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Learn T-SQL Querying

You're reading from   Learn T-SQL Querying A guide to developing efficient and elegant T-SQL code

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789348811
Length 484 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Pedro Lopes Pedro Lopes
Author Profile Icon Pedro Lopes
Pedro Lopes
Pam Lahoud Pam Lahoud
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Pam Lahoud
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Query Processing Fundamentals
2. Anatomy of a Query FREE CHAPTER 3. Understanding Query Processing 4. Mechanics of the Query Optimizer 5. Section 2: Dos and Donts of T-SQL
6. Exploring Query Execution Plans 7. Writing Elegant T-SQL Queries 8. Easily-Identified T-SQL Anti-Patterns 9. Discovering T-SQL Anti-Patterns in Depth 10. Section 3: Assemble Your Query Troubleshooting Toolbox
11. Building Diagnostic Queries Using DMVs and DMFs 12. Building XEvent Profiler Traces 13. Comparative Analysis of Query Plans 14. Tracking Performance History with Query Store 15. Troubleshooting Live Queries 16. Managing Optimizer Changes with the Query Tuning Assistant 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Activity Monitor gets a new life

LQS has its viable use case as we discussed in the Using Live Query Statistics section of this chapter—a previously identified long-running query. But what if we haven't identified an offending query yet? What if we are the database professional who got that middle-of-the-night call asking them to solve an issue with a business-critical ETL process that runs every night, but is unusually slow today?

ETL is an acronym for Extract-Transform-Load which is the name given to a process that extracts data from a data source, enacts transformations in that data such as aggregations or calculations, and loads the results into a destination such as a database. A typical example of an ETL process is a SQL Server Agent job that schedules the execution of a SQL Server Integration Services (SSIS) package.

That is where Activity Monitor (AM) comes...

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