Why is this query slow the first time after I start the service?

南笙酒味 提交于 2019-12-01 13:51:06

问题


Ok. Here's what I try to run:

USE tempdb;

SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO Numbers
FROM sys.objects s1
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s2
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s3
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s4;

This is one of those "make me a numbers table" queries.

Here's the problem. If I run this immediately after the SQL Server service is (re)started, it takes forever. Not forever as in ten seconds and I want it faster.  Forever as in, I let it go over two hours once by accident and still had to kill it. I'm thinking it just never ever comes back. And ordinarily it takes under two seconds on my machine to run this.

However, if I do this instead:

USE tempdb;

SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO Numbers
FROM sys.objects s1
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s2
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s3;

DROP TABLE Numbers;

SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO Numbers
FROM sys.objects s1
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s2
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s3
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s4;

Then it works as you would expect — the first SELECT runs in under two seconds, as does the second. Why don't I just use the three-table version? Because there aren't enough entries in sys.objects for that number cubed to equal a million result rows. But that's not even the point anymore.

Anyway, from here on, I can repeat that second DROP / SELECT…INTO as much as I want, no problem. Somehow that first three-table version made it ok forever. At least, till the next time the service is restarted and/or the machine rebooted. At which point, running that last SELECT again never comes back. Again.

Here's where it starts getting even weirder. If I pare that first SELECT back to a two-table version:

USE tempdb;

SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO Numbers
FROM sys.objects s1
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s2;

DROP TABLE Numbers;

SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO Numbers
FROM sys.objects s1
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s2
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s3
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s4;

This also makes the second SELECT run forever. As does a one-table version.  Somehow, that three-table version is magical!

What is going on here?  Why is this slow?

(And before anyone points out that I'm creating a permanent table in tempdb, yes, I know. Changing to actual temp tables doesn't make any difference.)


Added info:

  • This is SQL Server 2012 Developer Edition
  • Output of EXEC sp_WhoIsActive @find_block_leaders = 1, @sort_order = '[blocked_session_count] DESC' (scripted as XML so it can be read here) is:
<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<RESULTS1>
    <RECORD>
        <dd hh:mm:ss.mss>00 00:10:45.066</dd hh:mm:ss.mss>
        <session_id>52</session_id>
        <sql_text>&lt;?query --
SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO Numbers
FROM sys.objects s1
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s2
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s3
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s4;

--?&gt;</sql_text>
        <login_name>my own login name redacted</login_name>
        <wait_info>(99ms)LCK_M_X</wait_info>
        <CPU>              9,750</CPU>
        <tempdb_allocations>                713</tempdb_allocations>
        <tempdb_current>                702</tempdb_current>
        <blocking_session_id>NULL</blocking_session_id>
        <blocked_session_count>                  0</blocked_session_count>
        <reads>            583,273</reads>
        <writes>                537</writes>
        <physical_reads>                 50</physical_reads>
        <used_memory>                  3</used_memory>
        <status>suspended</status>
        <open_tran_count>                  2</open_tran_count>
        <percent_complete>NULL</percent_complete>
        <host_name>my own machine name redacted</host_name>
        <database_name>tempdb</database_name>
        <program_name>Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio - Query</program_name>
        <start_time>2013-11-23 23:48:19.473</start_time>
        <login_time>2013-11-23 23:47:47.060</login_time>
        <request_id>0</request_id>
        <collection_time>2013-11-23 23:59:04.560</collection_time>
    </RECORD>
</RESULTS1>

More added info:

Why I'm putting this in tempdb is that it's part of a script intended to be run on virgin installations, and tempdb is guaranteed to be there. As I said, changing to global temp tables does no different.


回答1:


I can could also reproduce this 100% of the time on my machine. (see note at end)

The gist of the problem is that you are taking out S locks on system table rows in tempdb that can conflict with the locks needed for internal tempdb cleanup transactions.

When this clean up work is allocated to the same session that owns the S lock an indefinite hang can occur.

To avoid this problem for certain you need to stop referencing the system objects inside tempdb.

It is possible to create a numbers table without referencing any external tables at all. The following needs to read no base table rows and thus also takes no locks.

WITH Ten(N) AS 
(
    SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL 
    SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL 
    SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT 1
)   
SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO   Numbers
FROM   Ten T10,
       Ten T100,
       Ten T1000,
       Ten T10000,
       Ten T100000,
       Ten T1000000 

Steps to Reproduce

First create a procedure

CREATE PROC P
AS
    SET NOCOUNT ON;

    DECLARE @T TABLE (X INT)
GO

Then restart the SQL Service and in one connection execute

WHILE NOT EXISTS(SELECT *
                 FROM   sys.dm_os_waiting_tasks
                 WHERE  session_id = blocking_session_id)
  BEGIN

      /*This will cause the problematic droptemp transactions*/
      EXEC sp_recompile 'P'

      EXEC P
  END;

SELECT *
FROM   sys.dm_os_waiting_tasks
WHERE  session_id = blocking_session_id 

Then in another connection run

USE tempdb;

SELECT TOP 1000000 IDENTITY(INT, 1, 1) Number
INTO #T
FROM sys.objects s1
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s2
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s3
CROSS JOIN sys.objects s4;

DROP TABLE #T

The query populating the Numbers table seems to manage to get into a live lock situation with the internal system transactions that clean up temporary objects such as table variables.

I managed to get session id 53 blocked in this manner. It is blocked indefinitely. The output of sp_WhoIsActive shows that this spid spends almost all of the time suspended. In consecutive runs the numbers in the reads column increases but the values in the other columns remain largely the same.

The wait duration doesn't show an increasing pattern though indicating that it must get unblocked periodically before getting blocked again.

SELECT *
FROM   sys.dm_os_waiting_tasks
WHERE  session_id = blocking_session_id

Returns

+----------------------+------------+-----------------+------------------+-----------+--------------------+-----------------------+---------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| waiting_task_address | session_id | exec_context_id | wait_duration_ms | wait_type |  resource_address  | blocking_task_address | blocking_session_id | blocking_exec_context_id |                                       resource_description                                       |
+----------------------+------------+-----------------+------------------+-----------+--------------------+-----------------------+---------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 0x00000002F2C170C8   |         53 |               0 |               86 | LCK_M_X   | 0x00000002F9B13040 | 0x00000002F2C170C8    |                  53 | NULL                     | keylock hobtid=281474978938880 dbid=2 id=lock2f9ac8880 mode=U associatedObjectId=281474978938880 |
+----------------------+------------+-----------------+------------------+-----------+--------------------+-----------------------+---------------------+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

Using the id in the resource description

SELECT o.name
FROM   sys.allocation_units au WITH (NOLOCK)
       INNER JOIN sys.partitions p WITH (NOLOCK)
         ON au.container_id = p.partition_id
       INNER JOIN sys.all_objects o WITH (NOLOCK)
         ON o.object_id = p.object_id
WHERE  allocation_unit_id = 281474978938880 

Returns

+------------+
|    name    |
+------------+
| sysschobjs |
+------------+

Running

SELECT resource_description,request_status
FROM   sys.dm_tran_locks 
WHERE request_session_id = 53 AND request_status <> 'GRANT'

Returns

+----------------------+----------------+
| resource_description | request_status |
+----------------------+----------------+
| (246708db8c1f)       | CONVERT        |
+----------------------+----------------+

Connecting via the DAC and running

SELECT id,name
FROM   tempdb.sys.sysschobjs WITH (NOLOCK)
WHERE %%LOCKRES%% = '(246708db8c1f)' 

Returns

+-------------+-----------+
|     id      |   name    |
+-------------+-----------+
| -1578606288 | #A1E86130 |
+-------------+-----------+

Curious about what that is

SELECT name,user_type_id
FROM tempdb.sys.columns
WHERE object_id = -1578606288 

Returns

+------+--------------+
| name | user_type_id |
+------+--------------+
| X    |           56 |
+------+--------------+

This is the column name in the table variable used by the stored proc.

Running

SELECT request_mode,
       request_status,
       request_session_id,
       request_owner_id,
       lock_owner_address,
       t.transaction_id,
       t.name,
       t.transaction_begin_time
FROM   sys.dm_tran_locks l
       JOIN sys.dm_tran_active_transactions t
         ON l.request_owner_id = t.transaction_id
WHERE  resource_description = '(246708db8c1f)' 

Returns

+--------------+----------------+--------------------+------------------+--------------------+----------------+-------------+-------------------------+
| request_mode | request_status | request_session_id | request_owner_id | lock_owner_address | transaction_id |    name     | transaction_begin_time  |
+--------------+----------------+--------------------+------------------+--------------------+----------------+-------------+-------------------------+
| U            | GRANT          |                 53 |           227647 | 0x00000002F1EF6800 |         227647 | droptemp    | 2013-11-24 18:36:28.267 |
| S            | GRANT          |                 53 |           191790 | 0x00000002F9B16380 |         191790 | SELECT INTO | 2013-11-24 18:21:30.083 |
| X            | CONVERT        |                 53 |           227647 | 0x00000002F9B12FC0 |         227647 | droptemp    | 2013-11-24 18:36:28.267 |
+--------------+----------------+--------------------+------------------+--------------------+----------------+-------------+-------------------------+

So the SELECT INTO transaction is holding an S lock on the row in tempdb.sys.sysschobjs pertaining to the table variable #A1E86130. The droptemp transaction cannot get an X lock on this row because of this conflicting S lock.

Running this query repeatedly reveals that the transaction_id for the droptemp transaction repeatedly changes.

I speculate that SQL Server must allocate these internal transactions on user spids and prioritise them before doing the user work. So the session id 53 is stuck in a constant cycle where it starts up a droptemp transaction, is blocked by the user transaction running on the same spid. Rolls back the internal transaction then repeats the process indefinitely.

This is borne out by tracing the various locking and transaction events in SQL Server Profiler after the spid becomes hung.

I also traced the locking events prior to that.

Lock Events Blocking

Most of the shared key locks taken out by the SELECT INTO transaction on keys in sysschobjs get released immediately. The exception is the first lock on (246708db8c1f).

This makes some sense as the plan shows nested loops scans of [sys].[sysschobjs].[clst] [o] and because temporary objects get given negative objectids they will be the first rows encountered in scan order.

I also encountered the situation described in the OP where running a three way cross join first seems to allow the four way one to succeed.

The first few events in the trace for the SELECT INTO transaction there are an entirely different pattern.

This was after a service restart so the lock resource values in the text data column are not directly comparable.

Instead of retaining the lock on the first key and then a pattern of acquiring and releasing subsequent keys it seems to acquire a lot more locks without releasing them initially.

I presume there must be some variance in execution strategy that avoids the issue.


Update

The Connect Item I raised about this has not been marked as fixed but I am now on SQL Server 2012 SP2 and can now only reproduce temporary self blocking rather than permanent. I still get the self blocking but after some amount of failed attempts to execute the droptemp transaction successfully it appears to go back to processing the user transaction. After that commits the system transaction then is executed successfully. Still on the same spid. (eight attempts in one example run. I'm not sure if this will be consistently repeated)




回答2:


Rather than chase this problem, why don't you just create the table once in the model database, then it will be created for you in tempdb automatically?

For the actual problem, we don't know. My first guess would be that your initial size for your tempdb file(s) is very small (like, 1MB). So, when you create the table, it has to expand the file(s) to accommodate it. This can be quite expensive especially if you don't have instant file initialization enabled, and it can also be very expensive to grow the log to accommodate the activity required there as well.

Other than that, we could keep guessing, but you will be better suited to investigate what is actually happening. Questions you'll want to ask:

  1. For the spid that is trying to create the table, what does sys.dm_exec_requests say for wait_type?
  2. Does it have a blocking_session_id?
  3. If so, what is that session doing?


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20155337/why-is-this-query-slow-the-first-time-after-i-start-the-service

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