February 28, 2013 at 9:57 pm
Hi all,
I have a table Order with primary key ID column is uniqueidentifier data type on server B. Nightly, a synchronization job runs to synchronize orders from server A to server B. After that, I check the fragmentation of clustered index I see that the value is always so high.
Does uniqueidentifier data type cause the high frag because SQL insert data into Order table with random mode?
I also set FILLFACTOR = 80%
Thanks,
February 28, 2013 at 10:59 pm
Dung Dinh (2/28/2013)
Hi all,I have a table Order with primary key ID column is uniqueidentifier data type on server B. Nightly, a synchronization job runs to synchronize orders from server A to server B. After that, I check the fragmentation of clustered index I see that the value is always so high.
Does uniqueidentifier data type cause the high frag because SQL insert data into Order table with random mode?
I also set FILLFACTOR = 80%
Thanks,
That is most likely your problem. This is a known issue with using the uniqueidentifier in any type of index, especially the clustered index. Fill factor will only go so far to help you. The best option is to move away from using uniqueidentifier or to stay extremely vigilant about maintaining your indexes.
There are no special teachers of virtue, because virtue is taught by the whole community.
--Plato
February 28, 2013 at 11:40 pm
opc.three (2/28/2013)
Dung Dinh (2/28/2013)
Hi all,I have a table Order with primary key ID column is uniqueidentifier data type on server B. Nightly, a synchronization job runs to synchronize orders from server A to server B. After that, I check the fragmentation of clustered index I see that the value is always so high.
Does uniqueidentifier data type cause the high frag because SQL insert data into Order table with random mode?
I also set FILLFACTOR = 80%
Thanks,
That is most likely your problem. This is a known issue with using the uniqueidentifier in any type of index, especially the clustered index. Fill factor will only go so far to help you. The best option is to move away from using uniqueidentifier or to stay extremely vigilant about maintaining your indexes.
As your point,I should rebuild or re-organize indexes on this table after this job is done nightly.
March 1, 2013 at 12:19 am
I would say yes you have to rebuild your index after sync dome with server.
Updating table which is having cluster index may face this problem batter to rebuild index once sync with server
March 1, 2013 at 5:33 am
Yes, the uniqueidentifier key is the most likely your problem. If you could make changes to your tables so that it gets newsequentialid() values, then you'll obtain a very low fragmentation.
Igor Micev,My blog: www.igormicev.com
March 1, 2013 at 7:09 am
Dung Dinh (2/28/2013)
As your point,I should rebuild or re-organize indexes on this table after this job is done nightly.
Yes. As often as you have a maintenance-window to keep those indexes at a low fragmentation level I would schedule it.
There are no special teachers of virtue, because virtue is taught by the whole community.
--Plato
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