vote up 1 vote down star
1

If your ID column on a table is a unique identifier (Guid), is there any point creating a clustered primary key on the ID column?

Given that they are globally unique, how would the sorting work?

flag

4 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

GUIDs as they are are terrible for performance since they are effectively random values (this "breaks" clustered index), and they are awful for indexes, since less entries fit on a single page/extent (SQL Server terms). SQL Server 2005 introduces newsequentialid() which helps solving first problem.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

The idea of having a sorted index is very good in itself as searching then becomes very efficient.

The problem however is that in case of a GUID one never searches with "WHERE GUID = xyz". So the whole concept is wasted. So I would suggest to rather have a clustered index on a column which is used most often as a SARG to increase the query efficiency.

link|flag
2  
I think "WHERE GUID = xyz" is used a lot, in selecting single records. But ab "ORDER BY guid" would be very rare. – Henk Holterman Apr 3 at 14:16
vote up 2 vote down

Putting a clustered index on a guid column is not such a good idea (unless you're making use of sequential guids).

The clustered index determines the physical order of how the records are stored.
This means that, if you put a clustered index on a column that does not sequentially grow, SQL Server will have some work making sure that the records are correctly ordered physically when you insert new records.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

I strongly advise against using clustered Guid key... We had big performance issues on SQL server because of such poor design a few years ago.

Also check out: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/583001/improving-performance-of-cluster-index-guid-primary-key

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.