I am switching some of my Linq to Sql code to use SqlBulkCopy, and problem is I need to do two inserts of multiple thousands of rows into two tables.
The service takes your batch of 10,000 links (imported from sitemap, backlink builders, etc), and chops them into RSS feeds of X per feed for aggregation. Problem is, I already have a table of 32 million rows. If i am doing linq to sql inserts, it takes depending on site traffic anywhere between 5 and 10 mintues to load 10,000 links.
The structure is very basic.
Feeds: Id bigint (PK), Title varchar(1000), Description varchar(1000), Published datetime, Aggregated datetime null, ShortCode varchar(8) [antiquated, not inserted anymore, but used for legacy data]
Items: Id bigint (PK), FeedId bigint (FK), Title varchar(1000), Description varchar(1000), Published datetime, ShortCode varchar(8) [antiquated, not inserted anymore, but used for legacy data], ShortId bigint null [updated after insert to equal Id (used in partitioning)]
FutureItems: Id bigint (PK), FeedId bigint (FK), Title varchar(1000), Description varchar(1000), Published datetime, ShortCode varchar(8) [antiquated, not inserted anymore, but used for legacy data], ShortId bigint null [updated after insert to equal Id (used in partitioning)]
OldItems: Id bigint (PK), FeedId bigint (FK), Title varchar(1000), Description varchar(1000), Published datetime, ShortCode varchar(8) [antiquated, not inserted anymore, but used for legacy data], ShortId bigint null [updated after insert to equal Id (used in partitioning)]
So if you have a feed size of 20, you get 500 inserts into the Feeds table, then 10000 inserted into the Items table, then and update runs to set the ShortId equal to the Id. Once a night, a job runs that separates the data into the other two tables, and shift future items into the Items table.
I read that SqlBulkCopy can do 20 million rows in the matter of mintues, but I can't find any good examples of doing it into multiple tables with a FK Constraint.
Our SQL server is a "monster" especially for this application. It is SQL 2008 R2 Web, Windows 2008 R2 Enterprise, 12GB Ram, Dual 4 core Xeons @ 2.8ghz.
Our web server is a clone without the database service.
The CPU runs about 85% when inserting links, and the database fills the RAM.
If SqlBulkCopy isn't good, any suggestion is welcome, we have paying customers who are getting mad, and I am not a DBA, just a plain-old-programmer.