SQL Server - best practices for SMB
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And how is your performance? I assumed you had more users based on your specs, so I'm guessing (hoping) you're flying. I hadn't heard of a Fusion IO card, but RAM seems really cheap at the moment so I'd probably always spend money on that rather than anything else, although SQL Server Standard is limited to 64GB. I think the Fusion card only kicks in when SQL can't get data out of RAM so wouldn't get used that much, depending on how big your database is (how big is it, by the way?)
For our existing, out-going ERP system, most of our reports are written by me in ASP (classic ASP) directly accessing the database. I also use ASP for writing data a lot of the time, avoiding the ERP client entirely. I love classic ASP, but really need to retire it and learn something a bit more up-to-date.
I'm planning on running the application server and SQL server on the same VM, rather than splitting them like you did. I'm not sure what the benefits are of splitting them?
Anecdotally, I hear that Microsoft have done a great job of improving performance over the last couple of versions of Dynamics NAV. The new version is supposed to considerably faster than the previous one. So hopefully everything will be fine. Their goal is for everyone to run it on Azure so they have a stake in performance that perhaps other ERP vendors, like Epicor, don't have. Whilst the worse the performance is the more revenue they would get from Azure as people have to purchase more resources, if it's slow it would create a negative image of Azure and put people off going down the cloud route.
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What language did you use for classic ASP? JScript and VBScript were the most popular, if I remember.
ASP.NET with C# is pretty powerful and easy to use.
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VBScript.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
And how is your performance? I assumed you had more users based on your specs, so I'm guessing (hoping) you're flying. I hadn't heard of a Fusion IO card, but RAM seems really cheap at the moment so I'd probably always spend money on that rather than anything else, although SQL Server Standard is limited to 64GB. I think the Fusion card only kicks in when SQL can't get data out of RAM so wouldn't get used that much, depending on how big your database is (how big is it, by the way?)
For our existing, out-going ERP system, most of our reports are written by me in ASP (classic ASP) directly accessing the database. I also use ASP for writing data a lot of the time, avoiding the ERP client entirely. I love classic ASP, but really need to retire it and learn something a bit more up-to-date.
I'm planning on running the application server and SQL server on the same VM, rather than splitting them like you did. I'm not sure what the benefits are of splitting them?
Anecdotally, I hear that Microsoft have done a great job of improving performance over the last couple of versions of Dynamics NAV. The new version is supposed to considerably faster than the previous one. So hopefully everything will be fine. Their goal is for everyone to run it on Azure so they have a stake in performance that perhaps other ERP vendors, like Epicor, don't have. Whilst the worse the performance is the more revenue they would get from Azure as people have to purchase more resources, if it's slow it would create a negative image of Azure and put people off going down the cloud route.
Performance was very good on Epicor 9, but it seems a little slower overall in Epicor 10. I have been monitoring that very closely, and I am seeing that we still seem fine in terms of the number of IOPs the server has compared to its workload, even with an increased number of users.
The real reason for splitting was encapsulation. There may be times when we need to reboot the application server but want to keep the SQL server running for people to be able to access our intranet system using the classic ASP pages my boss has written.
The database is about 36 GB now (maybe a little smaller but very close). It dropped in size by a factor of 5-10% in the upgrade. Epicor split their database into multiple schemas in version 10, and I know that made updating some of the ASP pages tough for my boss. And the custom fields that were part of normal tables for jobs, orders, etc. are now split off into user defined tables, causing many, many additional join statements to be added to code (which I feel pretty confident is slowing some things down, especially since the user-defined tables did not get indexes applied to them like all the other tables). I think we may still have some tuning to do. We have a 4-core SQL license, and thus far we are not pushing it, but I think we had some oversight in the upgrade regarding SSRS. That is the new engine for all reports, whereas they were Crystal Reports that ran mostly on the application server in the previous version. In this version the SQL Server takes a hit. I have beefed up the RAM to 50 GB this weekend with 40 GB of that reserved. I set the SQL memory limit to 40 GB as well.
But we have another problem going on right now with our web server being on the fritz and still physical. We have to find a way to get that moved very soon and are working on creative solutions.
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Quick question on SQL Server.
I'm installing it on OBR10, so no issues there. I will install the OS on it's own partition (C:). SQL Server will also be installed there (C:\program files). I will then create at least one extra partition for the database(s).
Is it best practice to install databases on a single partition (E:), or should I create separate partitions for data, logs and tempdb (E:,F:,G:).
This isn't a performance issue, obviously (unless it effects fragmentation in any way?). But from an admin perspective, is there any benefit to creating extra partitions? I would have thought that one of biggest risks with a database is running out of space and keeping an eye on space on one partition is easier than three.
I've googled and can't find any answers. Lots of discussions on the merits of physically separating data and logs, but not much on logically separating them. I guess this means it doesn't matter too much, but I need to make a decision one way or the other.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
Quick question on SQL Server.
I'm installing it on OBR10, so no issues there. I will install the OS on it's own partition (C:). SQL Server will also be installed there (C:\program files). I will then create at least one extra partition for the database(s).
Is it best practice to install databases on a single partition (E:), or should I create separate partitions for data, logs and tempdb (E:,F:,G:).
This isn't a performance issue, obviously (unless it effects fragmentation in any way?). But from an admin perspective, is there any benefit to creating extra partitions? I would have thought that one of biggest risks with a database is running out of space and keeping an eye on space on one partition is easier than three.
I've googled and can't find any answers. Lots of discussions on the merits of physically separating data and logs, but not much on logically separating them. I guess this means it doesn't matter too much, but I need to make a decision one way or the other.
We have our split up to OS, Data, and Logs. Not sure if it is best practice or not, it was recommended by both of our ERP vendors.
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@coliver said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
Quick question on SQL Server.
I'm installing it on OBR10, so no issues there. I will install the OS on it's own partition (C:). SQL Server will also be installed there (C:\program files). I will then create at least one extra partition for the database(s).
Is it best practice to install databases on a single partition (E:), or should I create separate partitions for data, logs and tempdb (E:,F:,G:).
This isn't a performance issue, obviously (unless it effects fragmentation in any way?). But from an admin perspective, is there any benefit to creating extra partitions? I would have thought that one of biggest risks with a database is running out of space and keeping an eye on space on one partition is easier than three.
I've googled and can't find any answers. Lots of discussions on the merits of physically separating data and logs, but not much on logically separating them. I guess this means it doesn't matter too much, but I need to make a decision one way or the other.
We have our split up to OS, Data, and Logs. Not sure if it is best practice or not, it was recommended by both of our ERP vendors.
We're in the same boat. Though I'm sure the split is from old school separate drive groups (separate RAID'ed drives).
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@Dashrender said:
@coliver said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
Quick question on SQL Server.
I'm installing it on OBR10, so no issues there. I will install the OS on it's own partition (C:). SQL Server will also be installed there (C:\program files). I will then create at least one extra partition for the database(s).
Is it best practice to install databases on a single partition (E:), or should I create separate partitions for data, logs and tempdb (E:,F:,G:).
This isn't a performance issue, obviously (unless it effects fragmentation in any way?). But from an admin perspective, is there any benefit to creating extra partitions? I would have thought that one of biggest risks with a database is running out of space and keeping an eye on space on one partition is easier than three.
I've googled and can't find any answers. Lots of discussions on the merits of physically separating data and logs, but not much on logically separating them. I guess this means it doesn't matter too much, but I need to make a decision one way or the other.
We have our split up to OS, Data, and Logs. Not sure if it is best practice or not, it was recommended by both of our ERP vendors.
We're in the same boat. Though I'm sure the split is from old school separate drive groups (separate RAID'ed drives).
Yep, I was thinking the same thing, when the performance of an individual drive/array wouldn't be enough for the entire database server.
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I always install SQL to C and then make a new virtual disk for the data and logs. then a third vdisk for the local SQL backups.
Strictly for ease of seeing usage at a glance. No performance concerns.
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I've planned on only one vdisk. I hadn't considered creating more than one.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I've planned on only one vdisk. I hadn't considered creating more than one.
Both approaches are completely valid. I like keeping the partitions separate, but I only like it a little. So I lean that way, but keeping them all in one is perfectly fine too.
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We had a rather large MS Dynamic GP deployment for ERP that handled both employee data as well all citizen's data and issues. it was ran on a VM fine with SQL and the storage was and iSccsi Vdisk (connected to esx not windows) to the SANs and we had no issues with that.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
I've planned on only one vdisk. I hadn't considered creating more than one.
Both approaches are completely valid. I like keeping the partitions separate, but I only like it a little. So I lean that way, but keeping them all in one is perfectly fine too.
If you only create one virtual disk and then partition it (eg for the OS, E: for data) and you later want to increase the size of C:, I believe you can't.
If you create separate disks then you can. Go into Windows Disk Management, right-click C:, and select 'Extend Volume'.
For this reason you should always create separate disks, I think. Correct me if I'm wrong.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
If you create separate disks then you can. Go into Windows Disk Management, right-click C:, and select 'Extend Volume'.
For this reason you should always create separate disks, I think. Correct me if I'm wrong.
You can do it with a single vdisk, but you have to go through a lot more work and you have to use third party disk partitioning tools to do it.
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@scottalanmiller said:
DBAs aren't the ones who should be making these decisions anyway, they don't know systems. They know databases.
You're giving a lot of DBAs too much credit even with this.
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
DBAs aren't the ones who should be making these decisions anyway, they don't know systems. They know databases.
You're giving a lot of DBAs too much credit even with this.
I've worked with pretty decent ones. Not too many DBAs anywhere outside of the super big teams.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
I've planned on only one vdisk. I hadn't considered creating more than one.
Both approaches are completely valid. I like keeping the partitions separate, but I only like it a little. So I lean that way, but keeping them all in one is perfectly fine too.
One reason and one reason only to do it as a separate partitions for data/logs/install.
If it fills up the disk, it wouldn't take down the OS in the process. Ive seen it happen, although Windows is usually resilient on that. But the only thing that would happen if you have separate partitions would be that the DBs couldn't write, halting the instance but recoverable by logging in and fixing it.
If you never expect to fill up a disk, make it huge and put it on one. But since it only takes a few minutes, and it's a real bitch to move data once in place to another drive, it's just easier to do this ahead of time to expect it.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
DBAs aren't the ones who should be making these decisions anyway, they don't know systems. They know databases.
You're giving a lot of DBAs too much credit even with this.
I've worked with pretty decent ones. Not too many DBAs anywhere outside of the super big teams.
A competent DBA is a rarity like an honest mechanic. I've known a couple of good ones, but most I've known either never worked because they weren't needed or were just stupid.
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
DBAs aren't the ones who should be making these decisions anyway, they don't know systems. They know databases.
You're giving a lot of DBAs too much credit even with this.
I've worked with pretty decent ones. Not too many DBAs anywhere outside of the super big teams.
A competent DBA is a rarity like an honest mechanic. I've known a couple of good ones, but most I've known either never worked because they weren't needed or were just stupid.
I knew a DBA who we had to teach how to save a word document while she worked with us on some stuff.. and she was also the Database & Programming (C++, VB.NET, Java) professor at a local college (very well know, especially for football) Enough said. But, I've heard most fail end up taking the class online and transferring the credit in to the college as they fail her classes since she doesn't even know it to teach it.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
I knew a DBA who we had to teach how to save a word document .....and she was also .....professor at a local college
Ding ding ding. I think we know where the problem was.