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Tips to Write Effective Queries and EXPLAIN PLAN


Contents
SQL Statement Processing Phases
AutoTrace
EXPLAIN PLAN
Explain Plan Operations Reference:
- Table Access Methods (Full Table Scans, Cluster, Hash, by Rowid, Index Lookup)
- Index Access Methods (Unique scan, Range scan, Full scan, Fast full scan)
- Join Operation Techniques (Nested Loops, Merge Joins or Sort Joins, Hash Joins)
- Operations (sort, filter, view)
Detect Driving Table
Several Tips to write better queries

SQL Statement Processing Phases


The four statement processing phases in SQL are parsing binding, executing and fetching.
PARSE: During the parse step, Oracle first verifies whether or not the SQL statement is in the library cache. If it is, only little
further processing is necessary, such as verification of access rights. If not, the statement will need to be parsed, checked for
syntax errors, checked for correctness of table- and column-names, and optimized to find the best access plan, etc. The former
type of parse is called a soft parse and it is considerably faster than the latter, a hard parse.
BIND: It scans the statement for bind variables and assigns a value to each variable.
EXECUTE: The Server applies the parse tree to the data buffers, performs necessary I/O and sorts for DML statements.
FETCH: Retrieves rows for a SELECT statement during the fetch phase. Each fetch retrieves multiple rows, using an array fetch.
A careful understanding of these steps will show that real user data are being processed in the steps 2 through 4; and that the step
1 merely is present for the Oracle engine to deal with the SQL statement.
This first step may take considerable time and resources, and as it is overhead seen from the data processing point of view,
applications should be written to minimize the amount of time spent during this step. The most efficient way to do this is to avoid
the parse/optimization step as much as possible.

AUTOTRACE
The trace utility is very helpful to see the execution plan for a specific query WITHOUT executing it. We can obtain the
execution plan and some additional statistics on running a SQL command automatically using AUTOTRACE.
SET AUTOTRACE <OPTIONS> <EXPLAIN or STATISTICS>
Setup:
- Create the PLAN_TABLE as SYS by executing:
@$ORACLE_HOME/rdbms/admin/utlxplan.sql
create or replace public synonym PLAN_TABLE for PLAN_TABLE;
grant all on PLAN_TABLE to PUBLIC;

- Setup the PLUSTRACE role (to be used with AUTOTRACE options) as SYS user:
@$ORACLE_HOME/sqlplus/admin/plustrce.sql
grant plustrace to public;

If granting the 'plustrace' role to public doesn't work, you could also do the following:
alter user &USER_NAME default role PLUSTRACE;

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Note=
If you get problems with AUTOTRACE, then try the following as SYS:
grant select on v_$session to plustrace;

Options to execute it
OFF - Disables autotracing SQL statements
ON - Enables autotracing SQL Statements
TRACEONLY - Enables auto tracing SQL Statements, and Suppresses Statement Output
EXPLAIN - Displays execution plans, but does not display statistics
STATISTICS Displays statistics, but does not display execution plans.
The best option is to use SET AUTOTRACE TRACE , this will not return the selected data from the query, it will return the
access path from plan table and its statistics.
If you just want the execution plan, then you can use SET AUTOTRACE TRACE EXP. These are the options:
set autotrace on explain; -> only the explain plan and the query result
set autotrace on statistics; -> only the result set and statistics. No explain plan
set autotrace traceonly; -> only the explain plan and statistics . No query result
set autotrace traceonly statistics; -> only the statistics. No query result or explain plan
set autotrace traceonly explain; -> only the explain plan. No query result or statistics
To disable use:
SET AUTOTRACE OFF;

NOTE: The most important results are the db block gets, consistent gets, physical reads, redo size, sorts (memory) and sorts (disk).

Statistic Explanation
recursive calls: The number of internal calls Oracle has made to execute the command. Those additional calls(sql) executed
by Oracle implicitly to process your (user) sql statement. Can be many things, hard parses, trigger executions , sort extent
allocations , data dictionary lookups/updates etc
db block gets: The number of blocks retrieved to answer the query. A: A 'db block get' is a current mode get. That is, it's the
most up-to-date copy of the data in that block, as it is right now, or currently. There can only be one current copy of a block in the
buffer cache at any time. Db block gets generally are used when DML changes data in the database. In that case, row-level locks
are implicitly taken on the updated rows. There is also at least one well-known case where a select statement does a db block get,
and does not take a lock. That is, when it does a full table scan or fast full index scan, Oracle will read the segment header in
current mode
consistent gets: The number of blocks retrieved that did not change the data and therefore did not interfere with other users
(i.e. by locking data). A 'consistent get' is when Oracle gets the data in a block which is consistent with a given point in time, or
SCN. The consistent get is at the heart of Oracle's read consistency mechanism. When blocks are fetched in order to satisfy a
query result set, they are fetched in consistent mode. If no block in the buffer cache is consistent to the correct point in time,
Oracle will (attempt to) reconstruct that block using the information in the rollback segments. If it fails to do so, that's when a
query errors out with the much dreaded, much feared, and much misunderstood ORA-1555 "snapshot too old".
physical reads: The number of blocks read from the disc. Basically those that cannot be satisfied by the cache and those that
are direct reads.
redo size: The number of redo entries. The redo entries are written out to the online redolog files from the log buffer cache by
LGWR.
bytes sent via SQL*Net to client: The number of bytes sent across the network from the server to the client.
bytes received via SQL*Net from client: The number of bytes sent across the network from the client to the server.
SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client: The number of exchanges between client and server.
sorts (memory): The number of data sorts performed in memory.
sorts (disc): The number of data sorts performed on disc.
rows processed: The number of rows processed by the query.
The db block gets, consistent gets and physical reads give the number of blocks that were read to form the buffers or from the
disc. For many queries, the number of physical reads is low as the data is already in the database buffers. If the number of
physical reads is high then the query will be expected to be slow as there will be many disc accesses.
The bytes received/sent via SQL*Net indicate how much data is being moved across the network. This is important as moving a
lot of data across the network may affect the network's performance.

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The sorts indicate the amount of work done in sorting data during the execution of the query. Sorts are important as sorting data is
a slow process.

EXPLAIN PLAN
The Explain Plan command uses a table to store information about the execution plan chosen by the optimizer.
Oracle provides an autotrace facility to provide execution plan and some statistics.
There are two methods for looking at the execution plan
1. EXPLAIN PLAN command: Displays an execution plan for a SQL statement without actually executing the statement
2. V$SQL_PLAN A dictionary view introduced in Oracle 9i that shows the execution plan for a SQL statement that has been
compiled into a cursor in the cursor cache
EXPLAIN PLAN COMMAND
Perform the following to check it:
EXPLAIN PLAN FOR
your query.
Example
EXPLAIN PLAN FOR
SELECT * FROM emp e, dept d
WHERE e.deptno = d.deptno
AND e.ename = 'SMITH';
Finally use the DBMS_XPLAN.DISPLAY function to display the execution plan:
SET LINESIZE 130
SET PAGESIZE 0
SELECT *
FROM TABLE(DBMS_XPLAN.DISPLAY);
------------------------------------------------------------------| Id | Operation
| Name
| Rows | Bytes | Cost |
------------------------------------------------------------------| 0 | SELECT STATEMENT
|
| 1
| 57
| 3
|
| 1 | NESTED LOOPS
|
| 1
| 57
| 3
|
|* 2 | TABLE ACCESS FULL
| EMP
| 1
| 37
| 2
|
| 3 | TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID| DEPT
| 1
| 20
| 1
|
|* 4 | INDEX UNIQUE SCAN
| PK_DEPT | 1
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------Predicate Information (identified by operation id):
--------------------------------------------------2 - filter("E"."ENAME"='SMITH')
4 - access("E"."DEPTNO"="D"."DEPTNO")

How To Read Query Plans?


The execution order in EXPLAIN PLAN output begins with the line that is the furthest indented to the right.
The next step is the parent of that line.
If two lines are indented equally, then the top line is normally executed first.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| Id | Operation
| Name
| Rows | Bytes | Cost (%CPU)| Time
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
0 | SELECT STATEMENT
|
|
1 |
11 |
53
(2)| 00:00:01 |
|
1 | SORT AGGREGATE
|
|
1 |
11 |
|
|
|
2 |
TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID| SKEW
|
53 |
583 |
53
(2)| 00:00:01 |
|* 3 |
INDEX RANGE SCAN
| SKEW_COL1 |
54 |
|
3
(0)| 00:00:01 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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The DBMS_XPLAN package supplies four table functions:


DISPLAY: to format and display the contents of a PLAN_TABLE. Parameters: table_name, sql_id, format, filter_preds
DISPLAY_CURSOR: to format and display the contents of the execution plan of any loaded cursor available in V$SQL.
Parameters: sql_id, child_number, format
DISPLAY_AWR: to format and display the contents of the execution plan of a stored SQL statement in the AWR in
DBA_HIST_SQLPLAN. Parameters: sql_id, plan_hash_value, db_id, format
DISPLAY_SQLSET: to format and display the contents of the execution plan of statements stored in a SQL tuning set, used
in conjunction with the package DBMS_SQLTUNE. Parameters: sqlset_name, sql_id, plan_hash_value, format,
sqlset_owner
The DBMS_XPLAN.DISPLAY function can accept 3 parameters:
1 table_name - Name of plan table, default value 'PLAN_TABLE'.
2 statement_id - Statement id of the plan to be displayed, default value NULL.
3 format - Controls the level of detail displayed, default value 'TYPICAL'. Other values include 'BASIC', 'ALL', 'SERIAL'.
EXPLAIN PLAN SET STATEMENT_ID='TSH' FOR
SELECT *
FROM emp e, dept d
WHERE e.deptno = d.deptno
AND e.ename = 'SMITH';
SET LINESIZE 130
SET PAGESIZE 0
SELECT *
FROM TABLE(DBMS_XPLAN.DISPLAY('PLAN_TABLE','TSH','BASIC'));
--------------------------------------------| Id | Operation
| Name
|
--------------------------------------------| 0 | SELECT STATEMENT
|
|
| 1 | NESTED LOOPS
|
|
| 2 | TABLE ACCESS FULL
| EMP
|
| 3 | TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID| DEPT
|
| 4 | INDEX UNIQUE SCAN
| PK_DEPT |
---------------------------------------------

Explain Plan using the SQL ID


You can also grab the Explain Plan by using the SQL ID for an already executed query. Example:
create table t ( x varchar2(30) primary key, y int );
exec dbms_stats.set_table_stats( user, 'T', numrows => 1000000, numblks => 100000 );
declare
l_x_number number;
l_x_string varchar2(30);
begin
execute immediate 'alter session set optimizer_mode=all_rows';
for x in (select * from t look_for_me where x = l_x_number) loop null; end loop;
for x in (select * from t look_for_me where x = l_x_string) loop null; end loop;
execute immediate 'alter session set optimizer_mode=first_rows';
for x in (select * from t look_for_me where x = l_x_number) loop null; end loop;
for x in (select * from t look_for_me where x = l_x_string) loop null; end loop;
end;
/

Run this query to "catch" specific queries:


select sql_id, child_number, sql_text
from v$sql
where upper(sql_text) like 'SELECT % FROM T%'
ORDER BY 2;

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Then run the following to Show its plan


select * from table(DBMS_XPLAN.DISPLAY_CURSOR('&cursor_id', 0) ); -- The 0 is the child_number of the query

Explain plan Hierarchy


Sample explain plan:
Query Plan
----------------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1234
TABLE ACCESS FULL TPAIS [:Q65001] [ANALYZED]

The rightmost uppermost operation of an explain plan is the first thing that the explain plan will execute. In this case TABLE
ACCESS FULL TPAIS is the first operation. This statement means we are doing a full table scan of table TPAIS When this
operation completes then the resultant row source is passed up to the next level of the query for processing. In this case it is the
SELECT STATEMENT, which is the top of the query.
[CHOOSE] is an indication of the optimizer_goal for the query. This DOES NOT necessarily indicates that plan has actually used
this goal. The only way to confirm this is to check the cost= part of the explain plan as well. For example the following query
indicates that the CBO has been used because there is a cost in the cost field:
SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1234

However the explain plan below indicates the use of the RBO because the cost field is blank:
SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=

The cost field is a comparative cost that is used internally to determine the best cost for particular plans. The costs of different
statements are not really directly comparable.
[:Q65001] indicates that this particular part of the query is being executed in parallel. This number indicates that the operation
will be processed by a parallel query slave as opposed to being executed serially.
[ANALYZED] indicates that the object in question has been analyzed and there are currently statistics available for the CBO to
use. There is no indication of the 'level' of analysis done.

Explain Plan Operations Reference


Table Access Methods
1- FULL TABLE SCAN (FTS) - Read every row in the table, every block up to the high water mark. The HWM marks the last
block in the table that has ever had data written to it. If you have deleted all the rows then you will still read up to the HWM.
Truncate is the only way to reset the HWM back to the start of the table. Buffers from FTS operations are placed on the Least
Recently Used (LRU) end of the buffer cache so will be quickly aged out. FTS is not recommended for large tables unless you are
reading >5-10% of it (or so) or you intends to run in parallel. Oracle uses multiblock reads where it can.
2- CLUSTER - Access via an index cluster.
3- HASH - A hash key is issued to access one or more rows in a table with a matching hash value.
4- BY ROWID - This is the quickest access method available. Oracle simply retrieves the block specified and extracts the rows it
is interested in. Access by rowid :
SQL> explain plan for select * from dept where rowid = ':x';
Query Plan
-----------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID DEPT [ANALYZED]

Another example where the table is accessed by rowid following index lookup:

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SQL> explain plan for select empno,ename from emp where empno=10;
Query Plan
-----------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP [ANALYZED]
INDEX UNIQUE SCAN EMP_I1

5- INDEX LOOKUP - The data is accessed by looking up key values in an index and returning rowids. A rowid uniquely
identifies an individual row in a particular data block. This block is read via single block I/O. In this example an index is used to
find the relevant row(s) and then the table is accessed to lookup the ename column (which is not included in the index):
SQL> explain plan for select empno,ename from emp where empno=10;
Query Plan
-----------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP [ANALYZED]
INDEX UNIQUE SCAN EMP_I1

Note the 'TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID' section. This indicates that the table data is not being accessed via a FTS operation but
rather by a rowid lookup. In this case looking up values in the index first has produced the rowid. The index is being accessed by
an 'INDEX UNIQUE SCAN' operation. This is explained below. The index name in this case is EMP_I1. If all the required data
resides in the index then a table lookup may be unnecessary and all you will see is an index access with no table access.
In the next example all the columns (empno) are in the index. Notice that no table access takes place:
SQL> explain plan for select empno from emp where empno=10;
Query Plan
-----------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
INDEX UNIQUE SCAN EMP_I1

Indexes are presorted so sorting may be unnecessary if the sort order required is the same as the index. In the next example the
index is sorted so the rows will be returned in the order of the index hence a sort is unnecessary.
SQL> explain plan for select empno,ename from emp where empno > 7876 order by empno;
Query Plan
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP [ANALYZED]
INDEX RANGE SCAN EMP_I1 [ANALYZED]

In the next example we will forcing a full table scan. Because we have forced a FTS the data is unsorted and we must sort the data
after it has been retrieved.
SQL> explain plan for select /*+ Full(emp) */ empno,ename from emp where empno> 7876 order by empno;
Query Plan
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=9
SORT ORDER BY
TABLE ACCESS FULL EMP [ANALYZED] Cost=1 Card=2 Bytes=66

Index Access Methods


There are 4 methods of index lookup:
b1.Index Unique Scan
b2.Index Range Scan
b3.Index Full Scan
b4.Index Fast Full Sscan
b5.Index Skip Scan
1. Index Unique Scan
Only one row will be returned. Used when the statement contains a UNIQUE or a PRIMARY KEY constraint that guarantees that
only a single row is accessed
Example:

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SQL> explain plan for select empno,ename from emp where empno=10;
Query Plan
-----------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP [ANALYZED]
INDEX UNIQUE SCAN EMP_I1

2. Index range scan


This is a method for accessing multiple column values. You must supply AT LEAST the leading column of the index to access
data via the index.
Can be used for range operations (e.g. >, <, <> , >=, <= , between). e.g.
SQL> explain plan for select empno,ename from emp where empno > 7876 order by empno;
Query Plan
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP [ANALYZED]
INDEX RANGE SCAN EMP_I1 [ANALYZED]

A non-unique index may return multiple values for the predicate col1 = 5 and will use an index range scan
SQL> explain plan for select mgr from emp where mgr = 5;
Query plan
-------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
INDEX RANGE SCAN EMP_I2 [ANALYZED]

3. Index Full Scan


In certain circumstances it is possible for the whole index to be scanned as opposed to a range scan (i.e. where no constraining
predicates are provided for a table). Oracle chooses an index Full Scan when you have statistics that indicate that it is going to be
more efficient than a Full table scan and a sort. For example Oracle may do a Full index scan when we do an unbounded scan of
an index and want the data to be ordered in the index order. The optimizer may decide that selecting all the information from the
index and not sorting is more efficient than doing a FTS or a Fast Full Index Scan and then sorting. An Index full scan will perform
single block i/o's and so it may prove to be inefficient.
Processes all leaf blocks of an index, but only enough branch blocks to find 1st leaf block. Used when all necessary columns are in
index & order by clause matches index struct or if sort merge join is done.
e.g. Index BE_IX is a concatenated index on big_emp (empno,ename)
SQL> explain plan for select empno,ename from big_emp order by empno,ename;
Query Plan
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=26
INDEX FULL SCAN BE_IX [ANALYZED]

4. Index Fast Full Scan (not very used)


Scans all the block in the index. Rows are not returned in sorted order. Note that INDEX FAST FULL SCAN is the mechanism
behind fast index create and recreate.
Scans all blocks in index used to replace a FTS when all necessary columns are in the index. Using multi-block IO & can going
parallel.
E.g.
Index BE_IX is a concatenated index on big_emp (empno, ename).
SQL> explain plan for select empno,ename from big_emp;
Query Plan
-----------------------------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
INDEX FAST FULL SCAN BE_IX [ANALYZED]

5. Index Skip Scan


Skips the leading edge of the index & uses the rest Advantageous if there are few distinct values in the leading column and many
distinct values in the nonleading column

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Join Operations Techniques


There are three kinds of join conditions: nested loops, merge joins, and hash joins. Each has specific performance implications,
and each should be used in different circumstances.
a. Nested loops work from one table (preferably the smaller of the two), looking up the join criteria in the larger table. For every
row in the outer table, Oracle accesses all the rows in the
inner table Useful when joining small subsets of data and there is an efficient way to access the second table (index look up). Its
helpful if the join column is indexed from the larger table. Nested loops are useful when joining a smaller table to a larger table
and performs very well on smaller amounts of data. Nesting is when you perform the same operation for every element in a data
set: For each row in A do B
b. Hash joins read the smaller tables into a hash table in memory so the referenced records can be quickly accessed by the hash
key. Hash joins are great in data warehouse scenarios where several smaller tables (with referential integrity defined) are being
referenced in the same SQL query as a single larger or very large table. The hash join has ab initial overhead (of creating the hash
tables) but performs rather well no matter how many rows are involved.
c. Sort Merge or Merge joins work by selecting the result set from each table, and then merging these two (or more) results
together. Merge joins are useful when joining two relatively large tables of about the same size together, the merge join starts out
with more overhead but remains rather consistent.
a. NESTED LOOPS JOIN - Nested Loops Joins are the most common and straightforward type of nesting in Oracle. When
joining two tables, for each row in one table Oracle looks up the matching rows in the other table.Take the example of 2 tables
joined as follows:
Select *
From Table1 T1, Table2 T2
Where T1.Table1_Id = T2.Table1_id;

In the case of the Nested Loop Join, the rows will be accessed with an outer table being chosen (say Table1 in this case) and for
each row in the outer table, the inner table (Table2) will be accessed with an index to retrieve the matching rows. Once all
matching rows from Table2 are found, then the next row on Table1 is retrieved and the matching to Table2 is performed again
It's important that efficient index access is used on the inner table (Table2 in this example) or that the inner table be a very
small table. This is critical to prevent table scans from being performed on the inner table for each row of the outer table that was
retrieved.
Optimizer uses nested loop when we are joining tables containing small number of rows with an efficient driving condition. It is
the most common join performed by transactional (OLTP) systems
OUTER - A nested loops operation to perform an outer join statement.
Note: You will see more use of nested loop when using FIRST_ROWS optimizer mode as it works on model of showing
instantaneous results to user as they are fetched. There is no need for selecting caching any data before it is returned to user.
In case of hash join it is needed and is explained below.

b. HASH JOIN - An operation that joins two sets of rows and returns the same result.
-ANTI - A hash anti-join.
-SEMI - A hash semi-join.
Hash joins are used when we are joining large tables. The optimizer uses the smaller of the 2 tables to build a hash table in
memory and the scans the large tables and compares the hash value (of rows from large table) with this hash table to find the
joined rows.
The algorithm of hash join is divided in two parts
1. Build a in-memory hash table on smaller of the two tables.
2. Probe this hash table with hash value for each row second table\
Unlike nested loop, the output of hash join result is not instantaneous as hash joining is blocked on building up hash table.
The Hash Join is is a very efficient join when used in the right situation. With the hash join, one Table is chosen as the Outer table.
This is the larger of the two tables in the Join - and the other is chosen as the Inner Table. Both tables are broken into sections and
the inner Tables join columns are stored in memory (if hash_area_size is large enough) and 'hashed'. This hashing provides an
algorithmic pointer that makes data access very efficient. Oracle attempts to keep the inner table in memory since it will be
'scanned' many times. The Outer rows that match the query predicates are then selected and for each Outer table row chosen,
hashing is performed on the key and the hash value is used to quickly find the matching row in the Inner Table. This join can often
outperform a Sort Merge join, particularly when 1 table is much larger than another. No sorting is performed and index access can

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be avoided since the hash algorithm is used to locate the block where the inner row is stored. Hash-joins are also only used for
equi-joins. Other important init.ora parms are: hash_join_enabled, sort_area_size and hash_multiblock_io_count.
Note: You may see more hash joins used with ALL_ROWS optimizer mode, because it works on model of showing results after all
the rows of at least one of the tables are hashed in hash table.

c. SORT MERGE JOIN or MERGE JOIN or Merge Scan - An operation that accepts two sets of rows, each sorted by a
specific value, combines each row from one set with the matching rows from the other. Take an example of 2 tables being joined
and returning a large number of rows (say, thousands) as follows:
Select *
From Table1 T1, Table2 T2
Where T1.Table1_Id = T2.Table1_id;

The Merge Scan join will be chosen because the database has detected that a large number of rows need to be processed and it
may also notice that index access to the rows are not efficient since the data is not clustered (ordered) efficiently for this join. The
steps followed to perform this type of join are as follows:
1) Pick an inner and outer table
2) Access the inner table, choose the rows that match the predicates in the Where clause of the SQL statement.
3) Sort the rows retrieved from the inner table by the joining columns and store these as a Temporary table. This step may not be
performed if data is ordered by the keys and efficient index access can be performed.
4) The outer table may also need to be sorted by the joining columns so that both tables to be joined are sorted in the same
manner. This step is also optional and dependent on whether the outer table is already well ordered by the keys and whether
efficient index access can be used.
5) Read both outer and inner tables (these may be the sorted temporary tables created in previous steps), choosing rows that
match the join criteria. This operation is very quick since both tables are sorted in the same manner and Database Prefetch can be
used.
6) Optionally sort the data one more time if a Sort was performed (e.g. an 'Order By' clause) using columns that are not the same
as were used to perform the join.
The Merge Join can be deceivingly fast due to database multi-block fetch (helped by initialization parameter
db_file_multiblock_read_count) capabilities and the fact that each table is accessed only one time each. These are only used for
equi-joins. The other init.ora parm that can be tuned to help performance is sort_area_size.
OUTER - A merge join operation to perform an outer join statement.
-ANTI - A merge anti-join.
-SEMI - A merge semi-join.
Important point to understand is, unlike nested loop where driven (inner) table is read as many number of times as the input from
outer table, in sort merge join each of the tables involved are accessed at most once. So they prove to be better than nested loop
when the data set is large.
When optimizer uses Sort merge join?
a) When the join condition is an inequality condition (like <, <=, >=). This is because hash join cannot be used for inequality
conditions and if the data set is large, nested loop is definitely not an option.
b) If sorting is anyways required due to some other attribute (other than join) like order by, optimizer prefers sort merge join
over hash join as it is cheaper.
Note: Sort merge join can be seen with both ALL_ROWS and FIRST_ROWS optimizer hint because it works on a model of first
sorting both the data sources and then start returning the results. So if the data set is large and you have FIRST_ROWS as
optimizer goal, optimizer may prefer sort merge join over nested loop because of large data. And if you have ALL_ROWS as
optimizer goal and if any inequality condition is used the SQL, optimizer may use sort-merge join over hash join

Operations
The following operations show up in explain plans:
a. Sort
b. filter
c. view

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a. Sorts
There are a number of different operations that promote sorts
Order by clauses
Group by
Sort merge join
Sorts are expensive operations especially on large tables where the rows do not fit in memory and spill to disk. By default sort
blocks are placed into the buffer cache. This may result in aging out of other blocks that may be reread by other processes.
b. Filter
Has a number of different meanings used to indicate partition elimination may also indicate an actual filter step where one row
source is filtering another functions such as min may introduce filter steps into query plans.In the next example there are 2 filter
steps. The first is effectively like a NL except that it stops when it gets something that it doesn't like (i.e. a bounded NL). This is
there because of the not in. The second is filtering out the min value:
SQL> explain plan for select * from emp where empno not in (select min(empno) from big_emp group by
empno);
Query Plan
-----------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE] Cost=1
FILTER
**** This is like a bounded nested loops
TABLE ACCESS FULL EMP [ANALYZED]
FILTER
**** This filter is introduced by the min
SORT GROUP BY NOSORT
INDEX FULL SCAN BE_IX

This example is also interesting in that it has a NOSORT function. The group by does not need to sort because the index row
source is already pre sorted.
c. Views
When a view cannot be merged into the main query you will often see a projection view operation. This indicates that the 'view'
will be selected from directly as opposed to being broken down into joins on the base tables. A number of constructs make a view
non mergeable. Inline views are also non mergeable.
In the following example the select contains an inline view that cannot be merged:
SQL> explain plan for select ename,tot from emp, (select empno,sum(empno) tot from big_emp group by
empno) tmp where emp.empno = tmp.empno;
Query Plan
-----------------------SELECT STATEMENT [CHOOSE]
HASH JOIN
TABLE ACCESS FULL EMP [ANALYZED]
VIEW
SORT GROUP BY
INDEX FULL SCAN BE_IX

In this case the inline view tmp that contains an aggregate function cannot be merged into the main query. The explain plan shows
this as a view step

Optimizer Method and how to know the Driving Table.


A small "golden rule" is that your driving table should be the table that returns the smallest number of rows (so you need to look at
the where clause), and this is not always the table with the smallest number of rows. But. Where to specify the driving Table?
Oracle processes result sets a table at a time. It starts by retrieving all the data for the first (driving) table. Once this data is
retrieved it is used to limit the number of rows processed for subsequent (driven) tables. In the case of multiple table joins, the
driving table limits the rows processed for the first driven table. Once processed, this combined set of data is the driving set for the
second driven table etc. Roughly translated into English, this means that it is best to process tables that will retrieve a small
number of rows first. The optimizer will do this to the best of its ability regardless of the structure of the DML, but some factors
may help.
Both the Rule and Cost based optimizers select a driving table for each query.
In the RBO (Rule Based Optimizer) the driving table is the LAST TABLE in the FROM CLAUSE (chooses the driving order by
taking the tables in the FROM clause RIGHT to LEFT).

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In the CBO (Cost Based Optimizer) the driving table is is determinated from costs derived from GATHERED STATISTICS. If
there are no statistics or if the optimizer_mode IS COST then CBO chooses the driving order of tables from LEFT to RIGHT in
the FROM clause, Place the most limiting tables first in the FROM clause
If a decision cannot be made, the order of processing is FROM the END of the FROM clause to the START.
In RBO, we have a habit of ordering tables right-to-left in queries, right being the driving table for the query.
In CBO, I had to adapt to ordering from left-to-right, left being the driving table. The ORDERED hint used in CBO picks up
tables left-to-right for processing. Take a pick.
Hence, it is important to have good statistics to pick up the correct driving table.
The WHERE clause is the main decision maker about which indexes to use. You should always try to use your unique indexes
first, and then if that is not possible then use a non-unique index. For a query to use an index, one or more fields from that index
need to be mentioned in the WHERE clause. On concatenated indexes the index will only be used if the first field in the index is
mentioned.On 10g that in not needed any more!!!
The more of its fields are mentioned in the where clause, the better an index is used.
So if you need to get statistics on your schema quickly, you can perform:
BEGIN
dbms_stats.gather_schema_stats (ownname => 'SCOTT'
, estimate_percent => 10
, degree => 5
, cascade => true);
END;
/

OR
execute dbms_stats.gather_schema_stats(ownname => 'SCOTT', estimate_percent => 10, degree => 5, cascade
=> true);

If you want to grab statistics for a Table and its indexes, then:
EXEC DBMS_STATS.gather_table_stats('SCOTT', 'TEST', cascade => TRUE);

More information HERE

TIPS to write better queries


Although two SQL statements may produce the same result, Oracle may process one faster than the other. You can use the results
of the EXPLAIN PLAN statement to compare the execution plans and costs of the two statements and determine which is more
efficient. Following are some tips that help in writing efficient queries.
Before starting our discussion, once nice parameter to know:
Flushing the Buffer Cache
Prior to Oracle Database 10g, the only way to flush the database buffer cache was to shut down the database and restart it. Oracle
Database 10g now allows you to flush the database buffer cache with the alter system command using the flush buffer_cache
parameter. The FLUSH Buffer Cache clause is useful if you need to measure the performance of rewritten queries or a suite of
queries from identical starting points. Use the following statement to flush the buffer cache.
ALTER SYSTEM FLUSH BUFFER_CACHE;
ALTER SYSTEM FLUSH SHARED_POOL;

#This command flushed the buffer cache in the SGA


#This command flushed the shared pool

However, note that these clauses are intended for use only on a test database. It is not advisable to use them on a production
database, because subsequent queries will have no hits, only misses.
Declare with Care!!
The following table and then the sections after that offer some concrete advice on potential issues you might encounter when
declaring variables in PL/SQL
NUMBER If you dont specify a precision, as in NUMBER(12,2), Oracle supports up to 38 digits of precision. If you dont need
this precision, youre wasting memory.
CHAR This is a fixed-length character string and is mostly available for compatibility purposes with code written in earlier
versions of Oracle. The values assigned to CHAR variables are right-padded with spaces, which can result in unexpected
behavior. Avoid CHAR unless its specifically needed.

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VARCHAR2 The greatest challenge you will run into with VARCHAR2 is to avoid the tendency to hard-code a maximum length,
as in VARCHAR2(30). Use %TYPE as described later in this sectoin.
INTEGER If your integer values fall within the range of 231+1 .. 2311 (a.k.a. 2147483647 .. 2147483647), you should
declare your variables as PLS_INTEGER. This is the most efficient format for integer manipulation (until you get to Oracle
Database 10g Release 2, at which point BINARY_INTEGER, PLS_INTEGER and all the other subtypes of BINARY_INTEGER
offer the same performance).
Anchor variables to database datatypes using %TYPE and %ROWTYPE.
When you declare a variable using %TYPE or %ROWTYPE, you anchor the type of that data to another, previously defined
element. If your program variable has the same datatype as (and, as is usually the case, is acting as a container for) a column in a
table or view, use %TYPE to define it from that column. If your record has the same structure as a row in a table or view, use
%ROWTYPE to define it from that table. Your code will automatically adapts to underlying changes in data structures.
1. Existence of a row
Do not use Select count(*) to test the existence of a row. Instead, open an explicit cursor, fetch once, and then check
cursor%NOTFOUND :
If you are going to insert a row or update one if that exists, instead of:
DECLARE
/* Declare variables which will be used in SQL statements */
v_LastName VARCHAR2(10) := 'Pafumi';
v_NewMajor VARCHAR2(10) := 'Computer';
v_exists number := 0;
BEGIN
Select count(1) into v_exists from students
WHERE last_name = v_LastName;
If v_exists = 1 then
/* Update the students table. */
UPDATE students
SET major = v_NewMajor
WHERE last_name = v_LastName;
else
INSERT INTO students (ID, last_name, major)
VALUES (10020, v_LastName, v_NewMajor);
END IF;
END;
/

Try to perform the following, is much faster !!!!


DECLARE
/* Declare variables which will be used in SQL statements */
v_LastName VARCHAR2(10) := 'Pafumi';
v_NewMajor VARCHAR2(10) := 'Computer';
BEGIN
/* Update the students table. */
UPDATE students
SET major = v_NewMajor
WHERE last_name = v_LastName;
/* Check to see if the record was found. If not, then we need to insert this record. */
IF SQL%NOTFOUND THEN
INSERT INTO students (ID, last_name, major)
VALUES (10020, v_LastName, v_NewMajor);
END IF;
END;
/

--Another Example if trying to insert values in a table with PK:


INSERT INTO RecognitionLog(MachineName,StartDateTime)
values(p_MachineName,p_StartDateTime);
p_RowsAffected := SQL%ROWCOUNT;
COMMIT;
RETURN 0;
EXCEPTION
When Dup_val_on_index then
UPDATE RecognitionLog
SET EndDateTime = p_EndDateTime,

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TotalRecognized = p_TotalRecognized,
TotalRecognitionFailed = p_TotalRecognitionFailed
WHERE MachineName = p_MachineName
AND StartDateTime = p_StartDateTime;
p_RowsAffected := SQL%ROWCOUNT;
commit;
RETURN 0;
when others then
rollback;
p_RowsAffected := 0;
return 1

If you just want to check the existance of a row, instead of the "classical":
select count(*) from student where status = 10;

You can perform the following:


SELECT
FROM
or
SELECT
FROM

COUNT(*) INTO v_count


student where status = 10 AND ROWNUM = 1;
'1' INTO v_dummy
student where status = 10 AND ROWNUM = 1;

In these examples only single a record is retrieved in the presence/absence check.


2. Avoid the use of NULL or IS NOT NULL.
Instead of:
Select * from clients where phone_number is null;
Use:
Select * from clients where phone_number = 0000000000000000;
3. Select the data that you need ONLY!!!
When selecting from a table, be sure to only select the data that you need.
For example, if you only need 1 column from a 50 column table, be sure to do a
'select fld from table' and only retrieve what you need. If you do a
'select * from table' you will be fetching ALL columns of the table which increases network traffic and causes the system to
perform unnecessary work to retrieve data that is not being used

4. Always use table alias and prefix


The parse phase for statements can be decreased by efficient use of aliasing. This helps the speed of parsing the statements in two
ways:
If an alias is not present, the engine must resolve which tables own the specified columns.
A short alias is parsed more quickly than a long table name or alias. If possible, reduce the alias to a single letter.
5. IN and EXISTS
Correlated Queries (Exists)
A subquery is said to be Correlated when it is joined to the outer query within the Subquery. An example of this is:
Select last_name, first_name
From Customer
Where customer.city = Chicago
and Exists
(Select customer_id
From Sales where
sales.total_sales_amt > 10000
and sales.customer_id = customer.customer_id);

Notice that the last line in the above query is a join of the outer Customer table and inner Sales tables. Given the query above, the
outer query is read and for each Customer in Chicago, the outer row is joined to the Subquery. Therefore, in the case of a
subquery, the inner query is executed once for every row read in the outer query. EXISTS often result in a FULL TABLE SCAN
This is efficient where a relatively small number of rows are processed by the query, but considerable overhead is incurred when a
large number of rows are read.

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Uncorrelated Queries (sub-query executes first) (IN)


A subquery is said to be uncorrelated (aka non-correlated) when the two tables are not joined together in the inner query. In
effect, the inner (sub) query is processed first and then the result set is joined to the outer query. This is very efficient for queries
that return a large number of rows. An example of this is:
Select last_name, first_name
From Customer
Where customer_id IN
(Select customer_id
From Sales where
sales.total_sales_amt > 10000);

The Sales table will be processed first and then all entries with a total_sales_amt > 10000 will be joined to the Customer table.
This is efficient where a large number of rows is being processed.
The optimizer is more likely to translate an IN into a join. It is important to understand the number of rows to be returned by a
query and then decide which approach to use.

EXISTS vs. IN
use a join where possible
use IN over EXISTS (i.e. non-correlated subquery vs. correlated subquery).
The optimizer is more likely to translate IN into a Join than it is with EXISTS
IN executes a subquery once while Exists executes it once per outer row
In is similar to a merge-scan while Exists is similar to a nested-loop join.
There are some cases where EXISTS can outperform IN, but in more cases IN will dramatically out-perform EXISTS. In
general, IN is better than EXISTS.
EXISTS tries to satisfy the subquery as quickly as possible and returns true if the subquery returns 1 or more rows it
should be indexed. Optimize the execution of the subquery.
Not In vs. Not Exists
Subqueries may be written using NOT IN and NOT EXISTS clauses. The NOT EXISTS clause is sometimes more efficient since
the database only needs to verify non-existence. With NOT IN the entire result set must be materialized. Another consideration
when using NOT IN, is if the subquery returns NULLS, the results may not be returned (at all). With NOT EXISTS, a value in the
outer query that has a NULL value in the inner will be returned. Not In performs very well as an anti-join using the cost-based
optimizer and often performs Not Exists when this access path is used. Outer joins can also be a very fast way to accomplish this.
Use IN instead of EXISTS.
A simple trick to increase the speed of an EXISTS sub query is to replace it with IN. The IN method is faster than EXISTS
because it doesnt check unnecessary rows in the comparison.
But this tip will be useful only if the inner query returns a small number of rows. If the inner query retrieves a larger row set, then
it is better to use EXISTS.
Example:
Before: select cgrfnbr from category where EXISTS (select cpcgnbr from cgprrel where cpprnbr = 149 )
After: select cgrfnbr from category where cgrfnbr IN (select cpcgnbr from cgprrel where cpprnbr = 149 )
36% Time Reduction could be achieved.
6. Use Joins in place of EXISTS.
SELECT *
FROM
emp e
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT d.deptno
FROM
dept d
WHERE e.deptno = d.deptno
AND
d.dname = 'RESEARCH');

To improve performance use the following:


SELECT *
FROM
emp e, dept d
WHERE e.deptno = d.deptno
AND
d.dname = RESEARCH;

7. Use EXISTS in place of DISTINCT.

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SELECT DISTINCT d.deptno, d.dname ,


FROM
dept d, emp e
WHERE
d.deptno = e.deptno;

The following SQL statement is a better alternative.


SELECT
d.deptno , d.dname
FROM
dept d
WHERE EXISTS (SELECT 'X'
FROM
emp e
WHERE
d.deptno = e.deptno);

Another Example:
SELECT DISTINCT hetitle, hename
FROM helpfiles h , merchant m
WHERE m.merfnbr = h.hemenbr;

Much Better:
SELECT hetitle, hename
FROM helpfiles h WHERE EXISTS (SELECT m.merfnbr
FROM merchant m);

48% Time Reduction could be achieved.


8. Math Expressions.
The optimizer fully evaluates expressions whenever possible and translates certain syntactic constructs into equivalent constructs.
This is done either because Oracle can more quickly evaluate the resulting expression than the original expression or because the
original expression is merely a syntactic equivalent of the resulting expression.
Any computation of constants is performed only once when the statement is optimized rather than each time the statement is
executed. Consider these conditions that test for monthly salaries greater than 2000:
sal > 24000/12
sal > 2000
sal*12 > 24000
If a SQL statement contains the first condition, the optimizer simplifies it into the second condition.
Note that the optimizer does not simplify expressions across comparison operators. The optimizer does not simplify the third
expression into the second. For this reason, application developers should write conditions that compare columns with constants
whenever possible, rather than conditions with expressions involving columns.
The Optimizer does not use index for the following statement.
SELECT *
FROM
emp
WHERE sal*12 > 24000;

Instead use the following statement.


SELECT *
FROM emp
WHERE sal > 24000/12;

9. Never use NOT in an indexed column. Whenever Oracle encounters a NOT in an index column, it will perform full-table
scan.
SELECT *
FROM emp
WHERE NOT deptno = 0;

Instead use the following.


SELECT *
FROM emp
WHERE deptno > 0;

10. Never use a function / calculation on an indexed column (unless you are SURE that you are using an Index Function Based
new in Oracle 8i). If there is any function is used on an index column, optimizer will not use index. Use some other alternative. If
you dont have another choice, keep functions on the right hand side of the equal sign. The Concatenate || symbol will also
disable indexes. Examples:

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/** Do not use **/


SELECT * FROM emp WHERE SUBSTR (ENAME, 1,3) = MIL;

/** Suggested Alternative **/


Note: Optimizer uses the index only when optimizer_goal is set to FIRST_ROWS.
SELECT * FROM

emp WHERE ENAME LIKE 'MIL%;

/** Do not use **/


SELECT * FROM emp WHERE sal! = 0;

Note: Index can tell you what is there in a table but not what is not in a table.
Note: Optimizer uses the index only when optimizer_goal = FIRST_ROWS.
/** Suggested Alternative **/
SELECT * FROM emp WHERE sal > 0;

/** Do not use **/


SELECT * FROM

emp WHERE ename || job = MILLERCLERK;

Note: || is the concatenate function. Like other functions it disables index.


/** Suggested Alternative **/
Note: Optimizer uses the index only when optimizer_goal=FIRST_ROWS.
SELECT *
FROM
emp
WHERE ename = 'MILLER'
AND
job
= CLERK;

11. Whenever possible try to use bind variables


In Dynamic SQL, this is a MUST!!!
The next example would always require a hard parse when it is submitted:
create or replace procedure dsal(p_empno in number) as
begin
execute immediate 'update emp set sal = sal*2 where empno = '||p_empno;
commit;
end;
/

Is more effective to use bind variables on the EXECUTE IMMEDIATE command as follows:
create or replace procedure dsal(p_empno in number) as
begin
execute immediate 'update emp set sal=sal*2 where empno = :x' using p_empno;
commit;
end;
/

The Performance Killer


Just to give you a tiny idea of how huge of a difference this can make performance wise, you only need to run a very small test:
Here is the Performance Killer ....
SQL> alter system flush shared_pool;
SQL> set serveroutput on;
declare
type rc is ref cursor;
l_rc rc;
l_dummy all_objects.object_name%type;
l_start number default dbms_utility.get_time;
begin
for i in 1 .. 1000
loop
open l_rc for
'select object_name from all_objects
where object_id = ' || i;
fetch l_rc into l_dummy;
close l_rc;
-- dbms_output.put_line(l_dummy);

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end loop;
dbms_output.put_line (round((dbms_utility.get_time-l_start)/100, 2) || ' Seconds...' );
end;
/

101.71 Seconds...
... and here is the Performance Winner:
declare
type rc is ref cursor;
l_rc rc;
l_dummy all_objects.object_name%type;
l_start number default dbms_utility.get_time;
begin
for i in 1 .. 1000
loop
open l_rc for
'select object_name from all_objects where object_id = :x' using i;
fetch l_rc into l_dummy;
close l_rc;
-- dbms_output.put_line(l_dummy);
end loop;
dbms_output.put_line (round((dbms_utility.get_time-l_start)/100, 2) || ' Seconds...' );
end;
/

1.9 Seconds...
That is pretty dramatic. The fact is that not only does this execute much faster (we spent more time PARSING our queries then
actually EXECUTING them!) it will let more users use your system simultaneously.

12. Use the same convention for all your queries.


Oracle will put all your SQL or PL/SQL code in memory and will reuse statements that are the same (saving parse time). So
remember that:
Select * from emp where dept = :dept_no

Is different than
Select * from EMP where dept = :dept_no

Even differing spaces in the statement will cause this lookup to fail. Assuming the statement does not have a cached execution
plan it must be parsed before execution.
13. Tuning the WHERE Clause:
- When using AND Clauses in the WHERE Clause, put the most stringent AND Clause furthest from the
WHERE.
- When using OR Clauses in the WHERE Clause, put the most stringent OR Clause closest to the WHERE.
14. Do not use the keyword HAVING use the keyword WHERE instead
The HAVING clause filters selected rows only after all rows have been fetched. Using a WHERE clause helps reduce overheads
in sorting, summing, etc. HAVING clauses should only be used when columns with summary operations applied to them are
restricted by the clause.
Given Query
SELECT d.dname, AVG (e.sal)
FROM emp e, dept d
WHERE e.deptno = d.deptno
GROUP BY d.dname
HAVING dname != 'RESEAECH'
AND dname != 'SALES';

Alternative
SELECT d.dname, AVG (e.sal)
FROM emp e, dept d
WHERE e.deptno = d.deptno
AND dname != 'RESEAECH'
AND dname != 'SALES'
GROUP BY d.dname;

26% Time Reduction could be achieved

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15. Avoid Multiple Sub queries where possible


Instead of this:
Update emp set emp_cat = (select max (category) from emp_categories),
sal_range = (select max(sal_range) from emp_categories);

Use:
Update emp set (emp_cat, sal_range) =

(Select max (category), max (sal_range) from emp_categories)

16. Use IN in place of OR


Least Efficient:
Select .
From location
Where loc_id = 10 or loc_id=20 or loc_id = 30

Most Efficient
Select .
From location
Where loc_id in (10,20,30)

17. Do not Commit inside a Loop


Do not use a commit or DDL statements inside a loop or cursor, because that will make the undo segments needed by the cursor
unavailable.
Many applications commit more frequently than necessary, and their performance suffers as a result. In isolation a commit is not a
very expensive operation, but lots of unnecessary commits can nevertheless cause severe performance problems. While a few
extra commits may not be noticed, the cumulative effect of thousands of extra commits is very noticeable. Look at this test. Insert
1,000 rows into a test table -- first as a single transaction, and then committing after every row. Your mileage may vary, but these
are my results, on an otherwise idle system show a performance blowout of more than 100% when committing after every row.
create table t (n number);
--BAD METHOD
declare
start_time number;
begin
start_time := dbms_utility.get_time;
for i in 0..999 loop
insert into t values (i);
commit;
end loop;
dbms_output.put_line(dbms_utility.get_time - start_time || ' centiseconds');
end;
/
102 centiseconds
truncate table t;
--GOOD METHOD
declare
start_time number;
begin
start_time := dbms_utility.get_time;
for i in 0..999 loop
insert into t values (i);
end loop;
commit;
dbms_output.put_line(dbms_utility.get_time - start_time || ' centiseconds');
end;
/
44 centiseconds

18. Use UNION ALL instead of UNION


The problem is that in a UNION, Oracle finds all the qualifying rows and then "deduplicates" them. To see what I mean, you can simply
compare the following queries:
select * from dual
union

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select * from dual;


D
--X
select * from dual
union ALL
select * from dual;
D
--X X
Note how the first query returns only one record and the second returns two. A UNION forces a big sort and deduplicationa removal of
duplicate values. Most of the time, this is wholly unnecessary. To see how this might affect you, I'll use the data dictionary tables to run a
WHERE EXISTS query using UNION and UNION ALL and compare the results with TKPROF. The results are dramatic.
First, I'll do the UNION query:
SQL> select *
2 from dual
3 where exists
4 (select null from all_objects
5
union
6
select null from dba_objects
7
union
8
select null from all_users);
call
cnt
-----Parse
1
Execute
1
Fetch
2
----- ---total
4

cpu
---0.01
2.78
0.00
---2.79

ela
query
--- -----0.00
0
2.75 192234
0.00
3
---- -----2.76 192237

As you can see, that was a lot of workmore than 192,000 I/Os just to see if I should fetch that row from DUAL. Now I add a
UNION ALL to the query:
SQL> select *
2
from dual
3 where exists
4 (select null from all_objects
5
union all
6
select null from dba_objects
7
union all
8
select null from all_users);
call
-----Parse
Execute
Fetch
-----total

cnt
---1
1
2
---4

cpu
---0.00
0.01
0.00
---0.01

ela
---0.00
0.00
0.00
---0.00

query
----0
9
3
----12

Quite a change! What happened here was that the WHERE EXISTS stopped running the subquery when it got the first row back,
and because the database did not have to bother with that deduplicate step, getting the first row back was very fast indeed.
The bottom line: If you can use UNION ALL, by all means use it over UNION to avoid a costly deduplication stepa step that is
probably not even necessary most of the time.
19. Check that your application is using the existing indexes
This is a CRITICAL point. So make use of Explain Plan!!!
20. Recommendation to work with dates.
If you need to get all the data for today's date, instead of:
SELECT ImportedDate, State
FROM IssueData

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http://www.pafumi.net/Tips_for_Effective_Queries.html

WHERE TRUNC(ImportedDate ) = TRUNC(SYSDATE);

Use the following:


SELECT ImportedDate, State
FROM IssueData
WHERE ImportedDate between trunc(SYSDATE) and TRUNC(SYSDATE) +

.99999;

21. Anti Joins


An anti-join is used to return rows from a table that that are present in another table. It might be used for example between DEPT
and EMP to return only those rows in DEPT that didn't join to anything in EMP;
SELECT *
FROM dept
WHERE deptno NOT IN (SELECT deptno FROM EMP);
SELECT dept.*
FROM dept, emp
WHERE dept.deptno = emp.deptno (+)
AND emp.ROWID IS NULL;
SELECT *
FROM dept
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT NULL FROM emp WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno);

22. Full Outer Joins


Normally, an outer join of table A to table B would return every record in table A, and if it had a mate in table B, that would be
returned as well. Every row in table A would be output, but some rows of table B might not appear in the result set. A full outer
join would return ebery row in table A, as well as every row in table B. The syntax for a full outer join is new in Oracle 9i, but it is
a syntactic convenience, it is possible to produce full outer joins sets using conventional SQL.
update emp set deptno = 9 where deptno = 10;
commit;

Conventional SQL
SELECT empno, ename, dept.deptno, dname
FROM emp, dept
WHERE emp.deptno(+) = dept.deptno
UNION ALL
SELECT empno, ename, emp.deptno, NULL
FROM emp, dept
WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno(+)
AND dept.deptno IS NULL
ORDER BY 1,2,3,4;
EMPNO
-----7369
7499
7521
7566
7654
7698
7782
7788
7839
7844
7876
7900
7902
7934

ENAME
DEPTNO DNAME
------- ------- ---------SMITH
20 RESEARCH
ALLEN
30 SALES
WARD
30 SALES
JONES
20 RESEARCH
MARTIN
30 SALES
BLAKE
30 SALES
CLARK
9
SCOTT
20 RESEARCH
KING
9
TURNER
30 SALES
ADAMS
20 RESEARCH
JAMES
30 SALES
FORD
20 RESEARCH
MILLER
9
10 ACCOUNTING

New Syntax
SELECT empno, ename,
NVL(dept.deptno,emp.deptno) deptno, dname
FROM emp FULL OUTER JOIN dept ON
(emp.deptno = dept.deptno)
ORDER BY 1,2,3,4;

EMPNO
-----7369
7499
7521
7566
7654
7698
7782
7788
7839
7844
7876
7900
7902
7934

ENAME
DEPTNO DNAME
------- ------- ---------SMITH
20 RESEARCH
ALLEN
30 SALES
WARD
30 SALES
JONES
20 RESEARCH
MARTIN
30 SALES
BLAKE
30 SALES
CLARK
9
SCOTT
20 RESEARCH
KING
9
TURNER
30 SALES
ADAMS
20 RESEARCH
JAMES
30 SALES
FORD
20 RESEARCH
MILLER
9
10 ACCOUNTING
40 OPERATIONS

4/9/2012 1:50 PM

Tuning Code and Explain Plan

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http://www.pafumi.net/Tips_for_Effective_Queries.html

40 OPERATIONS

23. Use BETWEEN instead of IN.


The BETWEEN keyword is very useful for filtering out values in a specific range. It is much faster than typing each value in the
range into an IN.
Example:
Before: SELECT crpcgnbr FROM cgryrel WHERE crpcgnbr IN (508858, 508859, 508860, 508861,508862, 508863,
508864)
After: SELECT crpcgnbr FROM cgryrel WHERE crpcgnbr BETWEEN 508858 and 508864

59% Time Reduction could be achieved.

4/9/2012 1:50 PM

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