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I am executing below query using ADO.NET. It takes nearly 60s to execute. At the same time when I run the query in SQL Server management studio, it takes only 1 second. Why is the huge difference and How can I improve the performance?

I tried the Stored procedure also. it is also taking nearly 60s.

SqlCommand sc = new SqlCommand(@"
BEGIN TRAN

BEGIN TRY

DELETE FROM [dbo].[Table1]
  WHERE ID = @Id ; -- nearly 600 records

DELETE FROM [dbo].[Table2]
  WHERE ID = @Id ; -- nearly 6500 records

DELETE FROM [dbo].[Table3]
  WHERE ID = @Id;  -- 1 record


COMMIT TRAN
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH

ROLLBACK TRAN
THROW
END CATCH
");
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  • then use the store procedure instead. revise the code, add a new parameter @id to the store procedure, and call the store procedure from your code with the list of ids. rather than inserting the query inside a loop to be executed on each id.
    – iSR5
    Nov 14, 2018 at 8:33
  • @iSR5 I don't see a loop; I see a PK/FK-based delete - looks fine; OP already says they've tried an SP, and hint: SPs don't change anything major (since something like 2003?) Nov 14, 2018 at 8:34
  • 2
    Is it possible that this is a bad plan cache due to parameter sniffing? can you try adding OPTION (OPTIMIZE FOR (@Id UNKNOWN)) to the three deletes? Nov 14, 2018 at 8:37
  • 1
    7000 is actually not that much to take that long.
    – SᴇM
    Nov 14, 2018 at 8:49
  • 2
    @SeM I'd be disappointed if it took 6 seconds... 7000 rows should be sub-second Nov 14, 2018 at 8:59

1 Answer 1

1

I tried this below. This is happening because of Parameter Sniffing. To overcome this issue, There are 4 methods

  • OPTION (RECOMPILE)
  • OPTION (OPTIMIZE FOR (@VARIABLE=VALUE))
  • OPTION (OPTIMIZE FOR (@VARIABLE UNKNOWN))
  • Use local variables

Below I have used the 4th method to fix this issue. referred

SqlCommand sc = new SqlCommand(@"
BEGIN TRAN

BEGIN TRY
Declare @Id int = @PId ; -- passing the parameter only here
DELETE FROM [dbo].[Table1]
WHERE ID = @Id ; -- nearly 600 records

DELETE FROM [dbo].[Table2]
WHERE ID = @Id ; -- nearly 6500 records

DELETE FROM [dbo].[Table3]
WHERE ID = @Id;  -- 1 record


COMMIT TRAN
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH

ROLLBACK TRAN
THROW
END CATCH
");

Thanks for everyone to make the better answer

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  • 1
    Note: this isn't a fix for parameter sniffing - all you've done is change the query, so now you've sniffed/cached a different initial value; the fix is - as I put in the comments - to use the UNKNOWN option Nov 14, 2018 at 9:20
  • That query doesn't change anything. The parameter is passed only once in both queries. Nov 14, 2018 at 10:23
  • @PanagiotisKanavos it works for me. the execution plan of the SQL server is different for both cases.
    – Irf92
    Nov 14, 2018 at 11:57
  • @Irf92 no, it worked for that parameter you used. Those are the very symptoms of parameter sniffing. Once you use a different parameter you'll run into the same problem. Nov 14, 2018 at 12:04

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