Book Image

Data Modeling for Azure Data Services

By : Peter ter Braake
Book Image

Data Modeling for Azure Data Services

By: Peter ter Braake

Overview of this book

Data is at the heart of all applications and forms the foundation of modern data-driven businesses. With the multitude of data-related use cases and the availability of different data services, choosing the right service and implementing the right design becomes paramount to successful implementation. Data Modeling for Azure Data Services starts with an introduction to databases, entity analysis, and normalizing data. The book then shows you how to design a NoSQL database for optimal performance and scalability and covers how to provision and implement Azure SQL DB, Azure Cosmos DB, and Azure Synapse SQL Pool. As you progress through the chapters, you'll learn about data analytics, Azure Data Lake, and Azure SQL Data Warehouse and explore dimensional modeling, data vault modeling, along with designing and implementing a Data Lake using Azure Storage. You'll also learn how to implement ETL with Azure Data Factory. By the end of this book, you'll have a solid understanding of which Azure data services are the best fit for your model and how to implement the best design for your solution.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1 – Operational/OLTP Databases
8
Section 2 – Analytics with a Data Lake and Data Warehouse
13
Section 3 – ETL with Azure Data Factory

Indexing

Congratulations! You have provisioned and implemented an Azure SQL database. There are a lot of extra features that you need to learn in relation to SQL Server. A good book to start with is SQL Server 2017 Developer's Guide, by Dejan Sarka, Miloš Radivojević, and William Durkin. There is one topic that is too important to not devote some time to in this regard: indexing.

Roughly speaking, indexes make reading data from a database faster, but slow down writing to databases. So, you have to be careful with the indexes you create. But without indexes, you are almost sure to experience performance problems.

There are two basic kinds of indexes:

  • Clustered indexes
  • Nonclustered indexes

Clustered index

A clustered index could be described as an index-organized table. When you create a clustered index, you store the actual rows sorted on the index key in a structure called a B-Tree. The index is the table. A clustered index is not a structure...