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I have a UPC Database of 12-digit UPC-A formatted barcodes (1,900,000 records). Currently they're stored as a varchar(13) due to leading zeros. I am using SQL Server 2008 R2.

I also have an WCF 4.0 API Method that goes and queries the database based on a UPC-A barcodes match.

  • What's the best way to improve performance of UPC based queries
  • What is the best way to store 12-Digit UPC-A Barcodes. Is my assumption to use varchar(12) okay?

Edit: More Information

Products

  • ProductID (int)
  • Barcode (varchar(12))
  • Name (varchar(50))
  • ImageUrl (varchar(255))

My code:

public JsonResult GetProductByCode(string code)
{
  DBEntities db = new DBEntities;

  Product product = (from prod in db.Products
                    where prod.Barcode == code
                    select prod).FirstOrDefault();

  return Json( product , JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet );
}
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  • It's hard to suggest improvements to performance when you haven't shown us what you're doing now. :) Also, please define "massive".
    – Ken White
    Nov 30, 2011 at 19:47
  • @KenWhite There some information for you! Nov 30, 2011 at 20:16
  • ... yes but what query is being executed?
    – Matthew
    Dec 1, 2011 at 17:08
  • 1
    Can u please tell us where we can get a UPC database like that u have?
    – App Work
    Mar 12, 2012 at 20:04
  • There can be 2 ways, Using Solr and other can be CouchDb
    – App Work
    Mar 12, 2012 at 20:05

3 Answers 3

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I take an index on the barcode column as a given.

You could save space if you stored the codes as numbers. Space is time as less bytes can be read faster. Also, the lookup should be faster on numbers. The leading zeros can be reconstructed when needed as UPC-A is a fixed-length code.

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  • 3
    Space isn't an issue here. It's only 1.9M rows, and since they're fixed-width it's more overhead padding with zeros and converting for display purposes than it is to just use characters. You'd also have to convert from a user-entered barcode (string) to a numeric, adding overhead again, before searching.
    – Ken White
    Nov 30, 2011 at 20:25
  • @Ken Space is always an issue. Dividing the physical size of an index on the UPC codes might decide between the needed parts of the index residing in 3rd level cache or RAM. Do you understand the implications of the cache hierarchy?
    – Peter G.
    Nov 30, 2011 at 21:21
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    @Ken White If the time overhead of reconstructing the leading zeros is a real issue, I have no hope of any lookup on commodity hardware being fast enough.
    – Peter G.
    Nov 30, 2011 at 21:27
  • @Peter: We're still only talking about 12-character ASCII (not Unicode) UPCs here, and 1.9m fairly small rows. You're telling me that SQL Server 2008 is going to have performance issues with that? If so, MS needs to change the line of work for that team.
    – Ken White
    Nov 30, 2011 at 21:28
  • @PeterG. I agree, if the conversion of a numeric string to an int at the client is the limited factor there is a serious problem here.
    – Matthew
    Nov 30, 2011 at 21:29
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I think storing as varchar(12) is probably fine. The #1 thing you can do to ensure the performance of your barcode queries is to make sure you have an index on the barcode column. Depending on your use of the data, you might consider making it a clustered index.

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  • If you have writes I would not recommend a clustered index. That will force your entire 1.9 million row table to re-sort on an INSERT because you're not INSERTing sequential data.
    – Matthew
    Nov 30, 2011 at 21:23
  • 1
    I'd go with char(12) instead of varchar -- if it's always 12 bytes of data, you don't need the two-byte overhead per field. Sure it's only two bytes, sure it's only 1.9M rows... but it sits in the indexes as well, and you are concerned with performance, so everything counts. Nov 30, 2011 at 21:26
  • @MatthewPK: I don't agree with your "entire 1.9 million" part. Most inserts will likely cause only a very small portion of data to be reordered even if UPC is specified as clustered index. However, using clustered index for UPC is kind of irritating to me but ɹǝʇǝd had his statement protected by "Depending on your use of the data...". (If the data is loaded once and never insert/update/delete, plus the only possible query type is on whole UPCs, using a clustered index is a good choice.)
    – Codism
    Nov 30, 2011 at 21:46
  • @Codism the use of a clustered index on inherently unordered data seems incorrect to me unless there is a specific reason to do it rather than a non-clustered index.
    – Matthew
    Nov 30, 2011 at 22:06
  • @MatthewPK: I agreed with you about the "clustered index on UPC" part if you read my previous comment more carefully (...using clustered index for UPC is kind of irritating to me...)
    – Codism
    Nov 30, 2011 at 22:21
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Make sure that your sql search criteria doesn't include a function, otherwise your query is not sargable.

I would guess that your reads far outnumber your writes, if the data is sensical without the leading zeros I would incur the cost of truncating them at write-time and searching on the exact value. Furthermore, UPC-A is numeric-only data. I would expect a more performant search on the numeric data than the varchar as you stated space is not a concern so you can even store both values if you desire.

You also need an index on the column.

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