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    Decode360's Blog

    業(yè)精于勤而荒于嬉 QQ:150355677 MSN:decode360@hotmail.com

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    January 03, 2006 Narendra -- Thanks for the question regarding "Reclaim space", version 9.2.0.1
    You Asked
    						
    Hi,
    
    A very happy & prosperous new year!!!
    I want to reduce the size of USERS datafile. I had created a table with 
    50000000 records in USERS tablespace. So the size of datafile is around 4.5 GB. 
    I dropped the table. However this had no affect on datafile. I tried taking 
    datafile/tablespace offline and bring it back online. Still no change. I tried 
    shutting and restarting ORACLE instance. Still no change.
    When I tried to manually reduce the datafile size (using OEM), it allowed me to 
    reduce the size by only few KBs. Any subsequent attempt to reduce the size 
    resulted in failure saying it needs the space.
    How do I reduce the size of USERS datafile so that it is only as big as size of 
    database objects and their corresponding data ?
    
    Thanks 


    and we said...
    						
    								http://asktom.oracle.com/pls/asktom/f?p=100:11:::::P11_QUESTION_ID:153612348067
    						
    The only thing that'll make a file "shrink" is to alter the database and shrink 
    the datafile - datafiles will NOT shrink on their own due to "offline/online" 
    or anything like that.
    
    But in your case - if OEM cannot shrink it further, neither will my script.  A 
    file contains extents of segments.  You have an extent for some allocated 
    object out there.
    
    Say you have tables T1 and T2 in that tablespace.  
    
    T1 is represented by X
    T2 is represented by Y
    free space in the tablespace is represented by f
    
    You created T1 and T2, your datafile in that tablespace might look like this:
    
    
    XYffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff
    
    you could shrink that file now and get rid of all of the f's.  But now table T1 
    grows and we have:
    
    XYXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXfff
    
    Now, you can shrink that file and get rid of just three f's (rest of the file 
    is full of data).  Now, table T2 runs out of room and extends:
    
    XYXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXYff
    
    Now, if you shrank the file, you would lose two f's of space.  However, you 
    drop table T1 - the datafile looks like this:
    
    fYfffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffYff
    
    You can STILL only shrink two f's away at the end - there is a Y extent way out 
    there and we cannot shrink over it.  What you can do is:
    
    
    alter table t2 MOVE and hopefully the datafile will end up looking like this:
    
    YfYffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff
    
    and you can shrink the file (or just move t2 into another tablespace all 
    together)
    
    see
    
    								http://www.oracle.com/technology/oramag/oracle/04-sep/o54asktom.html
    						
    for "What's at the end of a file"
    
    
    Here is an example showing what I tried to draw above:
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> create tablespace shrink_me
      2  datafile '/tmp/shrink_me.dbf' size 704k
      3  segment space management manual
      4  uniform size 64k
      5  /
    
    Tablespace created.
    
    we have exactly 10 64k extents we can use.  (the 11th 64k block of space is 
    used by Oracle to manage these locally managed tablespaces in the datafile)
    
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2>
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> create table t1 ( x int, a char(2000) default 'a', b 
    char(2000) default 'b', c char(2000) default 'c') tablespace shrink_me;
    
    Table created.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> create table t2 ( x int, a char(2000) default 'a', b 
    char(2000) default 'b', c char(2000) default 'c') tablespace shrink_me;
    
    Table created.
    
    Each row in these tables will consume a block (8 rows/extent - but don't 
    forget the first block is borrowed by Oracle to manage space in the 
    segment...)
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2>
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> select file_id, block_id first_block, block_id+blocks-1 
    last_block, segment_name
      2    from dba_extents
      3   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      4   union all
      5  select file_id, block_id, block_id+blocks-1, 'free'
      6    from dba_free_space
      7   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      8   order by file_id, first_block
      9  /
    
       FILE_ID FIRST_BLOCK LAST_BLOCK SEGMENT_NAME
    ---------- ----------- ---------- ------------------------------
            13           9         16 T1
            13          17         24 T2
            13          25         88 free
    
    so, we have the starting scenario - T1 has an extent, T2 has one and the rest 
    of the file is "free space", now lets fill up t1:
    
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> insert into t1 (x) select rownum from all_objects where 
    rownum <= 56;
    
    56 rows created.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> commit;
    
    Commit complete.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> select file_id, block_id first_block, block_id+blocks-1 
    last_block, segment_name
      2    from dba_extents
      3   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      4   union all
      5  select file_id, block_id, block_id+blocks-1, 'free'
      6    from dba_free_space
      7   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      8   order by file_id, first_block
      9  /
    
       FILE_ID FIRST_BLOCK LAST_BLOCK SEGMENT_NAME
    ---------- ----------- ---------- ------------------------------
            13           9         16 T1
            13          17         24 T2
            13          25         32 T1
            13          33         40 T1
            13          41         48 T1
            13          49         56 T1
            13          57         64 T1
            13          65         72 T1
            13          73         80 T1
            13          81         88 free
    
    10 rows selected.
    
    we have the middle scenario - if we dropped T1 now, all of the T1's would 
    become free space and we could shrink the file, however:
    
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2>
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2>
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> insert into t2 (x) select rownum from all_objects where 
    rownum <= 8;
    
    8 rows created.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> commit;
    
    Commit complete.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> select file_id, block_id first_block, block_id+blocks-1 
    last_block, segment_name
      2    from dba_extents
      3   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      4   union all
      5  select file_id, block_id, block_id+blocks-1, 'free'
      6    from dba_free_space
      7   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      8   order by file_id, first_block
      9  /
    
       FILE_ID FIRST_BLOCK LAST_BLOCK SEGMENT_NAME
    ---------- ----------- ---------- ------------------------------
            13           9         16 T1
            13          17         24 T2
            13          25         32 T1
            13          33         40 T1
            13          41         48 T1
            13          49         56 T1
            13          57         64 T1
            13          65         72 T1
            13          73         80 T1
            13          81         88 T2
    
    10 rows selected.
    
    Now the entire tablespace is full - no more free space - but we drop t1 and 
    get LOTS of free space:
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> drop table t1;
    
    Table dropped.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> select file_id, block_id first_block, block_id+blocks-1 
    last_block, segment_name
      2    from dba_extents
      3   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      4   union all
      5  select file_id, block_id, block_id+blocks-1, 'free'
      6    from dba_free_space
      7   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      8   order by file_id, first_block
      9  /
    
       FILE_ID FIRST_BLOCK LAST_BLOCK SEGMENT_NAME
    ---------- ----------- ---------- ------------------------------
            13           9         16 free
            13          17         24 T2
            13          25         80 free
            13          81         88 T2
    
    the tablespace is 80% empty - but we cannot shrink it - we cannot shrink it 
    at all, let alone to 300k - because the LAST EXTENT is taken by T2
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> alter database datafile '/tmp/shrink_me.dbf' resize 300k;
    alter database datafile '/tmp/shrink_me.dbf' resize 300k
    *
    ERROR at line 1:
    ORA-03297: file contains used data beyond requested RESIZE value
    
    
    but lets move T2 around...
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> alter table t2 move;
    
    Table altered.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2>
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> select file_id, block_id first_block, block_id+blocks-1 
    last_block, segment_name
      2    from dba_extents
      3   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      4   union all
      5  select file_id, block_id, block_id+blocks-1, 'free'
      6    from dba_free_space
      7   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      8   order by file_id, first_block
      9  /
    
       FILE_ID FIRST_BLOCK LAST_BLOCK SEGMENT_NAME
    ---------- ----------- ---------- ------------------------------
            13           9         16 T2
            13          17         24 free
            13          25         32 T2
            13          33         88 free
    
    now we have lots of free space at the end of the file and we can resize:
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> alter database datafile '/tmp/shrink_me.dbf' resize 300k;
    
    Database altered.
    
    ops$tkyte@ORA9IR2> select file_id, block_id first_block, block_id+blocks-1 
    last_block, segment_name
      2    from dba_extents
      3   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      4   union all
      5  select file_id, block_id, block_id+blocks-1, 'free'
      6    from dba_free_space
      7   where tablespace_name = 'SHRINK_ME'
      8   order by file_id, first_block
      9  /
    
       FILE_ID FIRST_BLOCK LAST_BLOCK SEGMENT_NAME
    ---------- ----------- ---------- ------------------------------
            13           9         16 T2
            13          17         24 free
            13          25         32 T2
    
    
    don't forget, if you move a table, you have to then rebuild the indexes




    -The End-

    posted on 2009-03-22 22:45 decode360-3 閱讀(310) 評論(0)  編輯  收藏 所屬分類: Toy
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