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Pro SQL Server Internals

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Pro SQL Server Internals explains how different SQL Server components work "under the hood" and how they communicate with each other. This is the practical book with a large number of examples that will show you how various design and implementation decisions affect the behavior and performance of your systems.

Pro SQL Server Internals covers a multiple SQL Server versions starting with SQL Server 2005 all the way up to the recently released SQL Server 2014. You ll learn about new SQL Server 2014 features including the new Cardinality Estimator, In-Memory OLTP Engine (codename Hekaton), and Clustered Columnstore Indexes. With Pro SQL Server Internals, you have a solid roadmap for understanding the depth and power of the SQL Server database backend, regardless of the version and edition of SQL Server you use.

Pro SQL Server Internals does the following:

Explains how to design efficient database schema, indexing, and transaction strategies.Shows how various database objects and technologies are implemented internally and when they should or should not be used.Demonstrates how SQL Server executes queries and works with data and transaction logs. What you'll learn Design and develop efficient database solutions utilizing SQL Server as the database backend.Troubleshoot and address design, concurrency, and performance issues in systems.Choose the right database objects and technologies for the job.Improve system availability and manageability and reduce implementation costs with data partitioning.Design efficient Disaster Recovery and High-Availability strategies for systems.Improve the performance of OLTP and Data Warehouse systems by utilizing new SQL Server 2014 features, such as the In-Memory OLTP Engine and Clustered Columnstore Indexes.

Who this book is for

Pro SQL Server Internals is a book for developers and database administrators who want to design, develop, and maintain systems in a way that gets the most from SQL Server. This book is an excellent choice for people who prefer to understand and fix the root cause of a problem, rather than applying a 'band aid' to it.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Tables and Indexes

Chapter 1: Data storage internals

Chapter 2: Tables and Indexes Internal Structure and Access Methods

Chapter 3: Statistics

Chapter 4: Special Indexing and Storage Features

Chapter 5: Index fragmentation

Chapter 6: Designing and tuning the indexes

Part 2: Other things that matter

Chapter 7: Constraints

Chapter 8: Triggers

Chapter 9: Views

Chapter 10: Functions

Chapter 11: XML

Chapter 12: Temporary Tables

Chapter 13: CLR

Chapter 14: CLR types

Chapter 15: Data partitioning

Chapter 16: System design considerations

Part 3: Locking, Blocking and Concurrency

Chapter 17: Lock types

Chapter 18: Troubleshooting Blocking issues

Chapter 19: Deadlocks

Chapter 20: Lock Escalations

Chapter 21: Optimistic isolation levels

Chapter 22: Application locks

Chapter 23: Schema locks

Chapter 24: Designing transaction strategies

Part 4: Query Life Cycle

Chapter 25: Query Optimization and Execution

Chapter 26: Plan Caching

Part 5: Practical Troubleshooting

Chapter 27: System Troubleshooting

Chapter 28: Extended events

Part 6: Inside the transaction log

Chapter 29: Transaction Log Internals

Chapter 30: Designing a Backup Strategy

Chapter 31: Designing a High Availability Strategy

Part 7: In-Memory OLTP Engine

Chapter 32: Hekaton (In Memory OLTP Engine)

Part 8: Columnstore Indexes

Chapter 33: In-Memory OLTP Programmability

Chapter 34: Introduction to Columnstore indexes

Chapter 35: Clustered Columnstore indexes "

776 pages, Unknown Binding

First published January 22, 2014

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About the author

Dmitri Korotkevitch

8 books2 followers

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Profile Image for Sebastian Gebski.
1,204 reviews1,382 followers
October 25, 2014
Best book on SQL Server I've ever read. By far.
To be honest I had considered myself pretty advanced on the topic, but I've learned so much from this book, that it has made me revise this opinion. Author dives into really low-level details that shed completely new light on how SQL Server works under the hood. What is also important - regardless of topic's complexity and overwhelming number of details, the book is still readable and comprehensible.

What did I miss? I was a bit disappointed that low level description of latches was ommitted & there were some chapters that were almost screaming for some cookbook-style, more elaborate examples.

But otherwise than these, book is almost perfect. Highly recommended read.
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