Why Does My SQL Server Go Very Slow Occasionally

May 2, 2007

Hi
I'm using SQL Server 2000 with Small Business System 2003. I have a smallish database and an Access 2003 Front End, with ODBC links. The system has been running fine for about 2 months with 16 users. This weekend, I will be adding a further 30 users to the system.

I've been doing some work on a new copy of the front end over the past day or two, and found that occassionaly, the system runs really slowly, taking a couple of minutes to open my front screen which normally takes a few seconds.

The only solution I have found is to stop and start SQL Server Manager on the server, and then everything is fine. However this is clearly not an acceptable solution, because I'm doing it about twice a day.

can anybody suggest why this might be, or how I might fix the problem?

I have a maintenance plan in place, which runs overnight,

Thanks for any help,

Colin

View 6 Replies


ADVERTISEMENT

SQL Server Admin 2014 :: SSMS Occasionally Freezing / Hanging

Jul 7, 2015

I have a weird intermittent issue with an enterprise version of SS2014. When clicking or right clicking around SSMS will lock up and display the 'SSMS is busy - waiting for an internal operation to complete'. It is only specific to the server as when I connect using my local SSMS this doesn't happen. This was happening both pre and post SP1 install.

View 4 Replies View Related

SQL 2012 :: Restoring Mirrored Database To Different Server Occasionally Fail?

Oct 19, 2015

Every once in a while a scheduled restore of a production database backup to a development server will fail with the following error.

RESTORE cannot operate on database 'XXX' because it is configured for database mirroring or has joined an availability group

While it is true the production database is involved in database mirroring, the development server does not have database mirroring enabled. This error tells me something within the backup is telling the development server the database is configured for database mirroring.

However the perplexing part for me is that we only receive this error maybe 5% of the time, if that, and only on a couple of our databases. We have numerous other restores of mirrored production databases to development servers that have never produced this error. So my question is what is causing this error to occur, and why is it not happening all of the time? We get around this error by deleting the DEV database and re-running the restore job.

View 0 Replies View Related

Trigger Occasionally Fails

Feb 6, 2004

I created a trigger to update another table when a record is inserted. This trigger appears to work about 99% of the time, but occasionally it will fail. Here is the code for the trigger, does anyone see anyting wrong with this?

CREATE TRIGGER trgUpdateClaimCapture ON ResponseCapture
FOR INSERT
AS
BEGIN
UPDATE ClaimCapture
SET ResponseTime = GETDATE()
FROM Inserted I, ClaimCapture C
WHERE C.Site = I.Site
AND C.Batch = I.Batch
AND C.RxNumber = I.RxNumber
AND C.ServiceDate = I.ServiceDate
AND C.ResponseTime IS NULL
END

Any help is appreciated....thanks.

View 11 Replies View Related

EncryptByKey DecryptByKey Occasionally Returns Null

Jan 21, 2008

The DecryptByKey function occasionally returns null even though the EncryptByKey function retuned a non-null value. The problem only occurs for a subset of rows returned by a single select and every time the script is executed, a different set of rows is affected by the problem. Occasionally all fields get encrypted/decrypted successfully, but this is rare.

It seems that the EncryptByKey function occasionally returns a value that can not be decrypted at a later point in time.

I am running on Windows XP Professional SP 2 with SQL Server 9.0.3042.

I have included a sample of the code below.

Thank you,
Mike

CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[encrypt_text]
(
@input_text varchar(255)
)
RETURNS varbinary(8000)
AS
BEGIN
RETURN EncryptByKey(Key_GUID('eia_key'), @input_text)
END



CREATE FUNCTION decrypt_text
(
@input_text varbinary(8000)
)
RETURNS varchar(255)
AS
BEGIN
return convert(varchar(255),DecryptByKey(@input_text))

END



IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.symmetric_keys WHERE name = N'eia_key')

DROP SYMMETRIC KEY eia_key


CREATE SYMMETRIC KEY eia_key

WITH ALGORITHM = DES

ENCRYPTION BY PASSWORD = '???'


OPEN SYMMETRIC KEY eia_key DECRYPTION BY PASSWORD = '???'


execute util_print 'Deleting data'

execute ld_delete_lips_data

execute util_print 'Loading data'



set nocount on

insert into maturities (maturity_id, maturity_name, minimum_maturity, maximum_maturity)

values (1, 'TERM', 0, 0)

insert into maturities (maturity_id, maturity_name, minimum_maturity, maximum_maturity)

values (2, '0 - 2', 0, 2)

insert into maturities (maturity_id, maturity_name, minimum_maturity, maximum_maturity)

values (3, '2 - 5', 2, 5)

insert into maturities (maturity_id, maturity_name, minimum_maturity, maximum_maturity)

values (4, '5 - 10', 5, 10)

insert into maturities (maturity_id, maturity_name, minimum_maturity, maximum_maturity)

values (5, '10+', 10, null)

insert into forecast_horizons (forecast_horizon_id, forecast_horizon_name, forecast_horizon_alias)

values (1, dbo.encrypt_text('3 Month'), dbo.encrypt_text('Blended'))

insert into forecast_horizons (forecast_horizon_id, forecast_horizon_name, forecast_horizon_alias)

values (2, dbo.encrypt_text('1 Year'), dbo.encrypt_text('Fundamental'))

insert into forecast_horizons (forecast_horizon_id, forecast_horizon_name, forecast_horizon_alias)

values (3, dbo.encrypt_text('Technical'), dbo.encrypt_text('Technical'))



insert into forecast_levels (forecast_level_id, forecast_level_name)

values (1, dbo.encrypt_text('Low'))

insert into forecast_levels (forecast_level_id, forecast_level_name)

values (2, dbo.encrypt_text('Median'))

insert into forecast_levels (forecast_level_id, forecast_level_name)

values (3, dbo.encrypt_text('High'))



execute util_reseed_ident 'asset_classes', 0

execute util_execute_sql 'insert into asset_classes default values', 11

insert into sectors (sector_id, sector_name)

values (1, dbo.encrypt_text('Sovereign'))

insert into sectors (sector_id, sector_name)

values (2, dbo.encrypt_text('Inflation Linked'))

insert into sectors (sector_id, sector_name)

values (3, dbo.encrypt_text('Quasi & Foreign Government'))

insert into sectors (sector_id, sector_name)

values (4, dbo.encrypt_text('Securitized/Collateralized'))

insert into sectors (sector_id, sector_name)

values (5, dbo.encrypt_text('Corporate'))

insert into credit_ratings (credit_rating_id, credit_rating_name)

values (6, dbo.encrypt_text('AAA'))

insert into credit_ratings (credit_rating_id, credit_rating_name)

values (7, dbo.encrypt_text('AA'))

insert into credit_ratings (credit_rating_id, credit_rating_name)

values (8, dbo.encrypt_text('A'))

insert into credit_ratings (credit_rating_id, credit_rating_name)

values (9, dbo.encrypt_text('BBB'))

insert into sectors (sector_id, sector_name)

values (10, dbo.encrypt_text('High Yield'))

insert into sectors (sector_id, sector_name)

values (11, dbo.encrypt_text('Emerging Debt'))



set nocount off

insert into currencies (currency_id, currency_name, currency_code)

select CurrencyID, dbo.encrypt_text(CurrencyName), dbo.encrypt_text(CurrencyCode)

from lips_import..Currencies

View 3 Replies View Related

Securing Local System, Password Expiration, Occasionally Connected MSDE

Jul 14, 2005

Numerous articles (e.g., http://www.microsoft.com/sql/techinfo/administration/2000/security/securingsqlserver.asp, even one that I wrote, http://www.dbazine.com/sql/sql-articles/cook12) state that to secure SQL Server, the SQL Server services should not run as Local System. That advice is useful only if making the change is not overly disruptive or is even allowable. My two most recent clients have absolutely rigid password expiration policies that require all account passwords to be changed at regular intervals. Realistically, that makes a compelling case for running as Local System.

View 4 Replies View Related

SQL Server 2005 Stored Procedure Is Very Slow Vs. SQL Server 2000

Apr 18, 2008

Hi there,

I was wondering if someone can point out the error or the thing I shouldn't be doing in a stored procedure on SQL Server 2005. I want to switch from SQL Server 2000 to SQL Server 2005 which all seems to work just fine, but one stored procedure is causing me headache.

I could pin the problem down to this query:


DECLARE @Package_ID bigint

DECLARE @Email varchar(80)

DECLARE @Customer_ID bigint

DECLARE @Payment_Type tinyint

DECLARE @Payment_Status tinyint

DECLARE @Booking_Type tinyint

SELECT @Package_ID = NULL

SELECT @Email = NULL

SELECT @Customer_ID = NULL

SELECT @Payment_Type = NULL

SELECT @Payment_Status = NULL

SELECT @Booking_Type = NULL

CREATE TABLE #TempTable(

PACKAGE_ID bigint,

PRIMARY KEY (PACKAGE_ID))

INSERT INTO

#TempTable

SELECT

PACKAGE.PACKAGE_ID

FROM

PACKAGE (nolock) LEFT JOIN BOOKING ON PACKAGE.PACKAGE_ID = BOOKING.PACKAGE_ID

LEFT JOIN CUSTOMER (nolock) ON PACKAGE.CUSTOMER_ID = CUSTOMER.CUSTOMER_ID

LEFT JOIN ADDRESS_LINK (nolock) ON ADDRESS_LINK.SOURCE_TYPE = 1 AND ADDRESS_LINK.SOURCE_ID = CUSTOMER.CUSTOMER_ID

LEFT JOIN ADDRESS (nolock) ON ADDRESS_LINK.ADDRESS_ID = ADDRESS.ADDRESS_ID

WHERE

PACKAGE.PACKAGE_ID = ISNULL(@Package_ID,PACKAGE.PACKAGE_ID)

AND PACKAGE.CUSTOMER_ID = ISNULL(@Customer_ID,PACKAGE.CUSTOMER_ID)

AND PACKAGE.PAYMENT_TYPE = ISNULL(@Payment_Type,PACKAGE.PAYMENT_TYPE)

AND PACKAGE.PAYMENT_STATUS = ISNULL(@Payment_Status,PACKAGE.PAYMENT_STATUS)

AND BOOKING.BOOKING_TYPE = ISNULL(@Booking_Type,BOOKING.BOOKING_TYPE)

-- If this line below is included the request will take about 90 seconds whereas it takes 1 second if it is outcommented

--AND ADDRESS.EMAIl LIKE '%' + ISNULL(@Email, ADDRESS.EMAIL) + '%'

GROUP BY

PACKAGE.PACKAGE_ID

DROP TABLE #TempTable


The request is performing quite well on the SQL Server 2000 but on the SQL Server 2005 it takes much longer. I already installed the SP2 x64, I'm running the SQL Server 2005 on a x64 environment.
As I stated in the comment in the query it takes 90 seconds to finish with the line included, but if I exclude the line it takes 1 second.
I think there must be something wrong with the join's or something else which has maybe changed in SQL Server 2005. All the tables joined have a primary key.
Maybe you folks can spot the error / mistake / wrong type of doing things easily.
I would appreciate any help you can offer me to solve this problem.

On the web I saw that there is a Cumulative Update 4 for the SP2 which fixes the following:





942659 (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/942659/)
FIX: The query performance is slower when you run the query in SQL Server 2005 than when you run the query in SQL Server 2000

Anyhow I think the problem is something else, I haven't tried out the cumulative update yet, as I think it is something different, more general why this query takes ages to process.

Thanks again for any help

Best regards,
Pascal

View 9 Replies View Related

SQL Server Very Slow

Mar 29, 2001

Hi,

we have performance problems with MS SQL Server 2000. We upsized an Access
2000 application to MS SQL server, using linked tables. Most of the time
the performance is fine (there are at most 10 users connected to the server
at the same time). However, it regularly happens that the database stops
responding. Queries, which normally take 20 ms to execute, require 20
seconds or more. In the Access client this looks as if Access has hung, it
is not responding, even though it eventually comes back to live. What I
have found out is that if I restart the SQL server, the problem disappears
and the performance stays fine for some time. This in mind, I set up a
batch which stops and restarts the SQL at night. However, recently the
problem started appearing even when the SQL server was running for only a
few hours.
I also looked at the performance monitor at both the client workstation and
the server and even when the response time are slow, the processor usage
both at the workstations and the server is under 10 percent.
I wonder whether anybody could help me with this problem. I realise that
using linked tables in Access is not the best thing for achieving good
performance, but I still would expect at least decent performance. At the
moment the situation is worse than if we were using just Access.
For your information, the computer which the SQL server runs on is a dual
processor Pentium Pro 200 MHz, with 320 MB RAM and a SCSI RAID. The server
is the only Windows 2000 domain controller on the network and it runs
Active directory. Plus there is also Exchange server 5.5 installed on this
server. This looks like a lot for a single server, but please bear in mind
that there are only 15 users on the network.
It may be also interesting to know that we have only recently upgraded from
SQL server 7 to SQL server 2000, but we were experiencing the same problem
before, even though not so often.

Thank you for any help.

Tomas Koutny
Elink Ltd

View 4 Replies View Related

SQL Server 7 Slow

Jul 15, 2004

When, at the same network, I run Windows Server 2003, with webserver on it, SQL clients connected to SQL server on other computer server, experience slow work with queries. What seems to be a problem? When I disconnect Windows 2003 Server everything go faster. Why?

View 2 Replies View Related

SQL Server Very Slow

Jul 20, 2004

Hiya folks,
This is more a request for some input from peeps with more experience of SQL than myself. A problem has shown itself on my SQL server over the last week or so, in that the server will 'slow down' intermitently, almost as if the the connection to the server has been lost for about 30 seconds. All will be fine for another minute or so and then the same problem occurs.

The only way I've found to get round this problem is to stop the SQL server and completely restart the server that SQL resides on, then restart SQL. This cures the problem for about a day.

Any offers??

View 9 Replies View Related

SQL-Server Very Slow Via VPN (WAN)???

Jan 14, 2005

Hello,

I've written a program, which communicates via ODBC with multipe database platforms. In a local network it seems to be everthing OK, but when I connect via VPN (2MBit/s S-DSL) to the MSSQL (2000 SP3) the connection is not only very slow, it seems that the MSSQL only uses 1 % of the bandwith. I don't think that 0,25 KByte/s is quite normal speed. A query takes about 5 - 10 minutes. (And I do a lot of queries...)

If I connect to an Oracle-DB the full bandwith will used (125 KByte/s).

Is there a problem with the SQL2000? How can I solve this behaviour?

so long

View 10 Replies View Related

SQL Server Slow

Nov 4, 2005

Hi,

I am having a problem accessing my sql server database using either Enterprise Manager or Query Analyser. It is awfully slow. Each time I click to expand a database in Enterprise Manager it takes about 25mins to do anything. I was running a DTS package yesterday which failed and have had this problem since. If I access the database via my app everything seems to be running at a normal speed. If I go to my task manager the sql server process is using up 750MB of memory and 750MB of virtual memory??

Has anyone seen this and know how to fix it???

Thanks in advance

View 2 Replies View Related

Server Slow Down

Jun 16, 2008

Does anyone have any experience with a server slowing down over time to the point that it must be rebooted? This occurs over a time frame of from a few days to as long as a week. The server has a single Xeon 3.6 processor and 8 GB of ram. It executes production SQL scripts against databases contained on the server as well as a data warehouse stored on an AS400 server.

After rebooting, all jobs seem to execute in a reasonable time frame, according to their size and scope.

View 9 Replies View Related

Slow Server

Jul 13, 2007

server was running out of space. drop a database to free up space. the server is slow now like its taking more time to query or delete records than normal. what happend and how do i fix it?

=============================
http://www.sqlserverstudy.com

View 3 Replies View Related

SQL Server Too Slow

Jul 20, 2005

When I query or browse databases or tables in SQL Server 2000 it worksextremely slow. It started working like this from one day to another.I tried reinstalling but it stayed the same.Now I'm installing Service Pack 3, it's curious that executingreplsys.sql, replcom.sql and repltran.sql scripts in the installationis extremely slow too.Did anyone experienced this or have any idea?Thanks in advance.

View 5 Replies View Related

Copying Table Data From SQL Server 2005 To SQL Server 2000 - Very Slow When Using OLEDB Source And Destination Sources?

May 8, 2006

An SSIS package to transfer data from a DB instance on SQL Server 2005 to SQL Server 2000 is extremely slow. The package uses an OLEDB Source to OLEDB Destination for data transfer which is basically one table from sql server 2005 to sql server 2000. The job takes 5 minutes to transfer about 400 rows at night when there is very little activity on the server. During the day the job almost always times out.

On SQL Server 200 instances the job ran in minutes in the old 2000 package.

Is there an alternative to this. Tranfer Objects task does not work as there is apparently a defect according to Microsoft. Please let me know if there is any other option other than using a Execute 2000 package task or using an ActiveX Script to read records from one source and to insert them into the destination source, which I am not certain how long it might take and how viable will that be?

Any inputs will be much appreciated.

Thanks,

MShah

View 5 Replies View Related

SQL Server Management Studio Run Extremely Slow On Server.

Mar 21, 2007

I had installed SQL 2005 in my server (very high spec server).

but i wonder why every time i launch the management studio, it tooks forever to load... about 5 minutes.

When i right click on a table and click on view properties, it can takes up to 5 minutes to display the detail.

Is there any setting / configuration that i configured wrongly?

View 4 Replies View Related

Slow Running Server

May 2, 2001

Our server is running. There are no locks, and server has been rebooted but the problem is still there. This has been going on for some time now. I intend to restart the server. Does anybody have a quick solution, please help. Thanks for your assistance!!

View 4 Replies View Related

Slow Running Server

May 17, 2001

Please what do I look out for 6.5 if I want to troubleshoot for slow running.
Thanks.

View 2 Replies View Related

Server Slow Down Problem

Aug 23, 2001

Our SQL server needs to be rebooted every two weeks sometimes even earlier. Otherwise it gets extremely slow and I can even open any tables in enterprize manager. Also the users cannot type any info into the application screen, it takes forever to change from one screen to other. Can somebody please suggest me how to avoid this situation or any idea of why it happens.

Thanks a lot.

View 2 Replies View Related

SQL Server Running Slow Down

Jun 6, 2001

Hi,

When first time I start my sql server is running faster. After 10 to 15 days later, sql sever performance is very slow. After I restart SQL service, to become normal.

Thanks
Mohan

View 1 Replies View Related

Slow Performance In Sql Server

Jun 5, 2004

Hi

We are facing performance related problem using Sql server 2000.

We have one stand alone P4 Pc (128 ram) and around 30 users access the sql server through network.

We have written our aplication in VB 6 and backend as Sql Server 2000. We have used Stored Procedure where ever necessary. We have used cursor location as Server side.

When we start with 5 users it is not slow, when all the users say 30 comes in it is slow down.

Can some one help to find out what is the problem.

Thanks

View 1 Replies View Related

Help With SLOW SQL Server Performance

Nov 29, 2005

I'm still new to SQL Server so some of my lingo/verbage may be incorrect, please bare with me.

The company I work for relies strictly on ASP and SQL Server for 85% of it's daily operations. We have some Access projects and some VB projects as well, but for the majority it's ASP and SQL Server.

Previously we had 2 T1 lines with something like 3MB a piece and a handfull of Dell Servers. Our main server is also a Dell running Windows Server 2003 and is hosted through a reputable company here in town. They have a host of fiber lines running all over so I know we're getting good throughput. We've actually just upgradded to a DS3 but we're still working out the kinks with that. Anyway, I just want to eliminate that up front - we have great connection speeds.

The problems lies, I believe in our database design. The company supposedly had a DBA come in and help setup the design some 3 or 4 years ago, however even with my limited knowledge I feel like something is just not working right.

Our main table is "Invoices" which is obviously all of our Invoices, ever. This table has an Identity field "JobID" which is also the Clustered Index. We have other Indexes as well, but it appears they're just scattered about. The table probably 30-40 fields per row and ONLY 740,000 rows. Tiny in comparison to what I'm told SQL Server can handle.

However, our performance is embarassing. We've just landed a new client who's going to be brining us big business and they're already complaining about the speed of their website. I am just trying to figure out ways to speed things up. SQL is on a dedicated machine I believe with dual Xeon processors and a couple gigs of ram. So that should be ok. THe invoices table I spoke of is constantly accessed by all kinds of operations as it's heart of what we do. We also have other tables such which are joined on this table to make up the reporting we do for clients.

So I guess my question is this. Should the Clustered Index be the identify field and is that causing us problems? We use this field alot for access a single Invoice at a time and from what I understand this makes it a good Clustered Index, because the index IS the jobID we're looking for. But when it comes time to do reporting for a client, we're not looking at this field. We just pull the records for that Clients Number. And we only have 1400 clients at this point. So if we were to make the "ClientID" field the Clustered Index, it would much faster to Zero in on the group of Invoices we wanted because the ClientID is ALWAYS included in our queries.

But because a "DBA" came in to design this setup, everyone is afraid to change it. I guess it's hard to explain without people sitting here going through the code and look at the structures of all our tables - but I guess what I need is like a guide of what to do to easily increase performance on SQL Server and the proper use of Clustered and Non-Clustered Indexs and how to mix and match those.

Sorry I wrote a book.
Ideas? This place has always helped me before, so thanks in advance!

View 14 Replies View Related

New Bigger, Better SQL Server...slow

Mar 23, 2006

Hi,

We just put on our main accounting (50 GB total, 8 GB largest table - GLTRAN) database on a new Windows Advanced 2003 server with 8 GBs of memory. Everything is essentially the same as the old box, aside from the fact that it's on Windows Advanced 2003 Server and it's using LUNS as the E: drive where the SQL database is kept. It runs fine for the most part, excpet this one report takes literally 20 times longer to run than on the pld box.

It's SQL Enterprise 2000 SP4 (also the same). Are there new config options for SQL when running on a 2003 server? Or is it how the OS is handling the SQL service? I'm perplexed. It's not indexes. I still have the old box and load the current dbase to it for testing purposes and the report runs like lightning on it.

Thanks,
Dave

View 14 Replies View Related

Sql Server Running Slow

Mar 2, 2004

Hi,

Our main production server has started running slow, it is a dual zeon thingy with plenty of ram so hardware is not an issue.

Basically a service connects to the database and executes a few stored procs, the only way I can get the system up to speed again is to recompile one of the SPs but that is only a temporary fix.

Anyone had a similar thing?

Can anyone give me help on performance tuning in SQL server 2000.

Thanks

View 2 Replies View Related

Does Sql Server Slow Down If It Has Lots Of Db's?

May 7, 2008

Hi,

You know how there are lots of hosted applications out there, many of them provide you with your own database (not shared).

1. If a server has 1K databases on it, will this slow down the server just due to the # of databases? (each user has their own database, but they won't be accessing it that much really).

A seperate database is required for security purposes usually.

2. Can you still open up EM with 1K+ databases?

View 3 Replies View Related

Server Admin Very Slow

Aug 23, 2007

I have a SQL 2k database, relatively small, < 1Gb, WinXP. Whenever I try to do anything in Ent Man I get the hour glass for minutes every time. Customers are not complaining. Performance Monitor and the db logs have not revealed any bottlenecks so far. Hardware tested good. All other applications run normally. Log file is about 80mb. This has started just recently.

I am a rookie so I need a hint on what to check. Indexes? Logging?

View 3 Replies View Related

Why Is SQL Query Slow On On Server But Not Another

Mar 18, 2008

Hi

I have a database and when I run a query on it the query takes 10 minutes to complete. I am running the following query

SELECT t103.cs_flag, t103.pr_flag, SUM (t103.amount), COUNT (t103.record_id)
FROM br_data t103
WHERE t103.acct_id = 12 AND (t103.state = 3 OR t103.state = 7)
GROUP BY t103.cs_flag, t103.pr_flag

The br_data table doesnt seem to be using its indexes ?? And it has around a million records. Now when I export the database and import on to another SQL server and then run the same query as above it only takes 1 or 2 seconds.

On the server that we are having problems with I have tried to re-build the indexes using DBCC DBREINDEX (br_data,' ',0) but this hasnt helped. I have also tried backing up the database, delete the database then restore, this also hasnt helped. I have no idea why the query runs slow on the original box, but then quick when I transfer it to another server??

Both servers are running windows 2003 with SQL 2000 SP4. There are no resorrce problems such as CPU / memory, Any ideas??

Thanks

View 1 Replies View Related

Slow Insert In SQL Server

Aug 16, 2006

Hi,It takes 4 minutes to insert 40 000 records on a SQL Server and 40 secon an other SQL Server. The slower run on windows 2000 terminal serverand the faster on windows 2000. The slower The slower have 2 Go ofram, the faster 512 Mo!!!How to diagnostic what's going wrong on the slower server? I can'tchange the application who do the insertions.

View 4 Replies View Related

SQL Server On Production Very Slow

Jan 17, 2007

Hi,I ran test data on my development machine and it took 1 minute toinsert the data. Ran the same set of data on the server and took 5minutes.Check both database and everything is the same. I even copied theproduction DB on my machine and it was taking still about 1 minute.Look at the fragmentation, and all the numbers are better on the serverthan my development machine so it should be faster.In the application I put some timer and discover that the insert istaking 0.015 ms on the server and 0 on the development. So the problemis on the insert.It is a Web application using ASP.NET.Here are the spec of the computers:Development: P4 HT 3.2GHz 1gig memory running WIN XPServer: Xeon 2.8GHz 1.5Gig memory running WIN 2000 serverAny idea how I to pinpoint the problem? I'm not at the point ofthinking that it can be the hardware, but how to verify that?ThanksFrank

View 2 Replies View Related

Slow Access To SQL Server

Sep 17, 2007

I have 25+ WinXP SP2 workstations on a Novell file server (Novell login) and also have a W2K SQL 2000 Server for our database. We are usint Win NT authentication to the SQL Server.

One AND ONLY ONE user is having trouble with this setup. Her workstation is PAINFULLY slow accessing the SQL server through my Delphi programs, through our third party programs, and through ODBC connections.

I thought it was her workstation until I configured a clean workstation for her, and it too had the same problem. I then took a brand new Dell 9200 workstation with 2gb memory, gigabit NIC, etc. and configured it to use our servers. It too had the same slowness connecting to the SQL server. Everything else is fast.

I deleted her entry in the NT domain users table, and re-entered her. No help.

Can anyone shed any light on this?

View 3 Replies View Related

SQL Server 2000 Slow Down

Apr 19, 2008



Hi,
I am using SQL2K for a intranet web application database. And I have several database in it.
After a long periode of time (about 6 month) the the application is slowing down when accessing the data.
I use full log for the database.
I also set an autobackup for the database for every 15 minute, but I think this is not what cause the slow down.
The database seem to slow down more and more every day.
I keep only the last 3 days transaction data and every day I delete transaction data older then 4 day, so the number of records in the transaction table is just about 3000 to 5000 records only.
Please help me. Thanks.

View 3 Replies View Related

I Need Help With A Slow Sql 2000 Server

Sep 30, 2007

Hi,
We have a server that s too slow. The tables have about between 1 million and 3 million records each. We have about 30 tables for production. The other tables are mostly look up tables (just for personnel and categories and so on, only static tables)

1/ do u guys think that s too much data, I mean about 3 millions records in a table. Because the manager said, may be if u archive some records and delete them from the tables, the system might become quick and performant?

2/ When we check the activity monitor in management in entreprise manager, we find a process Id 55 that has the value 1 in the Blocking column, and other processes having that process ID 55 in the Blocked by column.
Does the fact that the blocking column for a process equals 1 mean that the process is having a problem, and how do we know what causes the problem for sure?

3/When we check Performance monitor, pls note that we have RAID5 with 5 disks, we see that Avg. Disk Queue Length counter ranging between 20 and 70 and especially if we run a query for example, although simple select query in one of the tables, the Avg. Disk Queue Length counter goes to the roof to 100 % in performance monitor.

I don t think we have a pb with the CPU, it looks good, not going to the roof.

For your info, we have the web server on that same SQL server machine as well, but the web server s working well, only sql server and the client application that accesses it is slow, the web pages are pretty fast.

Am I following the good path to diagnose what s wrong. It s my first time doing this, and I am trying to learn.

I appreciate your guidance.

View 4 Replies View Related







Copyrights 2005-15 www.BigResource.com, All rights reserved