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I have built a document management system for my company. A desktop application connects to an ASP.Net Web API, hosted as an Azure Web App, which connects to an Azure SQL database.

As my database has become more populated, it is starting to slow down significantly so I need help with doing so query optimizations. Here is the Linq query that is currently causes me problems. Basically this query captures all the projects from the database and then populates a list in my desktop application

    var projects = (from p in db.Projects.Include(c => c.ProjectType)

                            select new
                            {
                                ID = p.ID,
                                HasSubProjects = (db.Projects.Where(u => u.ParentProjectID == p.ID).Count() > 0) ? 1 : 0,
                                ParentProjectID = p.ParentProjectID,
                                Name = p.Name,
                                Description = p.Description,
                                DateLastEdited = p.DateLastEdited,
                                DateCreated = p.DateCreated,
                                ProjectTypeID = p.ProjectTypeID,
                                LastEditedByGoesby = p.LastEditedByGoesby,
                                ProjectComponentSecurityType = p.ProjectComponentSecurityType,
                                ClonedFrom = p.ClonedFrom,
                                DateAnyVersionLastEditedByUser = p.DateAnyVersionLastEditedByUser,
                                DateAnyVersionLastEdited = p.UserProjectActivityLookups
                                    .OrderByDescending(u => u.LastActivityDate)
                                    .Select(v => v.LastActivityDate)
                                    .FirstOrDefault(),
                                // p.DateAnyVersionLastEdited,,
                                ProjectType = p.ProjectType

                            }).ToList()
                .Select(x2 => new Project
                {
                    ID = x2.ID,
                    HasSubProjects = x2.HasSubProjects,
                    ParentProjectID = x2.ParentProjectID,
                    Name = x2.Name,
                    Description = x2.Description,
                    DateLastEdited = x2.DateLastEdited,
                    DateCreated = x2.DateCreated,
                    ProjectTypeID = x2.ProjectTypeID,
                    LastEditedByGoesby = x2.LastEditedByGoesby,
                    ProjectComponentSecurityType = x2.ProjectComponentSecurityType,
                    ClonedFrom = x2.ClonedFrom,
                    DateAnyVersionLastEditedByUser = x2.DateAnyVersionLastEditedByUser,
                    DateAnyVersionLastEdited = x2.DateAnyVersionLastEdited,
                    ProjectType = x2.ProjectType
                });
            ;

Any ideas on how to optimize this, avoid problems related to this query, create indexes better or using standard procedures etc would be helpful. I'm looking for direction on this specific query but also any guidance on how I can improve my performance on other queries and how to go about doing that.

Thanks.

10
  • 3
    Well, the usual idea would be to ask the database for a query plan. Missing indexes can be spotted fairly easy from there.
    – Joey
    Sep 22, 2015 at 15:33
  • what Azure SQL database service tier / performance level are you on? Is it Basic by any chance?
    – ajg
    Sep 22, 2015 at 15:35
  • How many entries does your database contain? At some point in time (or rather DB fill level) your application just won't be able to load all into memory, regardless of indexes. Then you'll need to change strategy at application level, e.g. by paging or on-demand loading of lists and UI elements.
    – Christoph
    Sep 22, 2015 at 15:48
  • @ajg - "Is it Basic by any chance?" - and Standard isn't much better. :(
    – Rick
    Sep 22, 2015 at 15:49
  • how many entries are being retrieved by this query? 100? 10000? Sep 22, 2015 at 15:52

2 Answers 2

1

Azure SQL database has several built in tools that provide query optimization help.

  • Query Store acts as "flight data recorder" for queries to get the data on query plans, execution times and to find most expensive queries. You can look at the execution statistics for your query above to see if there are any obvious problems.
  • Index advisor analyzes the historical resource usage and provides index advice and monitors the index usage
  • Various dynamic management views (DMVs) like dm_exec_query_stats provide query execution statistics information
  • MSDN article on azure sql database performance guidance provides a high level performance guidance information

Azure SQL database shares common codebase with SQL Server. So, most of the query optimization techniques used for SQL Server will also apply here. Bing/Google search on SQL Server query optimization will provide lots of pointers.

Srini Acharya

1

I think the best way for going about is to find out what sql query this code is generating. Then try to see what is the issue with that sql query and accordingly change your linq query.

Some things that you should look for:

  1. ParentProjectID, check for the indexes and try to join instead of subquery.
  2. Similarly check for DateAnyVersionLastEdited, since the query is going against the all user data. This could slow you down if this has a lot of data and bad indexes.
  3. Last thing I would recommend to have a where clause depending upon the data you are retrieving.

So, if you are ultimately retrieving records in thousands, then try to restrict the count either by paging or by some other business condition.

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  • I think the problem may be in your #2 above as there are a lot of "Versions". I will check this and report back. Thanks.
    – apierceSO
    Sep 22, 2015 at 15:58

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