Direct Path Reads
Direct Path Reads
In a direct path read, the database reads buffers from disk directly into the PGA, bypassing the SGA entirely.
The following figure shows the difference between scattered and sequential reads, which store buffers in the SGA, and direct path reads.
Situations in which Oracle Database may perform direct path reads include:
Execution of a CREATE TABLE AS SELECT statement
Execution of an ALTER REBUILD or ALTER MOVE statement
Reads from a temporary tablespace
Parallel queries
Reads from a LOB segment
Direct Path Reads
In a direct path read, the database reads buffers from disk directly into the PGA, bypassing the SGA entirely.
The following figure shows the difference between scattered and sequential reads, which store buffers in the SGA, and direct path reads.
Direct Path Reads
In a direct path read, the database reads buffers from disk directly into the PGA, bypassing the SGA entirely.
The following figure shows the difference between scattered and sequential reads, which store buffers in the SGA, and direct path reads.
Direct Path Reads
In a direct path read, the database reads buffers from disk directly into the PGA, bypassing the SGA entirely.
The following figure shows the difference between scattered and sequential reads, which store buffers in the SGA, and direct path reads.
Direct Path Reads
In a direct path read, the database reads buffers from disk directly into the PGA, bypassing the SGA entirely.
The following figure shows the difference between scattered and sequential reads, which store buffers in the SGA, and direct path reads.
Direct Path ReadsIn a direct path read, the database reads buffers from disk directly into the PGA, bypassing the SGA entirely.
The following figure shows the difference between scattered and sequential reads, which store buffers in the SGA, and direct path reads.
Direct Path Reads
In a direct path read, the database reads buffers from disk directly into the PGA, bypassing the SGA entirely.
The following figure shows the difference between scattered and sequential reads, which store buffers in the SGA, and direct path reads.