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Is my query running fine in the cloud?

This is the fifth installment in a blog series. The previous entry is located here

We ended the last blog post with some tips on basic administration that you need to do in WASD. Now let us get more specific with regards to query tuning and what tool are available to help you in this area.

Although WASD is a smaller feature set from the on premise SQL Server, it has a set of DMVs that allow you to get insight into your workload and do some basic troubleshooting of issues that you see with query performance. Here is listing of some of the common ones that I use frequently.

Query Performance related DMVs

The challenge here is figuring out whether your queries are running or waiting. If they are waiting, then is there a common wait_type that we can go tune.

  • Sys.dm_exec_requests, Sys.dm_exec_sessions

    These two DMVs combined can give you a lot of useful information.

    select
r.session_id,r.blocking_session_id,r.wait_type,r.wait_time,r.wait_resource,r.total_elapsed_time,r.cpu_time,r.reads,r.writes,

s.nt_user_name,s.program_name,s.total_elapsed_time

from
sys.dm_exec_requests
r

join
sys.dm_exec_sessions
s

on
s.session_id=r.session_id

 

The typical columns to check for are as follows

  • Blocking_session_id:- If this shows a non-zero number then you have blocking going on

  • Wait_type , wait_time,wait_resource :- These columns give you an idea of what is the dominant wait types. Use this to look for multiple sessions waiting on similar waits.

  • Total_elapsed_time, cpu_time:- these correspond to total time spent by the query vs. time spent on CPU.A big difference between these two typically indicates we are waiting.

     

  • Sys.dm_db_wait_stats :- Use this DMV primarily to understand what your dominant wait type is

    SELECT
    wait_type
    AS
    wait_type, waiting_tasks_count, wait_time_ms, max_wait_time_ms, signal_wait_time_ms

    FROM
    sys.dm_db_wait_stats

    WHERE
    waiting_tasks_count
    > 0 OR
    wait_time_ms
    > 0 OR
    signal_wait_time_ms
    > 0

    ORDER
    BY
    wait_time_ms
    DESC

     

    For example here is the output from my database after running a blocking scenario. As expected, locks (i.e. LCK_*) show up as the top wait type

     

     

  • Execution Plans

    For ad-hoc query or stored procedures that are executing slower than expected, but do not show you a dominant wait type, you can get the execution plan from Management Studio by hitting Ctrl+M ( Include Actual Execution Plan)

    You can then look for any issues in the execution plan. Here are a few common ones that we see all the time

    • Missing Indexes will typically be shown at the top of the execution plan as follows

       

       

    • Implicit Conversions can be found in the operators in the execution plan e.g.

     

     

Connectivity related DMVs

Sys.event_log, sys.database_connection_stats:- Use these DMVs to understand connectivity and throttling errors & deadlocks against your user database

 

Here is a screenshot of how it appears in the Management Portal (under SQL Database àDashboard)

 

 

 

sys.database_connection_stats provides you a high level view of successful vs failed connections and further breaks down the failed connections as failed /terminated/throttled. More information about this DMV is outlined here

select
*
from
sys.database_connection_stats

where
start_time
>=
CAST(FLOOR(CAST(getdate()
AS
float)) AS
DATETIME)

order
by
start_time
desc

 

    
 

 

 

 

 

Sys.event_log gives you detailed reason for connection failures.

select
*

from
sys.event_log

where
event_type
<>
'connection_successful'

and
start_time
>=
CAST(FLOOR(CAST(getdate()
AS
float)) AS
DATETIME)

order
by
start_time
desc

 

    

Additionally it also displays any deadlocks. More information about this DMV is outlined here

    

    For deadlocks you can click on the additional_data column, save the output as an xdl file & get to the graphical deadlock graph as follows

    

 

Resource Usage related DMVs

  • Sys.resource_stats,sys.resource_usage :- Use it to baseline your database performance metrics.

     

    For all practical purposes, the output from sys.resource_stats can be used to baseline your database performance. More information about this DMV is outlined here

    Here is typical output from it for a database where I kept adding rows of data into a table

    SELECT
    *
    FROM
    sys.resource_stats

    WHERE
    start_time
    >=
    CAST(FLOOR(CAST(getdate()
    AS
    float)) AS
    DATETIME)

    --and database_name='ihavedeadlocks'

    ORDER
    BY
    start_time
    DESC

     

     

     

     

Putting it all together

In the on premise world we have long had a collection of scripts (sometimes called the PerfStats scripts) to collect DMV information from SQL Server. We have updated those scripts for the cloud and added the cloud-specific DMVs. The scripts are available for your download here. Additionally, when you open a support case for certain support topic areas the latest version of the scripts will be sent as part of an automated data collection (see KB article 2843748). Running the automated diagnostic and uploading the results can assist support with resolving your performance or connectivity problem more quickly.

References

  1. System Views (Windows Azure SQL Database) https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsazure/ee336238.aspx#sqlazure

 

Author: - Rohit Nayak (@sqlrohit)

Reviewers: - Keith Elmore, José Batista-Neto

Escalation Services, Microsoft

Comments

  • Anonymous
    November 02, 2013
    Hi, Thanks for the post. Did you forget to include the link for the updated script or did I miss it?

  • Anonymous
    November 08, 2013
    Great stuff, though still quite on-prem orientated.  Are you able to expand this article to include suggestions on tuning that DBAs can do to reduce the common Azure performance blockers IO thresholds, worker threads thresholds and how to reduce likelihood of encountering SE_REPL_ (at least as much as the DBA can influence)

  • Anonymous
    July 21, 2014
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    May 09, 2015
    What is significant of Predicate