Book Image

Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook

Book Image

Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook

Overview of this book

As a DBA you must have encountered a slow running application on SQL Server, but there are various factors that could be affecting the performance. If you find yourself in this situation, don't wait, pick up this book and start working towards improving performance of your SQL Server 2012. SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook is divided into three major parts -- Performance Monitoring, Performance Tuning, and Performance Management--that are mandatory to deal with performance in any capacity. SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook offers a great way to manage performance with effective, concise, and practical recipes. You will learn how to diagnose performance issues, fix them, and take precaution to avoid common mistakes. Each recipe given in this book is an individual task that will address different performance aspects to take your SQL Server's Performance to a higher level.The first part of this book covers Monitoring with SQL Server Profiler, DTA, System statistical function, SPs with DBCC commands, Resource Monitor & Reliability, and Performance Monitor and Execution Plan. The second part of the book offers Execution Plan, Dynamic Management Views, and Dynamic Management Functions, SQL Server Cache and Stored Procedure Recompilations, Indexes, Important ways to write effective TSQL, Statistics, Table and Index Partitioning, Advanced Query tuning with Query Hints and Plan Guide, Dealing with Locking, Blocking and Deadlocking and Configuring SQL Server for optimization to boost performance.The third and final part gives you knowledge of performance management with help of Policy Based Management and Management with Resource Governor.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Increasing performance by creating a clustered index


Any RDBMS supports the functionality to perform the INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE operations, and retrieve the data with the SELECT statement. As time passes by, data will increase in the database, and it will start creating an issue of slow retrieval of data whenever the SELECT statement is processed.

RDBMS is supposed to support a very large-scale database, especially when you are talking about SQL Server 2012. So, how can we eliminate this slow performance issue? Well, this is when index makes an entry into the life of a database administrator!

Prevention is always better than cure, so it is suggested that you implement proper indexes and keep changing the indexes over a period of time, if needed, even before performance issues start arising.

How to choose a proper field for the index defined in this recipe, and how to maintain the index properly and change it, will be covered in the next chapter— Chapter 10, Maintaining Indexes.

A clustered...