You were brought to this page based on an internet search
and as a free service to Oracle DBAs.
The text below is an except from the book,
Oracle Performance Firefighting, written by
Craig Shallahamer of
OraPub, Inc.
Figures and tables are not included on this page, only their reference.
To order the book in either print or PDF form, click
here.
©2009, 2010 by Craig Shallahamer. This is copyrighted material.
PleaseOut of respect for those involved in the creation of the book and also for
their familes, we ask you to respect the copyright both in intent and deed. Thank you.
-------------------------------
Figure 6-18. Oracle's touch-count algorithm determines buffer header popularity based on the number of times it is touched. Notice the FTS window concept is no longer necessary and has been removed.
There are three key touch-count algorithm aspects: midpoint insertion, touch count incrementation, and buffer promotion. The following sections look at each of these aspects.
The single most radical departure from the modified LRU algorithm is known as midpoint insertion. Each LRU chain is divided into a hot and cold region. When a buffer is read from disk and a free buffer has been found, the buffer and buffer header replace the previous buffer and buffer header contents, and then the buffer header is moved to the LRU chain midpoint. Single-block read, multiblock read, fast-full scan, or full-table scan-it makes no difference. The buffer header is not inserted at the MRU end of the LRU chain, but rather at the midpoint. This ensures the LRU chain is not obliterated by a large influx of a single object's blocks being read into the buffer cache.
©2009, 2010 by Craig Shallahamer. This is copyrighted material.
PleaseOut of respect for those involved in the creation of the book and also for
their familes, we ask you to respect the copyright both in intent and deed. Thank you.
|