Monday, October 4, 2010

Concurrency on the Exadata

Now that I have some benchmarks, I'm starting to delve into some testing to find out how it scales up.. I started with a large table 200+ million rows.

My base query did a FTS and returned one row of data.


1 execution runs in 3 seconds (DOP 32).

Once I scale up to 100 simultaneus executions, it runs longer, but I can't figure out the average execution time (parallel query skews the numbers).

In looking at the resource usage for both the database nodes and the storage nodes, I found the database nodes are almost Idle, and the storage nodes (7 of them) are producing about 10g of data/second. The cpu usage is about 7% user and 30% wait. When looking at the AWR information, all the time is still going to I/O waits. 399 seconds out of the 444 seconds are I/O wait times.. It appears that the Exadata does fantastic for a single query.. Once you execute that single query 100 times simultaneously, the times start to slow down.

I'm going to do more experients to see how I can get it to scale up nicer :)

Friday, October 1, 2010

Exadata storage Software

How else should I spend a Friday night, other than drinking hard cider, and running performance numbers on the Exadata storage software.

This is my dive into the storage software and WOW is it impressive.. I am selecting from a 200+ million row table (no indexes).. Without storage software it takes 3 minutes to scan the whole table.. really impressive. Then with the storage indexing it takes 30 seconds to come back with a distinct column value. 6 times faster..

Then I was really impressed when I used a Unique key lookup.. No index, it took 8 seconds to find the data, compared to 189 seconds. 23x faster with the Storage software.

Next I made the table parallel 64.. Now it comes back in 3 seconds (no storage software), and 1 second with storage software.. Unbelievable numbers.

One of the first things I noticed is that the Exadata makes you rethink your redo log sizes. When loading data a lot of my waits are waiting on the redo to flush out because it is so small.

All in all the storage software looks pretty impressive.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Rear view of an Exadata


Why HCC is exadata only

First the Physics.

The SAS drives spinning at 15k rpm's can produce 200m of data/second.Hypbrid Columnar compression get's on average 50x compression rate.200m x 50x = 10g of data PER DISK is read.

There are 100+ disks that can be read. This causes 2 issues.

a) The data is actually compressed/uncompressed at the storage tier. All the CPU's in the storage servers are utilized to make this happen.. Only the exadata can take advantage of the storage CPU's through the storage software

b) The data that is uncompressed is huge.. The disk can return 20.8g of data per second, but if you do get 50x compression, you are now trying to work with 1tb of disk/second..

Even if you are running infiniband, the system can't handle this volume of data.. The predicate elimination, and column eliminate will limit the data returned from the storage tier, making the processes of the data possible.
Without the storage software along with the CPU's at the storage level uncompressing data AND eliminating data, it is impossible to process the volume of data produced from HCC.

Monday, July 5, 2010

DBreplay AKA RAT (real application testing)

I have been spending a lot of time lately working with DBReplay.. This is an AWESOME arrow to have in your quiver to test upgrading to 11g.

I have made some intersting observations I want to share..

  • When you start your replay, remember that your cache is "cold", if you started your capture with a warm cache, it will take a bit for the cache to catch up.
  • If you started your capture during processing, you will see a lot of divergence.. This is normal
  • A single query taking longer can make a huge impact on the replay (I will explain in detail below).
  • Replaying twice in a row will not have the same results, but the results should be withing 5% of each other.

So while does a single query make sunch a huge impact ??? It all has to do with how the replay synch all the workload. You may have 100 or more different sessions all acting independently, but Oracle keeps it all in synch by SCN number.. This is good right ? Well, yes, but it can affect the replay. What happens if a query that usually takes .04 seconds, and is followed by an update, takes 5 minutes ? Well the replay gets held up by 5 minutes, because the SCN doesn't move until the query is finished.. Multiply that by12 executions, and you've lost an hour out of your replay.. WOW.

The best suggestion I have is to look at the DB time, the CPU time, and the reads. You may find that "overall" the replay used less DB time, even though it took longer to replay.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Direct path Reads

I am in process of tracking down as much as I can about the 11g new feature called "adaptive direct path reads". Direct path reads are block reads that bypass the SGA, and go directly into the PGA. I'm still trying to figure out if they are good.

From what I can figure out, they kick in for Full Table Scans (FTS), and only in certain cases.. You can turn them off with event 10949. They are affected by the size of the buffer cache, how big the table is, and how many blocks for the table are already in memory. Oracle has a "secret sauce" to determine when to kick in. I haven't had any luck finding the "secret sauce", just information from others on what the ingredients are, not the amounts of each.

There are advantages to them


  • They are much faster than conventional db file sequential read
  • They won't age blocks out of memory that you might want to keep

Disadvantages

  • If the same query is executed again, the blocks must be read from disk again.
  • Running a FTS on a table in multiple sessions won't share blocks, and can cause a large amount of I/O.

I also found that an object is much more likely to be using direct path reads immediately after Startup, since there are no blocks currently cached (thanks Jonathon Lewis for this tidbit!)

Here is as much additional information as I can find on this topic

I also stated asking some Exadata experts, on how Direct path reads relate to exadata. It seems that with Exadata, with Caching at both the DB layer, and the storage layer, along with the infiniband connection to storage, Direct path reads are not an issue. Exadata will cache at enough layers, that a Direct path read from the flashcache on the storage is fast enough to make it worthwhile.. It's almost as is Exadata was made to best utilize direct path reads, and other storage configurations will suffer from bottlenecking... Coincidence ?? you decide.

I will let all know how I make out with them.