Application Performance advice please?

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  • Steve_CA

    Application Performance advice please?

    Hello all,

    I've been recruited to assist in diagnosing and fixing a performance problem
    on an application we have running on SQL Server 7.
    The application itself is third party software, so we can't get at the
    source code. It's a Client Management system, where consultants all over
    the
    country track their client meetings, results, action plans, etc. , and has
    apparently been problematic for a long time now. I came into this
    investigation
    in mid-stream, but here's the situation as I understand it:

    We have users reporting it's slow, with no discernable pattern with respect
    to what part of the application they're using or now particular time of day.
    I am told that it doesn't appear to be a bandwith or computer resource
    problem. They apparently added two app servers a year or so ago, which
    temporarily
    improved the performance. We're using a nominal percentage of CPU and
    memory.

    There are three large tables (approx 8 million rows) that are queried often,
    as users click to see their calendar of appointments or review past meetings
    with a client, etc. The activity on these tables is over 90% reads
    (SELECTS) with about 10% INSERTS/UPDATES. We have attempted to run the Index
    Analyzer Wizard twice
    but so far it just seems to hang (it could be that the workload file is too
    big?) . So, what we're doing now is isolating the SELECT statements that
    take a long time to run and manually comparing them to the indexes that
    exist on these large tables. Since we can't alter the SQL source code,
    we're trying to alter the indexes to improve performance.

    What I would like to know is, is there a good way to get benchmark
    measurements so we can explicitly measure any performance changes? Also, do
    you think
    we're going about this the right way, or is there some other avenue we could
    be looking at to improve performance?

    I recognize that performance questions are tricky to post/answer in a
    newsgroup, because usually you need more information than is provided. The
    problem is
    that this is a high profile investigation (they're hauling us into meetings
    every two days to report our progress) and I need to be able to convincingly
    state that we have either improved performance by X% , or that it is the
    application itself that's the problem and we're stuck with it.

    Any thoughts would be deeply appreciated.

    Thanks and best regards,

    Steve


  • Simon Hayes

    #2
    Re: Application Performance advice please?


    "Steve_CA" <steveee_ca@yah oo.com> wrote in message
    news:35vad.1310 4$3C6.446571@ne ws20.bellglobal .com...[color=blue]
    > Hello all,
    >
    > I've been recruited to assist in diagnosing and fixing a performance
    > problem
    > on an application we have running on SQL Server 7.
    > The application itself is third party software, so we can't get at the
    > source code. It's a Client Management system, where consultants all over
    > the
    > country track their client meetings, results, action plans, etc. , and has
    > apparently been problematic for a long time now. I came into this
    > investigation
    > in mid-stream, but here's the situation as I understand it:
    >
    > We have users reporting it's slow, with no discernable pattern with
    > respect
    > to what part of the application they're using or now particular time of
    > day.
    > I am told that it doesn't appear to be a bandwith or computer resource
    > problem. They apparently added two app servers a year or so ago, which
    > temporarily
    > improved the performance. We're using a nominal percentage of CPU and
    > memory.
    >
    > There are three large tables (approx 8 million rows) that are queried
    > often,
    > as users click to see their calendar of appointments or review past
    > meetings
    > with a client, etc. The activity on these tables is over 90% reads
    > (SELECTS) with about 10% INSERTS/UPDATES. We have attempted to run the
    > Index
    > Analyzer Wizard twice
    > but so far it just seems to hang (it could be that the workload file is
    > too
    > big?) . So, what we're doing now is isolating the SELECT statements that
    > take a long time to run and manually comparing them to the indexes that
    > exist on these large tables. Since we can't alter the SQL source code,
    > we're trying to alter the indexes to improve performance.
    >
    > What I would like to know is, is there a good way to get benchmark
    > measurements so we can explicitly measure any performance changes? Also,
    > do
    > you think
    > we're going about this the right way, or is there some other avenue we
    > could
    > be looking at to improve performance?
    >
    > I recognize that performance questions are tricky to post/answer in a
    > newsgroup, because usually you need more information than is provided.
    > The
    > problem is
    > that this is a high profile investigation (they're hauling us into
    > meetings
    > every two days to report our progress) and I need to be able to
    > convincingly
    > state that we have either improved performance by X% , or that it is the
    > application itself that's the problem and we're stuck with it.
    >
    > Any thoughts would be deeply appreciated.
    >
    > Thanks and best regards,
    >
    > Steve
    >
    >[/color]

    Your first stop should probably be Profiler, where you can gather lots of
    information about the TSQL being executed on the server, along with
    durations, I/O cost, query plans etc. And of course Perfmon for checking if
    MSSQL is hitting I/O or CPU limits - if you've just joined the
    investigation, you should probably satisfy yourself about that, especially
    if you're now the person more or less responsible for resolving the
    situation.

    If it's a third-party app, then it's going to be awkward to find a
    resolution, as you say. Indexes are probably the only thing you can change,
    any even then you might find you've invalidated your support agreement by
    doing so. But certainly, gathering information and establishing where the
    bottleneck is (if there is one) should be the first step.

    Simon


    Comment

    • Hugo Kornelis

      #3
      Re: Application Performance advice please?

      On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 08:34:12 -0400, Steve_CA wrote:
      [color=blue]
      >We have users reporting it's slow, with no discernable pattern with respect
      >to what part of the application they're using or now particular time of day.[/color]

      Hi Steve,

      In addition to Simon's suggestion, I'd look into possible locking problems
      as well. Just add locking events to the Profiler trace already suggested
      by Simon.

      Best, Hugo
      --

      (Remove _NO_ and _SPAM_ to get my e-mail address)

      Comment

      • Ryan

        #4
        Re: Application Performance advice please?

        Can you capture some of the queries that run slowly ? I imagine that a
        number of them will consistently perform slowly. If so, try running
        these through QA and look at the execution plan. It should indicate
        where the performance hit is. You may find that this is table scans
        etc...

        Also, you should run the index analysis against these 'common' queries
        to see if it comes up with any suggestions.

        If it's locking/blocking then
        http://www.sommarskog.se/sqlutil/aba_lockinfo.html will likely be of
        some help

        Finally, a bit of a long shot as it sounds similar to a problem we
        had.

        Are any views used ? Can these be improved by swapping to tables
        populated by stored procedures ? You can keep the naming the same but
        swap them over. To give you an example, we had 4 views which were
        referenced by a final view (all were complex). Our app needed to look
        at the data, but I didn't want to change the code. I swapped the view
        to a table which was generated by a copy of the original view from an
        SP. This saved a lot of time (1 min from startup down to 5 seconds)
        with the SP being run every 10 mins on the server. This combined with
        better indexing and it's saving an hour a day for them. OK, it's a
        quick overview, but I'd see if you can get away with any little tricks
        like this (especially if in certain circumstances you only need to
        read the data). Might be worth a try.

        Ryan

        Hugo Kornelis <hugo@pe_NO_rFa ct.in_SPAM_fo> wrote in message news:<gh1mm0lln fvomce0s6u684ml 81q365ursh@4ax. com>...[color=blue]
        > On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 08:34:12 -0400, Steve_CA wrote:
        >[color=green]
        > >We have users reporting it's slow, with no discernable pattern with respect
        > >to what part of the application they're using or now particular time of day.[/color]
        >
        > Hi Steve,
        >
        > In addition to Simon's suggestion, I'd look into possible locking problems
        > as well. Just add locking events to the Profiler trace already suggested
        > by Simon.
        >
        > Best, Hugo[/color]

        Comment

        • Steve_CA

          #5
          Re: Application Performance advice please?

          Thank you all,

          Ryan, your suggestion regarding views is very relevant....one of the main
          culprits is a commonly used view
          and I thought we were dead in the water with version 7 (I know you can
          create indexes on views in 2000).

          "Ryan" <ryanofford@hot mail.com> wrote in message
          news:7802b79d.0 410120046.4ea7d cd@posting.goog le.com...[color=blue]
          > Can you capture some of the queries that run slowly ? I imagine that a
          > number of them will consistently perform slowly. If so, try running
          > these through QA and look at the execution plan. It should indicate
          > where the performance hit is. You may find that this is table scans
          > etc...
          >
          > Also, you should run the index analysis against these 'common' queries
          > to see if it comes up with any suggestions.
          >
          > If it's locking/blocking then
          > http://www.sommarskog.se/sqlutil/aba_lockinfo.html will likely be of
          > some help
          >
          > Finally, a bit of a long shot as it sounds similar to a problem we
          > had.
          >
          > Are any views used ? Can these be improved by swapping to tables
          > populated by stored procedures ? You can keep the naming the same but
          > swap them over. To give you an example, we had 4 views which were
          > referenced by a final view (all were complex). Our app needed to look
          > at the data, but I didn't want to change the code. I swapped the view
          > to a table which was generated by a copy of the original view from an
          > SP. This saved a lot of time (1 min from startup down to 5 seconds)
          > with the SP being run every 10 mins on the server. This combined with
          > better indexing and it's saving an hour a day for them. OK, it's a
          > quick overview, but I'd see if you can get away with any little tricks
          > like this (especially if in certain circumstances you only need to
          > read the data). Might be worth a try.
          >
          > Ryan
          >
          > Hugo Kornelis <hugo@pe_NO_rFa ct.in_SPAM_fo> wrote in message[/color]
          news:<gh1mm0lln fvomce0s6u684ml 81q365ursh@4ax. com>...[color=blue][color=green]
          > > On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 08:34:12 -0400, Steve_CA wrote:
          > >[color=darkred]
          > > >We have users reporting it's slow, with no discernable pattern with[/color][/color][/color]
          respect[color=blue][color=green][color=darkred]
          > > >to what part of the application they're using or now particular time of[/color][/color][/color]
          day.[color=blue][color=green]
          > >
          > > Hi Steve,
          > >
          > > In addition to Simon's suggestion, I'd look into possible locking[/color][/color]
          problems[color=blue][color=green]
          > > as well. Just add locking events to the Profiler trace already suggested
          > > by Simon.
          > >
          > > Best, Hugo[/color][/color]


          Comment

          • Ryan

            #6
            Re: Application Performance advice please?

            Steve,

            Got your e-mail (replied directly as well). Essentially, that's what I
            meant. Posting in NG in case it helps someone else later.

            The scenario that we had with this was that we had a view which gathered
            the data from 4 other views. Each of the 4 underlying views were a
            little complex and took a while to run. Combined in the ‘top level’
            view, the performance was slow. The application ran a simple summary
            query of the top level view when opening. This took about 50 seconds to
            run which was unacceptable to the users.

            Imagine… (obviously change the names to something more meaningful)

            myView1, myView2, myView3, myView4 all feed into myTopView. The
            application looks to query the object myTopView.

            I renamed the view from myTopView to myTopViewFull.

            I created a table called myTopViewTable (the same name as the view and
            the same structure as the data returned from the original view –
            myTopView).

            Then I created a view called myTopView (same name as my original top
            level view) which pointed to the table myTopViewTable instead of the 4
            lower level views. Simple ‘select *’ will do it.

            All I had to do was a very simple SP which truncated the table
            myTopViewTable and inserted the data from myTopViewFull. This still took
            a while to run, but it only takes the hit on the server and the user
            perception is changed and they think it’s run quicker. Instead of a
            bunch of users all doing the same thing at a 50 second cost to each of
            them, we only have a 50 second cost on the server every 10 minutes.

            For our needs, it doesn’t matter for this data if we update it every 10
            minutes, but the difference to the users was quite noticeable. The time
            to open the application dropped from 50 seconds plus to consistently
            lower than 5 seconds. I did add some indexes to the main tables
            (referenced by the view) to try and speed things up and it helped a
            little. I found more performance improvements in the application though
            as a result.

            The main benefit of this is shifting the perception of work from the
            users to the server. You can also try using OPTION (NO LOCK) on the
            select statements to reduce locking / blocking issues as you are taking
            the data into a table directly.

            Also, as SQL tables / views cannot have the same name, if you have a
            view that runs far too slowly, you can sometimes get a bit of a
            performance advantage by doing this. It’s crude, but it works provided
            you apply it correctly. No changes to the application should be needed.

            A simple test is, drop the data from the view into a table. Try a query
            that you know takes a while against the view and against the table. See
            if there is a performance improvement. Oh, and you could try indexes on
            the new table provided you don’t take a hit re-building them.

            Indexed views are possibly another option though.

            Hope that helps

            Ryan



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            Comment

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