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Home/ Questions/Q 384877
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T15:25:24+00:00 2026-05-12T15:25:24+00:00

I have a log table that will receive inserts from several web apps. I

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I have a log table that will receive inserts from several web apps. I wont be doing any searching/sorting/querying of this data. I will be pulling the data out to another database to run reports. The initial table is strictly for RECEIVING the log messages.

Is there a way to ensure that the web applications don’t have to wait on these inserts? For example I know that adding a lot of indexes would slow inserts, so I won’t. What else is there? Should I not add a primary key? (Each night the table will be pumped to a reports DB which will have a lot of keys/indexes)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T15:25:24+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 3:25 pm

    If performance is key, you may not want to write this data to a database. I think most everything will process a database write as a round-trip, but it sounds like you don’t want to wait for the returned confirmation message. Check if, as S. Lott suggests, it might not be faster to just append a row to a simple text file somewhere.

    If the database write is faster (or necessary, for security or other business/operational reasons), I would put no indexes on the table–and that includes a primary key. If it won’t be used for reads or updates, and if you don’t need relational integrity, then you just don’t need a PK on this table.

    To recommend the obvious: as part of the nightly reports run, clear out the contents of the table. Also, never reset the database file sizes (ye olde shrink database command); after a week or so of regular use, the database files should be as big as they’ll ever need to be and you won’t have to worry about the file growth performance hit.

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