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Home/ Questions/Q 6145835
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T18:51:21+00:00 2026-05-23T18:51:21+00:00

i am running a query in oracle 10 select A from B where C

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i am running a query in oracle 10 select A from B where C = D
B has millions of records and there is no index on C

The first time i run it it takes about 30 seconds, the second time i run the query it takes about 1 second.

Obviously it’s caching something and i want it to stop that, each time i run the query i want it to take 30s – just like it was running for the first time.

  • i am over-simplifying the issue that i am having for the sake of making the question readable.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T18:51:21+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 6:51 pm

    Clearing the caches to measure performance is possible but very unwieldy.

    A very good measure for tracking achieved performance of tuning efforts is counting the number of read blocks during query execution. One of the easiest way to do this is using sqlplus with autotrace, like so:

    set autotrace traceonly
    <your query>
    

    outputs

    ...
    Statistics
    ----------------------------------------------------------
              0  recursive calls
              0  db block gets
              1  consistent gets
              0  physical reads
              0  redo size
            363  bytes sent via SQL*Net to client
            364  bytes received via SQL*Net from client
              4  SQL*Net roundtrips to/from client
              0  sorts (memory)
              0  sorts (disk)
              1  rows processed
    

    The number of blocks read, be it from cache or from disk, is consistent gets.

    Another way is running the query with increased statistics i.e. with the hint gather_plan_statistics and then looking at the query plan from the cursor cache:

    auto autotrace off
    set serveroutput off
    <your query with hint gather_plan_statistics>
    select * from table(dbms_xplan.display_cursor(null,null,'typical allstats'));
    

    The number of blocks read is output in column buffers.

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    | Id  | Operation        | Name           | Starts | E-Rows | Cost (%CPU)| E-Time   | A-Rows |   A-Time   | Buffers |
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    |   0 | SELECT STATEMENT |                |      3 |        |     1 (100)|          |      3 |00:00:00.01 |       3 |
    |   1 |  SORT AGGREGATE  |                |      3 |      1 |            |          |      3 |00:00:00.01 |       3 |
    |   2 |   INDEX FULL SCAN| ABCDEF         |      3 |    176 |     1   (0)| 00:00:01 |    528 |00:00:00.01 |       3 |
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
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