show/hide this revision's text 3 Added clarification that TVF's are inline

I have a query that looks like

SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
 (
   SELECT
       A.ColumnX,
       A.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      dbo.TableReturningFunc1(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS A
   WHERE
      A.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 ),
 (
   SELECT
       B.ColumnX,
       B.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      dbo.TableReturningFunc2(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS B
   WHERE
      B.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 )
FROM
(
   <joined tables here>
) AS P
FOR XML AUTO,ROOT('ROOT')

P has ~ 5000 rows A and B ~ 4000 rows each

This query has a runtime performance of ~10+ minutes.

Changing it to this however:

SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
INTO #P

SELECT
 A.ColumnX,
 A.ColumnY,
 ...
INTO #A     
FROM
 dbo.TableReturningFunc1(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS A

SELECT
 B.ColumnX,
 B.ColumnY,
 ...
INTO #B     
FROM
 dbo.TableReturningFunc2(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS B


SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
 (
   SELECT
       A.ColumnX,
       A.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      #A AS A
   WHERE
      A.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 ),
 (
   SELECT
       B.ColumnX,
       B.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      #B AS B
   WHERE
      B.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 )
FROM #P AS P
FOR XML AUTO,ROOT('ROOT')

Has a performance of ~4 seconds.

This makes not a lot of sense, as it would seem the cost to insert into a temp table and then do the join should be higher by default. My inclination is that SQL is doing the wrong type of "join" with the subquery, but maybe I've missed it, there's no way to specify the join type to use with correlated subqueries.

Is there a way to achieve this without using #temp tables/@table variables via indexes and/or hints?

EDIT: Note that dbo.TableReturningFunc1 and dbo.TableReturningFunc2 are inline TVF's, not multi-statement, or they are "parameterized" view statements.

show/hide this revision's text 2 Adding follow up question that asks for more then just why

I have a query that looks like

SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
 (
   SELECT
       A.ColumnX,
       A.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      dbo.TableReturningFunc1(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS A
   WHERE
      A.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 ),
 (
   SELECT
       B.ColumnX,
       B.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      dbo.TableReturningFunc2(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS B
   WHERE
      B.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 )
FROM
(
   <joined tables here>
) AS P
FOR XML AUTO,ROOT('ROOT')

P has ~ 5000 rows A and B ~ 4000 rows each

This query has a runtime performance of ~10+ minutes.

Changing it to this however:

SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
INTO #P

SELECT
 A.ColumnX,
 A.ColumnY,
 ...
INTO #A     
FROM
 dbo.TableReturningFunc1(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS A

SELECT
 B.ColumnX,
 B.ColumnY,
 ...
INTO #B     
FROM
 dbo.TableReturningFunc2(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS B


SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
 (
   SELECT
       A.ColumnX,
       A.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      #A AS A
   WHERE
      A.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 ),
 (
   SELECT
       B.ColumnX,
       B.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      #B AS B
   WHERE
      B.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 )
FROM #P AS P
FOR XML AUTO,ROOT('ROOT')

Has a performance of ~4 seconds.

This makes not a lot of sense, as it would seem the cost to insert into a temp table and then do the join should be higher by default. My inclination is that SQL is doing the wrong type of "join" with the subquery, but maybe I've missed it, there's no way to specify the join type to use with correlated subqueries.

Is there a way to achieve this without using #temp tables/@table variables via indexes and/or hints?

show/hide this revision's text 1

Why is inserting into and joining #temp tables faster??

I have a query that looks like

SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
 (
   SELECT
       A.ColumnX,
       A.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      dbo.TableReturningFunc1(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS A
   WHERE
      A.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 ),
 (
   SELECT
       B.ColumnX,
       B.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      dbo.TableReturningFunc2(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS B
   WHERE
      B.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 )
FROM
(
   <joined tables here>
) AS P
FOR XML AUTO,ROOT('ROOT')

P has ~ 5000 rows A and B ~ 4000 rows each

This query has a runtime performance of ~10+ minutes.

Changing it to this however:

SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
INTO #P

SELECT
 A.ColumnX,
 A.ColumnY,
 ...
INTO #A     
FROM
 dbo.TableReturningFunc1(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS A

SELECT
 B.ColumnX,
 B.ColumnY,
 ...
INTO #B     
FROM
 dbo.TableReturningFunc2(@StaticParam1, @StaticParam2) AS B


SELECT
 P.Column1,
 P.Column2,
 P.Column3,
 ...
 (
   SELECT
       A.ColumnX,
       A.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      #A AS A
   WHERE
      A.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 ),
 (
   SELECT
       B.ColumnX,
       B.ColumnY,
       ...
   FROM
      #B AS B
   WHERE
      B.Key = P.Key
   FOR XML AUTO, TYPE  
 )
FROM #P AS P
FOR XML AUTO,ROOT('ROOT')

Has a performance of ~4 seconds.

This makes not a lot of sense, as it would seem the cost to insert into a temp table and then do the join should be higher by default. My inclination is that SQL is doing the wrong type of "join" with the subquery, but maybe I've missed it, there's no way to specify the join type to use with correlated subqueries.