We currently have a scenario where one table effectively has several (10 to 15) boolean flags (not nullable bit fields). Unfortunately, it is not really possible to simplify this too much on a logical level, because any combination of the boolean values is permissible.
The table in question is a transactional table which may end up having tens of millions of rows, and both insert and select performance is fairly critical. Although we are not quite sure of the distribution of the data at this time, the combination of all flags should provide relative good cardinality, i.e. make it a "worthwhile" index for SQL Server to make use of.
Typical select query scenarios might be to select records based on 3 or 4 of the flags only, e.g. WHERE FLAG3=1 AND FLAG7=0 AND FLAG9=1. It would not be practical to create separate indexes for all combinations of the flags used by these select queries, as there will be many of them.
Given this situation, what would be the recommended approach to effectively index these fields? The table is new, so there is no existing data to worry about yet, and we have a fair amount of flexibility in the actual implementation of the table.
There are two main options that we are considering at the moment:
- Create a single index which includes all the bit fields (this would probably include 1 or 2 other
intfields which would always used). My concern is that given the typical usage of only including a few of the fields, this approach would skip the index and resort to a table scan. Let's call this Option A (Having read some of the replies, it seems that this approach would not work well, since the order of the fields in the index would make a difference making it impossible to index effectively on ALL the fields). - Effectively do what I believe SQL Server is doing internally, and encode the bit fields into a single int field using binary operators (AND-ing and OR-ing numbers together: 1, 2, 4, 8, etc). My concern here is that we'd need to do some kind of calculation to query on this encoded field, which would skip the index again. Maintenance and the complexity of this solution is also a concern. Let's call this Option B. Additional info: The argument for this approach is that we could have a relatively simple and short index which includes one or two other fields from the table and this field. The other fields would narrow down the number of records needing to be evaluated, and since the encoded field would contain all of our bit fields, SQL Server would be able to perform the calculation using the data retrieved from the index directly (i.e. an index scan) as opposed to the table (i.e. a table scan).
At the moment, we are heavily leaning towards Option B. For completeness, this would be running on SQL Server 2008.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Edit: Spelling, clarity, query example, additional info on Option B.
