Recently, my friend Mike Fal ( b | t ) released a PowerShell script that can sample the counter inside SQL Server that one of my favorite database benchmarking utilities, HammerDB, uses to produce the transactions per minute counter value that the benchmarking utility outputs.
I thought I’d counter with a means to perform this task directly within SQL Server, and store the results inside a database so that a mathematical analysis can be performed quite quickly and repeatably. I always like to have multiple methods to perform any given action, so that you can select the best tool for a given scenario.
As Mike notes, the best counter used to store this value is “Batch Requests/sec“, and is very straightforward to collect. To perform this automated collection, follow these easy steps.
Create a container database, or opt to use one of your utility databases.
Create a table to store the results. Use or adapt the following DDL for your uses.
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[BatchReqPerSecLogger]( [ID] [bigint] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL, [BatchReqPerSec] [bigint] NULL, [DT] [datetime] NULL CONSTRAINT [DF_BatchReqPerSecLogger_DT] DEFAULT ( GETDATE() ), CONSTRAINT [PK_BatchReqPerSecLogger] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ( [ID] ASC ) |
Next, create a SQL Server Agent job that executes the following command against this new database every ten seconds.
INSERT INTO dbo.BatchReqPerSecLogger (BatchReqPerSec) SELECT cntr_value FROM sys.dm_os_performance_counters WHERE counter_name = ‘Batch Requests/sec’ |
Disable the job until you need it, and enable it when you begin your tests.
You can create a view on this data that gives you the insight into the database performance trends with a simple query. This query leverages statistics functions found in SQL Server 2012 and beyond. This view shows you the batch requests per minute numbers when you estimate your batch requests per minute by sample period.
CREATE VIEW dbo.vBatchReqPerSec AS SELECT ID, BatchReqPerSec, DT, LAG(batchreqpersec) OVER (ORDER BY DT) AS PrevSample, LAG(DT) OVER (ORDER BY DT) AS PrevSampleDT, DATEDIFF(ms,LAG(DT) OVER (ORDER BY dt),DT)/1000. AS SecDiff, (batchreqpersec – LAG(batchreqpersec) OVER (ORDER BY DT)) / (DATEDIFF(ms,LAG(DT) OVER (ORDER BY dt),DT)/1000.) as TPS, ((batchreqpersec – LAG(batchreqpersec) OVER (ORDER BY DT)) / (DATEDIFF(ms,LAG(DT) OVER (ODER BY DT),DT)/1000.)) * 60 AS TPM FROM dbo.BatchReqPerSecLogger |
You can now query against this data based on the date and time ranges for your test, and perform whatever analysis you like!
SELECT * FROM dbo.vBatchReqPerSec WHERE DT >= CAST(‘2015-03-03 7:00′ AS DATETIME) AND DT < cast(‘2015-03-03 7:00′ AS DATETIME) ORDER BY DT |
Now you can quickly perform any sort of analytics that you want on the raw data. Just remember to turn off the Agent job when you are done.