The job of the SQL Server Query Optimizer is to take the query tree that was output from the algebrizer and find a “good” way to retrieve the data (results) needed. Note the use of “good” here, rather than “best,” as for any nontrivial query, there may be hundreds, or even thousands, of different ways to achieve the same results, so finding the absolutely best one can be an extremely time-consuming process.Therefore, in order to provide results in a timely manner, the Query Optimizer looks for a “good enough” plan, and uses that. This approach means that you may very well be able to do better when you manually inspect the query plan; and in the section “Influencing Optimization” you will look at different ways you can affect the decisions that SQL Server makes during optimization.
The query optimization process is based on a principle of cost, which is an abstract measure of work that is used to evaluate different query plan options. The exact nature of these costs is a closely guarded secret, with some people suggesting that they are a reflection of the time, in seconds, that the query is expected to take. They also take into account I/O and CPU resources. However, users should consider cost to be a dimensionless value that doesn’t have any units — its value is derived from comparisons to the cost of other plans in order to find the cheapest one. Therefore, there are no true units for cost values.Although the exact details of what SQL Server does within the optimization phase are secret, it’s possible to get a glimpse at some of what goes on. You don’t need to know every small detail, and in fact such a deep understanding isn’t useful anyway. For one thing, there is nothing you can do to alter this process; moreover, with each new service pack or hotfix, the SQL Server team tunes the internal algorithms, thereby changing the exact behavior. If you were to know too much about what was occurring, you could build in dependencies that would break with every new version of SQL Server.
Rather than know all the details, you need only understand the bigger picture. Even this bigger picture is often too much information, as it doesn’t offer any real visibility into what the Query Optimizer is doing. All you can see of this secretive process is what is exposed in the Dynamic Management View (DMV) sys.dm_exec_query_optimizer_info. This can be interesting, but it’s not a great deal of help in understanding why a given T-SQL statement is assigned a particular plan, or how you can “fix” what you think may be a non-optimal plan.The current model provided by the SQL Server team works something like this:
- Is a valid plan cached? If yes, then use the cached plan. If no plan exists, then continue.
- Is this a trivial plan? If yes, then use the trivial plan. If no, then continue.
- Apply simplification. Simplification is a process of normalizing the query tree and applying some basic transformations to additionally “simplify” the tree.
- Is the plan cheap enough? If yes, then use this. If no, then start optimization.
- Start cost-based optimization.
- Phase 0 — Explore basic rules, and hash and nested join options.
- Does the plan have a cost of less than 0.2? If yes, then use this. If no, then continue.
- Phase 1 — Explore more rules, and alternate join ordering. If the best (cheapest) plan costs less than 1.0, then use this plan. If not, then if MAXDOP > 0 and this is an SMP system, and the min cost > cost threshold for parallelism, then use a parallel plan. Compare the cost of the parallel plan with the best serial plan, and pass the cheaper of the two to phase 2.
- Phase 2 — Explore all options, and opt for the cheapest plan after a limited number of explorations.
The output of the preceding steps is an executable plan that can be placed in the cache. This plan is then scheduled for execution.
You can view the inner workings of the optimization process via the DMV sys.dm_exec_query_optimizer_info. This DMV contains a set of optimization attributes, each with an occurrence and a value. Refer to SQL Books Online (BOL) for full details. Here are a few that relate to some of the steps just described:
select * from sys.dm_exec_query_optimizer_info where counter in ( 'optimizations' , 'trivial plan' , 'search 0' , 'search 1' , 'search 2' ) order by [counter]
The preceding will return the same number of rows as follows, but the counters and values will be different. Note that the value for optimizations matches the sum of the trivial plan, search 0, search 1, and search 2 counters (2328 + 8559 + 3 + 17484 = 28374):
Counter occurrencevalue Optimizations 28374 1 search 0 2328 1 search 1 8559 1 search 2 3 1 trivial plan 17484 1
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