SQL statements. The Parse CPU filter represents the percentage of CPU time spent parsing SQL statements. Parse time CPU can be a strong indication that an application has not been well tuned. High parse time CPU usually indicates that the application may be spending too much time opening and closing cursors or is not using bind variables. 

Total CPU Time 

Total elapsed time (in seconds) spent parsing, executing, and fetching during a session. 

Execute Time 

Total elapsed time (in seconds) for all calls (user and recursive) associated with a distinct session. 

Rollback Count 

Total number of times users manually issue the ROLLBACK statement or an error occurs during a user's transactions during the sample period. 

Commit Count 

Total number of user commits performed during the sample period. When a user commits a transaction, the redo generated that reflects the changes made to database blocks must be written to disk. Commits often represent the closest thing to a user transaction rate. 

SPID 

Server Process Identifier is a unique value given to each database server process. You must specify an exact id number for the filter to work. 

Logical Reads (%) 

Percentage of total buffer gets that were attributed to this session during the sample period. Default is 10%. 

Physical Reads (%) 

Percentage of database blocks read from disk. Also known as "disk reads." Default is 10%. 

Logon Time 

Time of logon by this session (filter includes sessions that started before a user-defined date and time). To set the date and time, double click on a piece of the timestamp and use the up/down arrows to increase or decrease the value. The default timestamp is the current date and time. 

UGA Memory 

Total amount of memory used by the User Global Areas for a session. 

Parse Elapsed Time 

Total elapsed time (in seconds) for all parses associated with a distinct session. 

Action 

The name of the action being performed by the application module that first executed this statement. This name can be optionally set by using DMBS_APPLICATION_INFO.SET_ACTION. 

Module 

The name of the application module that first executed this statement. This name can be optionally set by using DMBS_APPLICATION_INFO.SET_MODULE. 

Program 

The name of the client program. (Useful when the program name is known and is distinct from other programs.) 

Terminal 

The operating system terminal name (useful for character mode applications). 

Machine 

The operating system machine name. 

OS Username 

The name of the operating system client user. (Useful in a two tier architecture when the database client process does not live on a middle tier machine but initiated by the user on his desktop, or initiated on a UNIX machine. For desktop initiated processes, the Windows registry key USERNAME must be set to the username.) 

Session Name 

Either the Oracle username of the current session or if the session is owned by an Oracle background process, the name of the background process. 

Total Parses 

Total number of parse calls (hard and soft). A parse occurs when a SQL statement is mapped to a cursor during a session. 

Hard Parses 

Hard parses happen when the server parses a query and cannot find an exact match for the query in the library cache. Hard parses can be avoided by sharing SQL statements efficiently. The use of bind variables instead of literals in queries is one method to increase sharing. 

Sort Rows 

Total number of rows sorted. 

Memory Sorts 

Number of sorts with no disk writes. Sorts in memory are sorts that could be performed completely within the sort buffer in memory without using the temporary tablespace segments. 

Disk Sorts 

Sorts on disk are sorts too large to be performed entirely in the sort area, requiring I/O to temporary segments on disk. 

Constant Changes 

The number of times a database block has applied rollback entries to perform a consistent read on the block. 

Block Changes 

The number of times changes were made to blocks in the SGA as part of an update or delete. These are changes that are generating redo log entries and hence will be permanent changes to the database if the transaction is committed. 

Phys Reads 

This data item represents the number of data blocks read from disk during this sample period. When a user performs a SQL query, Oracle will try to retrieve the data from the database buffer cache (memory) first, then go to disk if it is not in memory already. Reading data blocks from disk is much more expensive than reading the data blocks from memory. The goal with Oracle should always be to maximize memory utilization. 

Constant Gets 

Total number of requests for information on constants in the data dictionary cache. 

Block Gets 

Total number of requests for information on blocks in the data dictionary cache in CURRENT mode. When Oracle processes a user request for data it checks to see if the database blocks containing the requested data are in the memory (the database buffer cache) first. If so, Oracle checks to see if the data in those blocks is "up to date". If they are, Oracle will fulfill the request using the data blocks in memory. If they aren't in memory, Oracle will retrieve them from disk. This is less efficient, but necessary. If Oracle was able to retrieve the blocks from memory without having to apply rollback data for consistency, each block retrieved will log a db block get. 

Using the Right Mouse Button on the Main Display

In the Oracle TopSessions chart, you can click on a username with the right mouse button and then select one of the menu items that appears in the context menu. The list contains the Print Screen, Report Chart, and Help on Chart menu items, and then lists the View, Collection, and Drilldown menus from which you can then select related items from the flyout menus.

Sorting the Order of Entries in the Chart

By default, the value of the sort statistic determines the order of session entries in the Oracle TopSessions chart. However, you can use any field in the list to sort the order of displayed session entries by clicking on any column header in the list.

Using the Chart Status Button

Use the Chart Status button in the upper right corner of the TopSessions chart to access many of the same options available from the Drilldown menu. You can display Advice about the current chart, view the Session Details page, kill the current session, and turn SQL Trace on or off. The contents of the menu that displays when you press the Chart Status button is subject to the context of the chart.

Viewing Details About a Given Session

To obtain more information about a given session, you can drill down by right mouse clicking on a session in the Oracle TopSessions chart. Click on the Drilldown menu item and choose Session Details. Optionally, you can select a session and then choose Session Details from the Drilldown menu on the menu bar.

A Session Details window for that session appears as seen in Figure 7-2.

Figure 7-2 TopSessions Details Window
Text description of ts_sess_details.gif follows.
Text description of the illustration ts_sess_details.gif

Session Details Page

The Session Details page presents a tabular view of a sessions details and includes the following sections:

Session Details Statistics Page

The Statistics page of the Session Details window provides a large number of performance statistics for the selected session. The particular statistics this page displays can vary, depending on the Oracle server instance.

Figure 7-3 Session Statistics Page


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Text description of the illustration ts_sess_stats.gif

For information about the statistics that can be displayed for a session, see the Oracle Server Reference. For information on how to make use of these statistics, see Oracle Server Tuning.

Customizing the Session Information You Display

To customize how session information is displayed in the Oracle TopSessions chart, choose Options from the Collection menu or click on the Options button on the toolbar. The Options property sheet that appears includes the following pages:

To select one of these pages, click on the appropriate tab title near the top of the Options property sheet.

Data Options Page

When TopSessions is selected from the Oracle Performance Manager navigator tree, the Data Tab appears in the right-hand pane. The Data Tab presents information about the selected TopSessions collection such as the Data Sources and the collection types of the selected data. You can personalize the Data Tab view by selecting or deselecting the collected data items.

Figure 7-4 TopSessions Data Options Page


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Data Sources

The "All data sources" option is selected by default.

Select Collected Data

You can specify which data items should appear in the chart by selecting or deselecting the items in this list. By default, a check mark appears in the "Collected Data" row, all data items will automatically appear in the chart.

Session Filtering Options Page

By default, a TopSessions collection will show any session that is currently active or any session that has executed a SQL statement since the last sample. These sessions are selected based on a default set of pre-defined filters. If you prefer, you can also customize the TopSessions collection by defining your own set of TopSessions filters. The TopSessions Filtering tab allows you to specify your own set of filters.

Figure 7-5 TopSessions Session Filtering Page


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Text description of the illustration ts_options_filter.gif

To enable the filtering options, check the box labeled: Show only the statements that meet all of the following conditions. Select a filtering condition and value, then click the More button to add additional filters. You can eliminate filters by pressing the Fewer button.

Creating a Customized TopSessions Collection

Before you create your own set of TopSessions filters, it is important to note the following filtering restrictions:

For a complete list of filtering conditions and their descriptions, see Table 7-1, "TopSessions Sort Statistics" .

Options Page

The Options tab provides two display options. These options should be set prior to showing the TopSessions chart. You can also change the options after starting the chart to reduce the number of sessions to a smaller sample set based upon some abnormality you see in the default chart.

Figure 7-6 TopSessions Options Page


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