Hobbyist here, Is it normal for businesses to be having 50 mil rows to insert into a 50 columns wide database via a 2100+ parameters query, 15000 inserts at a time to a single DB?
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It definitely seems unusual and poorly optimized...
Oh buddy, enjoy your life & don't touch Microsoft even with a 10 meters stick
Inserting 15k rows of 50 columns into a 50M table is something we do every day.
2100 params on a query sounds like spaghetti code.
I suspect OP is using single row insert statements when they need a bulk insert to be performant.
I am using SqlBulkInsert, given how bad MS is with naming things, that might as well be row inserts instead of bulks
2100 parameters is a documented ODBC limitation( which applies on all statements in a batch)
This means that a
"insert into (c1, c2) values (?,?), (?,?)..." can only have 2100 bound parameters, and has nothing to do with code, and even less that surrounding code is "spaghetti"
The tables ARE normalised, the fact that there are 50 colums is because underlying market - data calibration functions expects dozens of parameters, and returns back dozens of other results, such as volatility, implied durations, forward duration and more
The amount of immaturity, inexperience, and ignorance coming from 2 people here is astounding
Blocked
No. This seems like a poorly designed system. Definitely sounds like a nosql database would be a much better fit for this task.
And that many parameters seems like madness haha
Please enlighten us? You barely know anything about the system or usage, and you have deduced nosql is better? Lol
A flat 50 column table is usually an indicator of bad design and lack of normalization.
Nosql is absolutely ideal for flat data with lots of columns and huge amounts of rows. It's like one of its main use cases.
That many parameters is an indicator of poorly structured queries and spaghetti code. There is no way that's the best way the data can be structured.
I've done a lot of work and no, that is not normal.
A few things: First - SQL server has tools for migrating data that's pretty fast. SQL bulk copy can use some of these. Check to see if the built in db tools are better for this.
SQL bulk copy can handle way more than 15,000 records
Why are you wrapping a data dump in a transaction? That will slow things down for sure.
You generally shouldn't be doing huge queries like that to where you're nearing the parameter limit.
Can you share the code?
I timed the transaction and opening of the connection, it takes maybe a 100 milliseconds, absolutely doesn't explain ghe abysmal performance
Transaction is needed because 2 tables are touched, i don't want to deal with partially inserted data
Cannot share the code, but it's python calling .NET through "clr", and using SqlBulkCopy
What do you suggest i shouldn't be using that? It's either a prepared query, with thousands of parameters, or a plain text string with parameters inside (which admittedly, i didn't try, might be faster lol)
One thing to know about transactions is that they track data and then write it. It's not the opening that slows it down. I have a question though, what is your source data? Do you have a big CSV for something? Can you do a db to db transfer instead? There's another tool called the BCP utility.
Edit: SQL server/ssms have tools for doing migrations and batch imports
Just used SqlBulkCopy via C# and .NET a few weeks ago to insert 5-7 million rows into multiple tables in a matter of seconds.
I don't think any of my tables had 50 columns, but one had maybe half of that. Reading your other posts, my experience was different in these ways:
- Not using Python but C#
- The machine performing the insert was physically close to the SQL server and did not utilize WAN. (Not sure if this applies to you as well, I don't recall you saying)
- I don't remember putting a transaction on the insert. I just followed Microsoft's examples from the documentation. A transaction I think has a chance of nullifying the speed you gain from using bulk insert.
Lastly I think you should consider being be more respectful in some of your replies. We all get being frustrated with technology, but you don't need to extend that to people who are helping you for free.
What is your latency? Can you move data closer to where db is (cloud)? Did you change isolation level? Or recovery model? Did you try bcp
? Any indexes you have in table should be deleted?
Will try bcp & report back EDIT: I can't install bcp because it is only distributed with SQLServer itself, and I cannot install it on my corporate laptop.
Try BCP. I'm fairly new to the Microsoft landscape too, but found using BCP really helped with efficiency on loading.
I will try bcp. Somehow, i was convinced I had to have access to the machine running the sql server to use it, but from the doca i see i can specify a remote host.. Will report back! EDIT: I can't install bcp because it is only distributed with SQLServer itself, and I cannot install it on my corporate laptop.
No, it's a standalone utility that you can download and install separate from SQL Server. It just adds BCP.exe to your command line.
Look for the link that says "Download Microsoft Command Line Utilities 15 for SQL Server (x64)".
Omg it’s sooo daammmn slooow it takes around 30 seconds to bulk - insert 15000 rows
Do you have any measurements on how long it takes when you just 'do it raw'? Like trying to do the same insert though SQL Server Management Studio or something?
Because to me it's not really clear what's slow. Like you're complaining specifically about the Microsoft ODBC driver - but do you base that on anything? Can you insert faster from Linux or through other means?
Like if it's just 'always slow' it might just be the SQL Server. If you can better pinpoint when it's slow, and when it's fast(er) that probably helps to tell how to speed it up
A friend of a friend found that exporting to csv and importing is the fastest route. Honestly crazy, but I recreated a test and it's actually a little faster (when dumping and recreating the whole table, ymmv when inserting).
I'm not 100% sure if it was MSSQL, though.