I am using SQL Server 2008 and it is refusing to perform a seek on my index which covers a computed column.
My table looks like this:
CREATE TABLE Person
{
Id uniqueidentifier NOT NULL,
InsertDate datetime NOT NULL,
PhoneNumber NULL,
PhoneNumberComparable AS (MakePhoneNumberComparable(PhoneNumber)) PERSISTED,
... etc...
}
There is a clustered primary key index on the ID column, and also an index on the InsertDate column.
There is an index on the PhoneNumberComparable computed column like this:
CREATE NONCLUSTERED INDEX IX_Person_PhoneNumberComparable ON Person
(
PhoneNumberComparable ASC
)
The indexes all have up to date statistics.
My query looks like this:
SELECT TOP 20 * FROM Person
WHERE PhoneNumberComparable = @PhoneNumber
ORDER BY InsertDate DESC
By default, SQL Server decides to use the index on InsertDate instead of the index on PhoneNumberComparable, causing very poor performance.
If I try to force the phone number index to be used, by adding WITH (INDEX=IX_Person_PhoneNumberComparable) to the query, SQL trys to perform a scan, rather than a seek.
If I try to use the FORCESEEK query hint, then SQL Server gives me the following error:
Query processor could not produce a query plan because of the hints defined in this query. Resubmit the query without specifying any hints and without using SET FORCEPLAN.
So basically, for some reason SQL Server is refusing to seek my index! Why?
EDIT
As per suggestions in the comments, I've simplified the query, but the problem still exists (a scan on the primary key is performed instead of a seek on the phone number index):
SELECT TOP 20 PhoneNumberComparable FROM Person
WHERE PhoneNumberComparable = @PhoneNumber
ORDER BY InsertDate DESC
from your query?IX_Person_PhoneNumberComparable
is not selective enough. Also, since you are doing aselect *
the optimizer is forced to go to the clustered index anyways