2. Session Goals SQL Server implements three different physical operators to perform joins. In this session we will see how each of these three operators work, its advantages and challenges. We will try to understand the logic behind the optimizer’s decisions on which operator to use for various joins using (semi) real life examples and see examples about how to avoid common pitfalls.
6. Nested Loops Fetch next row from blue input Start No More Rows? Quit True False Find matching rows in red input
7. Considerations “Outer Loop” = The Number of Iterations At Least One Small Input Preferable “Inner Operation” = Work for Each Iteration Index/Table Scan Index Seek with Lookup Covering Index Seek
8. Foreign Key Joins Joins Parents and Childs Most Common Relationship is One-to-Many Parent ISIndexed Primary Key or Unique Indexing Foreign Keys Enables Efficient Use of Nested Loops
10. Fetch next row from blue input Start No More Rows? Quit True False Merge Fetch next row from red input Rows Match? True False
11. Considerations Input Must be Pre-Sorted By All Join Expression(s) Pre-Sorted in Plan, not necessarily in DB… Immediate& Sorted Match Outputs FASTFIRSTROW Hint Very Efficient and Simple Operator
13. Fetch next row from blue input Fetch next row from red input Start No more rows? No more rows? True True False False Quit Hash- Match Apply “hash” function Apply “hash” function Place row in “hash” bucket Probe bucket for matching rows
14. Considerations Hash Function Selection CPU, Memory and potential I/O Overhead No Sorting Whatsoever Probing Costs Not Revealed May Indicate Sub-Optimal Indexing
17. For More Information Books On Line Microsoft White Papers “SQL Server 2008 Internals” Kalen Delaney, Kimberly L.Tripp and more… Craig Freedman’s MSDN Blog http://blogs.msdn.com/craigfr/about.aspx
20. Coming up… P/X001 Designing High Scale OLTP systems Thomas Kejser P/L001 TSQL Techniques – Why and how to tune a routine Dave Ballantyne P/L002 Implementing Common Business Calculations in DAX Chris Webb P/L005 Consolidating data collection with SQLDIAG and analysing it all with SQLNexusChristian Bolton P/T007 Introduction to SQL Modelling Services Robert Hogg #SQLBITS