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Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook

You're reading from   Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook With this book you'll learn all you need to know about performance monitoring, tuning, and management for SQL Server 2012. Includes a host of recipes and screenshots to help you say goodbye to slow running applications.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849685740
Length 478 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (28) Chapters Close

Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Performance Tuning Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
1. Preface
1. Mastering SQL Trace Using Profiler FREE CHAPTER 2. Tuning with Database Engine Tuning Advisor 3. System Statistical Functions, Stored Procedures, and the DBCC SQLPERF Command 4. Resource Monitor and Performance Monitor 5. Monitoring with Execution Plans 6. Tuning with Execution Plans 7. Dynamic Management Views and Dynamic Management Functions 8. SQL Server Cache and Stored Procedure Recompilations 9. Implementing Indexes 10. Maintaining Indexes 11. Points to Consider While Writing Queries 12. Statistics in SQL Server 13. Table and Index Partitioning 14. Implementing Physical Database Structure 15. Advanced Query Tuning Hints and Plan Guides 16. Dealing with Locking, Blocking, and Deadlocking 17. Configuring SQL Server for Optimization 18. Policy-based Management 19. Resource Management with Resource Governor Index

Increasing performance by covering index


Before discussing covering index further, it should be understood that a covering index is not a separate type of index that has a different internal structure and algorithm. It is just a technique that is used to boost up the performance of data retrieval for the table.

You may wonder If it is not a new type of index, why do we need to use it?

Run the same SELECT query that we ran earlier in the Increasing performance by creating non-clustered index section, which was creating the non-clustered index seek operation. But now, run this query with some more fields in the SELECT clause, may be like this:

--running the same query we ran earlier to see behavior after --Non-Clustered Index was created with just one column extra --in the SELECT clause
SELECT OrderDate,OrderID FROM ordDemo WHERE OrderDate='2011-11-28 20:29:00.000'
GO

The ordDemo table already had a non-clustered index on the OrderDate field, so if you run this query, it should meet the non...

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