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Log Buffer #191, A Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

Welcome to Log Buffer, the weekly roundup of database blogs.

Kicking off this week in Log Buffer #191 are posts from Alisher Yuldashev:

Randolf Geist blogs on an Advanced Oracle Troubleshooting Session – PGA/UGA memory fragmentation for when a batch process takes significantly longer than expected.

James Morle talks about an example of a misleading average in Log File Sync and AWR – Not Good Bedfellows.

And a few faves from Bradd Piontek:

Marco Gralike, on Blog.Gralike.Com, revisits Enabling and Disabling Database Options, a small item that is easily overlooked. Marco also notes a cool tool: VirtualBox Appliance which makes a great start-up test environment. Word of caution however, it’s for testing purposes only.

On Askdba.org, Amit advises on downloading Oracle software directly to server in a post based on Pythian’s downloading from OTN directly to your database server. Watch for future posts from Brad on how he does it via Firefox, and edelivery.oracle.com.

Alex Gorbachev is spreading the word about The Ultimate SQL Tune-off with Jonathan Lewis and Kyle Hailey, two of his most respected Oracle performance experts, believing the session should be interesting to all DBAs, not just Oracle.

Robert Catteral continues to recap session highlights from the International DB2 Users Group Conference last month in Nuggets from DB2 by the Bay, Part 3, following Parts 1 & 2.

Chen Shapira contributed Cloning Oracle Home from RAC to Stand-Alone.

On In Recovery, Paul Randal wrote the whitepaper Proven SQL Server Architectures for High Availability and Disaster Recovery he wrote for the Spring SQL Server release has been published.

Moving to MySQL world, Vadim Tkachenko continues storage benchmarking of MySQL FlashCache (very much like Oracle FlashCache but for MySQL InnoDB engine). This time he is using FusionIO cards for FlashCache.

And, to round things off, Ronald Bradford writes about When SET GLOBAL affects SESSION scope.

Have a great weekend everyone.

Log Buffer #190, A Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

Welcome to Log Buffer, the weekly roundup of database blogs. We’re back this week with a short Log Buffer #190. Only ten more issues, and we’ll be celebrating our 200th edition post.

Chen Shapira was eager to share news early this week, sending along her favorite picks on Tuesday.

Prof. Neil Gunther doesn’t like the way commercial load testing software distributes think times.
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Log Buffer #189, A Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

Welcome to Log Buffer, a weekly review of the database industry. This week’s issue Log Buffer #189 is generously published by Iggy Fernandez, editor of the quarterly journal of the Northern California Oracle User Group (NoCOUG).

As always, if you’d like to host your own issue of Log Buffer, simply reach out to the Log Buffer coordinator.

Please enjoy Iggy’s issue of Log Buffer #189.

Log Buffer #188, a Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

It’s Friday already, and we know what that means! Log Buffer, the industry’s weekly review of database blogs is here again for your reading pleasure in the 188th issue.

Starting off this week’s issue is a request from Mark Grennan a DBA who would like to let the community know about his blog MySQL Fan Boy, where he wrote an interesting post on including a script to replace MySQL table files on a live system, making it faster and limiting locking on large table loads. Also a post this week on whether MariaDB is a drop in replacement for MySQL.

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Log Buffer #187, a Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

Welcome to Log Buffer. This week’s issue #187 was another group effort. Thanks to all our contributors – you rock!

Suggested by Pythian’s Bradd Piontek, is a post he really liked because he used to write pipelined functions for Dynamic Search queries, – Tom Kyte’s something new I learned about estimated cardinalities. He’s also highlighted something new Tom learned about sqlplus. And the fact that Richard Foote announced the Oak Table’s new website. Bradd’s last note highlights tips and tricks from Christian Antognini on analysing a SQL Trace File with SQL Statements on his blog Striving for Optimal Performance.

Contributing from Chris Presley on the SQL Server side of things is Kimberly L Trip’s post about single use plans in the procedure cache, or Glenn Berry’s SQL Server Performance blog – A DWV a Day – Day 29, sys.dm_exec_connections. Chris also suggests these cool restore myths debunked from Paul Randal’s blog In Recovery.

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Log Buffer #186, a Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

Welcome to the 186th Edition of Log Buffer. Lots to report this week, so read on…

In Oracle news:

We begin with Gary Myers at the Sydney Oracle Lab who mixes GUI and CLI and shows how to manage your database from EMACS. You have to read a post that starts with: “There is a place of shadow, a place between the dark lands of the command-line interface, and the shining brightness of the GUI. In the days of yore, many dwelled in the shadow lands, but almost all have been attracted to the lights of SQL Developer…”
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Log Buffer #185, a Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

It’s a busy time of year for Pythian. With many of our team tied up on client engagements, away at MySQL conference this week, and Collaborate 2010 next week, I’m pinch hitting as volunteer editor in helping to pull together this week’s edition of Log Buffer. Enjoy!

MySQL Conference 2010

Big news this week from MySQL Conference as Oracle’s Edward Screven elaborates on Oracle’s plans for MySQL in his opening keynote. Pythian’s Paul Vallee was interviewed by Network World’s John Brodkin, before the conference in anticipation of the session.

Ronald Bradford responds, writing about his disappointment with the keynote and then elaborates on being named an Oracle ACE Director.

Pythian’s Sheeri Cabral, recently recognized for her MySQL community contributions as Oracle’s first ACE Director for MySQL was in the middle of all the action. Sheeri outlines how Oracle can be MySQL’s friend-with-benefits in her community keynote. And then shares her thoughts on Drizzle with O’Reilly Media’s Tim O’Reilly. And on the keynote, Sheeri comments it was an ad to “come join us at OpenWorld”.

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Log Buffer #184, a Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

This is the 184th edition of Log Buffer, the weekly review of database blogs. I’ve edited a couple of Log Buffers before, but this is the first time I get to post directly to the Pythian blog. Just one of the many perks of being a Pythian employee ;)

On the Oracle front:

It is always good to start the day with a pop quiz to get the brain into gear: Charles Hooper posted a 3-part series with seemingly innocent True/False questions. He covers sorting, SQL tuning and wait events.

If you enjoyed the performance tuning quiz, you will also enjoy reading about 5 dangerous myths of SQL Performance that Iggy Fernandez reviewed in “So Many Oracle Manuals” blog.
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Log Buffer #183, a Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

Hello folks, it’s great to be back from hiatus. This is the 183rd edition of Log Buffer (arguably the best edition of Log Buffer yet!), the weekly review of database blogs.

The last time I wrote this was just under 2 years ago!!! WoW. Things have changed. Sun bought MySQL, Oracle bought Sun. Those were bombshell deals. At least you can rest assured that some things can be constant. I still eat my daily serving of broccoli (among other healthful “things”). I urge you all to go the fridge and grab some veggies prior to sitting down for this week’s… ahem… digest.

Starting with Oracle, Pythian’s own Alex Fatkulin illustrates a bug (?…likely) that could lead to logically corrupted data. Doug Burns provides an update on his Hotsos 2010 trip with some serious thumbs-up action pointing in Tanel Poder’s direction and his affinity toward SQL*Plus.

Over at Mark Rittman’s Oracle Weblog, Venkatakrishnan J talks about Oracle Warehouse Builder 11gR2 – Importing Essbase Cubes using ODI Knowledge Modules – Part 1. This should drive the MySQL folks bonkers (in a good way) since he points to an example by David Allen to import MySQL Metadata over and vice versa.

Oracle Virtualization Blog’s Adam Hawley let everyone know about a Best Practices around Oracle VM with RAC RAC SIG webcast. It was on March 18th, but it was recorded and should be available online. I’m interested in this stuff so I included it here. I hope you can enjoy it too.

I had the honour to recently provide a training session at a customer site on tuning methods and tools. A key topic of the discussion was related to Oracle statistics and the CBO. It was timely that the Oracle Scratchpad’s Jonathan Lewis posted a series created by Doug Burns all about stats. Nice.

Has anyone ever told you (or maybe you deduced it on your own) that leaving out where clauses is a bad thing. Well, leave it to Charles Hooper on his Oracle Notes to prove to us that sometimes, they are actually more efficient for solving certain types of problems. In another excellent post titled Physical Reads are Very Fast, Why is this SQL Statement Slow Charles also dives into why a slow query is “actually” slow. There’s an interesting discussion taking place. More performance tuning goodness was posted by Joel Goodman discussing some interesting behaviour with Oracle Index Leaf Blocks contention. Tell RAC to Leave Your Leaves Alone! Kerry Osborne illustrates the use of an interesting hidden parameter (_high_priority_processes) to resolve “log file sync” issues.

Over on the other side of the fence in the MySQL world, Jay Pipes @ Join-Fu gives us some background on the MySQL Transaction Log. Vadim Tkachenko with the MySQL Performance Blog has a number of posts on Percona 9.1 as well as a list of related sessions at the 2010 MySQL conference. Check it out.

On a more somber note (and by somber I mean legal, we all hate legalese don’t we?), Giuseppe Maxia over at The Data Charmer discusses Protocol, the GPL, and how Bazaar can help. He also has some good takeaways from the Linux MySQL distros meeting in Brussels. Baron Schwartz at xaprb has a new tool he’d like the MySQL folks to take for a spin. Try mk-query-advisor, a new Maatkit tool. It uses heuristics to find problems in SQL. Please use it and give feedback!

Are you interested in MySQL Clustering? I am. Andew Morgan has a new post introducing a tutorial to Build MySQL Cluster 7.1 from source – including MySQL Cluster Connector for Java. With Alex Fatkulin maybe running into an as yet possibly, sort of , kinda non-discovered bug, it’s only fair we also get some vision into the dark side on the MySQL front. Shlomi Noach states But I DO want MySQL to say “ERROR”!.

Brian Aker invites readers to participate at this year’s O’Reilly MySQL User’s Conference where they will be doing their first ever Ignite talk series.

Lastly, Stewart Smith has a very good set of posts illustrating Stored Procedures/Functions for Drizzle. Check this out (from Stewart’s post).

drizzle> select libtcc("#include <string.h>\n#include <stdlib.h>\nint foo(char* s) { char *a= 0x199c610; strcpy(s, a); return strlen(s); }") as result;

+--------------+
| result       |
+--------------+
| Hello World! |
+--------------+
1 row in set (0.01 sec)

I dare you.

On to SQL Server….

Scary DBA SQL MVP Grant Fritchey discusses Undocumented Virtual Column: %%lockres% and also recaps the SNESSUG March Meeting.

Jamie Thomson gives keyboard junkies some tips to Kill your temp tables using keyboard shortcuts : SSMS. Anyone interested in distributed queries should read Buck Woody’s Using linked servers, OPENROWSET and OPENQUERY.

Finally, Aaron Bertrand says with conviction “Yes, you can benefit from both data and backup compression”.

Having now exhausted my supply of munchies, it is time for me to retire. I bid you all a fantastic week. Keep your data safe, folks.

Shakir

Log Buffer #182, a Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

This is the 182nd edition of Log Buffer, the weekly review of database blogs. Make sure to read the whole edition so you do not miss where to submit your SQL limerick!

This week started out with me posting about International Women’s Day, and has me personally attending Confoo (Montreal) which is an excellent conference I hope to return to next year. I learned a lot from confoo, especially the blending nosql and sql session I attended.

This week was also the Hotsos Symposium. Doug’s Oracle Blog has a series of posts about Hotsos. If all this talk about conferences has gotten you excited, Joshua Drake notes that 14 days and the hotel is almost full for postgresql conference east which is March 25th-28th in Philadelphia. And the Oracle database insider notes that the Oracle OpenWorld call for papers is now open.

According to Susan Visser this week (ending tomorrow) is also read an e-book week. So if you have not already done so, read an e-book! She links a coupon for an e-book in the post.
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