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N**Y
It's like reading two useful books at once
Reading this was like absorbing the knowledge of two books at the same time, with one book on performance tuning and the other on dynamic management objects. I bought this book primary to learn more about dynamic management objects, but was surprised by the high coverage of performance tuning in general (and not just as pertains to dynamic management objects). The focus is still on use of dynamic management objects, but you can learn much about the goals of performance tuning from this book.Performance Tuning with SQL Server Dynamic Management Views is not a beginner level book, and it assumes knowledge of SQL Server and RDBMS technologies. Along the way there are recommendations for online articles to read for more in-depth information, or for background coverage of concepts that you may not have seen in a while and need to review. Unlike some technical books on SQL Server, this is not a regurgitation of SQL Server Books Online, however it does point you there for more information when appropriate.This book works in layers, so that you have a structure to approaching performance tuning by starting at an outer layer and working toward inner layers as the book progresses. Topics to be measured by dynamic management views (eg. transactions, latches) are briefly discussed as encountered. Rather than just blindly querying dynamic management views, the authors describe how to filter and display results in a useful manner. They also discuss pitfalls to avoid when using dynamic management objects... for example, they will mention if a particular dynamic management view may be resource intensive, things to do so that joins on dynamic management views are properly constructed, etc.The authors do not consider dynamic management objects in isolation. They make comparisons to alternative measurement methods and tool, and discuss advantages of dynamic management objects to consider (for example, the system impacts of measurement methods, available levels of granularity). They also discuss when other tools might be appropriate, or how other tools and dynamic management objects might be used together to address performance issues.This book describes the naming of dynamic management objects, and clarifies these names so that you can begin to get a feel for what a dynamic management object does based on the structure of its name. It also compares dynamic management objects among each other to avoid confusion... this is appreciated because a lot of the names can begin to look similar after a while. Dynamic management objects are also compared and contrasted to older SQL Server compatibility views. This way, you know where to go for information you were accustomed to getting from those older views. Along these same lines, the book discusses name changes of columns that are available in dynamic management objects but with a different name than was used in compatibility views.The book is full of good examples, and many of these set up scenarios in a database so that you can observe the resulting issues using dynamic management objects. Code examples in the book are available for download online (link for this is provided early in the book). Performance Tuning with SQL Server Dynamic Management Views is dense with information and hard to put down once you open it. It will be nearby with my other technical reference books, and I'm sure I'll be referring to it often in the coming years.
G**Y
A Necessary and Important Reference Manual
You know those technical manuals that sit on your desk, slowly collecting little post-it tabs with notes on them, the spines are cracked, the covers are wrinkled, when people come to borrow them you snatch it from their hands? You know those books? Yeah, well, this is one of them. I've only owned it for a few days, but I've already opened it several times to look stuff up, even stuff I had just finished reading.I really like the approach the authors, Louis Davidson & Tim Ford, took to the book. Instead of just laying out a bunch of Dynamic Management Objects (DMO) in alphabetical order or something, they focused on the DMOs associated with Performance Tuning. Then, they took the trouble to break the DMOs apart into different areas of data and performance metrics like "Query Plan MetaData" and "Transactions." They introduced each topic with an overview of the topic, why DMOs are useful to gathering data on that topic and then dived into which DMO did what to help you with the information you need to do performance tuning on your system.The writing is very clear and to the point. Also, I wasn't able to detect different "voices" as I read through the book. Despite more than one author, there's not that disjointed feeling you can get as you hop from one chapter to another and switch authors at the same time. I really liked the sample queries and the way they built on each other, showing you the true strength available in DMOs, which is combining them to put together extremely useful views on the data in the system. I also liked the fonts used and the layout of the book, the way important code was called out through bolding & font changes. I did think that the screen captures were a bit fuzzy, but not to the degree that it detracted from the book in any way.The argument can be made that books like this just rewrite the Books Online (BOL). But, in addition to extremely clear explanations, and a focused methodology showing you not just how to use the DMOs but where and why to use the DMOs, you also get the unique code samples. The thing about DMOs is that in isolation, they're useful. But it's in combination that they become powerful. The examples emphasize how these building blocks can be put together to create new, interesting and useful reports. Examples such as these are just not available in BOL.For all these reasons, I highly recommend this book. If you're responsible for maintaining or developing SQL Server systems, you'll find something useful in this book that you can put to work, right away.
H**R
Christmas Present
Bought it for my brother for a Christmas present, have not heard any complaints, so I assume it must be pretty good.
S**.
The Devilish DMOs Have Been Demystified
The biggest pain of Dynamic Management Views/Objects is that they often aren't that well documented, and you spend too much time figuring out which ones to use to diagnose which problems. This book helped to bridge that divide. It breaks it down by problem type, so you know which views to use, and which ones complement each other. Now it doesn't give you a start to finish methodology to say start with A, then go to B, then go to C. So it assumes you have some level of troubleshooting skills and familiarity with SQL Server performance. But if you have a good idea of where to start, then this book gives some solid examples of how to go down the rabbit hole and confirm your suspicions and get to the root cause. Because, in the end, that's what we want. It also gave some ideas on how to resolve those problems, but a good deal of that is going to be up to you. Chances are though, if you can find the problem, and you're an experienced DBA or developer, then you already have a pretty good idea of how to resolve it.
T**.
Great Resource
I have this book in Kindle and paper form. I highly recommend this book to learn more about DMV's and how they can help you find issues on your MSSQL servers.
W**N
Solid introduction to performance tunning DMVs.
I used this book in conjunction with other resources to performance tune a SQL Server 2008 R2 at work with great results. I'll re-read this book a second time.
D**S
Five Stars
Very helpful.
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