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Session # 27777 March 2, 2010

The Florida State University. Transactional Reporting in the real world with OBIEE. Session # 27777 March 2, 2010. [NQODBC] [SQL_STATE: S1000] [nQSError: 10058] A general error has occurred.

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Session # 27777 March 2, 2010

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  1. The Florida State University Transactional Reporting in the real world with OBIEE Session #27777 March 2, 2010

  2. [NQODBC] [SQL_STATE: S1000] [nQSError: 10058] A general error has occurred. [nQSError: 14026] Unable to navigate requested expression. Please fix the metadata consistency warnings.

  3. The Florida State University Current Enrollment 40,255

  4. Florida State University …is a premier, comprehensive, graduate research university, with both law and medical schools. • Annual Operating Budget: $1.1B • Over 40,000 students • Over 13,000 employees • Over 13,000 biweekly paychecks • Over $18 million in biweekly payroll

  5. Overview • Introduction to FSU’s BI Initiative • Overview of FSU’s OBIEE Implementation • Current BI State • What is Transactional/OLTP Reporting? • Physical/Logical Layer Deployment Issues • Answers… Just turn it on! • Tuning in the real World; Why is it SOOOO slow? • Closing Tips • Questions & Comments

  6. FSU and Oracle PeopleSoft • Implemented Financials 8.4, Portal 8.8, and EPM 8.8 in June 2004 • Implemented HR/Payroll 8.8 in Dec 2004 • Upgraded HR & EPM Suites to 8.9 in April 2006 • Upgraded FI Suite to 8.9 in Nov 2006 • Upgraded EPM & Portal Suites to 9.0 in Nov 2007 • Upgraded HR Suite to 9.0 in Oct 2008 • Upgraded FI Suite to 9.0 in April 2009 • Deployed EPM 9.0 & OBIEE 10.1.3.3(Windows) in March 2008 • Upgraded OBIEE 10.1.3.4(Linux) in April 2009

  7. FSU’s BI Profile • Deployed new BI Solution 2 years ago • Solution meets the reporting needs of our the major Administrative organizations on Campus • Consists of 25 Dashboards and 27 Subject Areas • Over 1200 distinct users & 2.5 Million Requests • Dashboard Consumption & Self Service Reporting • Currently in Phase III of our Deployment (Standardization of Campus BI on OBIEE) • 2009 Oracle Innovation Award Recipient

  8. Current BI Development State

  9. What is Transactional Reporting? Simply put, reporting against any source database which stores information outside of the normal constructs of a dimensional data warehouse model.

  10. Achieving success… The easy way! • Planning of Subject areas is a must • Business to source column mapping is key • You just can’t live without self service reporting… unless you have an unlimited budget for report developers. • Stop, Drop and Roll is no way to deploy a BI Solution • Subject Areas should be released in a phased approach

  11. Achieving success… The easy way! • Stars are the Goal… Even in the transactional world

  12. Achieving success… The easy way! • Subject area content should be grouped by business process. • Subject Areas typically align tightly with Dashboard Structure. • A Self Service user should be able to get at the data he/she needs to create business appropriate reports without tracking through 50 tables. • To many subject areas and you have another BIG problem; complexity.

  13. Physical/Logical Layer Issues Now for all of the “Techie” stuff!

  14. Physical Layer Issues • Circular Joins • Typically happens when a table has more than one route to complete a join. • Always import tables without FKs turned on. • Can be resolved easily with aliases • Aliases should always be named in a fashion which relates them to the logical layer subject matter.

  15. Physical Layer Issues • Nulls • It is absolutely imperative to set NULL flags correctly. Typical OBIEE Psuedo SQL Select fields from Select (Detail Rows) DR, Select (SubTotal Rows) SR Where DR.SubTotal Field = SR.SubTotal Field Nullable Join nvl(DR.c1 , 88.0) = nvl(SR.c1 , 88.0) and nvl(DR.c1 , 99.0) = nvl(SR.c1 , 99.0)

  16. Physical Layer Issues • Nulls • The 88.0 and 99.0 are auto generated based on the field being null. • For Char/Varchar fields a ‘q’ or ‘z’ are used. • Very dangerous especially if the join field contains the above null replacement characters. • Null when not nullable – Correct answer but can’t use index • Nullable when not null – Incorrect answers as an equal join would be used thereby removing rows from the result set which could be relevant.

  17. Physical Layer Issues • Recommended Join Structure • Get it right the first time, physical joins are typically never touched after initial implementation. • All joins should be PK/FK • This will (in most cases) guarantee insulation against typical errors which OBIEE generates due to not using standard dimensional model • Only ONE PK should exist on each table. • Driving tables are your friend; as long as you know the data structure.

  18. Physical Layer Issues • Row level security • Delivered is handled via joins to SJT tables • In our case we found it to be better performing by using the content filtering options on a logical table source. • Must be applied to each pseudo fact table in order to achieve row level security • Removes the need for a join by simply placing the restriction in a where clause. • Must use Repository variable(s) in order to use this method.

  19. Physical Layer Issues • Federated Joins • Federated joins should be avoided at ALL costs. • If reduction in federated joins isn’t possible; you should always set driving tables in order to reduce cost • Tune MAX_PARAMETERS_PER_DRIVE_JOIN to control how many in list operators can be sent per query of a drive. • Tune MAX_QUERIES_PER_DRIVE_JOIN to control the number of queries can be sent to formulate a driving join result set.

  20. Physical Layer Issues • Poorly Tuned Database features • Just because it’s the default doesn’t mean it’s correct! • Most defaults take a very reserved approach as to limit errors in the BI Server. • Common objects which should be investigated are: COUNT_DISTINCT_SUPPORTED DERIVED_TABLES_SUPPORTED CASE Statement Support Running Aggregate support(IE, Sum,Count,etc)

  21. Logical Layer Issues • Calculations in the Logical Layer • Keep one thing in mind when developing Logical objects; keep the objects as close to the database as possible. Ex: Given the below Case statements, imagine having 20 or so fields in the same scenario listed below. Those fields join to 5 smaller code lookup type tables. You create and answers document which has 5 fields used in the filter and return all 20 fields with a sum on each one. Case when “Field1” = ‘A’ then 1 else 0 end Case when “Field2” = ‘A’ then 1 else 0 end Case when “Field3” = ‘A’ then 1 else 0 end

  22. Logical Layer Issues • Problems? • The resulting SQL would contain somewhere in the neighborhood of 4.25 MILLION characters. • The compile time for OBIEE to even generate the SQL could well exceed 70 seconds • The BI Server process is pegged at 100% just to generate this SQL query for the 70 seconds mentioned above. -------------------- Logical Query Summary Stats: Elapsed time 74, Response time 74, Compilation time 72 (seconds)

  23. Logical Layer Issues • So what was the fix? • Stacking of calculations on a case statement isn’t very wise if the corresponding case can be handled in a database view. The best mix seems to be around 2~3 calculations deep and you should look at other alternatives. • Aliasing tables to resolve “Fan Traps” which OBIEE didn’t know how to handle. • DB Features of support “CASE” logic; There are 2 of these both on the DB Features tab. • The Result: -------------------- Logical Query Summary Stats: Elapsed time 4, Response time 4, Compilation time 0 (seconds)

  24. Answers Issues Answers… Can I just turn it on?

  25. Answers Issues • Query Limits? What’s that? • It’s not nice to lock those performing transactions out of the system because an answers user didn’t understand the meaning of a filter. • Even properly trained developers still have “whoopsie” moments! • We’re actively running reports against the Transactional System… need I say more?

  26. Answers Issues • Query Limits! Query Limits! Query Limits! • An Answers Self Service user should not be retrieving 10,000 rows through the web in a properly designed transactional reporting system. • Is set in the physical layer of the repository based on the role/groups a user belongs to and can limit based on row count, execution time or write back abilities

  27. Answers Issues • nAminG conVentionS! • Consistent naming of core business related fields. • Default aggregation standards by field type should be defined at planning stage. • Rename object names in the logical and presentation layer instead of setting display name. • Set display name doesn’t account for formulas which refer to the actual column name and not the display name

  28. Answers Issues • Metadata Generator • Manually Automatic process from the admin tool, which must be generated and uploaded to a specific location on the Presentation Server. • Allows users to dig into a presentation column and view the lineage about the column

  29. Answers Issues • Core Developer Subject Area • Composed of many tables sometimes between 50-100 • Allows a developer to test reporting options across all subject matter areas related to a specific database connection. • Most newly modeled tables start in this area, with subsequent copies to smaller business related subject areas. • Allows for testing of data anomalies • Can reduce need for direct data warehouse access by developers • Typically only available to developers who are creating university wide dashboards

  30. Closing • Plan the Subject Areas instead of them planning you. • Solid Physical/Logical Design • Joins, Aggregation, Security, NULL • Make sure your DB features are set based on the database you’re connecting to • Query Limits; Gotta have em. • Don’t get view happy in the database! • Error Message Troubleshooting • http://download.oracle.com/otndocs/products/bi/bi-ee/docs/784/AnyMsg.pdf

  31. Contact Reggie Gentle BI Architect Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Florida State University RGentle@admin.fsu.edu Thanks for attending Session #27777. I value your feedback. Please complete the session survey.

  32. This presentation and all Alliance 2010 presentations are available for download from the Conference Site Presentations from previous meetings are also available

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