Sort merge outer joins will always put the outer-joined table second regardless of the hints. Adding an extra inner-join allows control of the join order, and then ROWID can be used to join again to the large table. Hopefully two good joins will work better than one bad join.
Assumptions
This answer assumes that the sort merge join is the fastest join, and that the manual is correct that the second data set is always sorted. It would be difficult to test these assumptions without significantly more information about the data.
Sample Schema
Here are some similar tables, with fake statistics to make the optimizer think they have 500M rows and 100K rows.
create table F_SCREEN_INSTANCE(DAY_ID number, PARTIAL_ID number, ID number, AGENT_USER_ID number,COMPUTER_ID number, RAW_APPLICATION_ID number, APP_USER_ID number, APPLICATION_ID number, USER_ID number, RAW_MODULE_ID number,MODULE_ID number, START_TIME date, RAW_SCREEN_NAME varchar2(100), SCREEN_ID number, SCREEN_TYPE number, ACTIVE_TIME_SUM number, IDLE_TIME_SUM number,
constraint f_screen_instance_pk primary key (day_id, partial_id)
) organization index;
create table F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF(DAY_ID number, PARTIAL_ID number, ID number, AGENT_USER_ID number,COMPUTER_ID number, RAW_APPLICATION_ID number, APP_USER_ID number,APPLICATION_ID number, USER_ID number, RAW_MODULE_ID number, MODULE_ID number, START_TIME date, RAW_SCREEN_NAME varchar2(100), SCREEN_ID number, SCREEN_TYPE number, ACTIVE_TIME_SUM number, IDLE_TIME_SUM number,
constraint f_screen_instance_buf_pk primary key (day_id, partial_id)
);
begin
dbms_stats.set_table_stats(user, 'F_SCREEN_INSTANCE', numrows => 500000000);
dbms_stats.set_table_stats(user, 'F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF', numrows => 100000);
end;
/
The Problem
The desired join and join order can be achieved with the LEADING hint when an inner join is used. The smaller table, F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF, is the second table.
explain plan for
select /*+ use_merge(t s) leading(t s) */ *
from f_screen_instance_buf s
join f_screen_instance t
on (s.DAY_ID = t.DAY_ID and s.PARTIAL_ID = t.PARTIAL_ID);
select * from table(dbms_xplan.display(format => '-predicate'));
Plan hash value: 563239985
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Id | Operation | Name | Rows | Bytes |TempSpc| Cost (%CPU)| Time |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 0 | SELECT STATEMENT | | 100K| 19M| | 6898 (66)| 00:00:01 |
| 1 | MERGE JOIN | | 100K| 19M| | 6898 (66)| 00:00:01 |
| 2 | INDEX FULL SCAN | F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_PK | 500M| 46G| | 4504 (100)| 00:00:01 |
| 3 | SORT JOIN | | 100K| 9765K| 26M| 2393 (1)| 00:00:01 |
| 4 | TABLE ACCESS FULL| F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF | 100K| 9765K| | 34 (6)| 00:00:01 |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The LEADING hint does not work when changing to a left join.
explain plan for
select /*+ use_merge(t s) leading(t s) */ *
from f_screen_instance_buf s
left join f_screen_instance t
on (s.DAY_ID = t.DAY_ID and s.PARTIAL_ID = t.PARTIAL_ID);
select * from table(dbms_xplan.display(format => '-predicate'));
Plan hash value: 1472690071
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Id | Operation | Name | Rows | Bytes |TempSpc| Cost (%CPU)| Time |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 0 | SELECT STATEMENT | | 100K| 19M| | 16M (1)| 00:10:34 |
| 1 | MERGE JOIN OUTER | | 100K| 19M| | 16M (1)| 00:10:34 |
| 2 | TABLE ACCESS BY INDEX ROWID| F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF | 100K| 9765K| | 826 (0)| 00:00:01 |
| 3 | INDEX FULL SCAN | F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF_PK | 100K| | | 26 (0)| 00:00:01 |
| 4 | SORT JOIN | | 500M| 46G| 131G| 16M (1)| 00:10:34 |
| 5 | INDEX FAST FULL SCAN | F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_PK | 500M| 46G| | 2703 (100)| 00:00:01 |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This limitation is not documented as far as I can tell. I tried using the +outline
setting of DBMS_XPLAN
to see the full set of hints and then changed them around. But nothing I did could make the join order change for the LEFT JOIN
version. Perhaps someone else can get this to work.
select * from table(dbms_xplan.display(format => '-predicate +outline'));
...
Outline Data
-------------
/*+
BEGIN_OUTLINE_DATA
USE_MERGE(@"SEL$0E991E55" "T"@"SEL$1")
LEADING(@"SEL$0E991E55" "S"@"SEL$1" "T"@"SEL$1")
INDEX_FFS(@"SEL$0E991E55" "T"@"SEL$1" ("F_SCREEN_INSTANCE"."DAY_ID" "F_SCREEN_INSTANCE"."PARTIAL_ID"))
INDEX(@"SEL$0E991E55" "S"@"SEL$1" ("F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF"."DAY_ID"
"F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF"."PARTIAL_ID"))
OUTLINE(@"SEL$9EC647DD")
OUTLINE(@"SEL$2")
MERGE(@"SEL$9EC647DD")
OUTLINE_LEAF(@"SEL$0E991E55")
ALL_ROWS
DB_VERSION('12.1.0.1')
OPTIMIZER_FEATURES_ENABLE('12.1.0.1')
IGNORE_OPTIM_EMBEDDED_HINTS
END_OUTLINE_DATA
*/
Possible Solution
--#3: Join the large table to the smaller result set. This uses the largest table twice,
--but the plan can use the ROWID for a very quick join.
explain plan for
merge into F_SCREEN_INSTANCE t
using
(
--#2: Now get the missing rows with an outer join. Since the _BUF table is
--small I assume it does not make a big difference exactly how it it joind
--to the 100K result set.
--The hints NO_MERGE and NO_PUSH_PRED are required to keep the INNER_JOIN
--inline view intact.
select /*+ no_merge(inner_join) no_push_pred(inner_join) */ inner_join.*
from f_screen_instance_buf s
left join
(
--#1: Get 100K rows efficiently with an inner join.
--Note that the ROWID is retrieved here.
select /*+ use_merge(t s) leading(t s) */ s.*, s.rowid s_rowid
from f_screen_instance_buf s
join f_screen_instance t
on (s.DAY_ID = t.DAY_ID and s.PARTIAL_ID = t.PARTIAL_ID)
) inner_join
on (s.DAY_ID = inner_join.DAY_ID and s.PARTIAL_ID = inner_join.PARTIAL_ID)
) s
on (s.s_rowid = t.rowid)
when matched then update set
t.ACTIVE_TIME_SUM = t.ACTIVE_TIME_SUM + s.ACTIVE_TIME_SUM,
t.IDLE_TIME_SUM = t.IDLE_TIME_SUM + s.IDLE_TIME_SUM
when not matched then insert values (
s.DAY_ID, s.PARTIAL_ID, s.ID, s.AGENT_USER_ID, s.COMPUTER_ID, s.RAW_APPLICATION_ID, s.APP_USER_ID, s.APPLICATION_ID, s.USER_ID, s.RAW_MODULE_ID, s.MODULE_ID, s.START_TIME, s.RAW_SCREEN_NAME, s.SCREEN_ID, s.SCREEN_TYPE, s.ACTIVE_TIME_SUM, s.IDLE_TIME_SUM);
It ain't pretty, but at least it generates a plan with the large table first in the sort merge join.
select * from table(dbms_xplan.display);
Plan hash value: 1086560566
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Id | Operation | Name | Rows | Bytes |TempSpc| Cost (%CPU)| Time |
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 0 | MERGE STATEMENT | | 500G| 173T| | 5355K (43)| 00:03:30 |
| 1 | MERGE | F_SCREEN_INSTANCE | | | | | |
| 2 | VIEW | | | | | | |
|* 3 | HASH JOIN OUTER | | 500G| 179T| 29M| 5355K (43)| 00:03:30 |
|* 4 | HASH JOIN OUTER | | 100K| 28M| 3712K| 8663 (53)| 00:00:01 |
| 5 | INDEX FAST FULL SCAN| F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF_PK | 100K| 2539K| | 9 (0)| 00:00:01 |
| 6 | VIEW | | 100K| 25M| | 6898 (66)| 00:00:01 |
| 7 | MERGE JOIN | | 100K| 12M| | 6898 (66)| 00:00:01 |
| 8 | INDEX FULL SCAN | F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_PK | 500M| 12G| | 4504 (100)| 00:00:01 |
|* 9 | SORT JOIN | | 100K| 9765K| 26M| 2393 (1)| 00:00:01 |
| 10 | TABLE ACCESS FULL| F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_BUF | 100K| 9765K| | 34 (6)| 00:00:01 |
| 11 | INDEX FAST FULL SCAN | F_SCREEN_INSTANCE_PK | 500M| 46G| | 2703 (100)| 00:00:01 |
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Predicate Information (identified by operation id):
---------------------------------------------------
3 - access("INNER_JOIN"."S_ROWID"=("T".ROWID(+)))
4 - access("S"."PARTIAL_ID"="INNER_JOIN"."PARTIAL_ID"(+) AND
"S"."DAY_ID"="INNER_JOIN"."DAY_ID"(+))
9 - access("S"."DAY_ID"="T"."DAY_ID" AND "S"."PARTIAL_ID"="T"."PARTIAL_ID")
filter("S"."PARTIAL_ID"="T"."PARTIAL_ID" AND "S"."DAY_ID"="T"."DAY_ID")
update
andinsert
? My experience is that that is sometimes much faster than amerge
statement.