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Expert Cube Development with Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Analysis Services

You're reading from   Expert Cube Development with Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Analysis Services Design and implement fast, scalable and maintainable cubes with Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Analysis Services with this book and eBook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2009
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781847197221
Length 360 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Expert Cube Development with Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Analysis Services
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface
1. Designing the Data Warehouse for Analysis Services FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Basic Dimensions and Cubes 3. Designing More Complex Dimensions 4. Measures and Measure Groups 5. Adding Transactional Data such as Invoice Line and Sales Reason 6. Adding Calculations to the Cube 7. Adding Currency Conversion 8. Query Performance Tuning 9. Securing the Cube 10. Productionization 11. Monitoring Cube Performance and Usage Index

Scale-up and scale-out


Buying better or more hardware should be your last resort when trying to solve query performance problems: it's expensive and you need to be completely sure that it will indeed improve matters. Adding more memory will increase the space available for caching but nothing else; adding more or faster CPUs will lead to faster queries but you might be better off investing time in building more aggregations or tuning your MDX. Scaling up as much as your hardware budget allows is a good idea, but may have little impact on the performance of individual problem queries unless you badly under-specified your Analysis Services server in the first place.

If your query performance degenerates as the number of concurrent users running queries increases, consider scaling-out by implementing what's known as an OLAP farm. This architecture is widely used in large implementations and involves multiple Analysis Services instances on different servers, and using network load balancing to...

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