7 EASY STEPS TO CONFIGURE HUGEPAGES FOR YOUR ORACLE DATABASE SERVER

7 EASY STEPS TO CONFIGURE HUGEPAGES FOR YOUR ORACLE DATABASE SERVER

22. September 2016

Sebastian Winkler

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AMM   ASMM   Hugepages   memlock

Sebastian Winkler

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Sebastian Winkler

Hugepages and Large Pages

If you run a Oracle Database on a Linux Server with more than 16 GB physical memory and your System Global Area (SGA) is greater than 8 GB, you should configure HugePages. Oracle promises more performance by doing this. A HugePages configuration means, that the linux kernel can handle „large pages“, like Oracle generally calls them. Instead of standardly 4 KB on x86 and x86_64 or 16 KB on IA64 systems – 4 MB on x86, 2 MB on x86_64 and 256 MB on IA64 system. Bigger pages means, that the system uses less page tables, manages less mappings and by that reduce the effort for their management and access.

However their is a limitation by Oracle, because Automatic Memory Management (AMM) does not support HugePages. If you already use AMM and MEMORY_TARGET is set you have to disable it and switch back to Automatic Shared Memory Management (ASMM). That means set SGA_TARGET and PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET. But there is another innovation called Transparent Hugpages (THP) which should be disabled as well. The feature will be delivered since Red Hat Linux 6 or a according derivate. Oracle as well as Red Hat recommend to disable Transparent Hugepages. Explanation in point 5 – Change Server configuration. So lets get started and come to the 7 steps:

1. Check Physical Memory

First we should check our „physical“ available Memory. In the example we have about 128 GB of RAM. SGA_TARGET and PGA_AGGREGATE_TARGET together, should not be more than the availabel memory. Besides should be enough space for OS processes itself:

grep MemTotal /proc/meminfo

 

MemTotal: 132151496 kB

2. Check Database Parameter

Second check your database parameter. Initially: AMM disabled? MEMORY_TARGET and MEMORY_MAX_TARGET should be set to 0:

SQL> select value from v$parameter where name = 'memory_target';

 

VALUE

---------------------------

How big is our SGA? In this example about 40 GB. Important: In the following query we directly convert into kB (value/1024). With that we can continue to calculate directly:

SQL> select value/1024 from v$parameter where name = 'sga_target';

 

VALUE

---------------------------

41943040

Finally as per default the parameter use_large_pages should be enabled:

SQL> select value from v$parameter where name = 'use_large_pages';

 

VALUE

---------------------------

TRUE

3. Check Hugepagesize

In our example we use a x86_64 Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server. So by default hugepagesize should be set to 2 MB:

grep Hugepagesize /proc/meminfo

 

Hugepagesize:       2048 kB

4. Calculate Hugepages

For the calculation of the number of hugepages there is a easy way:

SGA / Hugepagesize = Number Hugepages

Following our example:

41943040 / 2048 = 20480

If you run more than one database on your server, you should include the SGA of all of your instances into the calculation:

( SGA 1. Instance + SGA 2. Instance + … etc. ) / Hugepagesize = Number Hugepages

In My Oracle Support you can find a script (Doc ID 401749.1) called hugepages_settings.sh, which does the calculation. This also includes a check of your kernel version and the actually used shared memory area by the SGA. Please consider that this calculation observes only the actual use of SGA and their use. If your second instance is down it will be not in the account. That means to adjust your SGA and restart your database first. Than you can run the script. Result should be the following line. Maybe you can make your own calculation and than check it with the script:

Recommended setting: vm.nr_hugepages = 20480

5. Change Server Configuration

The next step is to enter the number of hugepages in the server config file. For that you need root permissions. On Red Hat Linux 6 /etc/sysctl.conf.

vi /etc/sysctl.conf

 

vm.nr_hugepages=20480

Correctly inserted, following result should show up:

grep vm.nr_hugepages /etc/sysctl.conf

 

vm.nr_hugepages=20480 

The next parameter is hard and soft memlock in /etc/security/limits.conf for our oracle user. This value should be smaller than our available memory but minor to our SGA. Our hugepages should fit into that by 100 percent. For that following calculation:

Number Hugepages * Hugepagesize = minimum Memlock

Following our example:

20480 * 2048 = 41943040

vi /etc/security/limits.conf

 

oracle               soft    memlock 41943040

oracle               hard    memlock 41943040

Correctly inserted, following result should show up:

grep oracle /etc/security/limits.conf

 

...

oracle               soft    memlock 41943040

oracle               hard    memlock 41943040

As mentioned before we have to disable transparent hugepages from Red Hat Linux version 6 ongoing:

cat /sys/kernel/mm/redhat_transparent_hugepage/enabled

[always] madvise never

 

echo never > /sys/kernel/mm/redhat_transparent_hugepage/enabled

echo never > /sys/kernel/mm/redhat_transparent_hugepage/defrag

 

cat /sys/kernel/mm/redhat_transparent_hugepage/enabled

always madvise [never]

6. Server Reboot

If all parameter are set, make a complete reboot your server. As an alternative you can reload the parameters with sysctl -p.

7. Check Configuration

Memlock correct?

ulimit -l

 

41943040 

HugePages correctly configured and in use?

grep Huge /proc/meminfo

 

AnonHugePages:    538624 kB 

HugePages_Total:    20480

HugePages_Free:     12292

HugePages_Rsvd:      8188

HugePages_Surp:        0

Hugepagesize:       2048 kB

Transparent Hugepages disabled?

cat /sys/kernel/mm/redhat_transparent_hugepage/enabled

 

always madvise [never]

Did the database uses HugePages? For that we take a look into the alert log. After „Starting ORACLE instance (normal)“ following entry „Large Pages Information“ gives us advise:

************************ Large Pages Information *******************

 

Per process system memlock (soft) limit = 100 GB

Total Shared Global Region in Large Pages = 40 GB (100%) 

Large Pages used by this instance: 20481 (40 GB)

Large Pages unused system wide = 0 (0 KB)

Large Pages configured system wide = 20481 (40 GB)

Large Page size = 2048 KB

 

********************************************************************

If your configuration is incorrect Oracle delivers recommendation here for the right setting. In the following example exactly one Page is missing, so 2048 kB memlock to come to 100% of SGA use of hugepages:

************************ Large Pages Information *******************

...

...

 

RECOMMENDATION:

 

Total System Global Area size is 40 GB. For optimal performance,

prior to the next instance restart:

1. Increase the number of unused large pages by

at least 1 (page size 2048 KB, total size 2048 KB) system wide to

get 100% of the System Global Area allocated with large pages

2. Large pages are automatically locked into physical memory.

Increase the per process memlock (soft) limit to at least 40 GB to lock

100% System Global Area's large pages into physical memory