0

does anybody have an idea why this join operation does not terminate:

SELECT * FROM
(SELECT LOWER([Computer Name]) AS 'cname' FROM table1)
AS export,
(SELECT AssetID AS 'CCID', Hostname AS 'cname' FROM table2 WHERE LastVersionFlag=1)
AS known

WHERE export.cname = LEFT(known.cname, LEN(export.cname));

The problem which I want to solve is:

  • Table1 column "cname" contains: "pc1"
  • Table2 column "hostname" contains: "pc1.domain.com"
  • Table2 also contains column "CCID": 123123

As result of the query I need to receive the CCID of each "cname" from table1.

EDIT:

The query is running for >15minutes now and produces no output, nor terminates.

  • Table1 contains about 100.000rows
  • Table2 contains about 200.000rows

Any ideas how to speed up the query?!

EDIT2:

Indices are put on Table1 cname and Table2 cname

The task schedule looks like this: http://i55.tinypic.com/1z3o0t4.png

4 Answers 4

1

Is this what you're looking for, a basic join?

SELECT known.CCID, export.[Computer Name] AS cname 
FROM
table1 AS export
INNER JOIN table2 AS known ON LOWER(export.[Computer Name]) = LOWER(LEFT(known.cname, LEN(export.[Computer Name])))
WHERE LastVersionFlag=1 

Edit: Here are some suggestions for speeding up the query:

Firstly, the string operation in the join are very costly. You can avoid having to call lower() if you force a case insensitive collation for the join.

e.g. ...ON known.cname = export.[Computed Column] collate SQL_Latin1_General_Cp437_CI_AS_KI_WI

Your best move would be to create a persisted computed column on table2 that just contains the cname using your formula from the join LEFT(known.cname, LEN(export.[Computer Name])) , then you can put an index on the computed column as well as the cname column of table1. Once done, your join will be a simple equality instead of a heavily manipulated comparison. This will allow the query engine to make a more optimized plan.

2
  • Exactly. As far as I can see your query performs the same action as mine and also does not terminate...
    – Michael S
    Dec 13, 2010 at 7:37
  • Can I ask what you mean by "doesn't terminate"?
    – Laramie
    Dec 13, 2010 at 8:02
1

Just a side note: SQL Server is working in case insensitive mode by default (if you didn't do any changes), so you dont have to care about upper/lower-case normally. Using functions like LOWER prevents the usage of indexes.

And to speed up the last WHERE, you could rewrite it with a LIKE that will take advantage of an index on the involved columns (if you got one). That would be something like (as in devio's answer):

known.cname LIKE (export.cname + '%')
1

Bringing all suggestions together would give you following query.
With proper indexing and the number of records you mention, it shouldn't take minutes to return the results.

SELECT  cname = t1.[Computer Name] 
        , CCID = k.AssetID
        , Hostname = k.cname
FROM    table1 t1
        INNER JOIN known k ON k.Hostname LIKE t1.[Computer Name]  + '%'
WHERE   k.LastVersionFlag = 1        
3
  • Thanks for this input, I adjusted my query accordingly. Nevertheless it needs ~20minutes for processing and returns an empty result set. I have no explanation for this since there are matches within the two tables...
    – Michael S
    Dec 13, 2010 at 9:34
  • @Michael, could you show us the output of a SHOWPLAN statement. Dec 13, 2010 at 10:21
  • Is the Showplan different to the plan which I have posted as edit in topic?
    – Michael S
    Dec 13, 2010 at 12:13
1

My guess is your query does not perform because of the size of the data.

It needs to generate the Cartesian product of 100.000 * 200.000 rows, and then apply the WHERE conditions.

SQL Server comparison is case-insensitive if the column's collation is set to case-insensitive (defaulted by database and server collations).

To speed up the join operation, add (unique?) indexes on table1.[Computer Name] and table2.Hostname.

Modify your query to

SELECT known.CCID, export.[Computer Name] AS cname 
FROM table1 AS export
INNER JOIN table2 AS known 
    ON known.Hostname LIKE export.[Computer Name] + '%' 
    AND LastVersionFlag=1 

If all your hostnames use dotted cname notation, use '.%'.

1
  • Thanks for this input, I adjusted my query accordingly. Nevertheless it needs ~20minutes for processing and returns an empty result set. I have no explanation for this since there are matches within the two tables...
    – Michael S
    Dec 13, 2010 at 9:34

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.