TEMPORARY Tablespaces and TEMPFILES

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What are Temporary Tablespaces:

Temporary tablespaces are used to manage space for database sort operations and for storing global temporary tables. For example, if you join two large tables, and Oracle cannot do the sort in memory (see SORT_AREA_SIZE initialisation parameter), space will be allocated in a temporary tablespace for doing the sort operation. Other SQL operations that might require disk sorting are: CREATE INDEX, ANALYZE, Select DISTINCT, ORDER BY, GROUP BY, UNION, INTERSECT, MINUS, Sort-Merge joins, etc.

The DBA should assign a temporary tablespace to each user in the database to prevent them from allocating sort space in the SYSTEM tablespace. This can be done with one of the following commands:

SQL> CREATE USER scott DEFAULT TABLESPACE data TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp;
SQL> ALTER USER scott TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp;

Note that a temporary tablespace cannot contain permanent objects and therefore doesn't need to be backed up.

What are TEMPFILES?

Unlike normal data files, TEMPFILEs are not fully initialised (sparse). When you create a TEMPFILE, Oracle only writes to the header and last block of the file. This is why it is much quicker to create a TEMPFILE than to create a normal database file.

TEMPFILEs are not recorded in the database's control file. This implies that one can just recreate them whenever you restore the database, or after deleting them by accident. This opens interesting possibilities like having different TEMPFILE configurations between permanent and standby databases, or configure TEMPFILEs to be local instead of shared in a RAC environment.

One cannot remove datafiles from a tablespace until you drop the entire tablespace. However, one can remove a TEMPFILE from a database. Look at his example:

SQL> ALTER DATABASE TEMPFILE '/oradata/temp02.dbf' DROP INCLUDING DATAFILES;

If you remove all tempfiles from a temporary tablespace, you may encounter error: ORA-25153: Temporary Tablespace is Empty. Use the following statement to add a TEMPFILE to a temporary tablespace:

SQL> ALTER TABLESPACE temp ADD TEMPFILE '/oradata/temp03.dbf' SIZE 100M;

Except for adding a tempfile, as illustrated in the above example, you cannot use the ALTER TABLESPACE statement for a locally managed temporary tablespace (operations like rename, set to read only, recover, etc. will fail).

How does one create Temporary Tablespaces?

Oracle provides various ways of creating TEMPORARY tablespaces (mainly to provide backward compatibility). One should use the most recent method available:

- Prior to Oracle 7.3 - CREATE TABLESPACE temp DATAFILE ...;
- Oracle 7.3 & 8.0 - CREATE TABLESPACE temp DATAFILE ... TEMPORARY;
- Oracle 8i and above - CREATE TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp TEMPFILE ...;

Oracle 8i (and above) example:

SQL> CREATE TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp 
      TEMPFILE '/oradata/mytemp_01.tmp' SIZE 20M
      EXTENT MANAGEMENT LOCAL UNIFORM SIZE 16M;

For best performance, the UNIFORM SIZE must be a multiple of the SORT_AREA_SIZE parameter.

Starting from Oracle 9i, with OMF (Oracle Managed Files):

SQL> CREATE TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp;

Default Temporary Tablespaces:

In Oracle 9i and above, one can define a Default Temporary Tablespace at database creation time, or by issuing an "ALTER DATABASE" statement:

ALTER DATABASE DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE temp;

The default Default Temporary Tablespace is SYSTEM. Each database can be assigned one and only one Default Temporary Tablespace. Using this feature, a Temporary Tablespace is automatically assigned to users. The following restrictions apply to default temporary tablespaces:

- The Default Temporary Tablespace must be of type TEMPORARY
- The DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE cannot be taken off-line
- The DEFAULT TEMPORARY TABLESPACE cannot be dropped until you create another one.

To see the default temporary tablespace for a database, execute the following query:

SQL> SELECT * FROM DATABASE_PROPERTIES where PROPERTY_NAME='DEFAULT_TEMP_TABLESPACE';

All new users that are not explicitly assigned a TEMPORARY TABLESPACE, will get the Default Temporary Tablespace as its TEMPORARY TABLESPACE. Also, when you assign a TEMPORARY tablespace to a user, Oracle will not change this value next time you change the Default Temporary Tablespace for the database.

Other Considerations:

Some performance considerations for temporary tablespaces:

- Always use temporary tablespaces instead of permanent content tablespaces for sorting (no logging and uses one large sort segment to reduce recursive SQL and ST space management enqueue contention).
- Ensure that you create your temporary tablespaces as locally managed instead of dictionary managed (Use sort space bitmap instead of sys.fet$ and sys.uet$ for allocating space).
- Always use TEMPFILEs instead of DATAFILEs (reduce backup and recovery time + other advantages as described above)
- Stripe your temporary tablespaces over multiple disks to alleviate possible disk contention and to speed-up sorting operations (user processes can read/write to it directly).

Monitoring Temporary Tablespaces and Sorting:

Unlike datafiles, tempfiles are not listed in V$DATAFILE and DBA_DATA_FILES. Use V$TEMPFILE and DBA_TEMP_FILES instead.

One can monitor temporary segments from V$SORT_SEGMENT and V$SORT_USAGE

DBA_FREE_SPACE does not record free space for temporary tablespaces. Use V$TEMP_SPACE_HEADER instead:

SQL> select TABLESPACE_NAME, BYTES_USED, BYTES_FREE from V$TEMP_SPACE_HEADER;

TABLESPACE_NAME                BYTES_USED BYTES_FREE
------------------------------ ---------- ----------
TEMP                             52428800   52428800

Comments

Excellent information - very useful. 10 out of 10!

A great reference. It covers most you need to know about temp space.

Additional comment: multiple smaller tempfiles allow greater parallelisation on index rebuilds and other parallel actions, reducing overall execution time of these operations.

Hello admin,

This is good information. Was looking for this type of explaination for long time.
Good Job!

Thank you once again.
A.Srinivasulu.

Below article from Brian peasland said(in second paragraph) that if use locally managed temporary tablespace created with tempfile, then it will not release the segment even user has finished sorting due to oracle bug. But here says make sure to use LOCALLY managed temp tablesapce with tempfile. So which one should we use for 9.2 database?

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Does 9iR2 release temporary tablespace that is no longer used?

EXPERT RESPONSE FROM: Brian Peasland

Oracle 9i does not release allocated TEMP segments until you shutdown the database. While the TEMP segment is allocated, it does not mean that it is unavailable for use. When a user requests a disk sort, Oracle will allocate a TEMP segment. Once that sort is done, Oracle releases this TEMP segment for future use, but does not deallocate it. When the next user requests a disk sort, Oracle does not have to allocate a new TEMP segment. It uses the same one that no user is currently using. Oracle manages this for you in 9i. And there is really only one TEMP segment in the TEMP tablespace. Multiple users can utilitize this one segment.
There have been problems in 9i where users running a TEMPORARY TEMP tablespace with TEMPFILES that is Locally Managed where Oracle does not release the sort space once it is no longer being used. This is a known bug. The workaround has been to revert back to Dictionary Managed tablespace for TEMP.

Hi Oracular,

Really a good and easy understandable document. This helped to resolve issues reg ORA-25153 error.

Thanks for ur valuable information,keep updating like this.

Regards,
Prakash Dhanabal,
DBA.

It helped me with quick interview preparation.