Time Bomb Design - A Longer Fuse
In a sequel to his first article on Time Bomb Design, David Poole examines the issues we find between development environments and production ones.
In a sequel to his first article on Time Bomb Design, David Poole examines the issues we find between development environments and production ones.
If you will be in London on June 17th, this is an event you do not want to miss.
In Part IV of the Geo-Spatial series, an interactive dashboard is developed to present and interact with the data.
A technique from Bill Nicolich that allows you to target columns by data type for the same custom expression and easily build complex queries.
Are you working too hard? Is it worth it? Steve Jones says that it is not and that you should push back.
Fabiano continues in his mission to describe the major Showplan Operators used by SQL Server's Query Optimiser. This week he meets a star, the Key Lookup, a stalwart performer, but most famous for its role in ill-performing queries where an index does not 'cover' the data required to execute the query. If you understand why, and in what circumstances, key lookups are slow, it helps greatly with optimising query performance.
IBM has this tagline about a smarter planet and has a great video about the Internet of Things. Steve Jones looks at some of the issues we might have in actually using all this data.
There is much sound advice suggesting that every table should have a clustered index, and that narrow, integer, ever-increasing columns, such as afforded by an IDENTITY column are the best choice. But is the sedimentary approach really the natural order of the day?
The second part of this series compares four methods of obtaining the total number of rows in a paged data set.
Understanding how to analyze the characteristics of I/O patterns in the Microsoft® SQL Server® data management software and how they relate to a physical storage configuration is useful in determining deployment requirements for any given workload. A well-performing I/O subsystem is a critical component of any SQL Server application. I/O subsystems should be sized in the same manner as other hardware components such as memory and CPU. As workloads increase it is common to increase the number of CPUs and increase the amount of memory. Increasing disk resources is often necessary to achieve the right performance, even if there is already enough capacity to hold the data.
PlanTrace Now Supports PostgreSQL The same plan analysis you know from...
By Steve Jones
the kinder surprise – . the point in your early adolescence when you realize...
If you’ve been following my T-SQL Snapshot Backup series, most of what I’ve covered...
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On which Linux versions is SQL Server 2025 on Linux supported?
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