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I am trying to use Load Balance where I have 3 RAC nodes in my Oracle 10g Database like db1, db2, db3. I have developed a Java program with JDBC connection. This JDBC connection uses load balance. My problem is that I want to print the RAC node (whether db1 or db2 or db3) which is hit by this JDBC connection. Can anybody provide any SQL Query to know the RAC Node hit by the current JDBC Connection? I want to test that load balance is successfully used when we connecting through JDBC thin. Can anybody suggest any alternative ways to test load balance using JDBC Java program?

2 Answers 2

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select instance_name from v$instance
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  • This query provides me the same node to which I log in. For example, if I log in to db1 and run this query, it displays db1. for db2, it's db2. The same happens if I run this query from java program or directly in command line on the unix server.
    – ramesh
    Jan 16, 2013 at 11:09
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Normally, you would test that load balancing is working by doing something like

SELECT inst_id, count(*)
  FROM gv$session
 WHERE <<something that identifies your connections>>
 GROUP BY inst_id

to get a count of the number of sessions per instance. The <<something that identifies your connections>> could be a predicate on the MACHINE column (assuming your connections are coming from one or more app servers), the PROGRAM column, the OSUSER, the SCHEMANAME, or anything else that identifies the sessions you are interested in.

If you really want to get this information separately from your Java application, you could

SELECT DISTINCT inst_id
  FROM gv$mystat

In either case, you can look up which inst_id maps to which server using the gv$instance table.

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  • thanks @Justin Cave But I am still far from the answer. Both your queries display all the 3 nodes. To identify the connection I used OSUSER. When I run the java program from the local machine through vpn connection with Unix Server. It displays one more count in one of the node. But if I do the same from the UNIX Server itself. I don't find any change in count before and after running the java program. To get the accurate results, I do not close the connection and use Thread.sleep(10000) to keep it running for 10 secs.
    – ramesh
    Jan 16, 2013 at 11:15
  • @ramesh - Are you sure that the OSUSER is the same when the application is run on your local machine and on the UNIX server? It seems somewhat unlikely that you would be using the same operating system user in both cases. Jan 16, 2013 at 15:19
  • @Justin Cave - No the OSUSER is different in Unix Server than my local machine. But my question is if I can find more counts while running from local machine, why can't I get any difference while running on unix server.
    – ramesh
    Jan 16, 2013 at 15:53
  • @ramesh - If you are filtering the data so that you are only showing sessions opened by a particular osuser, you'll only see sessions opened by that osuser. If you run the application on a different machine with a different osuser, your WHERE clause would filter out that row. You would realistically need to pick a filter predicate that would identify all the sessions you are actually interested in. Jan 16, 2013 at 16:13
  • @Justin Cave - I am really interested in the rac node hit by my jdbc connection. I want to identify my session started by my java program through jdbc connection. What result I got is: when I filter using WHERE osuser='unixuser', I found no difference in count before run and during the run. But I noticed the count increased by 1 when I filtered using WHERE osuser='winuser'. Hope I could explain myself.
    – ramesh
    Jan 17, 2013 at 11:04

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