RE: Cost/Time Anomaly

And your resultset will contain at least as many rows as B1 (~20M as you said), 
perhaps many more - correct?  Given that, and the fact that B2 and B3 also 
contain ~20M rows, the CBO seems to be making a perfectly logical choice.
 
Is it possible you don't want such a large resultset returned?  Is there a 
filter you left off that would limit the # of rows?

-----Original Message-----
From: oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On 
Behalf Of blr_dba
Sent: Friday, December 29, 2006 1:03 PM
To: 'ORACLE-L'
Subject: Cost/Time Anomaly


Hi Gurus,
 
Am stuck in a tuning problem and need your expertise to get rid of the issue. 

I have 3 huge tables(~20M rows each) and many small look up tables joined in a 
query as follows... 

Assume: 
Big tables : BT1, BT2, BT3 
Small tables: ST1, ST2, ST3, ST4, ST5, ST6 

select * from BT1, BT2, BT3, ST1, ST2, ST3, ST4, ST5, ST6 
where 
BT1.id=BT2.id(+) and 
BT1.id=BT3.id(+) and 
BT1.id=ST1.id(+) and 
BT1.id=ST2.id(+) and 
BT1.id=ST3.id(+) and 
BT1.id=ST4.id(+) and 
BT1.id=ST5.id(+) and 
BT1.id=ST6.id(+); 

The CBO is using hash joins and the cost is too high (400K) and we are having a 
lots of "direct path write waits". 

I tried to remove the outer joins for the small lookup tables by using sclar 
sub-queries. The cost reduced drastically (10K) but the overall execution time 
got increased. 

Badly need your expertise to get rid of this issue. 

Also would like to know even if the CBO cost is less in the second case, why 
the overall execution time is more. Is n't the cost inversly proportional to 
the time taken to execute the query? 



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