CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP (Transact-SQL)
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* SQL Server *
SQL Server and SQL Managed Instance
Creates a Resource Governor workload group and associates the workload group with a Resource Governor resource pool. Resource Governor isn't available in every edition of SQL Server. For a list of features that are supported by the editions of SQL Server, see Editions and supported features of SQL Server 2022.
Transact-SQL syntax conventions.
Syntax
CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP group_name
[ WITH
( [ IMPORTANCE = { LOW | MEDIUM | HIGH } ]
[ [ , ] REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT = value ]
[ [ , ] REQUEST_MAX_CPU_TIME_SEC = value ]
[ [ , ] REQUEST_MEMORY_GRANT_TIMEOUT_SEC = value ]
[ [ , ] MAX_DOP = value ]
[ [ , ] GROUP_MAX_REQUESTS = value ] )
]
[ USING {
[ pool_name | "default" ]
[ [ , ] EXTERNAL external_pool_name | "default" ] ]
} ]
[ ; ]
Arguments
group_name
The user-defined name for the workload group. group_name is alphanumeric, can be up to 128 characters, must be unique within an instance of SQL Server, and must comply with the rules for Database Identifiers.
IMPORTANCE = { LOW | MEDIUM | HIGH }
Specifies the relative importance of a request in the workload group. Importance is one of the following, with MEDIUM being the default:
- LOW
- MEDIUM (default)
- HIGH
Note
Internally, each importance setting is stored as a number that is used for calculations.
IMPORTANCE is local to the resource pool. Workload groups of different importance inside the same resource pool affect each other, but don't affect workload groups in another resource pool.
REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT = value
Specifies the maximum amount of memory that a single request can take from the pool. value is a percentage relative to the resource pool size specified by MAX_MEMORY_PERCENT. Default value is 25.
value is an integer up to SQL Server 2017 (14.x) and the allowed range is from 1 through 100. Starting with SQL Server 2019 (15.x), the value is a float
data type and the allowed range is from 0 through 100.
Important
The amount specified only refers to query execution grant memory.
Setting value to 0 prevents queries with SORT and HASH JOIN operations in user-defined workload groups from running.
It is not recommended to set value greater than 70 because the server may be unable to set aside enough free memory if other concurrent queries are running. This may eventually lead to query time-out error 8645.
If the query memory requirements exceed the limit that is specified by this parameter, the server does the following:
For user-defined workload groups, the server tries to reduce the query degree of parallelism until the memory requirement falls under the limit, or until the degree of parallelism equals 1. If the query memory requirement is still greater than the limit, error 8657 occurs.
For internal and default workload groups, the server permits the query to obtain the required memory.
Be aware that both cases are subject to time-out error 8645 if the server has insufficient physical memory.
REQUEST_MAX_CPU_TIME_SEC = value
Specifies the maximum amount of CPU time, in seconds, that a request can use. value must be 0 or a positive integer. The default setting for value is 0, which means unlimited.
Note
By default, Resource Governor will not prevent a request from continuing if the maximum time is exceeded. However, an event will be generated. For more information, see CPU Threshold Exceeded Event Class.
Important
Starting with SQL Server 2016 (13.x) SP2 and SQL Server 2017 (14.x) CU3, and using trace flag 2422, Resource Governor will abort a request when the maximum time is exceeded.
REQUEST_MEMORY_GRANT_TIMEOUT_SEC = value
Specifies the maximum time, in seconds, that a query can wait for a memory grant (work buffer memory) to become available. value must be 0 or a positive integer. The default setting for value, 0, uses an internal calculation based on query cost to determine the maximum time.
Note
A query does not always fail when memory grant time-out is reached. A query will only fail if there are too many concurrent queries running. Otherwise, the query may only get the minimum memory grant, resulting in reduced query performance.
MAX_DOP = value
Specifies the maximum degree of parallelism (MAXDOP) for parallel query execution. value must be 0 or a positive integer. The allowed range for value is from 0 through 64. The default setting for value, 0, uses the global setting.
MAX_DOP is handled as follows:
MAX_DOP as a query hint is honored as long as it doesn't exceed workload group MAX_DOP.
MAX_DOP as a query hint always overrides sp_configure 'max degree of parallelism'.
Workload group MAX_DOP overrides sp_configure 'max degree of parallelism'.
If the query is marked as serial
(MAX_DOP = 1)
at compile time, it can't be changed back to parallel at run time regardless of the workload group or sp_configure setting.
After DOP is configured, it can only be lowered on grant memory pressure. Workload group reconfiguration isn't visible while waiting in the grant memory queue.
Note
Workload group MAX_DOP overrides the server configuration for max degree of parallelism and the MAXDOP
database scoped configuration.
Tip
To accomplish this at the query level, use the MAXDOP
query hint. Setting the maximum degree of parallelism as a query hint is effective as long as it does not exceed the workload group MAX_DOP. If the MAXDOP query hint value exceeds the value that is configured by using the Resource Governor, the SQL Server Database Engine uses the Resource Governor MAX_DOP
value. The MAXDOP query hint always overrides the server configuration for max degree of parallelism.
To accomplish this at the database level, use the MAXDOP
database scoped configuration.
To accomplish this at the server level, use the max degree of parallelism (MAXDOP) server configuration option.
GROUP_MAX_REQUESTS = value
Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous requests that are allowed to execute in the workload group. value must be a 0 or a positive integer. The default setting for value is 0, and allows unlimited requests. When the maximum concurrent requests are reached, a user in that group can log in, but is placed in a wait state until concurrent requests are dropped below the value specified.
USING { pool_name | "default" }
Associates the workload group with the user-defined resource pool identified by pool_name. This in effect puts the workload group in the resource pool. If pool_name isn't provided, or if the USING argument isn't used, the workload group is put in the predefined Resource Governor default pool.
"default"
is a reserved word and when used with USING, must be enclosed by quotation marks (""
) or brackets ([]
).
Note
Predefined workload groups and resource pools all use lower case names, such as "default". This should be taken into account for servers that use case-sensitive collation. Servers with case-insensitive collation, such as SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS
, will treat "default"
and "Default"
as the same.
EXTERNAL external_pool_name | "default"
Applies to: SQL Server 2016 (13.x) and later.
Workload group can specify an external resource pool. You can define a workload group and associate with two pools:
- A resource pool for SQL Server workloads and queries
- An external resource pool for external processes. For more information, see sp_execute_external_script (Transact-SQL).
Remarks
When REQUEST_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT
is used, index creation is allowed to use more workspace memory than what is initially granted for improved performance. This special handling is supported by Resource Governor in SQL Server. However, the initial grant and any additional memory grant are limited by resource pool and workload group settings.
The MAX_DOP
limit is set per task. It isn't a per request or per query limit. This means that during a parallel query execution, a single request can spawn multiple tasks that are assigned to a scheduler. For more information, see the Thread and Task Architecture Guide.
When MAX_DOP
is used and a query is marked as serial at compile time, it can't be changed back to parallel at run time regardless of the workload group or server configuration setting. After MAX_DOP
is configured, it can only be lowered due to memory pressure. Workload group reconfiguration isn't visible while waiting in the grant memory queue.
Index creation on a partitioned table
The memory consumed by index creation on non-aligned partitioned table is proportional to the number of partitions involved. If the total required memory exceeds the per-query limit REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT
imposed by the Resource Governor workload group setting, this index creation may fail to execute. Because the "default"
workload group allows a query to exceed the per-query limit with the minimum required memory, the user may be able to run the same index creation in "default"
workload group, if the "default"
resource pool has enough total memory configured to run such query.
Permissions
Requires CONTROL SERVER
permission.
Example
Create a workload group named newReports
that uses the Resource Governor default settings, and is in the Resource Governor default pool. The example specifies the default
pool, but this isn't required.
CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP newReports
WITH
(REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT = 2.5
, REQUEST_MAX_CPU_TIME_SEC = 100
, MAX_DOP = 4)
USING "default" ;
GO
See also
* SQL Managed Instance *
SQL Server and SQL Managed Instance
Creates a Resource Governor workload group and associates the workload group with a Resource Governor resource pool. Resource Governor isn't available in every edition of SQL Server. For a list of features that are supported by the editions of SQL Server, see Editions and supported features of SQL Server 2022.
Transact-SQL syntax conventions.
Syntax
CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP group_name
[ WITH
( [ IMPORTANCE = { LOW | MEDIUM | HIGH } ]
[ [ , ] REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT = value ]
[ [ , ] REQUEST_MAX_CPU_TIME_SEC = value ]
[ [ , ] REQUEST_MEMORY_GRANT_TIMEOUT_SEC = value ]
[ [ , ] MAX_DOP = value ]
[ [ , ] GROUP_MAX_REQUESTS = value ] )
]
[ USING {
[ pool_name | "default" ]
[ [ , ] EXTERNAL external_pool_name | "default" ] ]
} ]
[ ; ]
Arguments
group_name
The user-defined name for the workload group. group_name is alphanumeric, can be up to 128 characters, must be unique within an instance of SQL Server, and must comply with the rules for Database Identifiers.
IMPORTANCE = { LOW | MEDIUM | HIGH }
Specifies the relative importance of a request in the workload group. Importance is one of the following, with MEDIUM being the default:
- LOW
- MEDIUM (default)
- HIGH
Note
Internally, each importance setting is stored as a number that is used for calculations.
IMPORTANCE is local to the resource pool. Workload groups of different importance inside the same resource pool affect each other, but don't affect workload groups in another resource pool.
REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT = value
Specifies the maximum amount of memory that a single request can take from the pool. value is a percentage relative to the resource pool size specified by MAX_MEMORY_PERCENT. Default value is 25.
value is an integer up to SQL Server 2017 (14.x) and the allowed range is from 1 through 100. Starting with SQL Server 2019 (15.x), the value is a float
data type and the allowed range is from 0 through 100.
Important
The amount specified only refers to query execution grant memory.
Setting value to 0 prevents queries with SORT and HASH JOIN operations in user-defined workload groups from running.
It is not recommended to set value greater than 70 because the server may be unable to set aside enough free memory if other concurrent queries are running. This may eventually lead to query time-out error 8645.
If the query memory requirements exceed the limit that is specified by this parameter, the server does the following:
For user-defined workload groups, the server tries to reduce the query degree of parallelism until the memory requirement falls under the limit, or until the degree of parallelism equals 1. If the query memory requirement is still greater than the limit, error 8657 occurs.
For internal and default workload groups, the server permits the query to obtain the required memory.
Be aware that both cases are subject to time-out error 8645 if the server has insufficient physical memory.
REQUEST_MAX_CPU_TIME_SEC = value
Specifies the maximum amount of CPU time, in seconds, that a request can use. value must be 0 or a positive integer. The default setting for value is 0, which means unlimited.
Note
By default, Resource Governor will not prevent a request from continuing if the maximum time is exceeded. However, an event will be generated. For more information, see CPU Threshold Exceeded Event Class.
Important
Starting with SQL Server 2016 (13.x) SP2 and SQL Server 2017 (14.x) CU3, and using trace flag 2422, Resource Governor will abort a request when the maximum time is exceeded.
REQUEST_MEMORY_GRANT_TIMEOUT_SEC = value
Specifies the maximum time, in seconds, that a query can wait for a memory grant (work buffer memory) to become available. value must be 0 or a positive integer. The default setting for value, 0, uses an internal calculation based on query cost to determine the maximum time.
Note
A query does not always fail when memory grant time-out is reached. A query will only fail if there are too many concurrent queries running. Otherwise, the query may only get the minimum memory grant, resulting in reduced query performance.
MAX_DOP = value
Specifies the maximum degree of parallelism (MAXDOP) for parallel query execution. value must be 0 or a positive integer. The allowed range for value is from 0 through 64. The default setting for value, 0, uses the global setting.
MAX_DOP is handled as follows:
MAX_DOP as a query hint is honored as long as it doesn't exceed workload group MAX_DOP.
MAX_DOP as a query hint always overrides sp_configure 'max degree of parallelism'.
Workload group MAX_DOP overrides sp_configure 'max degree of parallelism'.
If the query is marked as serial
(MAX_DOP = 1)
at compile time, it can't be changed back to parallel at run time regardless of the workload group or sp_configure setting.
After DOP is configured, it can only be lowered on grant memory pressure. Workload group reconfiguration isn't visible while waiting in the grant memory queue.
Note
Workload group MAX_DOP overrides the server configuration for max degree of parallelism and the MAXDOP
database scoped configuration.
Tip
To accomplish this at the query level, use the MAXDOP
query hint. Setting the maximum degree of parallelism as a query hint is effective as long as it does not exceed the workload group MAX_DOP. If the MAXDOP query hint value exceeds the value that is configured by using the Resource Governor, the SQL Server Database Engine uses the Resource Governor MAX_DOP
value. The MAXDOP query hint always overrides the server configuration for max degree of parallelism.
To accomplish this at the database level, use the MAXDOP
database scoped configuration.
To accomplish this at the server level, use the max degree of parallelism (MAXDOP) server configuration option.
GROUP_MAX_REQUESTS = value
Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous requests that are allowed to execute in the workload group. value must be a 0 or a positive integer. The default setting for value is 0, and allows unlimited requests. When the maximum concurrent requests are reached, a user in that group can log in, but is placed in a wait state until concurrent requests are dropped below the value specified.
USING { pool_name | "default" }
Associates the workload group with the user-defined resource pool identified by pool_name. This in effect puts the workload group in the resource pool. If pool_name isn't provided, or if the USING argument isn't used, the workload group is put in the predefined Resource Governor default pool.
"default"
is a reserved word and when used with USING, must be enclosed by quotation marks (""
) or brackets ([]
).
Note
Predefined workload groups and resource pools all use lower case names, such as "default". This should be taken into account for servers that use case-sensitive collation. Servers with case-insensitive collation, such as SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS
, will treat "default"
and "Default"
as the same.
EXTERNAL external_pool_name | "default"
Applies to: SQL Server 2016 (13.x) and later.
Workload group can specify an external resource pool. You can define a workload group and associate with two pools:
- A resource pool for SQL Server workloads and queries
- An external resource pool for external processes. For more information, see sp_execute_external_script (Transact-SQL).
Remarks
When REQUEST_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT
is used, index creation is allowed to use more workspace memory than what is initially granted for improved performance. This special handling is supported by Resource Governor in SQL Server. However, the initial grant and any additional memory grant are limited by resource pool and workload group settings.
The MAX_DOP
limit is set per task. It isn't a per request or per query limit. This means that during a parallel query execution, a single request can spawn multiple tasks that are assigned to a scheduler. For more information, see the Thread and Task Architecture Guide.
When MAX_DOP
is used and a query is marked as serial at compile time, it can't be changed back to parallel at run time regardless of the workload group or server configuration setting. After MAX_DOP
is configured, it can only be lowered due to memory pressure. Workload group reconfiguration isn't visible while waiting in the grant memory queue.
Index creation on a partitioned table
The memory consumed by index creation on non-aligned partitioned table is proportional to the number of partitions involved. If the total required memory exceeds the per-query limit REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT
imposed by the Resource Governor workload group setting, this index creation may fail to execute. Because the "default"
workload group allows a query to exceed the per-query limit with the minimum required memory, the user may be able to run the same index creation in "default"
workload group, if the "default"
resource pool has enough total memory configured to run such query.
Permissions
Requires CONTROL SERVER
permission.
Example
Create a workload group named newReports
that uses the Resource Governor default settings, and is in the Resource Governor default pool. The example specifies the default
pool, but this isn't required.
CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP newReports
WITH
(REQUEST_MAX_MEMORY_GRANT_PERCENT = 2.5
, REQUEST_MAX_CPU_TIME_SEC = 100
, MAX_DOP = 4)
USING "default" ;
GO
See also
* Azure Synapse
Analytics *
Azure Synapse Analytics
Creates a workload group. Workload groups are containers for a set of requests and are the basis for how workload management is configured on a system. Workload groups provide the ability to reserve resources for workload isolation, contain resources, define resources per request, and adhere to execution rules. Once the statement completes, the settings are in effect.
Transact-SQL syntax conventions
CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP group_name
WITH
( MIN_PERCENTAGE_RESOURCE = value
, CAP_PERCENTAGE_RESOURCE = value
, REQUEST_MIN_RESOURCE_GRANT_PERCENT = value
[ [ , ] REQUEST_MAX_RESOURCE_GRANT_PERCENT = value ]
[ [ , ] IMPORTANCE = { LOW | BELOW_NORMAL | NORMAL | ABOVE_NORMAL | HIGH } ]
[ [ , ] QUERY_EXECUTION_TIMEOUT_SEC = value ] )
[ ; ]
group_name
Specifies the name by which the workload group is identified. group_name is a sysname. It can be up to 128 characters long and must be unique within the instance.
MIN_PERCENTAGE_RESOURCE = value
Specifies a guaranteed minimum resource allocation for this workload group that is not shared with other workload groups. Memory is the only resource governed by this parameter. value is an integer range from 0 to 100. The sum of min_percentage_resource across all workload groups cannot exceed 100. The value for min_percentage_resource cannot be greater than cap_percentage_resource. There are minimum effective values allowed per service level. See Effective Values for more details.
CAP_PERCENTAGE_RESOURCE = value
Specifies the maximum resource utilization for all requests in a workload group. Both CPU and memory resources are capped by this parameter. The allowed integer range for value is 1 through 100. The value for cap_percentage_resource must be greater than min_percentage_resource. The effective value for cap_percentage_resource can be reduced if min_percentage_resource is configured greater than zero in other workload groups.
REQUEST_MIN_RESOURCE_GRANT_PERCENT = value
Sets the minimum amount of resources allocated per request. Memory is the only resource governed by this parameter. value is a required parameter with a decimal range between 0.75 to 100.00. The value for request_min_resource_grant_percent must be a multiple of 0.25, must be a factor of min_percentage_resource, and be less than cap_percentage_resource. There are minimum effective values allowed per service level. See Effective Values for more details.
For example:
CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP wgSample
WITH
( MIN_PERCENTAGE_RESOURCE = 26 -- integer value
, REQUEST_MIN_RESOURCE_GRANT_PERCENT = 3.25 -- factor of 26 (guaranteed a minimum of 8 concurrency)
, CAP_PERCENTAGE_RESOURCE = 100 )
Consider the values that are used for resource classes as a guideline for request_min_resource_grant_percent. The table below contains resource allocations for Gen2.
Resource Class | Percent of Resources |
---|---|
Smallrc | 3% |
Mediumrc | 10% |
Largerc | 22% |
Xlargerc | 70% |
REQUEST_MAX_RESOURCE_GRANT_PERCENT = value
Sets the maximum amount of resources allocated per request. Memory is the only resource governed by this parameter. value is an optional decimal parameter with a default value equal to the request_min_resource_grant_percent. value must be greater than or equal to request_min_resource_grant_percent. When the value of request_max_resource_grant_percent is greater than request_min_resource_grant_percent and system resources are available, additional resources are allocated to a request.
IMPORTANCE = { LOW | BELOW_NORMAL | NORMAL | ABOVE_NORMAL | HIGH }
Specifies the default importance of a request for the workload group. Importance is one of the following, with NORMAL being the default:
- LOW
- BELOW_NORMAL
- NORMAL (default)
- ABOVE_NORMAL
- HIGH
Importance set at the workload group is a default importance for all requests in the workload group. A user can also set importance at the classifier level, which can override the workload group importance setting. This allows for differentiation of importance for requests within a workload group to get access to non-reserved resources quicker. When the sum of min_percentage_resource across workload groups is less than 100, there are non-reserved resources that are assigned on a basis of importance.
QUERY_EXECUTION_TIMEOUT_SEC = value
Specifies the maximum time, in seconds, that a query can execute before it is canceled. value must be 0 or a positive integer. The default setting for value is 0, which the query never times out. QUERY_EXECUTION_TIMEOUT_SEC counts once the query is in running state, not when the query is queued.
Remarks
Workload groups corresponding to resource classes are created automatically for backward compatibility. These system defined workload groups cannot be dropped. An additional 8 user defined workload groups can be created.
If a workload group is created with min_percentage_resource
greater than zero, the CREATE WORKLOAD GROUP
statement will queue until there are enough resources to create the workload group.
Effective Values
The parameters min_percentage_resource
, cap_percentage_resource
, request_min_resource_grant_percent
and request_max_resource_grant_percent
have effective values that are adjusted in the context of the current service level and the configuration of other workload groups.
The request_min_resource_grant_percent
parameter has an effective value because there are minimum resources needed per query depending on the service level. For example, at the lowest service level, DW100c, a minimum 25% resources per request is needed. If the workload group is configured with 3% request_min_resource_grant_percent
and request_max_resource_grant_percent
, the effective values for both parameters adjusts to 25% when the instance is started. If the instance is scaled up to DW1000c the configured and effective values for both parameters is 3% because 3% is the minimum supported value at that service level. If the instance is scaled higher than DW1000c, the configured and effective values for both parameters will stay at 3%. See the below table for further details on effective values at the different service levels.
Service Level | Lowest effective value for REQUEST_MIN_RESOURCE_GRANT_PERCENT | Maximum concurrent queries |
---|---|---|
DW100c | 25% | 4 |
DW200c | 12.5% | 8 |
DW300c | 8% | 12 |
DW400c | 6.25% | 16 |
DW500c | 5% | 20 |
DW1000c | 3% | 32 |
DW1500c | 3% | 32 |
DW2000c | 2% | 48 |
DW2500c | 2% | 48 |
DW3000c | 1.5% | 64 |
DW5000c | 1.5% | 64 |
DW6000c | 0.75% | 128 |
DW7500c | 0.75% | 128 |
DW10000c | 0.75% | 128 |
DW15000c | 0.75% | 128 |
DW30000c | 0.75% | 128 |
The min_percentage_resource
parameter must be greater than or equal to the effective request_min_resource_grant_percent
. A workload group with min_percentage_resource
configured less than effective min_percentage_resource
has the value adjusted to zero at run time. When this happens, the resources configured for min_percentage_resource
are sharable across all workload groups. For example, the workload group wgAdHoc
with a min_percentage_resource
of 10% running at DW1000c would have an effective min_percentage_resource
of 10% (3% is the minimum supported value at DW1000c). wgAdhoc
at DW100c would have an effective min_percentage_resource of 0%. The 10% configured for wgAdhoc
would be shared across all workload groups.
The cap_percentage_resource
parameter also has an effective value. If a workload group wgAdhoc
is configured with a cap_percentage_resource
of 100% and another workload group wgDashboards
is created with 25% min_percentage_resource
, the effective cap_percentage_resource
for wgAdhoc
becomes 75%.
The easiest way to understand the run-time values for your workload groups is to query the system view sys.dm_workload_management_workload_groups_stats.
Permissions
Requires CONTROL DATABASE
permission