Oracle® Database Reference 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E25513-03 |
|
|
PDF · Mobi · ePub |
Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type | String |
Syntax | DB_BLOCK_CHECKING = { FALSE | OFF | LOW | MEDIUM | TRUE | FULL } |
Default value | FALSE |
Modifiable | ALTER SYSTEM |
Basic | No |
DB_BLOCK_CHECKING
specifies whether or not Oracle performs block checking for database blocks.
Values:
OFF
or FALSE
No block checking is performed for blocks in user tablespaces. However, semantic block checking for SYSTEM
tablespace blocks is always turned on.
LOW
Basic block header checks are performed after block contents change in memory (for example, after UPDATE
or INSERT
statements, on-disk reads, or inter-instance block transfers in Oracle RAC).
MEDIUM
All LOW
checks and full semantic checks are performed for all objects except indexes (whose contents can be reconstructed by a drop+rebuild on encountering a corruption).
FULL
or TRUE
All LOW
and MEDIUM
checks and full semantic checks are performed for all objects.
Oracle checks a block by going through the data in the block, making sure it is logically self-consistent. Block checking can often prevent memory and data corruption. Block checking typically causes 1% to 10% overhead, depending on workload and the parameter value. The more updates or inserts in a workload, the more expensive it is to turn on block checking. You should set DB_BLOCK_CHECKING
to FULL
if the performance overhead is acceptable.
For backward compatibility, the use of FALSE
(implying OFF
) and TRUE
(implying FULL
) is preserved.