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My First Experience Running SLOB – Status Update 1

NOTE: This is a copy of my yesterday’s G+ post. You can find the original over here. As I am going to continue writing about our ongoing IO testing efforts under this blog I decided to provide the first post here to give readers a bit more context.

Status – Work in progress. We are still working on testing and analysing the results. However there are some things that is worth to share with others to help out with your efforts. This is why I chosen to use G+ to publish some intermediate status update and possibly raise some discussion.
SLOB is The Simple Little Oracle Benchmark from +Kevin Closson.
http://kevinclosson.wordpress.com/2012/02/06/introducing-slob-the-silly-little-oracle-benchmark/

Our attention to SLOB sparked during +Alex Gorbachev and +Kevin ClossonTwitter discussion that more or less could be summarized by the following tweet:
https://twitter.com/#!/kevinclosson/statuses/200727040192823296

@alexgorbachev says to @kevinclosson: lots of the system IO bound below the CPU level so you should see similar number with Orion or SLOB. why don’t I test?

Amen! Read the rest of this entry . . .

Log Buffer #271, A Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

They say, “April showers bring May flowers.”  They basically say that nature brings different things in different colors aimed at improving the things. That is so true for the blogging world too. This Log Buffer Edition also brings out different blog posts to improve things, so enjoy the Log Buffer #271.

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Hardware Components Failures — Survey Results

When preparing for the the IOUG Collaborate 12 deep dive on deploying Oracle Databases for high Availability, I wanted to provide some feedback on what hardware components are failing most frequently and which ones are less frequently. I believe I have reasonably good idea about that but I thought that providing some more objective data would be better. I couldn’t find and results of a more scientific research so I decided to organize a poll. This blog post shows the results and I promised to share it with several groups.

The results are also in the presentation material but it might be hidden deep into 100+ slides so here is the dedicated blog with some comments on the results.
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Storage Replication for Oracle Database and Licensing

While doing my high availability deep dive at Collaborate 12 few weeks ago, I stated that storage replication qualifies for the cold failover licensing rules (see slide #128).

During collaborate I spoke to one person at Oracle who definitely knows the rules. Simon Haslam also reached out to me by email pointing out that things might not be that rosy. Also Arjen Visser from Dbvisit noted to me after my session that they’ve seen Oracle sales pushing for different strategy.
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Log Buffer #270, A Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

As the summer in many parts of the world starts, not only the snow is thawing, many bloggers are also coming out of hiatus and the database blogosphere is seeing new sensational activity. This Log Buffer Edition includes blogging tidbits from Oracle, SQL Server and MySQL. Enjoy reading Log Buffer #270.

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Collaborate 2012 as seen by a MySQL DBA

I spent last week at Collaborate 2012 in Las Vegas and it was really great experience in many ways. I am a MySQL DBA and have been working with MySQL for most of my career, so Collaborate didn’t seem like an obvious choice. It turned out that there are so many things that I can learn from Oracle professionals and the Oracle community, which can be applied in MySQL world as well. For me an indication of a good conference is when you come back inspired and full of ideas. I am inspired, tired and have some ideas, which means it was time well spent.

Collaborate is huge. I can only compare it to the MySQL Conference in Santa Clara, which is no where close in terms of its speakers/attendees count. Being so big has its own pros and cons. There is a great diversity in the sessions topics and there are about 250 sessions running each day, so you have to do your homework and decide which one you would like to attend. Walking around the Convention Center and deciding which session you like doesn’t work here, because it will probably take you an hour to do so. There are many sessions but, obviously, there are many more attendees. I was told there were around 6k-7k this year. There are people from probably every possible industry out there (not too many web-startup folks, I noticed :) and it makes it a part of the fun — you can learn how people solve complex problems in the areas that you have never dealt with. On the other hand, you will probably not meet, let’s say, Monty (pick up analog from Oracle world) at the lobby bar, unless you are very lucky, or you know which one is his favorite.

Day 0 is a Deep Dives day at Collaborate. Deep Dive is a long 3-4 hour session which explains one particular topic in great detail. I initially went to Deep Dive about IO tuning, which I though might be helpful in my day to day job as MySQL DBA, but it turned out to be too Oracle specific, so I left and went to Real World Performance session by Tom Kyte, Andrew Holdsworth and Graham Wood and that was the best session I ever attended. As it turned out later, these guys are kind of titans of Oracle Performance world, but their session was generic enough that I could relate many things to my own MySQL experience. I missed the first part of the this several hours long session, which was dedicate to Datawarehouse performance, but I really enjoyed the part about OLTP performance.

First of all, there was a live demonstration of how a test application and database perform under certain conditions and you could actually see how throughput changes when you tune this or that parameter. There was a curious moment when Mr. Kyte showed a chart with a linear scalability and I was like “Ok, how did they get this?”. After some discussion it turned out it was not really linear and it was true for their carefully designed test application. So the Universal Scalability Law still makes sense. The OLTP performance demonstration had 2 examples, which I often see when working on customer’s environments here at Pythian. The first one was about dynamic connection pool which demonstrated that when your database server is overloaded and connections are not returned to the pool quickly enough connection pool decides to… add more connections! This makes the database server even more overloaded etc. You need to persuade application engineers that letting more users to connect to a db server which is crawling does not really help. You need to do the opposite: reduce the number of available connections in the pool. Another example was about proper exception handling. Sometimes, if exception is not being handled properly, the connection is never closed, because code never reaches that point and it is left hanging there. This can result in transactions holding row locks for hours or even days. I have seen this so many times and it usually very hard to debug, but now I have a hint for developers on where to start looking. Anyways, it was a great session, with a lot of insights and I would definitely love to see the full version.

Over the next 3 days I learned about Oracle Exadata (surprisingly, there are some similarities with what the guys at Infobright do) and other Exa-machines, I got an idea of what R is (worth a closer look), how to measure seniority of a DBA in a proper way, what SCAN is and many other things. Unfortunately the MySQL Track was not very exiting. Most of the sessions were explaining MySQL basics to Oracle DBAs which makes sense if you take into account that they are the primary audience there.

It was an exiting week. I had a lot of fun and met many amazing people. If you ask me if a MySQL DBA should go to Collaborate to learn something new about MySQL, I would probably say there is no reason to do so. But if you ask me if you should go to learn from experts in industry which is much more mature than MySQL and get some insights about how things are done in Oracle-world — it is definitely worth going.

Around the world in a day: Oracle Apps upgrades the Pythian way

Pythian’s Oracle Apps DBA team recently upgraded a client’s E-Business Suite system to version 12.1.3, bringing them into compliance with Oracle’s baseline support requirements for Release 12.1 nearly one year ahead of deadline. We’d like to tell you a bit about this project — not to toot our own horn (though that’s nice too, we are kinda proud), but because it provides an ideal illustration of the power of the Pythian service delivery model, particularly as it applies to large enterprise-class projects.

By the numbers

The numbers don’t tell the whole story, of course, but they set the stage. This massive patching exercise entailed:
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Log Buffer #269, A Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

There is no replacement for the documentation of the database products. There is no alternative of forums for these technologies, and also there is no alter ego for the database blogs. They add up yet another avenue to explore when the professionals need help. This Log Buffer Edition helps professional in identifying few blog posts from across the databases in Log Buffer #269.

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What a difference a space makes

Had a very interesting experience in my “RACing up the Miles” session this morning. There were about 70 people in the room and I hope they enjoyed the session as much as I did. I discussed a wee bit of architecture about RAC and concentrated on a very basic beginner’s primer to management activities with srvctl and crsctl. The session was intended to give attendees a startup understanding of RAC with little more. I mentioned a bit about separate SGAs, block ownership, and cache fusion. That’s it … I then moved on to a brief introduction to managing the RAC database and associated suite of services.
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And they’re off

Day 2 of COLLABORATE and no distractions like hockey to tend with today. I have seen a nice balance between new technology and the traditional offerings in the Oracle tech space. These user group shows, in some ways, are the bastion of the technologies which, as “old” as they may be, are still in use and of interest to many attendees.

Pythian’s own Yuri Velikanov and Christo Kutrovsky both on today at 2pm at COLLABORATE 12. It is so refreshing to see these Pythian giants tailoring their material to include the traditional Oracle CORE DBA audience.

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