This is not an Oracle fault, its just the way TOAD is sending SQL to oracle. ie toad doesn't cache the statement handle to oracle, it just closes it on completion.
Oracle will do one of three main things to a query when its sent to the SQL engine.
- hard parse it
- soft parse it
- not parse it
ie we want to be at case 3 and we certainly don't want to be at case 1!
so when will each case happen?
a hard parse will occur when the SQL is not in the shared pool at all or the SQL is in the shared pool but the bind varilables / literals in use mean that the current SQL is not usable. for example lets say we issued this SQL three times select MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval from dual
. This will hard parse the first time Oracle sees this SQL and puts it into the shared pool, and will soft parse on the 2nd and 3rd calls. We can see this happen easily:
SQL> select n.name, s.value from v$mystat s, v$statname n where n.statistic# = s.statistic# and n.name in ('parse count (hard)', 'parse count (total)');
NAME VALUE
-------------------- ----------
parse count (total) 522
parse count (hard) 287
SQL> select /* test1 */ MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval
2 from dual;
NEXTVAL
----------
62
SQL> select /* test1 */ MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval
2 from dual;
NEXTVAL
----------
63
SQL> select /* test1 */ MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval
2 from dual;
NEXTVAL
----------
64
SQL> select n.name, s.value from v$mystat s, v$statname n where n.statistic# = s.statistic# and n.name in ('parse count (hard)', 'parse count (total)');
NAME VALUE
-------------------- ----------
parse count (total) 526
parse count (hard) 288
SQL> select sql_text, executions, parse_calls from v$sql where sql_text like 'select /* test1 */%';
SQL_TEXT EXECUTIONS PARSE_CALLS
------------------------------ ---------- -----------
select /* test1 */ MY_SEQUENCE 3 3
_SEQ.nextval from dual
hard parses ticked up by one and the sql has registered 3 parses, so 1 hard parse (to put it into the shared pool) and 2 soft parses.
why did it soft parse? in order for "no parse" to happen, the client code has to keep hold of the statement handle and just re-execute it.
i.e. if we were writing this in Java we would write this:
public static int getNextSeq(String str)
throws Exception
{
if (sel == null)
{
sel = con.prepareStatement("select MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval v from dual "+str);
}
ResultSet rs = sel.executeQuery();
int seqVal=0;
while (rs.next())
{
seqVal = rs.getInt("V");
}
return seqVal;
}
i.e. we only call PrepareStatement if we havent already done this. if we execute this code with
System.out.println(getNextSeq(args[0]));
System.out.println(getNextSeq(args[0]));
System.out.println(getNextSeq(args[0]));
we can see this in action:
SQL> host java Prep two
70
71
72
SQL> select sql_text, executions, parse_calls from v$sql where sql_text like 'select %two';
SQL_TEXT EXECUTIONS PARSE_CALLS
------------------------------ ---------- -----------
select MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval 3 1
v from dual two
now oracle DIDN'T parse the SQL apart from the 1 hard parse. If the Java code was instead written poorly, we'd see this:
sel = con.prepareStatement("select MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval v from dual "+str);
ResultSet rs = sel.executeQuery();
SQL> host java Prep three
73
74
75
SQL> select sql_text, executions, parse_calls from v$sql where sql_text like 'select %three';
SQL_TEXT EXECUTIONS PARSE_CALLS
------------------------------ ---------- -----------
select MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval 3 3
v from dual three
and now we see the parse count = executions. in other words we are soft parsing each call which isn't ideal. again NOT an Oracle limitation, just poor client implementation.
with PL/SQL we DON'T have to worry about this. Why? PL/SQL does not parse either as its optimized a lot for running SQL (unsuprisingly!).
eg:
SQL> declare
2 v_seq number;
3 begin
4 for idx in 1..3 loop
5 select MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval into v_seq from dual pls_test;
6 end loop;
7 end;
8 /
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL> select sql_text, executions, parse_calls from v$sql where sql_text like 'SELECT %PLS_TEST';
SQL_TEXT EXECUTIONS PARSE_CALLS
------------------------------ ---------- -----------
SELECT MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.NEXTVAL 3 1
FROM DUAL PLS_TEST
now, there is one caveat to pl/sql doing this optimization for us, and that is the parameter SESSION_CACHED_CURSORS. in a given session, Oracle will hold open a set of cursors for us (ie they are soft open, that is if we need more cursors it will close them). so if we had SESSION_CACHED_CURSORS=0 and repeat the above test, we will see soft parses all of a sudden creep in:
SQL> alter session set session_cached_cursors=0;
Session altered.
SQL> declare
2 v_seq number;
3 begin
4 for idx in 1..3 loop
5 select MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.nextval into v_seq from dual pls_test2;
6 end loop;
7 end;
8 /
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL> select sql_text, executions, parse_calls from v$sql where sql_text like 'SELECT %PLS_TEST2';
SQL_TEXT EXECUTIONS PARSE_CALLS
------------------------------ ---------- -----------
SELECT MY_SEQUENCE_SEQ.NEXTVAL 3 3
FROM DUAL PLS_TEST2
obviously, the higher the value of cached cursors, the more opertuntity we have to avoid soft parsing and reach the holy grail of avoid parsing alltogether.
create sequence my_sequencer;
, then runSELECT MY_SEQUENCER.nextval FROM dual;
multiple times, and inselect executions, parse_calls, v$sql.* from v$sql where lower(sql_text) like '%my_sequencer%';
the executions increase but the parse_calls stay low. You may need to create a fully reproducible test case for us to debug the issue.select value from v$parameter where name = 'session_cached_cursors';
set to 0?