Hi
We will within the next week move our SQL 2000 server SP4 to a new high
performance server (2 x ghz XEON, 4 GB RAM)
The database which is to be running on the server has a physical size of 50
mb on disk.
Is there a way to optimize the SQL 2000 to keep as much as possible
in-memory so searching will as quick as possible? The read / write rate is
approx 1000/1 (we read 1000 x as often as writing)
Is the some memory settings we can tweak or are we better of letting sql
server 2000 handle it?
Thanks in regards
Anders JacobsenJust checking 50Mb not 50 Gb. If so then there's not much you can do, with
4Gb of RAM it will all reside in memory.
Simon Sabin
SQL Server MVP
http://sqljunkies.com/weblog/simons
"Anders" <anderskj1@.yahoo.dk> wrote in message
news:%23j7EngYXGHA.4432@.TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
> Hi
> We will within the next week move our SQL 2000 server SP4 to a new high
> performance server (2 x ghz XEON, 4 GB RAM)
> The database which is to be running on the server has a physical size of
> 50 mb on disk.
> Is there a way to optimize the SQL 2000 to keep as much as possible
> in-memory so searching will as quick as possible? The read / write rate is
> approx 1000/1 (we read 1000 x as often as writing)
> Is the some memory settings we can tweak or are we better of letting sql
> server 2000 handle it?
> Thanks in regards
> Anders Jacobsen
>|||"Anders" <anderskj1@.yahoo.dk> wrote in message
news:%23j7EngYXGHA.4432@.TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
> Hi
> We will within the next week move our SQL 2000 server SP4 to a new high
> performance server (2 x ghz XEON, 4 GB RAM)
> The database which is to be running on the server has a physical size of
50
> mb on disk.
> Is there a way to optimize the SQL 2000 to keep as much as possible
> in-memory so searching will as quick as possible? The read / write rate is
> approx 1000/1 (we read 1000 x as often as writing)
> Is the some memory settings we can tweak or are we better of letting sql
> server 2000 handle it?
Generally you're better off letting SQL Server handle it. It will grab as
much RAM as it can (2GB with Standard, more with Enterprise with the proper
switches) and use it to cache.
Check perfmon and look at the cache hit ratio for one thing to see how
you're doing.
If it's truly 50MB, that'll fit into RAM absolutely w/o problems.
> Thanks in regards
> Anders Jacobsen
>|||> Generally you're better off letting SQL Server handle it. It will grab as
> much RAM as it can (2GB with Standard, more with Enterprise with the
> proper
> switches) and use it to cache.
> Check perfmon and look at the cache hit ratio for one thing to see how
> you're doing.
> If it's truly 50MB, that'll fit into RAM absolutely w/o problems.
Sounds great.
Thanks
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