A key is a column or expression on which you can build an index. Follow these guidelines for choosing keys to index:
* Consider indexing keys that are used frequently in WHERE clauses.
* Consider indexing keys that are used frequently to join tables in SQL statements. For more information on optimizing joins, see the section "Using Hash Clusters for Performance".
* Choose index keys that have high selectivity. The selectivity of an index is the percentage of rows in a table having the same value for the indexed key. An index's selectivity is optimal if few rows have the same value.
Note:Oracle automatically creates indexes, or uses existing indexes, on the keys and expressions of unique and primary keys that you define with integrity constraints.
Indexing low selectivity columns can be helpful if the data distribution is skewed so that one or two values occur much less often than other values.
*Do not use standard B-tree indexes on keys or expressions with few distinct values. Such keys or expressions usually have poor selectivity and therefore do not optimize performance unless the frequently selected key values appear less frequently than the other key values. You can use bitmap indexes effectively in such cases, unless the index is modified frequently, as in a high concurrency OLTP application.
*Do not index columns that are modified frequently. UPDATE statements that modify indexed columns and INSERT and DELETE statements that modify indexed tables take longer than if there were no index. Such SQL statements must modify data in indexes as well as data in tables. They also generate additional undo and redo.
*Do not index keys that appear only in WHERE clauses with functions or operators. A WHERE clause that uses a function, other than MIN or MAX, or an operator with an indexed key does not make available the access path that uses the index except with function-based indexes.
*Consider indexing foreign keys of referential integrity constraints in cases in which a large number of concurrent INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statements access the parent and child tables. Such an index allows UPDATEs and DELETEs on the parent table without share locking the child table.
*When choosing to index a key, consider whether the performance gain for queries is worth the performance loss for INSERTs, UPDATEs, and DELETEs and the use of the space required to store the index. You might want to experiment by comparing the processing times of the SQL statements with and without indexes. You can measure processing time with the SQL trace facility.
Oracle 10 DBA Interview questions and answers
1. Is the following SQL statement syntactically correct? If not, please rewrite it correctly.
SELECT col1 FROM tableA WHERE NOT IN (SELECT col1 FROM tableB);
Ans. SQL is incorrect.
Correct SQL : SELECT col1 FROM tableA WHERE col1 NOT IN (SELECT col1 FROM tableB);
2. What is a more efficient way to write this query, to archive the same set?
Ans: SELECT col1 from tableA minus SELECT col1 from tableB
3.How would you determine that the new query is more efficient than the original query?
Ans: Run explain plan on both query and see the result .
4.How can we find the location of the database trace files from within the data dictionary?
Ans: Generally trace file on the database server machine is located in one of two locations:
1. If you are using a dedicated server connection, the trace file will be generated in the directory specified by
the USER_DUMP_DEST parameter.
2.If you are using a shared server connection, the trace file will be generated in the directory specified by the
BACKGROUND_DUMP_DEST parameter.
you can run sqlplus>SHOW PARAMETER DUMP_DEST
or
select name, value
from v$parameter
where name like '%dump_dest%'
5. What is the correct syntax for a UNIX endless WHILE loop?
while :
do
commands
done
6. Write the SQL statement that will return the name and size of the largest datafile in the database.
SQL> select name,bytes from v$datafile where bytes=(select max(bytes) from v$datafile);
7. What are the proper steps to changing the Oracle database block size?
cold backup all data files and backup controlfile to trace, recreate your database
with the new block size using the backup control file, and restore. It may be easier
with rman. You can not change datbase block size on fly.
8. Using awk, write a script to print the 3rd field of every line.
Ans:
awk '{print }'
awk '{print $3}
awk '{print $3}
9.Under what conditions, is a nested loop better than a merge join?
Ans:
Optimizer uses nested loop when we are joining tables containing small number of rows with an efficient driving
condition.
It is important to have an index on column of inner join table as this table is probed every time for a new value
from outer table.
Optimizer may not use nested loop in case:
1. No of rows of both the table is quite high
2. Inner query always results in same set of records
3. The access path of inner table is independent of data coming from outer table.
merge join is used to join two independent data sources. They perform better than nested loop when the volume of
data is big in tables
but not as good as hash joins in general.
10.Which database views would you use to ascertain the number of commits a user's session has performed?
Joining V$SESSTAT ,V$STATNAME
select * from V$SESSTAT a ,V$STATNAME b where b.CLASS=a.STATISTIC# and b.NAME='user commits' and a.sid=
11.What does the #!bin/ksh at the beginning of a shell script do? Why should it be there?
Ans: On the first line of an interpreter script, the "#!", is the name of a program which should be used to
interpret the contents of the file.
For instance, if the first line contains "#! /bin/ksh", then the contents of the file are executed as a korn shell
script.
12.What command is used to find the status of Oracle 10g Clusterware (CRS) and the various components it manages
(ONS, VIP, listener, instances, etc.)?
Ans:
$ocrcheck
13.Describe a scenario in which a vendor clusterware is required, in addition to the Oracle 10g Clusterware.
If you choose external redundancy for the OCR and voting disk, then to enable redundancy, the disk subsystem must be configurable for RAID mirroring/vendor clusterware. Otherwise, your system may be vulnerable because the OCR and voting disk are single points of failure.
14.How would you find the interconnect IP address from any node within an Oracle 10g RAC configuration?
using oifcfg command.
se the oifcfg -help command to display online help for OIFCFG. The elements of OIFCFG commands, some of which are
optional depending on the command, are:
*nodename—Name of the Oracle Clusterware node as listed in the output from the olsnodes command
*if_name—Name by which the interface is configured in the system
*subnet—Subnet address of the interface
*if_type—Type of interface: public or cluster_interconnect
You can use OIFCFG to list the interface names and the subnets of all of the interfaces available on the local node
by executing the iflist keyword as shown in this example:
oifcfg iflist
hme0 139.185.141.0
qfe0 204.152.65.16
You can also retrieve specific OIFCFG information with a getif command using the following syntax:
oifcfg getif [ [-global | -node nodename] [-if if_name[/subnet]] [-type if_type] ]
To store a new interface use the setif keyword. For example, to store the interface hme0, with the subnet
139.185.141.0, as a global interface (to be used as an interconnect for all of the RAC instances in your cluster),
you would use the command:
oifcfg setif -global hme0/139.185.141.0:cluster_interconnect
For a cluster interconnect that exists between only two nodes, for example rac1 and rac2, you could create the cms0
interface with the following commands, assuming 139.185.142.0 is the subnet addresses for the interconnect on rac1
and rac2 respectively:
oifcfg setif -global cms0/139.185.142.0:cluster_interconnect
Use the OIFCFG delif command to delete the stored configuration for global or node-specific interfaces. A specific
node-specific or global interface can be deleted by supplying the interface name, with an optional subnet, on the
command line. Without the -node or -global options, the delif keyword deletes either the given interface or all of
the global and node-specific interfaces on all of the nodes in the cluster. For example, the following command
deletes the global interface named qfe0 for the subnet 204.152.65.0:
oifcfg delif -global qfe0/204.152.65.0
On the other hand, the next command deletes all of the global interfaces stored with OIFCFG:
oifcfg delif -global
15.What is the Purpose of the voting disk in Oracle 10g Clusterware?
Voting disk record node membership information. Oracle Clusterware uses the voting disk to determine which instances are members of a cluster. The voting disk must reside on a shared disk. For high availability, Oracle recommends that you have a minimum of three voting disks. If you configure a single voting disk, then you should use external mirroring to provide redundancy. You can have up to 32 voting disks in your cluster.
16.What is the purpose of the OCR in Oracle 10g Clusterware?
Ans: Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) is a component in 10g RAC used to store the cluster configuration information. It is a shared disk component, typically located in a shared raw volume that must be accessible to all nodes in the cluster.
The daemon OCSSd manages the configuration info in OCR and maintains the changes to cluster in the registry.
17. In Oracle Streams archived log downstream capture, which database view can be used to determine which archived
logs are no longer needed by the capture process?
Ans: V$ARCHIVE_DEST_STATUS
SELECT col1 FROM tableA WHERE NOT IN (SELECT col1 FROM tableB);
Ans. SQL is incorrect.
Correct SQL : SELECT col1 FROM tableA WHERE col1 NOT IN (SELECT col1 FROM tableB);
2. What is a more efficient way to write this query, to archive the same set?
Ans: SELECT col1 from tableA minus SELECT col1 from tableB
3.How would you determine that the new query is more efficient than the original query?
Ans: Run explain plan on both query and see the result .
4.How can we find the location of the database trace files from within the data dictionary?
Ans: Generally trace file on the database server machine is located in one of two locations:
1. If you are using a dedicated server connection, the trace file will be generated in the directory specified by
the USER_DUMP_DEST parameter.
2.If you are using a shared server connection, the trace file will be generated in the directory specified by the
BACKGROUND_DUMP_DEST parameter.
you can run sqlplus>SHOW PARAMETER DUMP_DEST
or
select name, value
from v$parameter
where name like '%dump_dest%'
5. What is the correct syntax for a UNIX endless WHILE loop?
while :
do
commands
done
6. Write the SQL statement that will return the name and size of the largest datafile in the database.
SQL> select name,bytes from v$datafile where bytes=(select max(bytes) from v$datafile);
7. What are the proper steps to changing the Oracle database block size?
cold backup all data files and backup controlfile to trace, recreate your database
with the new block size using the backup control file, and restore. It may be easier
with rman. You can not change datbase block size on fly.
8. Using awk, write a script to print the 3rd field of every line.
Ans:
awk
awk '{print $3}
awk '{print $3}
9.Under what conditions, is a nested loop better than a merge join?
Ans:
Optimizer uses nested loop when we are joining tables containing small number of rows with an efficient driving
condition.
It is important to have an index on column of inner join table as this table is probed every time for a new value
from outer table.
Optimizer may not use nested loop in case:
1. No of rows of both the table is quite high
2. Inner query always results in same set of records
3. The access path of inner table is independent of data coming from outer table.
merge join is used to join two independent data sources. They perform better than nested loop when the volume of
data is big in tables
but not as good as hash joins in general.
10.Which database views would you use to ascertain the number of commits a user's session has performed?
Joining V$SESSTAT ,V$STATNAME
select * from V$SESSTAT a ,V$STATNAME b where b.CLASS=a.STATISTIC# and b.NAME='user commits' and a.sid=
11.What does the #!bin/ksh at the beginning of a shell script do? Why should it be there?
Ans: On the first line of an interpreter script, the "#!", is the name of a program which should be used to
interpret the contents of the file.
For instance, if the first line contains "#! /bin/ksh", then the contents of the file are executed as a korn shell
script.
12.What command is used to find the status of Oracle 10g Clusterware (CRS) and the various components it manages
(ONS, VIP, listener, instances, etc.)?
Ans:
$ocrcheck
13.Describe a scenario in which a vendor clusterware is required, in addition to the Oracle 10g Clusterware.
If you choose external redundancy for the OCR and voting disk, then to enable redundancy, the disk subsystem must be configurable for RAID mirroring/vendor clusterware. Otherwise, your system may be vulnerable because the OCR and voting disk are single points of failure.
14.How would you find the interconnect IP address from any node within an Oracle 10g RAC configuration?
using oifcfg command.
se the oifcfg -help command to display online help for OIFCFG. The elements of OIFCFG commands, some of which are
optional depending on the command, are:
*nodename—Name of the Oracle Clusterware node as listed in the output from the olsnodes command
*if_name—Name by which the interface is configured in the system
*subnet—Subnet address of the interface
*if_type—Type of interface: public or cluster_interconnect
You can use OIFCFG to list the interface names and the subnets of all of the interfaces available on the local node
by executing the iflist keyword as shown in this example:
oifcfg iflist
hme0 139.185.141.0
qfe0 204.152.65.16
You can also retrieve specific OIFCFG information with a getif command using the following syntax:
oifcfg getif [ [-global | -node nodename] [-if if_name[/subnet]] [-type if_type] ]
To store a new interface use the setif keyword. For example, to store the interface hme0, with the subnet
139.185.141.0, as a global interface (to be used as an interconnect for all of the RAC instances in your cluster),
you would use the command:
oifcfg setif -global hme0/139.185.141.0:cluster_interconnect
For a cluster interconnect that exists between only two nodes, for example rac1 and rac2, you could create the cms0
interface with the following commands, assuming 139.185.142.0 is the subnet addresses for the interconnect on rac1
and rac2 respectively:
oifcfg setif -global cms0/139.185.142.0:cluster_interconnect
Use the OIFCFG delif command to delete the stored configuration for global or node-specific interfaces. A specific
node-specific or global interface can be deleted by supplying the interface name, with an optional subnet, on the
command line. Without the -node or -global options, the delif keyword deletes either the given interface or all of
the global and node-specific interfaces on all of the nodes in the cluster. For example, the following command
deletes the global interface named qfe0 for the subnet 204.152.65.0:
oifcfg delif -global qfe0/204.152.65.0
On the other hand, the next command deletes all of the global interfaces stored with OIFCFG:
oifcfg delif -global
15.What is the Purpose of the voting disk in Oracle 10g Clusterware?
Voting disk record node membership information. Oracle Clusterware uses the voting disk to determine which instances are members of a cluster. The voting disk must reside on a shared disk. For high availability, Oracle recommends that you have a minimum of three voting disks. If you configure a single voting disk, then you should use external mirroring to provide redundancy. You can have up to 32 voting disks in your cluster.
16.What is the purpose of the OCR in Oracle 10g Clusterware?
Ans: Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) is a component in 10g RAC used to store the cluster configuration information. It is a shared disk component, typically located in a shared raw volume that must be accessible to all nodes in the cluster.
The daemon OCSSd manages the configuration info in OCR and maintains the changes to cluster in the registry.
17. In Oracle Streams archived log downstream capture, which database view can be used to determine which archived
logs are no longer needed by the capture process?
Ans: V$ARCHIVE_DEST_STATUS
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