I am currently involved in the upgrade of a server from Microsoft SQL Server 2012 to 2016. Following the upgrade, we are finding that objects with windowing functions are behaving very poorly.
By "windowing functions," I mean statements like ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY ... ORDER BY ...)
or LAG(...) OVER (PARTITION BY ... ORDER BY ...)
.
We can fix the performance issues by replacing these functions with MIN/MAX and extra joins.
For example, something like this behaves poorly:
FROM
table1 AS t1
LEFT JOIN
(SELECT
t2.ID,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY t2.ID ORDER BY t2.ROW_ID DESC) AS RowNum
FROM
table2 AS t2
WHERE
t2.flag = -1) AS t2Rollup ON t2Rollup.RowNum = 1
AND t2Rollup.ID = t1.ID
WHERE
t1.ID LIKE '%042'
Changing it to this dramatically improves performance:
FROM
table1 AS t1
LEFT JOIN
(SELECT
t2.ID,
MAX(t2.ROW_ID) AS MaxRowID
FROM
table2 AS t2
WHERE
t2.flag = -1
GROUP BY
t2.ID) AS MaxRow ON MaxRow.ID = t1.ID
LEFT JOIN
table2 AS t2Rollup ON t2Rollup.ID = MaxRow.ID
AND t2Rollup.ROW_ID = MaxRow.MaxRowID
WHERE
t1.ID LIKE '%042'
In these examples, table1 has 1 row per ID, and table2 has multiple rows per ID but unique ROW_ID
s. I include the WHERE
to insinuate that there are many more IDs in the tables than ultimately need to be considered for the output.
Inspecting the execution plan suggests that in the first case, SQL Server is sorting many more rows than actually need to be considered for the final query. I.e., it is sorting rows where t1.ID does not end in '042'. Even if I'm wrong about that, it is definitely spending a lot of time sorting.
One final clue, I think (but am not 100% sure) that we did not have this problem immediately following the upgrade. However, we were having other problems, notably with queries involving table variables, so we tried first turning Legacy Cardinality Estimation on, then turning that off and changing the compatibility level to SQL Server 2012 (110). After changing that setting, this problem appeared across many procedures.
My question is this: is anyone aware of database-wide configuration issue or settings that could explain this problem? I do not think it's an issue with the specific procedures, as they worked fine on our SQL Server 2012 instances. I do think there's a more than decent chance of something being wrong with configuration settings on the server or databases.
I have so far simply been replacing window functions with schemes based on MIN/MAX and multiple subqueries. I have inspected database configuration settings but was not able to come up with ideas.