Property | Description |
---|---|
Parameter type |
String |
Syntax |
|
Default value |
There is no default value. |
Modifiable |
|
Range of values |
Any valid character string |
Basic |
No |
In a CDB
In the root for a CDB, RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN
specifies the CDB resource plan. A CDB resource plan allocates resources among PDBs.
A CDB resource plan is created using DBMS_RESOURCE_MANAGER.CREATE_CDB_PLAN
and CREATE_CDB_PLAN_DIRECTIVE
.
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information about using DBMS_RESOURCE_MANAGER.CREATE_CDB_PLAN
and DBMS_RESOURCE_MANAGER.CREATE_CDB_PLAN_DIRECTIVE
Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for more information about the CREATE_CDB_PLAN
procedure and CREATE_CDB_PLAN_DIRECTIVE
procedure for the DBMS_RESOURCE_MANAGER
package
A session must be root
to change the value of RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN
for a CDB using the ALTER SYSTEM
statement. For example, to enable and disable a CDB resource plan:
SQL> ALTER SYSTEM SET RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN = CDB_resource_plan_name;
SQL> ALTER SYSTEM SET RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN = '';
In a PDB, RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN
specifies the PDB resource plan to use for the PDB.
A session must be in the PDB to enable or disable a PDB resource plan for that PDB. For example, to enable and disable a PDB resource plan:
SQL> ALTER SYSTEM SET RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN = PDB_resource_plan_name;
SQL> ALTER SYSTEM SET RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN = '';
In a PDB, the PDB resource plan has some restrictions compared to the resource plan of a non-CDB. The following restrictions apply to PDB resource plans:
A PDB resource plan cannot have subplans.
A PDB resource plan can have a maximum of eight consumer groups.
A PDB resource plan cannot have a multiple-level scheduling policy.
To enforce certain PDB resource plan policies, policies regarding resource allocation among PDBs should exist in the CDB resource plan. Without a CDB resource plan, certain PDB resource plan policies will not be enforced. If a PDB resource plan contains CPU or parallel statement queuing directives and a CDB resource plan is not specified, then Resource Manager will automatically enable the DEFAULT_CDB_PLAN
plan. To prevent this behavior, set the RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN
parameter at the root level to ORA$INTERNAL_CDB_PLAN
.
Note:
See Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on CPU, I/O bandwidth, and parallel execution servers requirements in CDB resource plans, and for a description of the results in the PDB resource plans when those requirements are not met.
In a Non-CDB
RESOURCE_MANAGER_PLAN
specifies the top-level resource plan to use for an instance in a non-CDB. The resource manager will load this top-level resource plan along with all its descendants (subplans, directives, and consumer groups). If you do not specify this parameter, the resource manager is off by default.
You can change the setting of this parameter using the ALTER SYSTEM
statement to turn on the resource manager (if it was previously off) or to turn off the resource manager or change the current resource plan (if it was previously on). If you specify a resource plan that does not exist in the data dictionary, Oracle returns an error message.
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on resource plans
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for information on using Oracle Resource Manager with a CDB and PDBs
Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for information on the DBMS_RESOURCE_MANAGER
package
Oracle Database PL/SQL Packages and Types Reference for information on the DBMS_RESOURCE_MANAGER_PRIVS
package
"DBA_RSRC_PLANS", "DBA_RSRC_PLAN_DIRECTIVES", and the various V$RSRC_*
dynamic performance views in Dynamic Performance Views for information on existing resource plans