Changing and finding stuff in a database containing a few dozen tables with around half a million rows in the big ones I’m running into timeouts quite often.
Some of these timeouts I don’t understand. For example I got this table:
CREATE TABLE dbo.[VPI_APO]
(
[Key] bigint IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL CONSTRAINT [PK_VPI_APO] PRIMARY KEY,
[PZN] nvarchar(7) NOT NULL,
[Key_INB] nvarchar(5) NOT NULL,
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
ALTER TABLE dbo.[VPI_APO] ADD CONSTRAINT [IX_VPI_APOKey_INB] UNIQUE NONCLUSTERED
(
[PZN],
[Key_INB]
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
I often get timeouts when I search an item in this table like this (during inserting high volumes of items):
SELECT [Key] FROM dbo.[VPI_APO] WHERE ([PZN] = @Search1) AND ([Key_INB] = @Search2)
These timeouts when searching on the unique constraints happen quite often. I expected unique constraints to have the same benefits as indices, was I mistaken? Do I need an index on these fields, too?
Or will I have to search differently to benefit of the constraint?
I’m using SQL Server 2008 R2.
A unique constraint creates an index. Based on the query and the constraint defined you should be in a covering situation, meaning the index provides everything the query needs without a need to back to the cluster or the heap to retrieve data. I suspect that your index is not sufficiently selective or that your statistics are out of date. First try updating the statistics with sp_updatestats. If that doesn’t change the behavior, try using UPDATE STATISTICS VPI_APO WITH FULL SCAN. If neither of those work, you need to examine the selectivity of the index using DBCC SHOW_STATISTICS.