Let’s start with basics to understand the root cause of this problem.
What are Mutexes?
Oracle introduced Mutexes in Oracle Version 10.2 replacing library cache pin and they stand for mutual exclusion (functionality is similar to mutexes in c). Mutexes are used to protect data or other resources from concurrent access. Don’t come to any conclusion based on the previous statement. Please read ahead.
How does Oracle Mutexes work?
Oracle uses counters to implement mutexes. The counters are called as reference or ref counters
1. Every time a particular mutex is obtained, Oracle will increment its value.
2. Every time a particular mutex is released, Oracle will decrement its value.
Finally what is “cursor pin s”?
A wait even that occurs when a session wants a mutex in shared mode on a cursor. As mentioned in the previous section, Oracle has to update the ref counters to get the mutex
However it is very important to understand that access to these counters are not concurrent. If there are concurrent sessions trying to obtain the mutex, then only one session can actually increment or decrement the reference counter at a time. Therefore these concurrent sessions must wait.
Four key points to avoid confusion are
- Oracle is requesting the mutex in shared mode
- No session is holding the mutex in exclusive mode
- Wait event occurs as Oracle was not able to update the reference counters.
- Sessions will wait over and over until the mutex is obtained. This may cause CPU spike.
The simplest analogy to understand “cursor pin s” is traffic bottlenecks caused by Tolls. There may not be a real traffic problem because of road capacity or lane merger. Instead the traffic problem is caused by toll booth.
The easiest way to detect “cursor: pin s” is running AWR report and the queries causing the “cursor: pin s” wait event can be identified with ADDM report. You can also query
- V$ACTIVE_SESSION_HISTORY: Column P1 (idn or sql hash_value)
- V$MUTEX_SLEEP_HISTORY: Column MUTEX_IDENTIFIER (idn or sql hash_value)
Bugs
One of the notorious bugs associated with mutexes is Bug 6904068. This affects almost all versions of Oracle from 10.2.0.x to 11.2.0.x . We hit this bug with 10.2.0.3 database because one of our SQL statement was executed with very high concurrency.
Database Solutions (As usual please contact Oracle support when playing around with underscore parameter)
1. Apply patch for the bug 6904068 and then adjust _FIRST_SPARE_PARAMETER. After applying the patch, setting _FIRST_SPARE_PARAMETER to ZERO will retain current behavior.
2. Set underscore parameter “ _CURSOR_FEATURES_ENABLED” to 10
3. Disable mutexes and embrace library cache pins. Mutexes can be disabled by setting underscore parameter “_KKS_USE_MUTEX_PIN” to false
Application solution
1. Synonym Approach: Create multiple synonyms for table and use them in SQL statements. This will force Oracle to use different SQL area for the SQL statement. This is good if high concurreny SQL is used for multiple packages.
- Select ename f rom synonym1 where job=:b1; (In Package emppkg1)
- Select ename f rom synonym2 where job=:b1; (In Package emppkg2)
Where synonym1 and synonym2 are synonyms for table EMP
2. Table Alias Approach: Create table aliases for the same SQL if they are used in different packages
- Select ename f rom EMP A where job=:b1; (In Package emppkg1)
- Select ename f rom EMP B where job=:b1; (In Package emppkg2)
3.JAVA prepare statement Approach: This approach is good when SQL statement is prepared using JAVA where in we modify the SQL statement in a way to have multiple SQL areas for same SQL statement by adding table alias for the SQL statement. The simplest way to generate table alias is using hostname.
“select ename from emp myapp1 where myapp1.ename = :1″ INSTEAD OF “select ename from emp where ename =:1”
Moral of Story
Everything in excess is opposed to nature –Hippocrates .
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