Oracle8 Tuning Release 8.0 A58246-01 |
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This chapter shows how to use the SQL command EXPLAIN PLAN. It covers the following topics:
See Also: For the syntax of the EXPLAIN PLAN command, see the Oracle8 SQL Reference.
The EXPLAIN PLAN command displays the execution plan chosen by the Oracle optimizer for SELECT, UPDATE, INSERT, and DELETE statements. A statement's execution plan is the sequence of operations that Oracle performs to execute the statement. By examining the execution plan, you can see exactly how Oracle executes your SQL statement.
EXPLAIN PLAN results alone cannot tell you which statements will perform well, and which badly. For example, just because EXPLAIN PLAN indicates that a statement will use an index does not mean that the statement will run quickly. The index might be very inefficient! Use EXPLAIN PLAN to determine the access plan and to test modifications to improve the performance.
It is not necessarily useful to subjectively evaluate the plan for a statement, and decide to tune it based only on the execution plan. Instead, you should examine the statement's actual resource consumption. For best results, use the Oracle Trace or SQL trace facility and TKPROF to examine performance information on individual SQL statements.
Attention: EXPLAIN PLAN tells you the execution plan the optimizer would choose if it were to produce an execution plan for a SQL statement at the current time, with the current set of initialization and session parameters. However, this plan is not necessarily the same as the plan that was used at the time the given statement was actually executed. The optimizer bases its analysis on many pieces of data-some of which may have changed! Furthermore, because the behavior of the optimizer is likely to evolve between releases of the Oracle Server, output from the EXPLAIN PLAN command will also evolve. Changes to both the optimizer and EXPLAIN PLAN output will be documented as they arise.
The row source count values appearing in EXPLAIN PLAN output identify the number of rows that have been processed by each step in the plan. This can help you to identify where the inefficiency in the query lies (that is, the row source with an access plan that is performing inefficient operations).
Before you can issue an EXPLAIN PLAN statement, you must create a table to hold its output. Use one of the following approaches:
Any table used to store the output of the EXPLAIN PLAN command must have the same column names and datatypes as the PLAN_TABLE:
CREATE TABLE plan_table (statement_id VARCHAR2(30), timestamp DATE, remarks VARCHAR2(80), operation VARCHAR2(30), options VARCHAR2(30), object_node VARCHAR2(128), object_owner VARCHAR2(30), object_name VARCHAR2(30), object_instance NUMERIC, object_type VARCHAR2(30), optimizer VARCHAR2(255), search_columns NUMERIC, id NUMERIC, parent_id NUMERIC, position NUMERIC, cost NUMERIC, cardinality NUMERIC, bytes NUMERIC, other_tag VARCHAR2(255) other LONG);
The PLAN_TABLE used by the EXPLAIN PLAN command contains the following columns:
Column | Description |
STATEMENT_ID |
The value of the optional STATEMENT_ID parameter specified in the EXPLAIN PLAN statement. |
TIMESTAMP |
The date and time when the EXPLAIN PLAN statement was issued. |
REMARKS |
Any comment (of up to 80 bytes) you wish to associate with each step of the explained plan. If you need to add or change a remark on any row of the PLAN_TABLE, use the UPDATE statement to modify the rows of the PLAN_TABLE. |
OPERATION |
The name of the internal operation performed in this step. In the first row generated for a statement, the column contains one of the following values: UPDATE STATEMENT |
OPTIONS |
A variation on the operation described in the OPERATION column. |
OBJECT_NODE |
The name of the database link used to reference the object (a table name or view name). For local queries using the parallel query option, this column describes the order in which output from operations is consumed. |
OBJECT_OWNER |
The name of the user who owns the schema containing the table or index. |
OBJECT_NAME |
The name of the table or index. |
OBJECT_INSTANCE |
A number corresponding to the ordinal position of the object as it appears in the original statement. The numbering proceeds from left to right, outer to inner with respect to the original statement text. Note that view expansion will result in unpredictable numbers. |
OBJECT_TYPE |
A modifier that provides descriptive information about the object; for example, NON-UNIQUE for indexes. |
OPTIMIZER |
The current mode of the optimizer. |
SEARCH_COLUMNS |
Not currently used. |
ID |
A number assigned to each step in the execution plan. |
PARENT_ID |
The ID of the next execution step that operates on the output of the ID step. |
POSITION |
The order of processing for steps that all have the same PARENT_ID. |
OTHER |
Other information that is specific to the execution step that a user may find useful. |
OTHER_TAG |
Describes the contents of the OTHER column. See Table 23-2 for more information on the possible values for this column. |
PARTITION_START |
The start partition of a range of accessed partitions. |
PARTITION_STOP |
The stop partition of a range of accessed partitions. |
PARTITION_ID |
The step that has computed the pair of values of the PARTITION_START and PARTITION_STOP columns. |
COST |
The cost of the operation as estimated by the optimizer's cost-based approach. For statements that use the rule-based approach, this column is null. Cost is not determined for table access operations. The value of this column does not have any particular unit of measurement, it is merely a weighted value used to compare costs of execution plans. |
CARDINALITY |
The estimate by the cost-based approach of the number of rows accessed by the operation. |
BYTES |
The estimate by the cost-based approach of the number of bytes accessed by the operation. |
Table 23-2 describes the values that may appear in the OTHER_TAG column.
The following table lists each combination of OPERATION and OPTION produced by the EXPLAIN PLAN command and its meaning within an execution plan.
OPERATION | OPTION | Description |
---|---|---|
AND-EQUAL |
|
An operation that accepts multiple sets of ROWIDs and returns the intersection of the sets, eliminating duplicates. This operation is used for the single-column indexes access path. |
BITMAP |
CONVERSION |
TO ROWIDS converts the bitmap representation to actual ROWIDs that can be used to access the table. FROM ROWIDS converts the ROWIDs to a bitmap representation. COUNT returns the number of ROWIDs if the actual values are not needed. |
|
INDEX |
SINGLE VALUE looks up the bitmap for a single key value in the index. RANGE SCAN retrieves bitmaps for a key value range. FULL SCAN: A bitmap index full scan is performed if there is no start or stop key. |
|
MERGE |
Merges several bitmaps resulting from a range scan into one bitmap.
|
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MINUS |
Subtracts the bits of one bitmap from another. This row source is used for negated predicates and can be used only if there are some nonnegated predicates yielding a bitmap from which the subtraction can take place. An example appears in "Bitmap Indexes and EXPLAIN PLAN" on page 23-10. |
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OR |
Computes the bitwise OR of two bitmaps. |
CONNECT BY |
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A retrieval of rows in a hierarchical order for a query containing a CONNECT BY clause. |
CONCATENATION |
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An operation that accepts multiple sets of rows and returns the union-all of the sets. |
COUNT |
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An operation that counts the number of rows selected from a table. |
STOPKEY |
A count operation where the number of rows returned is limited by the ROWNUM expression in the WHERE clause. |
Note: Access methods and join operations are discussed in Oracle8 Concepts.
Index row sources appear in the EXPLAIN PLAN output with the word BITMAP indicating the type. Consider the following sample query and plan, in which the TO ROWIDS option is used to generate the ROWIDs that are necessary for table access.
EXPLAIN PLAN FOR SELECT * FROM T WHERE C1 = 2 AND C2 <> 6 OR C3 BETWEEN 10 AND 20; SELECT STATEMENT TABLE ACCESS T BY ROWID BITMAP CONVERSION TO ROWIDS BITMAP OR BITMAP MINUS BITMAP MINUS BITMAP INDEX C1_IND SINGLE VALUE BITMAP INDEX C2_IND SINGLE VALUE BITMAP INDEX C2_IND SINGLE VALUE BITMAP MERGE BITMAP INDEX C3_IND RANGE SCAN
In this example, the predicate C1=2 yields a bitmap from which a subtraction can take place. From this bitmap, the bits in the bitmap for c2 = 6 are subtracted. Also, the bits in the bitmap for c2 IS NULL are subtracted, explaining why there are two MINUS row sources in the plan. The NULL subtraction is necessary for semantic correctness unless the column has a NOT NULL constraint.
An INLIST ITERATOR operation appears in the EXPLAIN PLAN output if an index implements an IN list predicate. For example, for the query
SELECT * FROM EMP WHERE empno IN (7876, 7900, 7902);
the EXPLAIN PLAN output is as follows:
OPERATION OPTIONS OBJECT_NAME ---------------- --------------- -------------- SELECT STATEMENT INLIST ITERATOR CONCATENATED TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP INDEX RANGE SCAN EMP_EMPNO
The INLIST ITERATOR operation iterates over the operation below it for each value in the IN list predicate.
For partitioned tables and indexes, the three possible types of IN list columns are described in the following sections.
If the IN list column EMPNO is an index column but not a partition column, then the plan is as follows (the IN list operator appears above the table operation but below the partition operation):
OPERATION OPTIONS OBJECT_NAME PARTITION_START PARTITION_STOP ---------------- ------------ ----------- --------------- -------------- SELECT STATEMENT PARTITION CONCATENATED KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST) INLIST ITERATOR CONCATENATED TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST) INDEX RANGE SCAN EMP_EMPNO KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST)
The KEY(INLIST) designation for the partition start and stop keys specifies that an IN list predicate appears on the index start/stop keys.
If EMPNO is an indexed and a partition column, then the plan contains an INLIST ITERATOR operation above the partition operation:
OPERATION OPTIONS OBJECT_NAME PARTITION_START PARTITION_STOP ---------------- ------------ ----------- --------------- -------------- SELECT STATEMENT INLIST ITERATOR CONCATENATED PARTITION CONCATENATED KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST) TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST) INDEX RANGE SCAN EMP_EMPNO KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST)
If EMPNO is a partition column and there are no indexes, then no INLIST ITERATOR operation is allocated:
OPERATION OPTIONS OBJECT_NAME PARTITION_START PARTITION_STOP ---------------- ------------ ----------- --------------- -------------- SELECT STATEMENT PARTITION CONCATENATED KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST) TABLE ACCESS BY ROWID EMP KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST) INDEX RANGE SCAN EMP_EMPNO KEY(INLIST) KEY(INLIST)
If EMP_EMPNO is a bitmap index, then the plan is as follows:
OPERATION OPTIONS OBJECT_NAME ---------------- --------------- -------------- SELECT STATEMENT INLIST ITERATOR CONCATENATED TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID EMP BITMAP CONVERSION TO ROWIDS BITMAP INDEX SINGLE VALUE EMP_EMPNO
This section shows options for formatting EXPLAIN PLAN output
Note: The output of the EXPLAIN PLAN command reflects the behavior of the Oracle optimizer. As the optimizer evolves between releases of the Oracle server, output from the EXPLAIN PLAN command is also likely to evolve.
The following example shows a SQL statement and its corresponding execution plan generated by EXPLAIN PLAN. The sample query retrieves names and related information for employees whose salary is not within any range of the SALGRADE table:
SELECT ename, job, sal, dname FROM emp, dept WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno AND NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM salgrade WHERE emp.sal BETWEEN losal AND hisal);
This EXPLAIN PLAN statement generates an execution plan and places the output in PLAN_TABLE:
EXPLAIN PLAN SET STATEMENT_ID = 'Emp_Sal' FOR SELECT ename, job, sal, dname FROM emp, dept WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno AND NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM salgrade WHERE emp.sal BETWEEN losal AND hisal);
This SELECT statement generates the following output:
SELECT operation, options, object_name, id, parent_id, position
FROM plan_table
WHERE statement_id = 'Emp_Sal'
ORDER BY id;
OPERATION OPTIONS OBJECT_NAME ID PARENT_ID POSITION COST CARDINALITY BYTES OTHER_TAG OPTIMIZER
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SELECT STATEMENT 0 2 2 1 62 CHOOSE
FILTER 1 0 1
NESTED LOOPS 2 1 1 2 1 62
TABLE ACCESS FULL EMP 3 2 1 1 1 40 ANALYZED
TABLE ACCESS FULL DEPT 4 2 2 4 88 ANALYZED
TABLE ACCESS FULL SALGRADE 5 1 2 1 1 13 ANALYZED
The ORDER BY clause returns the steps of the execution plan sequentially by ID value. However, Oracle does not perform the steps in this order. PARENT_ID receives information from ID, yet more than one ID step fed into PARENT_ID.
For example, step 2, a merge join, and step 7, a table access, both fed into step 1. A nested, visual representation of the processing sequence is shown in the next section.
The value of the POSITION column for the first row of output indicates the optimizer's estimated cost of executing the statement with this plan to be 5. For the other rows, it indicates the position relative to the other children of the same parent.
Note: A CONNECT BY does not preserve ordering. To have rows come out in the correct order in this example, you must either truncate the table first, or else create a view and select from the view. For example:
CREATE VIEW test AS SELECT id, parent_id, lpad(' ', 2*(level-1))||operation||' '||options||' '||object_name||' '|| decode(id, 0, 'Cost = '||position) "Query Plan" FROM plan_table START WITH id = 0 and statement_id = 'TST' CONNECT BY prior id = parent_id and statement_id = 'TST'; SELECT * FROM foo ORDER BY id, parent_id;
This yields results as follows:
ID PAR Query Plan --- --- -------------------------------------------------- 0 Select Statement Cost = 69602 1 0 Nested Loops 2 1 Nested Loops 3 2 Merge Join 4 3 Sort Join 5 4 Table Access Full T3 6 3 Sort Join 7 6 Table Access Full T4 8 2 Index Unique Scan T2 9 1 Table Access Full T1 10 rows selected.
This type of SELECT statement generates a nested representation of the output that more closely depicts the processing order used for the SQL statement.
SELECT LPAD(' ',2*(LEVEL-1))||operation||' '||options ||' '||object_name ||' '||DECODE(id, 0, 'Cost = '||position) "Query Plan" FROM plan_table START WITH id = 0 AND statement_id = 'Emp_Sal' CONNECT BY PRIOR id = parent_id AND statement_id ='Emp_Sal'; Query Plan ------------------------------ SELECT STATEMENT Cost = 5 FILTER NESTED LOOPS TABLE ACCESS FULL EMP TABLE ACCESS FULL DEPT TABLE ACCESS FULL SALGRADE
The order resembles a tree structure, illustrated in the following figure.
The tree structure illustrates how operations that occur during the execution of a SQL statement feed one another. Each step in the execution plan is assigned a number (representing the ID column of the PLAN_TABLE) and is depicted by a "node". The result of each node's operation passes to its parent node, which uses it as input.
EXPLAIN PLAN is not supported for statements that perform implicit type conversion of date bind variables. With bind variables in general, the EXPLAIN PLAN output may not represent the real execution plan. From the text of a SQL statement, TKPROF cannot determine the type of the bind variables. It assumes that the type is CHARACTER, and gives an error message if this is not the case. You can avoid this limitation by putting appropriate type conversions in the SQL statement.
See Also: Chapter 24, "The SQL Trace Facility and TKPROF"