संपादित करें

इसके माध्यम से साझा किया गया


Improve the Performance of Full-Text Indexes

Applies to: SQL Server Azure SQL Database

This topic describes some of the common causes of poor performance for full-text indexes and queries. It also provides a few suggestions to mitigate these issues and improve performance.

Common causes of performance issues

Hardware resource issues

The performance of full-text indexing and full-text queries is influenced by hardware resources, such as memory, disk speed, CPU speed, and machine architecture.

The main cause for reduced full-text indexing performance is hardware-resource limits.

  • CPU. If CPU usage by the filter daemon host process (fdhost.exe) or the SQL Server process (sqlservr.exe) is close to 100 percent, the CPU is the bottleneck.

  • Memory. If there is a shortage of physical memory, memory might be the bottleneck.

  • Disk. If the average disk-waiting queue length is more than two times the number of disk heads, there is a bottleneck on the disk. The primary workaround is to create full-text catalogs that are separate from the SQL Server database files and logs. Put the logs, database files, and full-text catalogs on separate disks. Installing faster disks and using RAID can also help improve indexing performance.

    Note

    Beginning in SQL Server 2008 (10.0.x), the Full-Text Engine can use AWE memory because the Full-Text Engine is part of the sqlservr.exe process. For more information, see Full-Text Search architecture.

Full-text batching issues

If the system has no hardware bottlenecks, the indexing performance of full-text search mostly depends on the following:

  • How long it takes SQL Server to create full-text batches.

  • How quickly the filter daemon can consume those batches.

Full-text index population issues

  • Type of population. Unlike full population, incremental, manual, and auto change tracking population are not designed to maximize hardware resources to achieve faster speed. Therefore, the tuning suggestions in this topic may not enhance performance for full-text indexing when it uses incremental, manual, or auto change tracking population.

  • Master merge. When a population has completed, a final merge process is triggered that merges the index fragments together into one master full-text index. This results in improved query performance since only the master index needs to be queried rather than a number of index fragments, and better scoring statistics may be used for relevance ranking. However the master merge can be I/O intensive, because large amounts of data must be written and read when index fragments are merged, though it does not block incoming queries.

    Master merging a large amount of data can create a long running transaction, delaying truncation of the transaction log during checkpoint. In this case, under the full recovery model, the transaction log might grow significantly. As a best practice, before reorganizing a large full-text index in a database that uses the full recovery model, ensure that your transaction log contains sufficient space for a long-running transaction. For more information, see Manage the Size of the Transaction Log File.

Tune the performance of full-text indexes

To maximize the performance of your full-text indexes, implement the following best practices:

  • To use all CPU processors or cores to the maximum, set sp_configure 'max full-text crawl range' to the number of CPUs on the system. For information about this configuration option, see max full-text crawl range Server Configuration Option.

  • Make sure that the base table has a clustered index. Use an integer data type for the first column of the clustered index. Avoid using GUIDs in the first column of the clustered index. A multi-range population on a clustered index can produce the highest population speed. We recommend that the column serving as the full-text key be an integer data type.

  • Update the statistics of the base table by using the UPDATE STATISTICS statement. More important, update the statistics on the clustered index or the full-text key for a full population. This helps a multi-range population to generate good partitions on the table.

  • Before you perform a full population on a large multi-CPU computer, we recommend that you temporarily limit the size of the buffer pool by setting the max server memory value to leave enough memory for the fdhost.exe process and operating system use. For more information, see Estimating the Memory Requirements of the Filter Daemon Host Process (fdhost.exe), later in this topic.

  • If you use incremental population based on a timestamp column, build a secondary index on the timestamp column to improve the performance of incremental population.

Troubleshoot the performance of full populations

Review the full-text crawl logs

To help diagnose performance problems, look at the full-text crawl logs.

When an error occurs during a crawl, the Full-Text Search crawl logging facility creates and maintains a crawl log, which is a plain text file. Each crawl log corresponds to a particular full-text catalog. By default, crawl logs for a given instance (in this example, the default instance) are located in %ProgramFiles%\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL15.MSSQLSERVER\MSSQL\LOG folder.

The crawl log file follows the following naming scheme:

SQLFT<DatabaseID\><FullTextCatalogID\>.LOG[<n\>]

The variable parts of the crawl log file name are the following.

  • <DatabaseID> - The ID of a database. <dbid> is a five digit number with leading zeros.
  • <FullTextCatalogID> - Full-text catalog ID. <catid> is a five digit number with leading zeros.
  • <n> - Is an integer that indicates one or more crawl logs of the same full-text catalog exist.

For example, SQLFT0000500008.2 is the crawl log file for a database with database ID = 5, and full-text catalog ID = 8. The 2 at the end of the file name indicates that there are two crawl log files for this database/catalog pair.

Check physical memory usage

During a full-text population, it is possible for fdhost.exe or sqlservr.exe to run low on memory or to run out of memory.

  • If the full-text crawl log shows that fdhost.exe is being restarted often or that error code 8007008 is being returned it means one of these processes is running out of memory.
  • If fdhost.exe is producing dumps, particularly on large, multi-CPU computers, it might be running out of memory.
  • To get information about memory buffers used by a full-text crawl, see sys.dm_fts_memory_buffers (Transact-SQL).

The possible causes of low memory or out of memory issues are the following:

  • Insufficient memory. If the amount of physical memory that is available during a full population is zero, the SQL Server buffer pool might be consuming most of the physical memory on the system.

    The sqlservr.exe process tries to grab all available memory for the buffer pool, up to the configured maximum server memory. If the max server memory allocation is too large, out-of-memory conditions and failure to allocate shared memory can occur for the fdhost.exe process.

    You can solve this problem by setting the max server memory value of the SQL Server buffer pool appropriately. For more information, see Estimating the Memory Requirements of the Filter Daemon Host Process (fdhost.exe), later in this topic. Reducing the batch size used for full-text indexing may also help.

  • Memory contention. During a full-text population on a multi-CPU computer, contention for the buffer pool memory can occur between fdhost.exe or sqlservr.exe. The resulting lack of shared memory causes batch retries, memory thrashing, and dumps by the fdhost.exe process.

  • Paging issues. Insufficient page-file size, such as on a system that has a small page file with restricted growth, can also cause the fdhost.exe or sqlservr.exe to run out of memory. If the crawl logs do not indicate any memory-related failures, it is likely that performance is slow due to excessive paging.

Estimate the memory requirements of the Filter Daemon Host process (fdhost.exe)

The amount of memory required by the fdhost.exe process for a population depends mainly on the number of full-text crawl ranges it uses, the size of inbound shared memory (ISM), and the maximum number of ISM instances.

The amount of memory (in bytes) consumed by the filter daemon host can be roughly estimated by using the following formula:

number_of_crawl_ranges * ism_size * max_outstanding_isms * 2

The default values of the variables in the preceding formula are as follows:

Variable Default value
number_of_crawl_ranges The number of CPUs
ism_size 1 MB for x86 computers

4 MB, 8 MB, or 16MB for x64 computers, depending on the total physical memory
max_outstanding_isms 25 for x86 computers

5 for x64 computers

The following table presents guidelines about how to estimate the memory requirements of fdhost.exe. The formulas in this table use the following values:

  • F, which is an estimate of memory needed by fdhost.exe (in MB).

  • T, which is the total physical memory available on the system (in MB).

  • M, which is the optimal max server memory setting.

For essential information about the following formulas, see the notes that follow the table.

Platform Estimating fdhost.exe memory requirements in MB-F^1 Formula for calculating max server memory-M^2
x86 F = Number of crawl ranges * 50 M =minimum(T, 2000) - F - 500
x64 F = Number of crawl ranges * 10 * 8 M = T - F - 500

Notes about the formulas

  1. If multiple full populations are in progress, calculate the fdhost.exe memory requirements of each separately, as F1, F2, and so forth. Then calculate M as T- sigma**(_F_i)**.
  2. 500 MB is an estimate of the memory required by other processes in the system. If the system is doing additional work, increase this value accordingly.
  3. .ism_size is assumed to be 8 MB for x64 platforms.

Example: Estimate the memory requirements of fdhost.exe

This example is for an 64-bit computer that has 8GB of RAM and 4 dual core processors. The first calculation estimates of memory needed by fdhost.exe -F. The number of crawl ranges is 8.

F = 8*10*8 = 640

The next calculation obtains the optimal value for max server memory -M. The total physical memory available on this system in MB-T-is 8192.

M = 8192-640-500 = 7052

Example: Setting max server memory

This example uses the sp_configure and RECONFIGURE Transact-SQL statements to set max server memory to the value calculated for M in the preceding example, 7052:

USE master;  
GO  
EXEC sp_configure 'max server memory', 7052;  
GO  
RECONFIGURE;  
GO  

For more info about the server memory options, see Server Memory Server Configuration Options.

Check CPU usage

The performance of full populations is not optimal when the average CPU consumption is lower than about 30 percent. Here are some factors that affect CPU consumption.

  • High wait time for pages

    To find out whether a page wait time is high, run the following Transact-SQL statement:

    SELECT TOP 10 * FROM sys.dm_os_wait_stats ORDER BY wait_time_ms DESC;  
    

    The following table describes the wait types of interest here.

    Wait type Description Possible resolution
    PAGEIO_LATCH_SH (_EX or _UP) This could indicate an IO bottleneck, in which case you would typically also see a high average disk-queue length. Moving the full-text index to a different filegroup on a different disk could help reduce the IO bottleneck.
    PAGELATCH_EX (or _UP) This could indicate a lot of contention among threads that are trying to write to the same database file. Adding files to the filegroup on which the fulltext index resides could help alleviate such contention.

    For more info, see sys.dm_os_wait_stats (Transact-SQL).

  • Inefficiencies in scanning the base table

    A full population scans the base table to produce batches. This table scanning could be inefficient in the following scenarios:

    • If the base table has a high percentage of out-of-row columns that are being full-text indexed, scanning the base table to produce batches might be the bottleneck. In this case, moving the smaller data in-row using varchar(max) or nvarchar(max) might help.

    • If the base table is very fragmented, scanning might be inefficient. For information about computing out-of-row data and index fragmentation, see sys.dm_db_partition_stats (Transact-SQL) and sys.dm_db_index_physical_stats (Transact-SQL).

      To reduce fragmentation, you can reorganize or rebuild the clustered index. For more information, see Reorganize and Rebuild Indexes.

Troubleshoot slow indexing of documents

Note

This section describes an issue that only affects customers who index documents (such as Microsoft Word documents) in which other document types are embedded.

The Full-Text Engine uses two types of filters when it populates a full-text index: multithreaded filters and single-threaded filters.

  • Some documents, such as Microsoft Word documents, are filtered using a multithreaded filter.
  • Other documents, such as Adobe Acrobat Portable Document Format (PDF) documents, are filtered using a single-threaded filter.

For security reasons, filters are loaded by the filter daemon host processes. A server instance uses a multithreaded process for all multi-threaded filters and a single-threaded process for all single-threaded filters. When a document that uses a multithreaded filter contains an embedded document that uses a single-threaded filter, the Full-Text Engine launches a single-threaded process for the embedded document. For example, on encountering a Word document that contains a PDF document, the Full-Text Engine uses the multithreaded process for the Word content and launches a single-threaded process for the PDF content. A single-threaded filter might not work well in this environment, however, and could destabilize the filtering process. In certain circumstances where such embedding is common, destabilization might lead to crashes of the process. When this occurs, the Full-Text Engine re-routes any failed document - for example, a Word document that contains embedded PDF content - to the single-threaded filtering process. If re-routing occurs frequently, it results in performance degradation of the full-text indexing process.

To work around this problem, mark the filter for the container document (the Word document, in this example) as a single-threaded filter. To mark a filter as a single-threaded filter, set the ThreadingModel registry value for the filter to Apartment Threaded. For information about single-threaded apartments, see the white paper Understanding and Using COM Threading Models.

See Also

Server Memory Server Configuration Options
max full-text crawl range Server Configuration Option
Populate Full-Text Indexes
Create and Manage Full-Text Indexes
sys.dm_fts_memory_buffers (Transact-SQL)
sys.dm_fts_memory_pools (Transact-SQL)
Troubleshoot Full-Text Indexing
Full-Text Search architecture