¿What Improves SQL Server Performance? HD Speed, Processor Speed Or Ram?

Oct 18, 2007



Hi,

I have several data bases on a server (SQL Server 2000 only, no web server installed) and lately, as the company keeps gowing, my users complain saying the server gets slow, (this dbs are well designed and recieve optimizations and integrity checks, etc) because of this, Im thinking about getting a new server to repleace my old ProLiant ML 330 which was bought 4 years ago but Im concerned about what server arquitecture or characteristic can help me best to improve response performance, is it HD speed? Processor speed? or more Ram? I want to make a good decision, so I´d really appreciate your help...

Thanks, Luis Luevano

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Sql Server And Vpn: Performance/speed

Jul 23, 2005

Hello NG,We have a performance problem in using a clientserver solution based on MS SQL-Server 2000 througha VPN tunnel (via broadband internet connection).The SQL Server is running on a Windows 2003 Serverwhich is configured as VPN server as well.We figured out that not the performanceof the VPN tunnel itself is the problem,but the problem is the access to the MS SQL Server.We tested it by executing sql statements on the Query Analyzeron the VPN client (WIN XP built in) which is connected to the serverthrough the tunnel.For example execution of the SELECT statement"select TOP 1000 * from Items" on thedatabase trough the tunnel takes more than 30 times as muchthan the same execution on the server itself or within theserver's local network.But we can make FTP downloads from our server throughthe tunnel with 600 KBit/s under same conditionsso the bandwidth of the tunnel should not be the problem.Do you have any ideas how we can accelerate thisor does any one has made experiencesrelated to this topic?Thanks for your help!JENS

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Dec 19, 2006

Why does restarting my server improve SQL's performance so dramatically? What can I do to achieve the same effect, without restarting? Thanks for any ideas.

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Jul 10, 2007

Hello,



I am looking for information on the SQL server 2005 performance, mainly on the data recording speed. I have a project where I have to save approximately 20000 analogical value per second.



Thanks



Alan

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SQL Server, C# .NET 2.0 -- Speed Best Practices

Feb 21, 2008

Greetings,

I'm developing a trading application in C# that processes streaming data that can be very heavy at times. Transactions are occuring, logging information is stored, etc., often at a very rapid pace. Up until recently, I had been storing all of this information in memory in DataSets -- upon a graceful exit, the application would call DataSet.WriteXml() to a file, and then next time the application was opened, it would consequently call ReadXml() to obtain its last state. This is all great in theory because it is super fast, there is negligible lag when I add a row to a DataTable that already has 12,000 rows (at a rate of 300 per second), however if the program were to crash, without a chance to write the data to file, then I'm screwed.

My solution is to have the various DataSets bound to a SQL Server database -- I've created strongly typed DataSets and TableAdapters to help aid this process. Because often I'm adding rows VERY quickly and in large numbers to these tables, having an INSERT command execute on the database for EVERY transaction is prohibitively slow.

What I would like is to have some mechanism in place where I only affect the local DataTables on the fly, and then occasionally make calls to TableAdapter.Update (on their respective TableAdapters) during slow periods (or lulls in the message traffic) so that any changes to the in-memory data is persisted on the database. I'm looking for general "best practices" in this regard -- nothing specific, just advice from people who have dealt with this type of application/environment before and might have some tips.

The first thing I thought about doing would be a relatively simple algorithm that, upon receiving a new transaction, sets a timer (for, say 500 ms). When this timer is triggered, it calls the Update command on the DataSet that was updated. If another update comes in before the 500 ms, it first checks to see if there's an active timer for this DataSet, if so, it cancels it, and sets a new timer for 500 ms. This way, if I have a very rapid set of transactions that all occur within a few ms of each other, it will not make any calls to the database during the "peak" of data -- only when there's a 500 ms gap will it make a call.

Does that seem like a viable approach?

Any help/direction is greatly appreciated.

Rick

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Possible To Speed Up The Decision Tree By Clustering The Server 2003

Aug 24, 2007

Dear All,


I have a dataminig programming that need to run for days. Is it possibile to speed up the training process by clustering several server by Windows 2003 clustering services? Is it actually that clustering 2 QUAD core computer is almost giving comparable performance as the sum of the speed of two (There must be some overhead, I know). I am actually familiary with the use of clustering. Is it just for making the server farm more reliable or it will collaborate and speeed up the whole training process?

If it is, is there any limit on the number of cluster is in the cluster. What version of Windows and SQL Server do I need to achieve speed up of data mining training process?

Thanks and regards

Tony Chun Tung Siu

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SQL Server 2008 :: Speed Up Text Search In Large Result Set?

Jul 14, 2015

I have a query below which filters detail field in the #TempLogins table. The details field is a text field which contains many types of text strings, some containing urls that have parts like "ResultID=5" which is what is contained in the ResultIDSearch and ResultSetIDSearch fields. The records with entries like "ResultID=5" are the ones I'm trying to filter for.

The problem I have is that the query takes way too long to run. The TempLogin table has around 200 K records and the TempSearch table has around 80 K records.

select * from #TempLogins a where exists
(select 1 from #TempSearch t1 where
a.detail like '%' + t1.ResultIDSearch + '%'
or
a.detail like '%' + t1.ResultSetIDSearch + '%')

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Oct 13, 2015

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WHILE 1 = 1
BEGIN
DELETE TOP(50000)
FROM F_POLICY_TRANSACTION with (tablockx)

[code]....

Problem is, it takes around 10 minutes to run.Is there any way it can be made more efficient?I have tried varying the rowcount with no success

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Jan 31, 2008

I have an application written in VB6 that creates a ADO connection using the (native SQL2005 clien)t from the client to SQLServer 2005 on Server 2003 configured as a stand alone server. The application works great on XP and has for a number of years.

Now I am attempting to deploy in Vista and using the same code the connection speed CRAWLS. it's in the magnitude of atleast 10 times slower. It eventualy works but the selects and doing a readnext against the resulting record set is at a snails pace.

What am I missing. It's has to be some sort of configuration problem somewhere.

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Performance Improves With Studio Query Window Open

Aug 28, 2007


Bit of a strange one here. We have a SQL Express instance running with one database which is accessed by a VB6 client application.

Performance between the application and the database isn't great, but bizarrely if you open a Query window from the Management Studio (against the database) the performance dramatically improves - to the extent that it is visually noticeable from within the application.

So, I'm thinking that the database connections being made by the application are taking longer because of instance name resolution or the like and with the Query window open this resolution is performed quicker.

Has anyone come across this situation? I can re-create it on several different computers each with their own Express instance and I've not found anything about this on the net.

Here's the connection string used by the application - I have tried various permutations of values to no avail:

Provider=SQLOLEDB.1;Initial Catalog=SampleDB;Data Source=(local)sqlexpress;Trusted_Connection=yes

Thanks very much

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Apr 23, 2015

I have a pretty large DB and a fairly complex query. If I drop buffers and clear cache the query runs in 20 seconds returning 25K rows. Subsequent runs are 2 seconds. Is this the result of the results being cached, execution being cached, other? Are there good ways to close the gap between the initial and later runs? Does the cache stay present until the service restarts or does SQL recycle the memory and if so, based on what criteria?

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SQL Speed

Sep 19, 2006

Andy writes "I have data with more than 4 milions. How to speed up query it ?"

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Speed

Mar 9, 2007

hello,
i need some opinion on how to sum up or group by more than 2k records faster.. eg, how do i optimize this?

SELECT DISTINCT r.ClientID,c.ClientName, r.ItemID, r.StockID,r.StockName, r.ExpectedQty,r.QCQty,r.AVAQty,r.PNDQty as pnd, r.VMIQCQty,r.VMIAVAQty,r.VMIPNDQty as vmipnd,

(Select isnull( SUM(d.HoldQty) ,0) FROM tblItemdetail d WHERE d.itemid=r.itemid AND d.ConsignorID=@ClientID AND d.Ownerstatus='VMI') AS VMIPNDQty,

(Select isnull( SUM(d.HoldQty) ,0) FROM tblItemdetail d WHERE d.itemid=r.itemid AND d.ConsignorID=@ClientID AND d.Ownership= i.Supplier AND d.Ownerstatus='VMI') AS PNDQty,

(Select isnull(SUM(d.OriginQty - d.PickQty -d.HoldQty -d.qcqty),0) FROM tblItemDetail d WHERE d.ConsignorID=@ClientID AND d.Ownership= i.Supplier AND d.Ownerstatus='OWN') AS StockAtCustAVAQty,

(Select isnull(SUM(d.HoldQty),0) FROM tblItemDetail d WHERE d.ConsignorID=@ClientID AND d.Ownership= i.Supplier AND d.Ownerstatus='OWN') AS StockAtCustPNDQty,

(Select isnull(SUM(d.qcqty),0) FROM tblItemDetail d WHERE d.ConsignorID=@ClientID AND d.Ownership= i.Supplier AND d.Ownerstatus='OWN') AS StockAtCustQCQty

FROM tblItemCrossRef r
INNER JOIN tblClient c ON c.ClientID=r.ClientID
INNER JOIN tblItemClients i on i.Supplier=r.ClientID
WHERE r.ClientID=@ClientID AND r.StockID LIKE @StockID+'%'

~~~Focus on problem, not solution~~~

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Jun 22, 2006

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Jul 20, 2005

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Jul 12, 2006

Hello,
 
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Jan 17, 2007

Hi,
Can anyone tell me a way to speed up these querys?
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SqlConnection conn2 = new SqlConnection(ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["MyDB"].ConnectionString);
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//Then I open a data reader that uses the records
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conn2a.Open();
while (dr.Read())
{
//the records are then placed 1 by one into a temp table
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SqlCommand cmd4 = new SqlCommand(fillresultID, conn2a);
cmd4.CommandTimeout = 0;
cmd4.ExecuteNonQuery();
//then the original table that held the numbers is marked as used(again one by one)
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dr.Close();
conn2.Close();
conn2a.Close();
Thanks,
Doug

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Apr 22, 2008

Hi, how can i speed up this query, it seems to be taking a very long time to bring back the reults;
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May 28, 2002

I have a select statement that has many 'ands' where one side uses the same thing for ex.

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t1.column1=e5.new and
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Thanks,
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Sep 4, 2001

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Dec 10, 1999

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Randall

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Jan 4, 1999

Howdy,

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thanks

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Aug 1, 2006

Hi

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Aug 28, 2004

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Recipients has 80 million records
UpdatedStagingRecipients has 34 million records.

Why would this possibly take so long? Is there anything that I can do at all?


UPDATE Recipients
SET Recipients.First = UpdatedStagingRecipients.First
, Recipients.Last = UpdatedStagingRecipients.Last
, Recipients.StreetAddress = UpdatedStagingRecipients.StreetAddress
, Recipients.City = UpdatedStagingRecipients.City
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, Recipients.DOB = UpdatedStagingRecipients.DOB
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, Recipients.IPv4 = UpdatedStagingRecipients.IPv4
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, Recipients.NameLine = UpdatedStagingRecipients.NameLine
, Recipients.AddressSourceID = UpdatedStagingRecipients.AddressSourceID
, Recipients.AddressLine = UpdatedStagingRecipients.AddressLine
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Jan 18, 2006

it is working but takes about 3-4 seconds per exec.

CREATE PROCEDURE isp_ap_calc_apt_totals
@p_comp char(2),
@p_vend char(6),
@p_asofdatechar(8)
as

if (@p_asofdate <= '00000000')
begin
set @p_asofdate = '99999999'
end

delete from XAPAPTTOT
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insert into XAPAPTTOT
select apph_comp, apph_vend, apph_type, apph_id, @p_asofdate,
sum(apph_paymnts),
sum(apph_discts),
sum(apph_adjts),
count(apph_paymnts),
sum(apph_paymnts)+ sum(apph_discts) + sum(apph_adjts) +
b.apt_gross,
0,
max(str(yy,4) + replace(str(mm,2),' ','0') + replace(str(dd,2),' ','0'))
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group by apph_comp, apph_vend, apph_type, apph_id

update XAPAPTTOT
set xapt_last_payck =
(select max(apph_payck) from APPHISTF
where apph_comp = xapt_comp and apph_vend = xapt_vend and apph_type = xapt_type
and apph_id = xapt_id
and str(yy,4) + replace(str(mm,2),' ','0') + replace(str(dd,2),' ','0') = xapt_last_paydt )
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Jan 25, 2006

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Aug 28, 2006

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Jul 30, 2007

Hi Everyone -

We were discussing select speeds the other day,
the question comes in at...

what is faster, a standard query with specifies the search critera
i.e. select * from xyz where a='A' or a='B'
or is the IN a better way to go....

select * from xyz where a in ('A', 'B')

we ran the tests in performance analyzer,
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maybe i'm smoking the stuff - but i thought the
useage of the IN causes a full table scan for each
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please advise

take care
tony

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Mar 1, 2004

This may be more appropriate on another forum, but wanted to see if anyone could give me any ideas.

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We have roughly 100 - 140 simultaneous connections.

Some users have very slow access times where others have a fast connection time. This is not restricted to DB access, but also for file transferring.

Just like you can test your DSL/Cable speeds, are there any similar tests that can be ran on client machines to find their access speeds to the SQL database server?

I really appreciate your suggestions!

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I need to speed this process up.

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select record_number, etc....
from
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set Indentity _insert temp_table on

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May 20, 2008

Hello,
I am working with some third party software and trying to rebuild my own queries for my own reports but using the business logic that is behind their queries so that I can be sure the numbers still match up and are useable. The reports in the third party software seem to be built on the fly as I am finding when I run sql profiler because there are no stored procedures. I have a query which returns a basic result set but it takes 52 seconds to get it back and I feel like that is way to long for such a simple result set of returning a count by location. The query creates a few temporary tables and combines and updates some data. I want to update this query to make it faster but am not sure of the best approach to take. The temporary tables create alot of columns that I am not even going to need in the final result set or the update statements so I thought by removing some it would help. I am going to paste in the original query and if anyone has any ideas to make this more up to date with sql 2005 standards and just faster please feel free to let me know. Thanks! :)

CREATE TABLE #FI28EF3WE3DN
(practice_id char(4) null, location_id uniqueidentifier null, rendering_id uniqueidentifier null, service_item_id char(12) null, service_item_lib_id uniqueidentifier null, service_item_desc varchar(80) null, cpt4_code_id char(12) null, charge_amt numeric(19,2) null, quantity dec(19,2) null, begin_date_of_service char(8) null, closing_date char(8) null, create_timestamp datetime null, rvu1 float null, rvu1_total float null, rvu2 float null, rvu2_total float null, rvu3 float null, rvu3_total float null, rvu4 float null, rvu4_total float null, end_date_of_service char(8) null, midlevel_id uniqueidentifier null, unit_price numeric(19,2) null, override_ind char(1) null, modifier_1 char(2) null, modifier_2 char(2) null, modifier_3 char(2) null, modifier_4 char(2) null, link_id uniqueidentifier null, source_id uniqueidentifier null, enc_nbr numeric null, source_type char(1) null, name varchar(150) null, person_id uniqueidentifier null, date_of_birth char(8) null, patient_age char(8) null, address_line_1 varchar(55) null, address_line_2 varchar(55) null, city varchar(35) null, state varchar(3) null, zip char(9) null, country_id uniqueidentifier null, county_id uniqueidentifier null, county_desc varchar(100) null, sex char(1) null, sex_desc varchar(30) null, batch_info varchar(40) null, override_closing_date char(8) null, ud_demo1_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo2_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo3_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo4_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo5_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo6_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo7_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo8_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo9_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo10_id uniqueidentifier null, icd9cm_code_id varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_id_2 varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_id_3 varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_id_4 varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_desc varchar(255) null, icd9cm_code_desc_2 varchar(255) null, icd9cm_code_desc_3 varchar(255) null, icd9cm_code_desc_4 varchar(255) null, quadrant char(2) null, tooth char(2) null, surface_description varchar(200) null, form char(4) null, fin_class_id uniqueidentifier, person_payer_id uniqueidentifier, department_id uniqueidentifier, outsource_ind char(1) null, outsource_date char(8) null, outsource_agency_id uniqueidentifier, outsource_agency_desc varchar(40) null, fqhc_enc_ind char(1) null, fin_class varchar(100) null, payer_name varchar(40) null, person_nbr char(12) null, pat_prov_name_1 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_2 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_3 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_4 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_5 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_6 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_7 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_8 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_9 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_10 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_11 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_12 varchar(75))

INSERT into #FI28EF3WE3DN
(practice_id, source_id, source_type, location_id, rendering_id, service_item_id, service_item_lib_id, cpt4_code_id, charge_amt, quantity, begin_date_of_service, closing_date, create_timestamp, rvu1_total, rvu2_total, rvu3_total, rvu4_total, end_date_of_service, modifier_1, modifier_2, modifier_3, modifier_4, midlevel_id, unit_price, override_ind, link_id, person_id, override_closing_date, batch_info, icd9cm_code_id, icd9cm_code_id_2, icd9cm_code_id_3, icd9cm_code_id_4, icd9cm_code_desc, icd9cm_code_desc_2, icd9cm_code_desc_3, icd9cm_code_desc_4, quadrant, tooth, surface_description, form, fin_class_id, person_payer_id, outsource_ind, outsource_date, outsource_agency_id, fqhc_enc_ind)

SELECT c.practice_id, c.source_id, c.source_type, c.location_id, c.rendering_id, c.service_item_id, c.service_item_lib_id, c.cpt4_code_id, amt, quantity, begin_date_of_service, closing_date, c.create_timestamp, 0.0000, 0.0000, 0.0000, 0.0000, end_date_of_service, c.modifier_1, c.modifier_2, modifier_3, modifier_4, midlevel_id, unit_price, override_ind, link_id, c.person_id, override_closing_date, batch_info, c.icd9cm_code_id, c.icd9cm_code_id_2, c.icd9cm_code_id_3, c.icd9cm_code_id_4, icd9cm_code_desc, icd9cm_code_desc_2, icd9cm_code_desc_3, icd9cm_code_desc_4, quadrant, tooth, surface_description, c.form, p.financial_class, pe.cob1_person_payer_id, outsource_ind, outsource_date, outsource_agency_id, pe.fqhc_enc_ind

FROM charges c, patient_encounter pe, payer_mstr p

WHERE source_type = 'V' and c.practice_id = pe.practice_id and c.source_id = pe.enc_id and pe.cob1_payer_id = p.payer_id and begin_date_of_service >= '20080401' and begin_date_of_service < '20080501' and (c.link_id is null) AND c.practice_id = '0001'

INSERT into #FI28EF3WE3DN
(practice_id, source_id, source_type, location_id, rendering_id, service_item_id, service_item_lib_id, cpt4_code_id, charge_amt, quantity, begin_date_of_service, closing_date, create_timestamp, rvu1_total, rvu2_total, rvu3_total, rvu4_total, end_date_of_service, modifier_1, modifier_2, modifier_3, modifier_4, midlevel_id, unit_price, override_ind, link_id, person_id, override_closing_date, batch_info, icd9cm_code_id, icd9cm_code_id_2, icd9cm_code_id_3, icd9cm_code_id_4, icd9cm_code_desc, icd9cm_code_desc_2, icd9cm_code_desc_3, icd9cm_code_desc_4, quadrant, tooth, surface_description, form, outsource_ind, outsource_date, outsource_agency_id, fqhc_enc_ind) SELECT c.practice_id, c.source_id, c.source_type, c.location_id, c.rendering_id, c.service_item_id, c.service_item_lib_id, c.cpt4_code_id, amt, quantity, begin_date_of_service, closing_date, c.create_timestamp, 0.0000, 0.0000, 0.0000, 0.0000, end_date_of_service, c.modifier_1, c.modifier_2, modifier_3, modifier_4, midlevel_id, unit_price, override_ind, link_id, c.person_id, override_closing_date, batch_info, c.icd9cm_code_id, c.icd9cm_code_id_2, c.icd9cm_code_id_3, c.icd9cm_code_id_4, icd9cm_code_desc, icd9cm_code_desc_2, icd9cm_code_desc_3, icd9cm_code_desc_4, quadrant, tooth, surface_description, c.form, outsource_ind, outsource_date, outsource_agency_id, pe.fqhc_enc_ind FROM charges c, patient_encounter pe

WHERE source_type = 'V' and c.practice_id = pe.practice_id and c.source_id = pe.enc_id and pe.cob1_person_payer_id is null and begin_date_of_service >= '20080401' and begin_date_of_service < '20080501' and (c.link_id is null) AND c.practice_id = '0001'

INSERT into #FI28EF3WE3DN
(practice_id, source_id, source_type, location_id, rendering_id, service_item_id, service_item_lib_id, cpt4_code_id, charge_amt, quantity, begin_date_of_service, closing_date, create_timestamp, rvu1_total, rvu2_total, rvu3_total, rvu4_total, end_date_of_service, modifier_1, modifier_2, modifier_3, modifier_4, midlevel_id, unit_price, override_ind, link_id, person_id, override_closing_date, batch_info, icd9cm_code_id, icd9cm_code_id_2, icd9cm_code_id_3, icd9cm_code_id_4, icd9cm_code_desc, icd9cm_code_desc_2, icd9cm_code_desc_3, icd9cm_code_desc_4, quadrant, tooth, surface_description, form, outsource_ind)

SELECT c.practice_id, c.source_id, c.source_type, c.location_id, c.rendering_id, c.service_item_id, c.service_item_lib_id, c.cpt4_code_id, amt, quantity, begin_date_of_service, closing_date, c.create_timestamp, 0.0000, 0.0000, 0.0000, 0.0000, end_date_of_service, c.modifier_1, c.modifier_2, modifier_3, modifier_4, midlevel_id, unit_price, override_ind, link_id, c.person_id, override_closing_date, batch_info, c.icd9cm_code_id, c.icd9cm_code_id_2, c.icd9cm_code_id_3, c.icd9cm_code_id_4, icd9cm_code_desc, icd9cm_code_desc_2, icd9cm_code_desc_3, icd9cm_code_desc_4, quadrant, tooth, surface_description, c.form, c.outsource_ind FROM charges c

WHERE source_type = 'I' and begin_date_of_service >= '20080401' and begin_date_of_service < '20080501' and (c.link_id is null) AND c.practice_id = '0001'

UPDATE #FI28EF3WE3DN
SET name = isnull(per.last_name,'') + ', ' + isnull(per.first_name,'') + ' ' + isnull(per.middle_name,''), date_of_birth = per.date_of_birth, patient_age = per.date_of_birth, city = per.city, zip = per.zip, country_id = per.country_id, sex = per.sex, address_line_1 = per.address_line_1, address_line_2 = per.address_line_2, state = per.state, county_id = per.county_id, person_nbr = per.person_nbr
FROM person per
WHERE #FI28EF3WE3DN.person_id = per.person_id

UPDATE #FI28EF3WE3DN
SET name = emp.name, city = emp.city, zip = emp.zip, address_line_1 = emp.address_line_1, address_line_2 = emp.address_line_2, state = emp.state, county_id = emp.county_id
FROM invoices inv, accounts ac, employer_mstr emp
WHERE #FI28EF3WE3DN.source_type = 'I' and #FI28EF3WE3DN.practice_id = inv.practice_id and #FI28EF3WE3DN.source_id = inv.invoice_id and inv.practice_id = ac.practice_id and inv.acct_id = ac.acct_id and ac.guar_type = 'E' and ac.guar_id = emp.employer_id

CREATE TABLE #GP28EF3WE3DQ
(practice_id char(4) null, location_id uniqueidentifier null, practice_name varchar(40) null, location_desc varchar(40) null, rendering_id uniqueidentifier null, attend_first_name varchar(25) null, attend_middle_name varchar(25) null, attend_last_name varchar(25) null, service_item_id char(12) null, service_item_desc varchar(80) null, cpt4_code_id char(12) null, cpt4_desc varchar(50) null, charge_amt numeric(19,2) null, quantity dec(19,2) null, begin_date_of_service char(8) null, closing_date char(8) null, create_timestamp datetime null, rvu1 float null, rvu1_total float null, rvu2 float null, rvu2_total float null, rvu3 float null, rvu3_total float null, rvu4 float null, rvu4_total float null, end_date_of_service char(8) null, midlevel_id uniqueidentifier null, unit_price numeric(19,2) null, override_ind char(1) null, modifier_1 char(2) null, modifier_2 char(2) null, modifier_3 char(2) null, modifier_4 char(2) null, link_id uniqueidentifier null, mid_last_name varchar(25) NULL, mid_first_name varchar(25) NULL, mid_middle_name varchar(25) NULL, link_ind char(1) null, name varchar(150) null, date_of_birth char(8) null, patient_age char(8) null, address_line_1 varchar(55) null, address_line_2 varchar(55) null, city varchar(35) null, state varchar(3) null, zip char(9) null, country_id uniqueidentifier null, county_id uniqueidentifier null, county_desc varchar(100) null, sex char(1) null, sex_desc varchar(30) null, batch_info varchar(40) null, override_closing_date char(8) null, location_subgrouping1_id uniqueidentifier null, location_subgrouping1_desc varchar(100) null, location_subgrouping2_id uniqueidentifier null, location_subgrouping2_desc varchar(100) null, provider_subgrp1_id uniqueidentifier null, provider_subgrp1_desc varchar(100) null, provider_subgrp2_id uniqueidentifier null, provider_subgrp2_desc varchar(100) null, ud_demo1_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo1 char(100) null, ud_demo2_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo2 char(100) null, ud_demo3_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo3 char(100) null, ud_demo4_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo4 char(100) null, ud_demo5_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo5 char(100) null, ud_demo6_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo6 char(100) null, ud_demo7_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo7 char(100) null, ud_demo8_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo8 char(100) null, ud_demo9_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo9 char(100) null, ud_demo10_id uniqueidentifier null, ud_demo10 char(100) null, icd9cm_code_id varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_id_2 varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_id_3 varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_id_4 varchar(10) null, icd9cm_code_desc varchar(100) null, icd9cm_code_desc_2 varchar(100) null, icd9cm_code_desc_3 varchar(100) null, icd9cm_code_desc_4 varchar(100) null, quadrant char(2) null, tooth char(2) null, form char(4) null, quad_desc varchar(200) null, tooth_desc varchar(200) null, surface_description varchar(200) null, form_desc varchar(200) null, department_id uniqueidentifier, fin_class varchar(100) null, payer_name varchar(40) null, department varchar(100) null, outsource_ind char(1) null, outsource_date char(8) null, outsource_agency_desc varchar(40) null, fqhc_enc_ind char(1) null, person_nbr char(12) null, pat_prov_name_1 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_2 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_3 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_4 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_5 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_6 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_7 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_8 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_9 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_10 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_11 varchar(75), pat_prov_name_12 varchar(75))

INSERT into #GP28EF3WE3DQ
(practice_id, location_id, rendering_id, service_item_id, service_item_desc, cpt4_code_id, charge_amt, quantity, begin_date_of_service, closing_date, create_timestamp, rvu1, rvu1_total, rvu2, rvu2_total, rvu3, rvu3_total, rvu4, rvu4_total, end_date_of_service, modifier_1, modifier_2, modifier_3, modifier_4, midlevel_id, unit_price, override_ind, link_id, name, date_of_birth, patient_age, address_line_1, address_line_2, city, state, zip, country_id, county_id, sex, override_closing_date, batch_info, ud_demo1_id, ud_demo2_id, ud_demo3_id, ud_demo4_id, ud_demo5_id, ud_demo6_id, ud_demo7_id, ud_demo8_id, ud_demo9_id, ud_demo10_id, icd9cm_code_id, icd9cm_code_id_2, icd9cm_code_id_3, icd9cm_code_id_4, icd9cm_code_desc, icd9cm_code_desc_2, icd9cm_code_desc_3, icd9cm_code_desc_4, quadrant, tooth, surface_description, form, department_id, outsource_ind, outsource_date, outsource_agency_desc, fqhc_enc_ind, fin_class, payer_name, person_nbr, pat_prov_name_1, pat_prov_name_2, pat_prov_name_3, pat_prov_name_4, pat_prov_name_5, pat_prov_name_6, pat_prov_name_7, pat_prov_name_8, pat_prov_name_9, pat_prov_name_10, pat_prov_name_11, pat_prov_name_12)

SELECT practice_id, location_id, rendering_id, null , null , null , sum(isnull(charge_amt,0)), sum(isnull(quantity,0)), begin_date_of_service, null , null , null , sum(isnull(rvu1_total,0)), null , sum(isnull(rvu2_total,0)), null , sum(isnull(rvu3_total,0)), null , sum(isnull(rvu4_total,0)), null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , name, date_of_birth, null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null , null

FROM #FI28EF3WE3DN group by practice_id, location_id, rendering_id, begin_date_of_service, name, date_of_birth

UPDATE #GP28EF3WE3DQ

SET attend_first_name = pm.first_name, attend_middle_name = pm.middle_name, attend_last_name = pm.last_name, provider_subgrp1_id = pm.provider_subgrouping1_id, provider_subgrp2_id = pm.provider_subgrouping2_id FROM provider_mstr pm

WHERE #GP28EF3WE3DQ.rendering_id = pm.provider_id

UPDATE #GP28EF3WE3DQ
SET practice_name = p.practice_name FROM practice p
WHERE #GP28EF3WE3DQ.practice_id = p.practice_id

UPDATE #GP28EF3WE3DQ
SET location_desc = l.location_name, location_subgrouping1_id = l.location_subgrouping1_id, location_subgrouping2_id = l.location_subgrouping2_id
FROM location_mstr l
WHERE #GP28EF3WE3DQ.location_id = l.location_id

UPDATE #GP28EF3WE3DQ SET link_ind = 'Y'
WHERE link_id is not null

UPDATE #GP28EF3WE3DQ

SET #GP28EF3WE3DQ.department = ml.mstr_list_item_desc
FROM mstr_lists ml
WHERE #GP28EF3WE3DQ.department_id = ml.mstr_list_item_id and mstr_list_type = 'department'

UPDATE #GP28EF3WE3DQ
SET county_desc = ml.mstr_list_item_desc
FROM mstr_lists ml
WHERE #GP28EF3WE3DQ.county_id = ml.mstr_list_item_id and ml.mstr_list_type = 'county'

select location_desc,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null,null, count(*) from #GP28EF3WE3DQ GROUP BY location_desc Order By location_desc

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