Book Image

SQL Server Query Tuning and Optimization

By : Benjamin Nevarez
Book Image

SQL Server Query Tuning and Optimization

By: Benjamin Nevarez

Overview of this book

SQL Server is a relational database management system developed by Microsoft. As a database server, it is a software product with the primary function of storing and retrieving data as requested by other software applications. This book starts by describing the inner workings of the query optimizer, and will enable you to use this knowledge to write better queries and provide the query engine with all the information it needs to produce efficient execution plans. As you progress, you’ll get practical query optimization tips for troubleshooting underperforming queries. The book will also guide you through intelligent query processing and what is new in SQL Server 2022. Query performance topics such as the Query Store, In-Memory OLTP and columnstore indexes are covered as well. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to get the best possible performance for your queries and applications.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Columnstore indexes

When SQL Server 2012 was originally released, one of the main new features was columnstore indexes. By using a new column-based storage approach and new query-processing algorithms, memory-optimized columnstore indexes were designed to improve the performance of data warehouse queries by several orders of magnitude. Although the inability to update data was the biggest drawback when this feature was originally released back in 2012, this limitation was addressed in the following release. From SQL Server 2014 onward, it has the ability to directly update its data and even create a columnstore clustered index on it. The fact that columnstore indexes were originally limited to only nonclustered indexes was also considered a limitation because it required duplicated data on an already very large object such as a fact table. That is, all the indexed columns would be both on the base table and in the columnstore index.

As mentioned at the beginning of this chapter...