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I/O Performance Analysis (Preview) - SQL Server on Azure VMs

Applies to: SQL Server on Azure VM

This article teaches you to analyze I/O performance for SQL Server on Azure Virtual Machines (VMs) to find issues that result from exceeding virtual machines and data disks limits.

Note

I/O Analysis for SQL Server on Azure VMs in the Azure portal is currently in preview.

Overview 

Although various tools help you troubleshoot SQL Server performance problems, to do so effectively on an Azure VM, it's important to understand what's happening at both the host level and your SQL Server instance where, often, correlating host metrics with SQL Server workloads can be a challenge. SQL Server on Azure VMs make it easy to identify performance issues stemming from IOPS (Input / Output per second) and throughput throttling caused by exceeding virtual machine and data disks limits.

Performance metrics that demonstrate the issue, and potential steps to address it, are available in the Azure portal, and queryable with the Azure CLI.

The Storage pane of your SQL virtual machines resource in the Azure portal helps you:

Understanding the metrics 

The I/O Analysis tab relies on Azure Metrics to identify disk latency, and VM or disk I/O throttling. Azure Metrics are sampled every 30 seconds and aggregated to a minute.

The system monitors for throttling and disk latency. Some throttling is expected, and is ignored unless there's also disk latency. If more than 500 milliseconds of disk latency is observed in a consecutive 5-minute period, then the system:

  • Digs deeper into performance metrics
  • Identifies the throttled resource
  • Provides potential root causes and mitigation steps

The following table explains the Azure Metrics used to identify problematic throttling issues:

Azure Metric Metric description Problematic condition I/O throttling conclusions
Disk latency (preview) The average time to complete IOs for the data disk during the monitored period. Values are in milliseconds. > 500 milliseconds in a consecutive 5-minute period There is a latency problem for the system to further investigate potential throttling.
VM Cached IOPS Consumed Percentage The percentage calculated by the total IOPS completed over the max cached virtual machine IOPS limit. >= 95% in a consecutive 5-minute period There is VM throttling. The application running on the SQL virtual machine is fully utilizing the maximum cached IOPS capacity available to the virtual machine - the storage demands of the application exceed the cached IOPS provided by the virtual machine's underlying storage configuration.
VM Cached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage The percentage calculated by the total disk throughput completed over the max cached virtual machine throughput. >= 95% in a consecutive 5-minute period There is VM throttling. The application running on the SQL virtual machine is utilizing the maximum available cached disk bandwidth for data transfer - the data transfer demands of the application exceed the cached bandwidth resources provided by the virtual machine's underlying storage configuration. 
VM Uncached IOPS Consumed Percentage The percentage calculated by the total IOPS on a virtual machine completed over the max uncached virtual machine IOPS limit. >= 95% in a consecutive 5-minute period There is VM throttling. The application running on the SQL virtual Machine is utilizing the maximum allowable uncached IOPS capacity available to the virtual machine- the storage demands of the application exceed the uncached IOPS resources provided by the virtual machine's underlying storage configuration.
VM Uncached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage The percentage calculated by the total disk throughput on a virtual machine completed over the max provisioned virtual machine throughput. >= 95% in a consecutive 5-minute period There is VM throttling. The application running on the SQL virtual machine is utilizing the maximum allowable uncached disk bandwidth for data transfer – the data transfer demands of the application exceed the uncached bandwidth resources provided by the virtual machine's underlying storage configuration.
Data Disk IOPS Consumed Percentage The percentage calculated by the data disk IOPS completed over the provisioned data disk IOPS. >= 95% in a consecutive 5-minute period There is data disk throttling. The application running on the SQL virtual machine is hitting the IOPS limit for the provisioned data disk - the storage demands of the application exceed the performance capabilities of the chosen disk configuration.
Data Disk Bandwidth Consumed Percentage The percentage calculated by the data disk throughput completed over the provisioned data disk throughput. >= 95% in a consecutive 5-minute period There is data disk throttling. The application running on the SQL virtual machine is hitting the IOPS limit for the provisioned data disk - the storage demands of the application exceed the performance capabilities of the chosen disk configuration.

I/O analysis findings 

Based on its analysis of performance metrics in the last 24 hours, I/O analysis determines that there's:

  • No throttling
  • VM level I/O throttling
  • Disk level I/O throttling

No I/O throttling issue 

If you're experiencing a performance problem but there's no disk latency, then the performance problem isn't due to an I/O throttling issue. You'll need to investigate other areas. You can use the Best practices checklist for SQL Server on Azure VMs to make sure your system is configured efficiently, or find useful links for troubleshooting SQL Server performance. If you enable the SQL best practices assessment feature, you can see the full list of recommendations for your SQL Server VM.

VM level I/O throttling issue 

Azure Virtual Machines are cloud-based computing resources that come in different series and sizes for various workloads, each with different capabilities and performance characteristics. For SQL Server workloads, generally, the recommended series for SQL Server workloads are the memory-optimized ones, such as the Ebdsv5, M, and Mv2 series.

The size of the VM determines the number of vCPUs, memory, and storage available for the SQL Server instance. Compared to storage, it's relatively easy for customers to resize their virtual machines and scale their VM up and down based on application resource needs. Since it's possible for IOPS and throughput to be throttled at the VM level, choose an appropriate VM size based on performance needs and cost of the workload.

If you're migrating to Azure, you can use tools such as the Data Migration Assistant and SKU Recommendations, to analyze your current SQL Server configuration and usage and suggest the best VM size for your workload in Azure.

The following Azure metrics are used to determine the workload is throttled from exceeding limits imposed by the VM:

  • VM Cached IOPS Consumed Percentage
  • VM Cached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage
  • VM Uncached IOPS Consumed Percentage
  • VM Uncached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage

Consider the following the key points about VM throttling:

  • You can increase memory, vCores, throughput, and IOPS by resizing your virtual machine within a VM series.
  • You can't reduce the VM size to a level where the number of data disks exceeds the max data disks limit for the target VM size.
  • It's important to determine the throttling pattern. For example, infrequent spikes of throttling can likely be addressed by tuning the workload, whereas sustained spikes could indicate the underlying storage is incapable of handling the workload.

Disk level I/O throttling issue 

For SQL virtual machine customers, storage is the most critical aspect to configure appropriately for optimized performance since modifying storage is more challenging than resizing a virtual machine. For example, making any changes to increase IOPS or throughput for Premium SSD disks requires creating a new storage pool. As such, it's crucial to optimize storage configuration for both price and performance during the planning phase to avoid performance issues after deployment.

The following Azure metrics are used to determine the workload is throttled from exceeding limits imposed by the disk:

  • Data Disk IOPS Consumed Percentage

  • Data Disk Bandwidth Consumed Percentage   Consider the following key points about disk level I/O throttling:

  • The data disk is critical for SQL Server performance. Placing SQL Server data (.mdf) and log (.df) files on the data disk is recommended.

  • For throttling at the data disk level, enable read-caching, if it's available.

Data Disk IOPS Consumed Percentage

The Data Disk IOPS Consumed Percentage metric measures IOPS consumption at the disk level. Generally, high IOPS needs are associated with highly transactional, OLTP based applications and workloads.   The following scenarios or conditions can potentially exceed data disk IOPS limits:

  • High Transaction Workload (IOPS): If the application is processing a high volume of database transactions that involve frequent read and write operations, it can quickly consume the allocated IOPS. 
  • Inefficient Queries: Poorly optimized SQL queries or data retrieval operations can lead to excessive I/O activity, consuming more IOPS than anticipated. 
  • Concurrent Users: If multiple users or sessions are concurrently accessing the database and generating I/O requests, the cumulative effect can result in reaching the IOPS limit. 
  • Contending Resources: If the underlying physical infrastructure is heavily shared with other tenants or workloads, it can impact the available IOPS for your virtual machine. 
  • Temporary Spikes: Temporary spikes in workload, such as batch processing or data migrations, can lead to sudden increases in I/O demand that surpass the allocated IOPS. 
  • Small disk size: If the provisioned data disk size is relatively small, the IOPS capacity might be limited. Individual smaller disks have lower IOPS limits, and if the application's demands exceed this limit, the "Data Disk IOPS Consumed Percentage" reaches 100%. 
  • Insufficient disk type: Choosing a lower-performance disk type (such as a Standard HDD) for an I/O-intensive application can lead to IOPS limitations. 
  • Unoptimized disk stripe size: If the storage configuration isn't optimized for the workload, it might lead to suboptimal IOPS performance. 

Consider the following steps to avoid exceeding the data disk IOPS limit:

  • Optimize SQL queries and database design to minimize unnecessary I/O operations. 
  • Choose an appropriate disk type (Standard SSD or Premium SSD) that matches your application's IOPS requirements. 
  • Use larger disk sizes to increase the available IOPS capacity. 
  • Distribute I/O across multiple data disks using RAID configurations. 

Data Disk Bandwidth Consumed Percentage 

The Data Disk Bandwidth Consumed Percentage Azure metric measures bandwidth utilization at the disk level. Generally, high throughput needs are associated with data warehousing, data mart, reporting, ETL, and other data analytic workloads.

The following scenarios or conditions can potentially exceed data disk bandwidth limits:

  • Large data transfers: Frequent, large-scale application data transfers between the disk and the SQL database, can quickly consume the available data disk bandwidth. 
  • Bulk data loading: Disk transfer activities associated with bulk data inserts, updates, or imports, can lead to high bandwidth consumption. 
  • Data warehousing or analytics: Applications that involve heavy data warehousing, analytics processing, or reporting can generate substantial data movement, potentially causing exceeding bandwidth limits.
  • High data redundancy technology / replication: Data copying associated with uses disk-based replication, data mirroring, or other redundancy mechanisms can contribute to bandwidth saturation. 
  • Data backup and restore: Frequent data backups, snapshots, or restoration processes can consume significant data disk bandwidth. 
  • Parallel query execution: Parallel queries that involve large data scans or joins can lead to substantial data movement that results in bandwidth utilization. 
  • Elevated network traffic: High network activity, such as data transfers between the virtual machine and other resources, can indirectly impact data disk bandwidth availability. 
  • Insufficient disk type: Choosing a lower-performance disk type for an application with high data transfer requirements can lead to exceed the bandwidth limit. 
  • Concurrent data-intensive operations: The combined effect of multiple concurrent processes or sessions accessing and transferring data on the same disk can result in reaching the bandwidth limit. 
  • Unoptimized queries or ETL processes: Poorly optimized SQL queries or Extract, Transform, Load (ETL) processes can lead to excessive data movement that results in excessive bandwidth consumption. 

Consider the following steps to avoid exceeding the data disk bandwidth limit:

  • Optimize data transfer operations to minimize unnecessary data movement. 
  • Consider using higher-performance disk types that offer greater bandwidth capacity, such as Premium SSD or Premium SSD v2.
  • Distribute data across multiple disks using techniques such as partitioning or sharding.
  • Optimize and parallelize queries and data processing to reduce data movement.
  • Use compression and efficient data storage mechanisms to reduce the volume of data being transferred.
  • Monitor performance metrics and scale up your storage configurations as needed. Premium SSD v2 allows customers to scale their IOPS and throughput as needed on demand.
  • It's important to monitor and analyze performance metrics regularly to identify the cause of IOPS limitations and take appropriate actions to optimize the storage performance for your SQL virtual machine.

Tip

Regularly monitoring performance metrics, tuning data transfer operations, and optimizing disk configurations ensures the performance of your data disk for your SQL virtual machine remains optimal without exceeding limits.

Since poorly configured storage systems can lead to performance issues, you can use the Storage pane in the Azure portal to run a disk-specific subset of SQL best practices assessment rules to identify storage configuration issues with your SQL Server on Azure VMs. The SQL best practices feature is based on the SQL Assessment API.

You can view a full list of recommendations on GitHub. By filtering on the id column on the rules on GitHub, you can see the SQL VM disk configuration rules that are validated on the I/O configuration best practices tab of the Storage pane for your SQL virtual machines resource in the Azure portal.

  • AzSqlVmSize
  • AzDataDiskCache
  • AzDataDiskStriping
  • AzDataOnDataDisks
  • AzDbDefaultLocation
  • AzDiskColumnCount
  • AzErrorLogLocation
  • AzPremSsdDataFiles
  • AzTempDbFileLocation
  • AzTranLogDiskCache
  • NtfsBlockSizeNotFormatted
  • LockedPagesInMemory

On the I/O related best practices tab, use Run assessment to start an assessment of your configuration, which should take a few minutes to complete (unless there's a large number of databases and objects). Alternatively, if you see a timestamp for the latest available results, you can use Fetch latest results to review findings from previous assessments.

Analyze I/O with PowerShell

You can also use the I/O Analysis PowerShell script to analyze the I/O performance of your SQL Server VM:

# Enter parameters
$subscriptionId = Read-Host "<Subscription ID>"
$resourceGroup = Read-Host "<Resource Group>"
$vmName = Read-Host "<Virtual machine name>"

# Set resource details
$resourceType = "Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines"
$resourceId = "/subscriptions/$subscriptionId/resourceGroups/$resourceGroup/providers/$resourceType/$vmName"

# Get Azure access token
$accessToken = az account get-access-token --query accessToken -o tsv

# Invoke Azure Monitor Metrics API
function Get-Metrics {
    [CmdletBinding()]
    param (
        [string]$accessToken,
        [string]$resourceId,
        [string]$metricNames,
        [string]$apiVersion = "2023-10-01"
    )
    try {
        $startTime = (Get-Date).AddHours(-24).ToUniversalTime().ToString('yyyy-MM-ddTHH:mm:ssZ')
        $endTime = (Get-Date).ToUniversalTime().ToString('yyyy-MM-ddTHH:mm:ssZ')
        $timespan = "$startTime/$endTime"
        Write-Verbose "Evaluating timespan: $timespan"
        $uri = "https://management.azure.com$resourceId/providers/Microsoft.Insights/metrics?api-version=$apiVersion&metricnames=$metricNames&aggregation=maximum&interval=PT1M&timespan=$timespan"
        $headers = @{ "Authorization" = "Bearer $accessToken"; "Content-Type" = "application/json" }
        
        $response = Invoke-RestMethod -Uri $uri -Headers $headers -Method Get
        if ($response) {
            Write-Verbose "API response successfully retrieved."
            return $response
        } else {
            Write-Error "No response from API."
        }
    } catch {
        Write-Error "Error retrieving metrics: $_"
    }
}

# Check if data disk latency violates thresholds
function Check-Latency {
    [CmdletBinding()]
    param (
        [Parameter(Mandatory = $true)]
        [Object]$metrics,

        [Parameter()]
        [int]$latencyThreshold = 500,

        [Parameter()]
        [int]$consecutiveCount = 5
    )
    $violationTimes = @()
    foreach ($metric in $metrics.value) {
        if ($metric.name.value -eq "Data Disk Latency") {
            $count = 0
            foreach ($dataPoint in $metric.timeseries[0].data) {
                if ($dataPoint.maximum -gt $latencyThreshold) {
                    $count++
                    if ($count -ge $consecutiveCount) {
                        $violationTimes += $dataPoint.timeStamp
                        $count = 0  # Reset count after recording a violation
                    }
                } else {
                    $count = 0  # Reset count if the sequence is broken
                }
            }
        }
    }
    if ($violationTimes.Count -gt 0) {
        Write-Verbose "Latency violations detected."
        return @{ "Flag" = $true; "Times" = $violationTimes }
    } else {
        Write-Verbose "No latency violations detected."
        return @{ "Flag" = $false }
    }
}

# Check metrics other than latency to evaluate for throttling
function Check-OtherMetricsThrottled {
    [CmdletBinding()]
    param (
        [Parameter(Mandatory = $true)]
        [Object]$metrics,

        [Parameter()]
        [int]$PercentageThreshold = 90,

        [Parameter()]
        [int]$consecutiveCount = 5
    )
    $violatedMetrics = @()
    foreach ($metric in $metrics.value) {
        $count = 0
        foreach ($dataPoint in $metric.timeseries[0].data) {
            if ($dataPoint.maximum -gt $PercentageThreshold) {
                $count++
                if ($count -ge $consecutiveCount) {
                    $violatedMetrics += @{ "Metric" = $metric.name.localizedValue; "Time" = $dataPoint.timeStamp; "Value" = $dataPoint.maximum }
                    break
                }
            } else {
                $count = 0
            }
        }
    }
    if ($violatedMetrics.Count -gt 0) {
        Write-Verbose "Other metrics violations detected."
    } else {
        Write-Verbose "No other metrics violations detected."
    }
    return $violatedMetrics
}

# Compare times for latency & other throttled metrics. Logs the volations with values & timestamps
function CompareTimes {
    [CmdletBinding()]
    param (
        [Parameter(Mandatory = $true)]
        [Hashtable]$latencyResult,
        
        [Parameter(Mandatory = $true)]
        [Array]$otherMetrics
    )
    foreach ($metric in $otherMetrics) {
        $otherDateTime = [DateTime]$metric["Time"]
        $isWithinFiveMinutes = $false
        $closestLatencyTime = $null
        $closestTimeDifference = [int]::MaxValue

        foreach ($latencyTime in $latencyResult.Times) {
            $latencyDateTime = [DateTime]$latencyTime
            $timeDifference = [Math]::Abs(($otherDateTime - $latencyDateTime).TotalMinutes)
            
            if ($timeDifference -le 5) {
                $isWithinFiveMinutes = $true
                if ($timeDifference -lt $closestTimeDifference) {
                    $closestTimeDifference = $timeDifference
                    $closestLatencyTime = $latencyTime
                }
            }
        }

        if ($isWithinFiveMinutes) {
            if ($otherDateTime -lt $closestLatencyTime) {
                Write-Host "`n $($metric["Metric"]) limit was hit before latency spiked at $closestLatencyTime with value $($metric["Value"]). `n"
            } else {
                Write-Host "`n $($metric["Metric"]) hit its limit with value $($metric["Value"]) at $($metric["Time"])."
                Write-Host "Latency spiked at $closestLatencyTime before $($metric["Metric"]) hit its limit `n"
            }
        } else {
            Write-Host "`n Metric: $($metric["Metric"]) exceeded its threshold with a value of $($metric["Value"]) at $($metric["Time"]), but this was not within 5 minutes of any latency spikes."
        }
    }
}

# Prompt user for latency threshold
$latencyThreshold = Read-Host "Enter Latency Threshold (default is 500)"
if (-not [int]::TryParse($latencyThreshold, [ref]0)) {
    $latencyThreshold = 500 # Use default if invalid input
    Write-Host "No valid input provided. Using Default 500ms for disk latency threshold"
}

# Execute main logic
$latencyMetrics = Get-Metrics -accessToken $accessToken -resourceId $resourceId -metricNames "Data Disk Latency"
$latencyResult = Check-Latency -metrics $latencyMetrics -latencyThreshold $latencyThreshold

if ($latencyResult.Flag) {
    
    # If latency is flagged, check for other metrics. If there is no disk latency, machine is likely not throttled but only at high consumption
    Write-Verbose "Checking the following metrics: Data Disk Bandwidth Consumed Percentage,Data Disk IOPS Consumed Percentage,VM Cached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage,VM Cached IOPS Consumed Percentage,VM Uncached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage,VM Uncached IOPS Consumed Percentage"
    
    $DiskVMMetrics = Get-Metrics -accessToken $accessToken -resourceId $resourceId -metricNames "Data Disk Bandwidth Consumed Percentage,Data Disk IOPS Consumed Percentage,VM Cached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage,VM Cached IOPS Consumed Percentage,VM Uncached Bandwidth Consumed Percentage,VM Uncached IOPS Consumed Percentage"
    
    $additionalMetrics = Check-OtherMetricsThrottled -metrics $DiskVMMetrics
    
    if ($additionalMetrics.Count -gt 0) {
        CompareTimes $latencyResult $additionalMetrics
    } else {
        Write-Host "No metrics violations detected besides latency."
    }
} else {
    Write-Host "No latency issues detected."
}

Next steps