Performance Tuning with SQL Server Dynamic Management views – eBook Download

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Performance Tuning with SQL Server DMVs, by Tim Ford and Louis Davidson

This is the book that will de-mystify the process of using Dynamic Management Views to collect the information you need to troubleshoot SQL Server problems. It will highlight the core techniques and “patterns” that you need to master, and will provide a core set of scripts that you can use and adapt for your own requirements.

The book is available to buy from Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk.

Download the free PDF here
Download the ePub version here

Why read this book?

Dynamic Management Views (DMVs) are a significant and valuable addition to the DBA’s troubleshooting armory, laying bare previously unavailable information regarding the under-the-covers activity of your database sessions and transactions.

Why, then, aren’t all DBAs using them? Why do many DBAs continue to ignore them in favour of “tried and trusted” tools such as sp_who2, DBCC OPENTRAN, and so on, or make do with the “ready made” reports built into SSMS? Why do even those that do use the DMVs speak wistfully about “good old sysprocesses”?

There seem to be two main factors at work. Firstly, some DBAs are simply unaware of the depth and breadth of the information that is available from the DMvs, or how it might help them troubleshoot common issues. This book investigates all of the DMVs that are most frequently useful to the DBA in investigating query execution, index usage, session and transaction activity, disk IO, and how SQL Server is using or abusing the operating system.

Secondly, the DMVs have a reputation of being difficult to use. In the process of exposing as much useful data as possible, sysprocesses has been de-normalized, and many new views and columns have been added. This fact, coupled with the initially-baffling choices of what columns will be exposed where, has lead to some DBAs to liken querying DMVs to “collecting mystic spells”.

In fact, however, once you start to write your own scripts, you’ll see the same tricks, and similar join patterns, being used time and again. As such, a relatively small core set of scripts can be readily adapted to suit any requirement. This book is here to de-mystify the process of collecting the information you need to troubleshoot SQL Server problems. It will highlight the core techniques and “patterns” that you need to master, and will provide a core set of scripts that you can use and adapt for your own systems, including how to:

  • Root out the queries that are causing memory or CPU pressure on your system
  • Investigate caching, and query plan reuse
  • Identify index usage patterns
  • Track fragmentation in clustered indexes and heaps
  • Get full details on blocking and blocked transactions, including the exact commands being executed, and by whom.
  • Find out where SQL Server is spending time waiting for resources to be released, before proceeding
  • Monitor usage and growth of tempdb

The DMVs don’t make existing, built-in, performance tools obsolete. On the contrary, they complement these tools, and offer a flexibility, richness and granularity that are simply not available elsewhere. Furthermore, you don’t need to master a new GUI, or a new language in order to use them; it’s all done in a language all DBAs know and mostly love: T-SQL.

About the Author

Louis Davidson has been in the IT industry for 15 years as a corporate database developer and data architect. Currently he is the Data Architect for Compass Technology in Chesapeake, Virginia, supporting the Christian Broadcasting Network and NorthStar Studios in Nashville, Tennessee. Louis has been a Microsoft MVP since 2004, and is an active volunteer for the Professional Association for SQL Server working in their Special Interest Groups. He is the author of SQL Server 2005 Database Design and Optimization.

Tim Ford is a senior database administrator with Spectrum Health in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He has been an active volunteer with The Professional Association for SQL Server (PASS) since 2002 and a certified solutions developer (MCSD) since 2001. In his free time he usually has a camera, game controller, spatula, guitar, handlebars, book, or beer in his hands. His wife and two young sons, Austen and Trevor keep him sane when not driving him completely crazy.

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About the author

Tony Davis

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Tony Davis is an Editor with Red Gate Software, based in Cambridge (UK), specializing in databases, and especially SQL Server. He edits articles and writes editorials for both the Simple-talk.com and SQLServerCentral.com websites and newsletters, with a combined audience of over 1.5 million subscribers. You can sample his short-form writing at either his Simple-Talk.com blog or his SQLServerCentral.com author page.

As the editor behind most of the SQL Server books published by Red Gate, he spends much of his time helping others express what they know about SQL Server. He is also the lead author of the book, SQL Server Transaction Log Management.

In his spare time, he enjoys running, football, contemporary fiction and real ale.