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06:16
@NickDeveloper Do you wish to get top 80% most sold products? If you have one product with 80 % and 20 with 1 % you dont just want the first product right? If I am reading it correct, then it's not that difficult to do
06:50
morning dudes
morning
07:13
Morning guys
07:23
Morning
morning lads
good morning
07:39
!!>!!1
@HéctorÁlvarez true
@HéctorÁlvarez false
That's what I thought.
07:52
Morning
morning
Morning
whats up
@Andrew That means you answered without reading the question properly so that you re-read it. You look very experienced so it's obvious not expecting it along with comments thrown above from you. So you don't think my answer is more simpler than yours and elegant in every aspects ? — Susang 2 hours ago
Interesting question / comment
1
Q: Compare the date if the columns (day, month and year) are stored separately in SQL Server

princeexpeditionI have 3 columns Day, Month and Year of type INT that are totally separate. What I need is to pass a date (format: yyyy-mm-dd) into a WHERE clause to check if this following date is matched or not. What would be the best approach to handle this issue?

That's the question
War
War
is it possible to delete a result set from a select query with joins
08:05
Comes down to how you read the question, would you read that as the 3 ints are being passed to a where clause, or the 3 ints passed in for a where clause.
you mean delete from x select x join y ?
War
War
I need to write a sproc to delete an "app" in my db, but apps are made up of a lot of stuff so i was hoping i could create a select statement to pull all relevant data and then just feed that in to a delete
You can do DELETE x FROM x Inner join y on x.id = y.id where y.somefield = somevalue
@War morning
Then why is he specifying a date at all if he's not using it?
A delete can only operate on a table at a time, but you can feed it with a from clause with joins
War
War
08:07
delete from
select * from Foo f
join bar b on ...
join ...
like that ?
@Shaneis - I can't answer any questions as to intent, just you can read it in a few different ways, 2 of us answering read it one way, Susang read it another
delete f
from Foo f
join bar b on ...
join ...
I think that's the form of it
or you can use delete from foo where id in (select xyz from abc etc)
should point out @War that you can only delete from 1 table at a time, so that will delete from Foo but not bar
War
War
hmmm
@Shaneis - pointed out above :)
War
War
then it sounds like i'm gonna write a delete from each table
08:09
@Andrew Which is why I created the rule of not answering before caffeine! Ugh, stick to your rules people!
!!afk coffee
Already 1 cup in :)
@War - yes, unless you have RI enabled with cascade delete - but if you did have that enabled, we would be slapping our foreheads :)
War
War
hmmm
i did consider cascades
but there a lot of ways that data could be deleted
It's far far more pain than its ever worth imho, especially in a high vol system
War
War
and in some of them you might not want to follow a cascade
so I figured control all chaining in code
Ideally, unless this data is sitting in a very unused area of the DB, avoid putting the delete across lots of tables in a transaction, especially if multiple deletes can occur
That path lies blocks, waits and deadlocks
Is the delete to be synchronous or async?
08:24
@War delete foo from foo join bar on foo.id=bar.idfoo
you can join more stuff of course, you'll delete from the table you specify after delete
War
War
i'm just tidying up my db diagram
so i can see the extent of the work needed
it really annoys me that in EF I can't find a way to force a name on join tables
EF should abstract you from that.
If you want to join Dog and Cat you may want to have a model called Animals( Dog, Cat)
Boi I just wrote an answer so long it needed a TLDR
08:42
That noob doesn't know about the moon and sun books.
Get attacked, pop a book, boom, instant dragon.
War
War
08:58
here we go guys
so from the diagram
small db:)
War
War
I need to do a delete on all rows from the highlighted tables
@Andrew yeh our smallest
and i need to clean it up
it's a bit of a mess atm
Sync delete or async
War
War
a lot of the structure around pages will be going
it doesn't matter
typically i async everything though
I think a queued async delete which is ghosting the data is my instinctive first thought, its too complex to perform in a single transaction and not hurt the DB performance.
09:02
I would do a transactional delete, one table at a time.
If you need to delete data from 80% of the tables, I could hardly believe you'll care about end-users for the mean time. This looks like an intensive maintenance task.
Do you have some sort of replication?
Maybe you can balance it all towards a subscriber while you mop up the bits, then propagate the changes.
Oh by the way.
Let's assume you have a database that is shared by several companies. Would you propagate the company ID to each and every single table? I don't think that's good at all, but they do it around here.
War
War
the db holds information about a lot of apps
i'm deleting only one of them
most of the tables as it is today are pretty small
the overhead for this should be possible in a single transaction
given how rare such an operation is I would hope that it's ok
@HéctorÁlvarez our transactional data is a point of concern at the moment
we have stuff like that where we upload invoices
then multiple users from multiple companies then have access to that data and can perform operations on it
i'm starting to think that SQL is a limiting factor with this type of data and that the better solution is to not use SQL at all
it's super rare when you do a complex business transaction that you would only get a row lock ... so I often end up in impossible to avoid deadlock situations because of overlapping page locks
I'm thinking the better way to go is to have a single thread running in a windows service that updates data in SQL and then apply the complex transactional changes to the data in something in ram on the server
OK, have you tried snapshotting the database?
Or rather, the tables you need.
War
War
how would that help ?
i'm not sure i follow
I don't know, maybe a snapshot would let you work on the actual data while you work at the background.
!!brb meeting
War
War
09:12
the problem with that is surely the same problem
I take a copy of the db ... update that ... i still have to update the db at some point
09:28
hello.
One thing is sure, if you want to hold cohesion you either promote dirty reads or block users from getting desired data until the whole process has finished.
If you want to keep performance above everything, I guess you'd have to run cursors, and delete row per row.
Anyway, it looks like Andrew has the most experience around here.
War
War
hmmm
But you still want a transaction in any case, or risk stray data.
War
War
yeh
i need to install sql on this machine
gonna be another day of yak shaving me thinks
@WhatsThePoint Wow you spend time writing a long answer at work... Maybe you should work more :P
09:35
Transactions will only increase the likelihood of locking issues, if you can afford to delete without them, I would.
It depends on your tolerance to orphaned / semi-deleted data during the process though and whether the DB can be eventually consistent, or has to be consistent all the time
@Zulatin I procrastinate a lot but when I actually work I get work done quick
War
War
hmmm
it really bugs me with SQL that anytime i try to do something important there's always some negotiation where I have to make a compromise
If you use a no-sql type solution for storing the data, you still get locking issues, or in fact a lack of locks and siblings (alternative versions with no resolution) for changes
War
War
considering how popular relational models are and how old SQL is ... this crap should be dealt with already through years of patching
frustrating
Even no-sql solutions are making compromises, with each of them deciding on a potentially different location within the CAP triangle to base themselves
Relational DB's don't tend to compromise on the C aspect, no-sql makes far more of a compromise on that
Is the data being deleted very old?
e.g. is it likely that any other procedure is accessing data in that area? if not, the row lock to page lock escalation is not really a problem
War
War
09:42
hmmm
the data might not be old
but it's likely not being used
that said ... it's page information and what not for an active web application
On deletion the row will get an IX lock then an X lock, the page will get an S lock, the table will get a Shared lock (as I recall)
War
War
so i can't really be sure something isn't going to attempt a read but it's not likely something is going to attempt a write
What isolation level are you running on?
War
War
other than my delete of course
I have no idea
I'm using EF to talk to the db
in this case I figured pulling everything over to the application server is a bad idea
The isolation level will make quite a difference to the balance of performance vs problems
War
War
09:44
so I figured I would just execute a sproc from EF
how do i check that ?
is it a server setting I can ask SQL for ?
If you have set nothing, I would expect a default of READ COMMITTED isolation
you set / request it on your connection
War
War
ah ok
but for some things there are server settings, e.g. snapshot isolation levels require a server setting
War
War
yup
20
Q: Entity Framework and transaction isolation level

Alan CoromanoI'm using Entity Framework 4.0. Now I need to restrict access to a table while I'm reading from it or writing to it. Probably that's about transaction isolation level. How do I do that? Update here is what I have using (var db = new MyDb()) { using (TransactionScope scope = new Transactio...

read committed snapshot allows people to read while other transactions alter the data
but comes at a perf cost
War
War
09:47
how does SQL resolve threading issues
That's interesting that it says default on ef6 is read committed snapshot (yes you would get less deadlocks) but the server has to be configured to have that switched on, its not by default
War
War
for example I have a bunch of business processes that do things like insert invoices
invoices have a buer and a supplier
ALTER DATABASE yourDB
SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION ON
War
War
multiple threads might be doing these inserts and attaching new invoices to the same companies
@War - if you were based in the north west, I'm freelance from next week, could pop in :)
War
War
09:48
lol
I think i need you for like 6 months mate
i'm great when it comes to the code but the db side
Multiple threads can insert, they each issue locks as appropriate
War
War
might as well be latin
I'm happy to do ad-hoc consultancy :)
as well as the free stuff here
War
War
so i've noticed the way we do things at the moment uses batch inserts
so we lock at page level
If the threads are all inserting different data, they can lock the same things but the locks don't necessarily clash
when you say lock, you have to specify which lock
(in your thinking)
War
War
09:50
I'm in the process of moving our workflow stuff over to workflow foundation where i plan to do inserts individually my theory being that I shouldn't need page level locks for individual record inserts
an insert locks as well at the table level - but its a shared lock
War
War
i don't directly control this of course
its a sql thing right ?
he server decides how to lock and weather to escalate
escalation is a decision by the server, although it can be switched off
i managed to share db records from +2 connections by storing a command string instead of overwriting data directly.
War
War
so i figure by removing the batching and doing all ops as a single insert or update I should be able to reduce lock escalation
09:51
In oracle it never escalates, in SQL server it can
but just inserting a row in a table issues multiple locks
War
War
yeh that's what i'm seeing
as well as the row / page, there is a shared table lock, and a sch-s lock
War
War
so what we are doing is something like this ...
that prevents another connection altering the table structure while you are inserting
exactly, async problem.
War
War
09:53
take an xml file provided by a client > parse in to objects in code > validate those > perform some business rules on them > check if there's an existing row set for the new data we have > if new insert else update > call EF save changes which does the lot in a transaction
I'm considering taking a more granular apporach instead
Do you really need a transaction there?
War
War
insert each invoice on it's own, update each invoice on it's own
What are the chances of a torn insert / update, what is the impact, what is the recovery path
War
War
so EF automatically wraps a transaction round everything when you call save changes i believe
If you can avoid bulk inserting in a single transaction, then definitely avoid it
War
War
09:54
but we also have a situation where the business wants the whole process to succeed or fail and thus if any part fails we need to roll back
It's very situational but if you are mass inserting, the locks on the rows / page, the indexes etc, its expensive
War
War
yeh that's my understanding of it
You might be better staging the data
prior to insertion
War
War
we moved to this model from indiviual inserts before because our code was taking too long to run
we gained a ton of perf
(situational, and I don't know enough of the situation)
War
War
09:56
The older version of this process with todays workload would take 8 hours to run
we have a 4 hour window in which it must complete
I think now we are down to about 20 minutes
is this process run once per day?
War
War
The problem is that we are middleware platform essentially and every client has data in a different format and we need to support them
yeh it is
ah, and an all or nothing process? do you have to present data part way through the process or at the end?
War
War
so I figured we would do this with workflow rather than using hard coded business rules
or we would never be done writing the code for new bussiness procs
yeh it's all or nothing then we produce a report of what happened
we also take an extract of the reports high level numbers and send them in an email of what happened
I ask those leading questions because that definitely sounds more like you should stage and then partition switch
War
War
09:58
This process currently happens on a about 150 files per day every morening for that 1 client
you could stage outside of the main table, not impact any existing query and then metadata switch in the new data once its loaded and ready
War
War
uh ...
run that by me again
that keeps all inserts and selects on separate objects
you know about partitioned tables in SQL Server?
War
War
you went all dba on me and i got all programmer and got confused
yeh i know of them
not something i have ever tried to implement myself in anger
you can load data into 1 table, then switch it in to be a partition of the main table
the 'switch' is a few ms operation
War
War
10:00
we have a VM based sql instance (which clearly doesn't help)
I would like to hardware level control data structure and storage
that allows loading and indexing of daily data loads to be performed outside of the main tables you use, and then the data is switched in when ready
War
War
split key tables over disks on a san
but we cant :(
really ?
why have i never heard of this
If its a daily load, and you don't need to present the data until its all loaded and done - then using partitions becomes an option
War
War
that's epic
do you know how i can find out how i might do this with EF ?
Oh no idea, remember some time back, I said I wouldn't use any form of ORM, I can't control the DB in the way I need to via that :)
There are limits on the number of partitions, depending on which SQL Server version you are on
and it requires a whole slew of table partition scripts to manage the process, but table partitioning is designed around data take on / roll off, they are not a performance tool;
War
War
10:04
hmmm
You stage the data in process it, even get the indexes ready on it - and then perform a switch and behind the scenes, SQL Server plays smoke and mirrors with the hobtID of the partition / table and makes the partition meta data point to the table HobtID
(People use partitioning for performance but that's not the real purpose of them, is what I should say)
War
War
now i feel like i just read a load of word soup
i'm having a moment where i feel stupid
Just grab a coffee and read again
as I say, next week I'm proper freelance, last day here on Friday
Will be available for Skype conversations then far easier - it sounds like you are in a daily complicated ETL process, for which partitioning might be useful. It doesn't fix the deletions though.
126!!!
I come back from meetings to 126 messages
So proud of you guys
War
War
lol @Shaneis
10:09
Introducing @War to partitioned tables
War
War
thx @Andrew this is awesome info ... given me tons to think about
i don't get 30% of this convo tbh (not bragging about anything)
War
War
i knew of them but i had never heard about using them like this
This is actually the official use of them
War
War
I thought it was mainly about cutting the data up on to multiple db files
10:09
especially the partition part, never heard about or used them.
(In the sense of what they are designed for, data take on / roll off)
this for deployment @Andrew? I've read about this but we've never done it
SQL Server has range partitioning, Oracle has Hash, Range, Interval partitioning anf sub-partitioning, Post gres even has partitioning
I think I first used SQL Server table partitioning on the 2005 beta's when it was new, used it for loading weekly sales data, it was the only way to make it performant (we were loading 350m rows of data to be placed into the table, of about 38bn rows)
we use it for file management as well, we have the range horribly wrong so 4 of like 15 are busy and the rest are basically empty
can't get a window to change them though because the business won't give us one
@War - where are you based?
War
War
10:13
Andover (england south)
Miles away, I know it, grew up in Sussex
There are a lot of gotcha's and techniques to make partitioning work well (vs not well), but from what you have said so far, it sounds like there is some potential use you can investigate
I suspect if done correctly, your process will be a lot faster than the 20 minutes
War
War
interesting
is there any specific tool for the job or is it MS embedded ?
War
War
the whole process consists of around "up to" 10k inserts + similar numbers of updates across a set of about 20 tables
the updates would have to hit the normal tables, only new data can be handled in the partition
and you would have to partition each table involved
War
War
10:26
jeez that's a huge can o worms
e.g. 20 tables being partitioned and all taking in new data at once, when its ready, all 20 swap in the data which would take under a second easily
War
War
and i suppose to avoid concurrency conflicts I would have to create a partition for each thread i'm connected to sql on
At the point you think SQL Server can't cope - you have to look at your underlying designs and key choices - SQL Servers can handle thousands of proc calls per second
no, you wouldn't do that - they can all just insert
you index it after all the inserts are done, concurrency should be simpler
War
War
that's how i'm hitting deadlocks at the moment
multi threaded inserts
most likely onto tables with indexes
War
War
10:28
yup
have you pulled the deadlock graph to understand where the deadlock is?
War
War
the indexes get locked and then bang
yeh one of my guys did ... he was showing me
when you do partitioning, you have a switch / exchange table, non-indexed, same structure as the main table
War
War
I personally haven't though
load your data, then index, constrain then switch
so the load happens with no indexes in place, just stream the data in
War
War
10:29
oh i c
if the data needs to be on a clustered table, you stream it into a heap, then index from the heap to a clustered table, then NC indexes added, then switch
War
War
when you insert in to the partition isn't that basically another table
you do not stream data quickly onto pre-indexed tables
War
War
that would make sense
it's another table at the start, and then via a metadata change it becomes a part of the main table (HobtID changes)
if its only 150 XML files you said? how many rows of data is that?
War
War
10:33
up to about 10k invoices per file
the files contain the master data (company information) and the invoice lines ... we use the line information to construct the headers
the master data should already be in the db
1.5m rows max, and its taking 20 minutes? that's very slow
War
War
typical load on a given day for this process is about 20k at the moment so it's worse
the perf is horrendously bad
sounds like something in the way in which the DB design or ETL design has come together is not quite right
War
War
i will grab a diagram image and show you what i'm working with
I hate that db
Tables are clustered on which key?
War
War
10:37
so the files that we receive contain row data for the tables SIHead, and it's related children (recursive)
SIHeadID is an identity field at least?
War
War
yeh anything named <TableName>ID is a primary key
Primary Key != Clustered Key neccessarily
War
War
there are depending on table usually multiple indexes indexes
What is the type used for the ID fields
War
War
10:39
clustered keys i'm not sure we have many of extensively
let me see
the ID's are all integers
by default, sql server would of made the primary key the clustered key
War
War
ah ok
unless you told it otherwise
War
War
i can check
otherwise the tables are heaps
War
War
10:41
ok ssms defines the PK_SIHead as ...
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[SIHead] ADD  CONSTRAINT [PK_SIHead] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
	[SIHeadId] ASC
)WITH (PAD_INDEX = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = OFF, SORT_IN_TEMPDB = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF, ONLINE = OFF, ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = ON) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
looks like clustering as you might expect
and SIHeadID is Identity Int?
War
War
yeh
pretty much applies to all tables across this db
int PK clustered identity
so the new data is in theory always being added at the end of the table, but index wise you would be inserting new index entries all over the place and no doubt page splitting the index a lot
War
War
the db was created in something called LLBLGen
it's like a pre-decessor to EF
Does each day's invoices all have the same CreationDate ?
War
War
10:43
yeh i think that's the reason for our perf hits
0
Q: SQL SERVER - HOW TEST STORED PROCEDURE

Bruno MiguelI create one Stored Procedure with Update, Delete, Select and Insert in the same Stored Procedure now I want to test my Stored Procedure how I do that? The Stored Procedure I create: CREATE PROCEDURE SP_Counters ( @CounterInterventions BIGINT ,@CounterTasks BIGINT ,@StatementType N...

War
War
no the dates could be anything
For partitioning to work, you have to have a partition key
War
War
the files we get are a snapshot of data from a collection of SAP systems on the other end
something that every day's data relates to and ideally is within search predicates used on the table
You can use an arbitrary import date, but then every query would span all partitions regardless
War
War
10:45
when i insert in to the partitions do i have to refer to them by a different name
like they are another table
While you are staging the data, it literally is another table
War
War
ok
until you perform the smoke and mirrors switch its a table in its own right
War
War
so on creation of that partition i have 0 indexes right ?
except the "partition key"
how does that work ?
is it basically just a shared PK with the main table
@WhatsThePoint the question seemed a downvote-proof, how it resisted until now, astonishing.
10:46
the partitioned table has a hobtid per partition, and every normal table has a hobtid - during a partition switch you just switch the hobtid's around and the table then appears as a partition and the old partition appears to be a table
War
War
or do i have to insert in to one then basically do a select into to gen destination keys ?
not anymore.
Think you are thinking about it the wrong way around
You have a staging table, ideally a heap, you load your data into that table, then rebuild to a clustered index table
then apply NC indexes on that table so it appears identical in structure and indexes to the main table, same for constraints
when it appears identical in schema, you are then permitted to switch the pointers and the table then appears to be a partition in the main table
The mechanism is designed to let you load, process, index data prior to presenting it to users
War
War
oh so you literally create an entire copy of the original table without indexes
do your bulk insert
re add the indexes
then swap them over and delete the original
War
War
10:51
oh
create a duplicate of the original table structure wise, import into it, index it, switch it to be a partition of the larger table
a partitioned table underneath is a collection of tables considered one, a bit like a view where its select * from table1 union all select * from table2 union all etc
War
War
oh ok
but then you have multiple tables
and if i did that each day i would end up with lots of tables
no, underneath its handled like that but you don't see it unless you start poking around in system tables
War
War
I could have 1 partition per client or something
to you it looks like 1 table
War
War
10:53
oh ok
so when i insert in to the partition
where do i insert ?
Every table is a hobt
War
War
in to the main table ?
Heap Or B+Tree
a partitioned table is a collection of Hobt's 1 per partition
War
War
but it looks at the data and based on index puts it in the partition ?
hmm, how to explain this
Consider you have 100 mailboxes, numbered 1 to 100
If you insert mail for house 25, you insert it into mailbox 25
If you build a new house (new day of data) which is number 101, you create and build a new mailbox to the side, construct it, paint it etc, and when its ready, you put it with the rest
War
War
10:56
"add it to the mail mans rounds"
Partitioning is the same, you have X many existing partitions you can access, and ideally access via the partition key, and when you are inserting entirely new data which is not a part of the existing range, you set that up to the side, load it, index it, get it all ready, then when it is finally ready put it in the block with the rest of them
War
War
i c ... so there needs to be something in each days data that would point at the new parittion
yes, each day you load to an empty table sitting on the side (easy to automate), index it, get it all ready, constraint it, and when its finally set to go, you can ask it to be considered a part of the larger group
that request (metadata change) literally takes milliseconds
War
War
so how do you gain perf this way ?
I guess the actual insert still takes a long time
The load at the side can be performed on a table with no indexes
War
War
10:58
but adding the data to the main table is fast
making the insert speed far faster
War
War
hmmm
bulk load to zero index table + index time is quicker than loading to a pre-indexed table
War
War
how do you clean this up when you have 1,000 parittions
I can load 100m rows and index them, far faster than you can load 100m into a pre-indexed table
War
War
10:59
also in a given day i might have say 20k records ... but maybe 2k of them would be new
You can have more than 1k depending on SQL Server version, 1k was the original max

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