I have a table in SQL Server 2008 R2 with close to a billion rows. I want to change the datatype of two columns from int to bigint. Two times ALTER TABLE zzz ALTER COLUMN yyy works, but it's very slow. How can I speed the process up? I was thinking to copy the data to another table, drop, create, copy back and switching to simple recovery mode or somehow doing it with a cursor a 1000 rows a time but I'm not sure if those will actually lead to any improvement.
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Depending on what change you are making, sometimes it can be easier to take a maintenance window. During that window (where nobody should be able to change the data in the table) you can:
The key here is that it allows you to perform the update incrementally in step 3, which you can't do in a single ALTER TABLE command. This assumes the column is not playing a major role in data integrity - if it is involved in a bunch of foreign key relationships, there are more steps. EDIT Also, and just wondering out loud, I haven't done any testing for this (but adding it to the list). I wonder if page + row compression would help here? If you change an INT to a BIGINT, with compression in place SQL Server should still treat all values as if they still fit in an INT. Again, I haven't tested if this would make an alter faster or slower, or how much longer it would take to add compression in the first place. Just throwing it out there. |
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Alterstatement you supplied is your best bet here. – mattytommo May 25 '12 at 12:47