176

I have a large data table. There are 10 million records in this table.

What is the best way for this query

   Delete LargeTable where readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())
5
  • 4
    :) I am afraid unless you are willing to write some sort of ETL to get all the rows readTime >= dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE()) into another table and then issue a Truncate table and put the data back using ETL, you would not be able to prevent it from writing to the log
    – TMNT2014
    Jun 13, 2014 at 20:27
  • Logging is an all or nothing function of having a resilient transactions. It literally doesn't make sense to not have a log for some operation but not others, otherwise the log is useless. Jun 13, 2014 at 20:40
  • 2
    Export the data you want to keep, truncate the table, then import back in
    – Bohemian
    Jun 13, 2014 at 20:40
  • Another option would be using a tablevariable which are not logged. Hence store your readTime >= dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE()) data in a table variable and then truncate the original table and copy back the data from the table variable. I would however keep a back up of the data in case something went wrong and the table gets inadvertently truncated.:) And always do a test run of your script on a lesser environment.
    – TMNT2014
    Jun 13, 2014 at 20:40

14 Answers 14

269
  1. If you are Deleting All the rows in that table the simplest option is to Truncate table, something like

     TRUNCATE TABLE LargeTable
     GO
    

Truncate table will simply empty the table, you cannot use WHERE clause to limit the rows being deleted and no triggers will be fired.

  1. On the other hand if you are deleting more than 80-90 Percent of the data, say if you have total of 11 million rows and you want to delete 10 million another way would be to Insert these 1 million rows (records you want to keep) to another staging table. Truncate this large table and Insert back these 1 million rows.

  2. Or if permissions/views or other objects which has this large table as their underlying table doesn't get affected by dropping this table, you can get these relatively small amounts of the rows into another table, drop this table and create another table with same schema, and import these rows back into this ex-Large table.

  3. One last option I can think of is to change your database's Recovery Mode to SIMPLE and then delete rows in smaller batches using a while loop something like this:

     DECLARE @Deleted_Rows INT;
     SET @Deleted_Rows = 1;
    
    
     WHILE (@Deleted_Rows > 0)
       BEGIN
        -- Delete some small number of rows at a time
          DELETE TOP (10000)  LargeTable 
          WHERE readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())
    
       SET @Deleted_Rows = @@ROWCOUNT;
     END
    

and don't forget to change the Recovery mode back to full and I think you have to take a backup to make it fully effective (the change or recovery modes).

8
  • 21
    Also rememeber that if you truncate a table, you cannot have any FKs assocaited with it.
    – HLGEM
    Feb 4, 2015 at 15:26
  • 1
    But how to be sure that you are deleting 80-90% of data? Let's assume i have only range of values that should be deleted. And i have a few tables. So i have to check every of them and calculate percentage, and if it around 30% i guess this method is not very effective... I'm trying to find optimal solution for unknown case.
    – Archont
    Nov 25, 2016 at 12:41
  • 9
    @Archont optimal solution for unknown case that’s the dream isn't it? Unfortunately you cannot cure every disease with any one pill; I have suggested some possible solutions for different scenarios. There is no sliver bullet here unfortunately.
    – M.Ali
    Nov 25, 2016 at 15:54
  • 10
    One thing to note if choosing option 4: Depending on the how the table is used, it may be a better option to delete less than 5000 rows at a time to avoid lock escalation.
    – Daniel
    Dec 9, 2016 at 14:01
  • If the count of records to delete is much much bigger then records that will remain in the table, i found that simple select into temp table of the records that will stay in and drop original table and rename of the temp table is much faster. Given that you don't use identity Id foreign key somewhere. Feb 13, 2017 at 7:20
148

@m-ali answer is right but also keep in mind that logs could grow a lot if you don't commit the transaction after each chunk and perform a checkpoint. This is how I would do it and take this article http://sqlperformance.com/2013/03/io-subsystem/chunk-deletes as reference, with performance tests and graphs:

DECLARE @Deleted_Rows INT;
SET @Deleted_Rows = 1;


WHILE (@Deleted_Rows > 0)
  BEGIN

   BEGIN TRANSACTION

   -- Delete some small number of rows at a time
     DELETE TOP (10000)  LargeTable 
     WHERE readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())

     SET @Deleted_Rows = @@ROWCOUNT;

   COMMIT TRANSACTION
   CHECKPOINT -- for simple recovery model
END
5
  • 3
    This should be the accepted answer in case that available disk space is limited. Without COMMIT TRANSACTION and CHECKPOINT the logs are still growing. Thanks for making this clear.
    – gkoul
    Mar 13, 2020 at 22:41
  • 1
    +1. Just note that you might want to compare @Deleted_Rows to 10000 or you might end up with an infinitely loop due to it indefinitely deleting small sets of data. So WHILE (@Deleted_Rows = 10000) - as soon as there wasn't a full "page" of data to delete it will stop. In your implementation, WHILE (@Deleted_Rows > 0), the while-loop will execute again even if it only deleted one row, and the next execution might also find a row or two to delete - resulting in an infinite loop.
    – dutoitns
    Jun 26, 2020 at 7:48
  • @NSduToit the WHERE clause is considering records that are at least 7 months old so there won't be new records that fulfil that condition while you are performing the deletion. Jun 26, 2020 at 12:30
  • 2
    @FranciscoGoldenstein Well, the date used in the query will be different with each iteration as you repeatedly calculate the date within the WHILE loop itself: dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE()).
    – dutoitns
    Jun 26, 2020 at 13:52
  • 1
    @FranciscoGoldenstein Also, maybe for other use cases than this one - maybe new data gets added to the underlying table that will result in new records that can be deleted between different iterations of the WHILE loop.
    – dutoitns
    Jun 26, 2020 at 13:54
71

You can also use GO + how many times you want to execute the same query.

DELETE TOP (10000)  [TARGETDATABASE].[SCHEMA].[TARGETTABLE] 
WHERE readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-1,GETDATE());
-- how many times you want the query to repeat
GO 100
6
  • I like this, it is working for me I accidentally inserted the same row into a table 26 Million times and needed to delete all occurrences of it, which in one single delete statement ran out of memory on the server, so this is great one question, will it stop mid loop if it runs out of rows to delete?
    – ScottC
    Mar 20, 2017 at 20:42
  • 2
    @ScottC, it is not a loop, it just repeats the query (batch like) and if you run out of rows it can not delete anything. But it will not stop. you wil get something like (0 row(s) affected) if it runs out of rows you delete. Mar 22, 2017 at 8:02
  • ah, yes I discovered that about 5 mins after I posted my question, since my delete finished, thanks this was very helpful!
    – ScottC
    Mar 24, 2017 at 13:18
  • 1
    From what MS SQL Server is this syntax GO xx supposed to work? I get a "Could not find stored procedure '' " error. Without the GO command it works fine though.
    – Abel
    Jun 25, 2018 at 22:53
  • 4
    Hmm, it seems like I can execute it, and it runs indeed multiple times, but in MS SQL Mgt Studio it shows the red curly line with the mentioned error (but F5-run works then)
    – Abel
    Jun 25, 2018 at 23:15
15

@Francisco Goldenstein, just a minor correction. The COMMIT must be used after you set the variable, otherwise the WHILE will be executed just once:

DECLARE @Deleted_Rows INT;
SET @Deleted_Rows = 1;

WHILE (@Deleted_Rows > 0)
BEGIN
    BEGIN TRANSACTION

    -- Delete some small number of rows at a time
    DELETE TOP (10000)  LargeTable 
    WHERE readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())

    SET @Deleted_Rows = @@ROWCOUNT;

    COMMIT TRANSACTION
    CHECKPOINT -- for simple recovery model

END
0
12

This variation of M.Ali's is working fine for me. It deletes some, clears the log and repeats. I'm watching the log grow, drop and start over.

DECLARE @Deleted_Rows INT;
SET @Deleted_Rows = 1;
WHILE (@Deleted_Rows > 0)
  BEGIN
   -- Delete some small number of rows at a time
    delete top (100000) from InstallLog where DateTime between '2014-12-01' and '2015-02-01'
    SET @Deleted_Rows = @@ROWCOUNT;
    dbcc shrinkfile (MobiControlDB_log,0,truncateonly);
END
1
  • This was very useful! I modified it to parameterize the # of rows to delete at a time, and also the WHERE clause. Works like a charm!
    – Shiva
    Apr 25, 2018 at 19:04
10

If you are willing (and able) to implement partitioning, that is an effective technique for removing large quantities of data with little run-time overhead. Not cost-effective for a once-off exercise, though.

4

I was able to delete 19 million rows from my table of 21 million rows in matter of minutes. Here is my approach.

If you have a auto-incrementing primary key on this table, then you can make use of this primary key.

  1. Get minimum value of primary key of the large table where readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE()). (Add index on readTime, if not already present, this index will anyway be deleted along with the table in step 3.). Lets store it in a variable 'min_primary'

  2. Insert all the rows having primary key > min_primary into a staging table (memory table if no. of rows is not large).

  3. Drop the large table.

  4. Recreate the table. Copy all the rows from staging table to main table.

  5. Drop the staging table.

1
  • 2
    There is no need to drop the large table. Doing a truncate is also OK and fast Nov 8, 2021 at 13:25
4

Shorter syntax

select 1
WHILE (@@ROWCOUNT > 0)
BEGIN
  DELETE TOP (10000) LargeTable 
  WHERE readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())
END
3

You can delete small batches using a while loop, something like this:

DELETE TOP (10000)  LargeTable 
WHERE readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())
WHILE @@ROWCOUNT > 0
BEGIN
    DELETE TOP (10000)  LargeTable 
    WHERE readTime < dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())
END
3

If you are using SQL server 2016 or higher and if your table is having partitions created based on column you are trying to delete(for example Timestamp column), then you could use this new command to delete data by partitions.

TRUNCATE TABLE WITH ( PARTITIONS ( { | } [ , ...n ] ) )

This will delete the data in selected partition(s) only and should be the most efficient way to delete data from part of table since it will not create transaction logs and will be done just as fast as regular truncate but without having all the data deleted from the table.

Drawback is if your table is not setup with partition, then you need to go old school and delete the data with regular approach and then recreate the table with partitions so that you can do this in future, which is what I did. I added the partition creation and deletion into insertion procedure itself. I had table with 500 million rows so this was the only option to reduce deletion time.

For more details refer to below links: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/statements/truncate-table-transact-sql?view=sql-server-2017

SQL server 2016 Truncate table with partitions

Below is what I did first to delete the data before I could recreate the table with partitions with required data in it. This query will run for days during specified time window until the data is deleted.

:connect <<ServerName>>
use <<DatabaseName>>

SET NOCOUNT ON;
DECLARE @Deleted_Rows INT;
DECLARE @loopnum INT;
DECLARE @msg varchar(100);
DECLARE @FlagDate datetime;
SET @FlagDate =  getdate() - 31;
SET @Deleted_Rows = 1;
SET @loopnum = 1;

/*while (getdate() < convert(datetime,'2018-11-08 14:00:00.000',120))
BEGIN
    RAISERROR( 'WAIT for START' ,0,1) WITH NOWAIT   
    WAITFOR DELAY '00:10:00'
END*/
RAISERROR( 'STARTING PURGE' ,0,1) WITH NOWAIT   

WHILE (1=1)
BEGIN
    WHILE (@Deleted_Rows > 0 AND (datepart(hh, getdate() ) >= 12 AND datepart(hh, getdate() ) <= 20)) -- (getdate() < convert(datetime,'2018-11-08 19:00:00.000',120) )
      BEGIN
       -- Delete some small number of rows at a time
         DELETE TOP (500000)  dbo.<<table_name>>
         WHERE timestamp_column < convert(datetime, @FlagDate,102)
         SET @Deleted_Rows = @@ROWCOUNT;
         WAITFOR DELAY '00:00:01'
         select @msg = 'ROWCOUNT' + convert(varchar,@Deleted_Rows);
         set @loopnum = @loopnum + 1
         if @loopnum > 1000
             begin 
                 begin try
                        DBCC SHRINKFILE (N'<<databasename>>_log' , 0, TRUNCATEONLY)
                        RAISERROR( @msg ,0,1) WITH NOWAIT
                 end try
                 begin catch
                     RAISERROR( 'DBCC SHRINK' ,0,1) WITH NOWAIT  
                 end catch
                 set @loopnum = 1
             end
        END
WAITFOR DELAY '00:10:00'
END 
select getdate()
1
  • Still doesn’t work with FKs, so that’s an annoying limitation .. Dec 16, 2020 at 5:09
2

Another use:

SET ROWCOUNT 1000 -- Buffer

DECLARE @DATE AS DATETIME = dateadd(MONTH,-7,GETDATE())

DELETE LargeTable  WHERE readTime < @DATE
WHILE @@ROWCOUNT > 0
BEGIN
   DELETE LargeTable  WHERE readTime < @DATE
END
SET ROWCOUNT 0

Optional;

If transaction log is enabled, disable transaction logs.

ALTER DATABASE dbname SET RECOVERY SIMPLE;
2

If i say without loop, i can use GOTO statement for delete large amount of records using sql server. exa.

 IsRepeat:
    DELETE TOP (10000)
    FROM <TableName>
    IF @@ROWCOUNT > 0
         GOTO IsRepeat

like this way you can delete large amount of data with smaller size of delete.

let me know if requires more information.

2

This question is a little old, but I just stumbled onto it looking for assistance. The fastest way to delete a whole bunch of rows, while keeping some, is to create a script that

  1. Creates a temp table (I used a table variable)

  2. Select the rows to keep into the temp table

  3. Truncate the target table

  4. Insert the kept rows back into the target table.

    Begin Tran

I always test first by selecting the rows in the @tmpSaveTable and rolling back the transaction. I just did 17 million rows in a couple of seconds.

Begin tran
DECLARE @tmpSaveTable   table (
...your columns, types, etc. go here )
INSERT @tmpSaveTable (columns here)
SELECT (appropriate columns from target here)
WHERE (which rows to save)
-- appropriate place to test w/ select from @tmpSaveTable
TRUNCATE SourceTable
INSERT SourceTable (columns) 
SELECT (all values from @tmpSaveTable)
--Rollback Tran testing 
Commit Tran
0

If you want to delete the records of a table with a large number of records but keep some of the records, You can save the required records in a similar table and truncate the main table and then return the saved records to the main table.

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