non clustered index question

  • I have a table with some non clustered indexes on it. Every day I truncate the table and fill it again with insert statements.

    How does this affect my indexes?

    Is it better to first drop the indexes, then truncate the table and recreate the indexes at the end of the inserts?

    Any advice is welcome. Thanks you.

  • Is it better to first drop the indexes, then truncate the table and recreate the indexes at the end of the inserts?

    Absolutely... performance of the inserts should be much quicker doing it this way.

  • Ian Scarlett (7/15/2009)


    Is it better to first drop the indexes, then truncate the table and recreate the indexes at the end of the inserts?

    Absolutely... performance of the inserts should be much quicker doing it this way.

    You also get contiguous and fully-filled index pages this way too, so it is a double win.

    Best,
    Kevin G. Boles
    SQL Server Consultant
    SQL MVP 2007-2012
    TheSQLGuru on googles mail service

  • TheSQLGuru (7/16/2009)


    Ian Scarlett (7/15/2009)


    Is it better to first drop the indexes, then truncate the table and recreate the indexes at the end of the inserts?

    Absolutely... performance of the inserts should be much quicker doing it this way.

    You also get contiguous and fully-filled index pages this way too, so it is a double win.

    Do you also have a clustered index on this table? If you don't, consider creating one on a column (or combination of columns) that are unique and you select against alot.

    You may want to consider dropping all indexes (clustered and nonclustered), insert, then rebuild.

    Gaby________________________________________________________________"In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not." - Albert Einstein

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