Friday, July 17, 2009

PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET

Property

Description

Parameter type

Big integer

Syntax

PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET = integer [K | M | G]

Default value

10 MB or 20% of the size of the SGA, whichever is greater

Modifiable

ALTER SYSTEM

Range of values

Minimum: 10 MB

Maximum: 4096 GB - 1

Basic

Yes

PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET specifies the target aggregate PGA memory available to all server processes attached to the instance.

Setting PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET to a nonzero value has the effect of automatically setting the WORKAREA_SIZE_POLICY parameter to AUTO. This means that SQL working areas used by memory-intensive SQL operators (such as sort, group-by, hash-join, bitmap merge, and bitmap create) will be automatically sized. A nonzero value for this parameter is the default since, unless you specify otherwise, Oracle sets it to 20% of the SGA or 10 MB, whichever is greater.

Setting PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET to 0 automatically sets the WORKAREA_SIZE_POLICY parameter to MANUAL. This means that SQL workareas are sized using the *_AREA_SIZE parameters.

Oracle attempts to keep the amount of private memory below the target specified by this parameter by adapting the size of the work areas to private memory. When increasing the value of this parameter, you indirectly increase the memory allotted to work areas. Consequently, more memory-intensive operations are able to run fully in memory and less will work their way over to disk.

When setting this parameter, you should examine the total memory on your system that is available to the Oracle instance and subtract the SGA. You can assign the remaining memory to PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET.

Note:

1. Query for the current value of the parameter

select name, value, isdefault, isses_modifiable, issys_modifiable,

isinstance_modifiable, isdeprecated, description

from v$parameter where upper(name) = ‘’;

NAME

VALUE

IS

DEFAULT

ISSES_

MODIFIABLE

ISSYS_

MODIFIABLE

ISINSTANCE_

MODIFIABLE

IS

DEPRECATED

DESCRIPTION

Oracle initializatoin parameters

No comments:

Post a Comment