I have 2 delete statements that are taking a long time to complete. There are several indexes on the columns in where clause.
What is a duplicate?
If 2 or more records have same values in columns id,cid,type,trefid,ordrefid,amount and paydt then there are duplicates.
The DELETEs delete about 1 million record.
Can they be re-written in any way to make it quicker.
DELETE FROM TABLE1 A WHERE loaddt < (
SELECT max(loaddt) FROM TABLE1 B
WHERE
a.id=b.id and
a.cid=b.cid and
NVL(a.type,'-99999') = NVL(b.type,'-99999') and
NVL(a.trefid,'-99999')=NVL(b.trefid,'-99999') and
NVL(a.ordrefid,'-99999')= NVL(b.ordrefid,'-99999') and
NVL(a.amount,'-99999')=NVL(b.amount,'-99999') and
NVL(a.paydt,TO_DATE('9999-12-31','YYYY-MM-DD'))=NVL(b.paydt,TO_DATE('9999-12-31','YYYY-MM-DD'))
);
COMMIT;
DELETE FROM TABLE1 a where rowid > (
Select min(rowid) from TABLE1 b
WHERE
a.id=b.id and
a.cid=b.cid and
NVL(a.type,'-99999') = NVL(b.type,'-99999') and
NVL(a.trefid,'-99999')=NVL(b.trefid,'-99999') and
NVL(a.ordrefid,'-99999')= NVL(b.ordrefid,'-99999') and
NVL(a.amount,'-99999')=NVL(b.amount,'-99999') and
NVL(a.paydt,TO_DATE('9999-12-31','YYYY-MM-DD'))=NVL(b.paydt,TO_DATE('9999-12-31','YYYY-MM-DD'))
);
commit;
Explain Plan:
DELETE TABLE1
HASH JOIN 1296491
Access Predicates
AND
A.ID=ITEM_1
A.CID=ITEM_2
ITEM_3=NVL(TYPE,'-99999')
ITEM_4=NVL(TREFID,'-99999')
ITEM_5=NVL(ORDREFID,'-99999')
ITEM_6=NVL(AMOUNT,(-99999))
ITEM_7=NVL(PAYDT,TO_DATE(' 9999-12-31 00:00:00', 'syyyy-mm-dd hh24:mi:ss'))
Filter Predicates
LOADDT<MAX(LOADDT)
TABLE ACCESS TABLE1 FULL 267904
VIEW VW_SQ_1 690385
SORT GROUP BY 690385
TABLE ACCESS TABLE1 FULL 267904
How large is the table? If count of deleted rows is up to 12% then you may think about index.
Could you somehow partition your table – like week by week and then scan only actual week?
Maybe this could be more effecient. When you’re using aggregate function, then oracle must walk through all relevant rows (in your case fullscan), but when you use exists it stops when the first occurence is found. (and of course the query would be much faster, when there was one function-based(because of NVL) index on all columns in where clause)