52

I have a SQL table BookChapters with over 20 millions rows. It has a clustered primary key (bookChapterID) and doesn't have any other keys or indexes. It takes miliseconds to run the following query

if (select count(*) from BookChapters) = 0
...

However, it takes over 10 minutes when I change it like so

if (select count(*) from BookChapters) = 1
...

or

if (select count(*) from BookChapters) > 1
...

Why is that? How can I get select count(*) to execute faster?

1
  • 4
    Generally speaking select "count(*) from table" - may have big problems with bigger data gets ;)
    – Yusubov
    Jun 21, 2012 at 1:41

6 Answers 6

68

Mikael Eriksson has a good explanation bellow why the first query is fast:

SQL server optimize it into: if exists(select * from BookChapters). So it goes looking for the presence of one row instead of counting all the rows in the table.

For the other two queries, SQL Server would use the following rule. To perform a query like SELECT COUNT(*), SQL Server will use the narrowest non-clustered index to count the rows. If the table does not have any non-clustered index, it will have to scan the table.

Also, if your table has a clustered index you can get your count even faster using the following query (borrowed from this site Get Row Counts Fast!)

--SQL Server 2005/2008/2016/2017/2019/2022
SELECT OBJECT_NAME(i.id) [Table_Name], i.rowcnt [Row_Count]
FROM sys.sysindexes i WITH (NOLOCK)
WHERE i.indid in (0,1)
ORDER BY i.rowcnt desc

--SQL Server 2000
SELECT OBJECT_NAME(i.id) [Table_Name], i.rows [Row_Count]
FROM sysindexes i (NOLOCK)
WHERE i.indid in (0,1)
ORDER BY i.rows desc

It uses sysindexes system table. More info you can find here SQL Server.

Here is another link Why is my SELECT COUNT(*) running so slow? with another solution. It shows technique that Microsoft uses to quickly display the number of rows when you right click on the table and select properties.

select sum (spart.rows)
from sys.partitions spart
where spart.object_id = object_id(’YourTable’)
and spart.index_id < 2

You should find that this returns very quickly no matter how many tables you have.

If you are using SQL 2000, you can use the sysindexes table to get the number.

select max(ROWS)
from sysindexes
where id = object_id(’YourTable’)

This number may be slightly off depending on how often SQL updates the sysindexes table, but it’s usually correct (or at least close enough).

5
  • 1
    do you agree with my suggestion?
    – Yusubov
    Jun 21, 2012 at 2:02
  • 1
    Hi Aleksey, you are genius, that it is, I was just curious that my new table BookChapters2 return the query count much faster, I saw, just as you said, because there is a non-cluster index inside the table, Thanks so much
    – danmiao
    Jun 21, 2012 at 2:09
  • 1
    +1 for the great answer - Thanks! Just one additional point. Make sure the indexes/statistics are up to date on the table that is being queried. Since it uses those statistics for the count, out of date stats will deliver inaccurate results.
    – jabs
    Aug 24, 2012 at 16:25
  • 1
    But what about filtering? This is a quick way of getting the count of unfiltered records in a table. In my experience results are nearly always filtered.
    – Mick
    Feb 6, 2018 at 0:53
  • The "Why is my SELECT COUNT(*) running so slow?" link is dead FYI. Nov 28, 2022 at 17:52
19

try this if you only want to know rows count:

exec sp_spaceused [TABLE_NAME]
9

If you have a look at the execution plans for your queries you would see what is going on.

Your first query if (select count(*) from BookChapters) = 0 is recognized by the query optimizer as the same as if exists(select * from BookChapters). SQL Server knows that the expression is true if there are at least one row present so it goes looking for the presence of one row instead of counting all the rows in the table.

For your other queries it can't be that smart and have to count the number of rows in the table before it can decide if the expression evaluates to true or false.

7

Did you consider query select count(BookChapterId) from BookChapterTable ? - where `BookChapterId is a non-clustered index. That should make it run much faster.

Depending on how table is used and rows accessed, querying against non-clustered index might be the key point: I just took some points from MDSN:

  • Before you create nonclustered indexes, understand how your data will be accessed. Consider using nonclustered indexes for:
  • Columns that contain a large number of distinct values, such as a
    combination of last name and first name (if a clustered index is used for other columns). If there are very few distinct values, such as
    only 1 and 0, most queries will not use the index because a table
    scan is usually more efficient.
  • Queries that do not return large result sets.
  • Columns frequently involved in search conditions of a query (WHERE
    clause) that return exact matches.
  • Decision-support-system applications for which joins and grouping are frequently required. Create multiple nonclustered indexes on columns involved in join and grouping operations, and a clustered index on any foreign key columns.
  • Covering all columns from one table in a given query. This eliminates accessing the table or clustered index altogether.
3
  • 1
    Hi EIYusubov, i tested, no difference, still very slow
    – danmiao
    Jun 21, 2012 at 1:45
  • 1
    please revisit your indexes, may be you have composite indexes, or you need to rebuild them.
    – Yusubov
    Jun 21, 2012 at 1:46
  • 1
    hi EIYusubov, it is a single column cluster index, not composite indexs, I have delete the primary key and recreate it, but no difference.
    – danmiao
    Jun 21, 2012 at 1:54
3

try this, if you need to detect, if the table has more rows than one:

if (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM (SELECT TOP 2 * FROM BookChapters) AS b) > 1
0

One option that help me to improve the query was to use a common table to list the id's and later make the count in the final results. Something like this.

;WITH TABLEBOOKS AS
(
  SELECT Id FROM BookChapters 
  WHERE XXX = XXX
)
SELECT COUNT(Id) FROM TABLEBOOKS 

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