About This Blog

Including my content originally published on 𝕏, SQLperformance.com, and SQLblog.com

Thursday, 18 November 2021

Be Careful with LOBs and OPTION (RECOMPILE)

Be Careful with LOBs and OPTION (RECOMPILE)

It sometimes makes sense to add OPTION (RECOMPILE) to a query. Typically this will be when:

  • A good enough plan for the query is very sensitive to one or more parameters
  • No good single value exists for the parameter to use in a hint
  • Optimize for unknown doesn’t give a good result
  • The plan might be expected to change over time
  • The cost of recompiling the statement is much less than the expected execution time
  • Recompiling every time is very likely to save more time and resources than it costs overall

All that is fairly well-known. The point of this short post is to draw your attention to another side-effect of adding OPTION (RECOMPILE) — the parameter embedding optimization (PEO).

Saturday, 5 June 2021

Empty Parallel Zones

Empty Parallel Zones

An empty parallel zone is an area of the plan bounded by exchanges (or the leaf level) containing no operators.

How and why does SQL Server sometimes generate a parallel plan with an empty parallel zone?

Wednesday, 24 March 2021

Incorrect Results with Parallel Eager Spools and Batch Mode

Incorrect Results with Parallel Eager Spools and Batch Mode

You might have noticed a warning at the top of the release notes for SQL Server 2016 SP2 CU 16:

Note: After you apply CU 16 for SQL Server 2016 SP2, you might encounter an issue in which DML (insert/update/delete) queries that use parallel plans cannot complete any execution and encounter HP_SPOOL_BARRIER waits. You can use the trace flag 13116 or MAXDOP=1 hint to work around this issue. This issue is related to the introduction of fix for 13685819 and it will be fixed in the next Cumulative Update.

That warning links to bug reference 13685819 on the same page. There isn’t a separate KB article, only the description:

Fixes an issue with insert query in SQL Server 2016 that reads the data from the same table and uses a parallel execution plan may produce duplicate rows