Server Administration :: Any Relation Of Tablespace Disk Space And Actual Data Present In Tables
Aug 16, 2012
We are using Oracle 10g and have 10 tablespaces defined for our Database which have 108 tables. Size of 108 tables is around 251 MB as seen during importing the dump. While creating these 10 tablespaces I used below parameters for allocation of space
SIZE 1M REUSE AUTOEXTEND ON NEXT 1M MAXSIZE 1M;
which set the initial space for 10 tablespaces to around 1032Kb each. Now my Question is after importing the dump , how the disk space for 10 tablespaces increases to 398 MB in total ?
Is there any relation of Tablespace disk space and Actual Data present in the tables ?
essentially create data fragmentation within the datafile resulting in the db having lots more space to write into but not actually freeing space, even if you shrink the file it doesnt free space or do a reorg?
We have as an example a DB with 2 billion rows of data in 1 table, no partioning just one large table.
We have worked out that we can probably delete 1 billion rows or even better only keep a rolling 3 month window of data.
What would be the suggestion on deleting this data and reclaiming the disk space to actually see additional disk space made available at the os level.
deleting the data and reclaiming the space.
Through reading it looks like it might be something like, delete, creating new table space partitions from this data. This in theory would create new a tablespace in newly created data files which would result in the data being reorganised and taking up less physical space and when completed you point to the newly created partitions and drop the old tables.
I look after a team of DBAs and I have a request to free up space on our very expensive storage system. However the answers on how to do this differ and i'd like to ask for external input...So not being a techincal person I see the world as quite black and white. Meaning that you delete data and you free space but after doing much reading I understand this is not the case, as you essentially create data fragmentation within the datafile resulting in the db having lots more space to write into but not actually freeing space, even if you shrink the file it doesnt free space or do a reorg?
We have as an example a DB with 2 billion rows of data in 1 table, no partioning just one large table. We have worked out that we can probably delete 1 billion rows or even better only keep a rolling 3 month window of data. What would be the suggestion on deleting this data and reclaiming the disk space to actually see additional disk space made available at the os level.
How about deleting the data and reclaiming the space. Through reading it looks like it might be something like, delete, creating new table space partitions from this data. This in theory would create new a tablespace in newly created data files which would result in the data being reorganised and taking up less physical space and when completed you point to the newly created partitions and drop the old tables.
how they have done this as it must be a common problem that people have created some different solutions. What commands, procedures have been used?
What should be our approach when we see the disk response time is bad for a particular tablespace in database.I heard a good disk response time should be on an average 10ms.
In My database rollback segment space is not releasing space even though, there is no transaction is using RBS. RBS tablespace size is around 70GB. Unfortunately still our environment is running in 9i due to application code
SQL> show parameter undo
NAME TYPE VALUE ------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------ undo_management string MANUAL undo_retention integer 1800 undo_suppress_errors boolean FALSE undo_tablespace
Application team requested hosting team to add some space to tablespace as it was exceeding 80% used.Now the hosting team have added the space as per recommendation and the application team wants us to verify if the space was added. How to check the space was added in GB to list of tablesapces ?
Mistakenly I added lot of datafiles with autextend on option.. I realized later and then tried to resize the datafiles to a minumum space but got the below error
ORA-03214: File Size specified is smaller than minimum required.
How to resolve this problem to reclain the space back?
How to check for the increment of a space of the tablespace based on the particular table. (i.e.) Say a scenario, if am trying to load the data for a particular table, for first I loaded some 10000 records and then again loading 50000 records ,so based on the icrement of the reocrds the tablespace size also increases gradually . so for this scenario how to monitor the increment of the space.
I Configured an ASM instance and a disk group with two disk for normal redundancy.
> Here .. each disk is 2gb
The disk group has two disks...
SQL> select group_number, name, type, total_mb, free_mb 2 from v$asm_diskgroup;
GROUP_NUMBER NAME TYPE TOTAL_MB FREE_MB ------------ ------------------------------ ------ ---------- ---------- 1 DATA NORMAL 4000 3898
as the group has two way mirroring (Normal redundancy) How much data (2 GB or 4 GB) can i keep in the disk group? My conception is I can keep 2 GB data in the disk group... (as the disk group keeps every extent in another disk as mirror)
In my environment Oracle database 11gR1 is running & dg is configured i.e >> 1 primary & 1 standby. In near future space issues will arise for standby. I want to create 1 more standby with max disk space, but how? Active dataguard is configured where report are generated from where & what changes should be made in Primary pfile & new standby pfile.
i have a tablespace with a datafile of 20g. now by mistake i delete the datafile and then try to delete the tablespace from EM but i got an error which says that data file is not present to delete
Now initially after deleting the file physically so then i check space by applying df -ah at os lvl so it didn't reclaim the space now i try to delete the tablespace from em so it gives me the above error. This might be due to tablespace existence. so how can i reclaim the space.
We are using oracle 10g in linux machine which runs as server. And there are around 25 clients which run at the same time parallel to each other. I am new to oracle 10g and also for client-server version of database. I faced some problems when i first put the server into actual use.
-> Users have been created and tablespace is USERS and temporary space is TEMP. RESOURCE privilege is given. -> Some times login fails for some clients. -> Some times all the client login will be successful. -> Query execution will be sometimes fast, but some times it takes too much time. -> Some times the connection will be lost and again I have bring UP the server.
to maintain the oracle server.
-> Should I have to make any configuration settings in the server. -> Should I change any values in the server. -> Is there any way to properly maintain the server.
oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.1.0.6.0 - 64bit Production PL/SQL Release 11.1.0.6.0 - Production "CORE 11.1.0.6.0 Production"
I have a main table : CLAIMS_MAIN, in which claim_id is a primary key I have another table : CLAIMS_TRANS , in which claim_id is not a unique key, I mean, there can be more than one records with the same claim_id.. but the column transaction_id is unique, but transaction_id column doesnt exist in the main claims table.
It is required to join both these tables on claim_id...
I was wondering if there is any way to know in which Tablespace and Datafile my Table is located. I have exported a table and about to delete it as i am partitioning it.
i have a tablespace which contains 121 datafile(max limit reached) as a dba what we have to do?
creating a new tablespace with a datafile and assign the users to the current tablespace which i created now.iif the above process is correct,after some time the tablespace which was filled up got freed up.now can i give the access to the users previous (i.e. freed up tablespace) and current tablespaces
Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition Release 11.1.0.7.0 - 64bit Production PL/SQL Release 11.1.0.7.0 - Production CORE 11.1.0.7.0 Production TNS for Linux: Version 11.1.0.7.0 - Production NLSRTL Version 11.1.0.7.0 - Production
My os version is
Linux damdat01 2.6.18-128.7.1.el5 #1 SMP Wed Aug 19 04:00:49 EDT 2009 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
My database is OLP system.
My question is what are the advantages and disadvantages having one single tablespace versus multiple tablespace?
Easy to maintain when you have single tablespace. but hard to track the IO issues if you have one single tablespace.
We want to find out difference of data for some tables between current day & previous day. We can use query with minus operation but it will take lot of time since table size is in range from 200 to 500 GB. We have to do this exercise every day.
Is it possible to create trigger on the various tables and views exists (i.e. dynamic performance views) in data dictionary, when ever any DML operations performs by Oracle it self?
I checked and found we have disk that is assigned with 0 disk GROUP_NUMBER. What does that mean ? how to check if disk T1_ASM05 is been part of any disk group or not.?
SQL> select GROUP_NUMBER,NAME from v$asm_diskgroup;
GROUP_NUMBER NAME ------------ ------------------------------ 1 DATA 2 FRA SQL> SQL> select GROUP_NUMBER,name,PATH from v$asm_disk;
My requirement is to to truncate the table and load it with the data present in file. In the control file, I used the "TRUNCATE" command as well.In case, if the file has some invalid data and sqlldr fails, my existing data will be lost. Is there any option in which the sqlldr does not TRUNCATE the table in case of a failure.
What is best practice to change small disk D:? I am beginner with Oracle. 10g on W2008. 5 datafiles (all indexes,second data file, 2 undotabs)*.dbf (34;30;1;34;12 GB) is on D:. Part of tablespaces (1 data, 1 undo)has files on c:.
I. 1.Shutdown 2008 server. 2.Copy D: image with GHOST to USB, network. 3.Connect new D, create RAID. 4.Restore image to D. 5.Start 2008 server.
II. 1.Stop application. 2.CONNECT AS SYSDBA 3.SHUTDOWN NORMAL or (IMMEDIATE)? 4.Copy files *.dbf at OS level from d: to ... USB disk, network. 5.Shutdown 2008 server. 6.Change disks, create RAID in BIOS. 7.Start W2008. Is Oracle at this moment in SHUTDOWN mode? 8.Copy back *.dbf to new D: (with directory structure). 9.STARTUP Oracle.