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What are common database development mistakes made by application developers?
1. Not using appropriate indices
This is a relatively easy one but still it happens all the time. Foreign keys should have indexes on them. If you're using a field in a WHERE you should (probably) have an index on it. Such indexes should often cover multiple columns based on the queries you need to execute.
2. Not enforcing referential integrity
Your database may vary here but if your database supports referential integrity--meaning that all foreign keys are guaranteed to point to an entity that exists--you should be using it.
It's quite common to see this failure on MySQL databases. I don't believe MyISAM supports it. InnoDB does. You'll find people who are using MyISAM or those that are using InnoDB but aren't using it anyway.
More here:
How important are constraints like NOT NULL and FOREIGN KEY if I’ll always control my database input with php?
Are foreign keys really necessary in a database design?
Are foreign keys really necessary in a database design?
3. Using natural rather than surrogate (technical) primary keys
Natural keys are keys based on externally meaningful data that is (ostensibly) unique. Common examples are product codes, two-letter state codes (US), social security numbers and so on. Surrogate or technical primary keys are those that have absolutely no meaning outside the system. They are invented purely for identifying the entity and are typically auto-incrementing fields (SQL Server, MySQL, others) or sequences (most notably Oracle).
In my opinion you should always use surrogate keys. This issue has come up in these questions:
How do you like your primary keys?
What's the best practice for primary keys in tables?
Which format of primary key would you use in this situation.
Surrogate vs. natural/business keys
Should I have a dedicated primary key field?
This is a somewhat controversial topic on which you won't get universal agreement. While you may find some people, who think natural keys are in some situations OK, you won't find any criticism of surrogate keys other than being arguably unnecessary. That's quite a small downside if you ask me.
Remember, even countries can cease to exist (for example, Yugoslavia).
4. Writing queries that require DISTINCT to work
You often see this in ORM-generated queries. Look at the log output from Hibernate and you'll see all the queries begin with:
SELECT DISTINCT ...
This is a bit of a shortcut to ensuring you don't return duplicate rows and thus get duplicate objects. You'll sometimes see people doing this as well. If you see it too much it's a real red flag. Not that DISTINCT is bad or doesn't have valid applications. It does (on both counts) but it's not a surrogate or a stopgap for writing correct queries.
From Why I Hate DISTINCT:
Where things start to go sour in my
opinion is when a developer is
building substantial query, joining
tables together, and all of a sudden
he realizes that it looks like he is
getting duplicate (or even more) rows
and his immediate response...his
"solution" to this "problem" is to
throw on the DISTINCT keyword and POOF
all his troubles go away.
5. Favouring aggregation over joins
Another common mistake by database application developers is to not realize how much more expensive aggregation (ie the GROUP BY clause) can be compared to joins.
To give you an idea of how widespread this is, I've written on this topic several times here and been downvoted a lot for it. For example:
From SQL statement - “join” vs “group by and having”:
First query:
SELECT userid
FROM userrole
WHERE roleid IN (1, 2, 3)
GROUP by userid
HAVING COUNT(1) = 3
Query time: 0.312 s
Second query:
SELECT t1.userid
FROM userrole t1
JOIN userrole t2 ON t1.userid = t2.userid AND t2.roleid = 2
JOIN userrole t3 ON t2.userid = t3.userid AND t3.roleid = 3
AND t1.roleid = 1
Query time: 0.016 s
That's right. The join version I
proposed is twenty times faster than
the aggregate version.
6. Not simplifying complex queries through views
Not all database vendors support views but for those that do, they can greatly simplify queries if used judiciously. For example, on one project I used a generic Party model for CRM. This is an extremely powerful and flexible modelling technique but can lead to many joins. In this model there were:
Party: people and organisations;
Party Role: things those parties did, for example Employee and Employer;
Party Role Relationship: how those roles related to each other.
Example:
Ted is a Person, being a subtype of Party;
Ted has many roles, one of which is Employee;
Intel is an organisation, being a subtype of a Party;
Intel has many roles, one of which is Employer;
Intel employs Ted, meaning there is a relationship between their respective roles.
So there are five tables joined to link Ted to his employer. You assume all employees are Persons (not organisations) and provide this helper view:
CREATE VIEW vw_employee AS
SELECT p.title, p.given_names, p.surname, p.date_of_birth, p2.party_name employer_name
FROM person p
JOIN party py ON py.id = p.id
JOIN party_role child ON p.id = child.party_id
JOIN party_role_relationship prr ON child.id = prr.child_id AND prr.type = 'EMPLOYMENT'
JOIN party_role parent ON parent.id = prr.parent_id = parent.id
JOIN party p2 ON parent.party_id = p2.id
And suddenly you have a very simple view of the data you want but on a highly flexible data model.
7. Not sanitizing input
This is a huge one. Now I like PHP but if you don't know what you're doing it's really easy to create sites vulnerable to attack. Nothing sums it up better than the story of little Bobby Tables.
Data provided by the user by way of URLs, form data and cookies should always be treated as hostile and sanitized. Make sure you're getting what you expect.
8. Not using prepared statements
Prepared statements are when you compile a query minus the data used in inserts, updates and WHERE clauses and then supply that later. For example:
SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = 'bob'
vs
SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = ?
or
SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = :username
depending on your platform.
I've seen databases brought to their knees by doing this. Basically, each time any modern database encounters a new query it has to compile it. If it encounters a query it's seen before, you're giving the database the opportunity to cache the compiled query and the execution plan. By doing the query a lot you're giving the database the opportunity to figure that out and optimize accordingly (for example, by pinning the compiled query in memory).
Using prepared statements will also give you meaningful statistics about how often certain queries are used.
Prepared statements will also better protect you against SQL injection attacks.
9. Not normalizing enough
Database normalization is basically the process of optimizing database design or how you organize your data into tables.
Just this week I ran across some code where someone had imploded an array and inserted it into a single field in a database. Normalizing that would be to treat element of that array as a separate row in a child table (ie a one-to-many relationship).
This also came up in Best method for storing a list of user IDs:
I've seen in other systems that the list is stored in a serialized PHP array.
But lack of normalization comes in many forms.
More:
Normalization: How far is far enough?
SQL by Design: Why You Need Database Normalization
10. Normalizing too much
This may seem like a contradiction to the previous point but normalization, like many things, is a tool. It is a means to an end and not an end in and of itself. I think many developers forget this and start treating a "means" as an "end". Unit testing is a prime example of this.
I once worked on a system that had a huge hierarchy for clients that went something like:
Licensee -> Dealer Group -> Company -> Practice -> ...
such that you had to join about 11 tables together before you could get any meaningful data. It was a good example of normalization taken too far.
More to the point, careful and considered denormalization can have huge performance benefits but you have to be really careful when doing this.
More:
Why too much Database Normalization can be a Bad Thing
How far to take normalization in database design?
When Not to Normalize your SQL Database
Maybe Normalizing Isn't Normal
The Mother of All Database Normalization Debates on Coding Horror
11. Using exclusive arcs
An exclusive arc is a common mistake where a table is created with two or more foreign keys where one and only one of them can be non-null. Big mistake. For one thing it becomes that much harder to maintain data integrity. After all, even with referential integrity, nothing is preventing two or more of these foreign keys from being set (complex check constraints notwithstanding).
From A Practical Guide to Relational Database Design:
We have strongly advised against exclusive arc construction wherever
possible, for the good reason that they can be awkward to write code
and pose more maintenance difficulties.
12. Not doing performance analysis on queries at all
Pragmatism reigns supreme, particularly in the database world. If you're sticking to principles to the point that they've become a dogma then you've quite probably made mistakes. Take the example of the aggregate queries from above. The aggregate version might look "nice" but its performance is woeful. A performance comparison should've ended the debate (but it didn't) but more to the point: spouting such ill-informed views in the first place is ignorant, even dangerous.
13. Over-reliance on UNION ALL and particularly UNION constructs
A UNION in SQL terms merely concatenates congruent data sets, meaning they have the same type and number of columns. The difference between them is that UNION ALL is a simple concatenation and should be preferred wherever possible whereas a UNION will implicitly do a DISTINCT to remove duplicate tuples.
UNIONs, like DISTINCT, have their place. There are valid applications. But if you find yourself doing a lot of them, particularly in subqueries, then you're probably doing something wrong. That might be a case of poor query construction or a poorly designed data model forcing you to do such things.
UNIONs, particularly when used in joins or dependent subqueries, can cripple a database. Try to avoid them whenever possible.
14. Using OR conditions in queries
This might seem harmless. After all, ANDs are OK. OR should be OK too right? Wrong. Basically an AND condition restricts the data set whereas an OR condition grows it but not in a way that lends itself to optimisation. Particularly when the different OR conditions might intersect thus forcing the optimizer to effectively to a DISTINCT operation on the result.
Bad:
... WHERE a = 2 OR a = 5 OR a = 11
Better:
... WHERE a IN (2, 5, 11)
Now your SQL optimizer may effectively turn the first query into the second. But it might not. Just don't do it.
15. Not designing their data model to lend itself to high-performing solutions
This is a hard point to quantify. It is typically observed by its effect. If you find yourself writing gnarly queries for relatively simple tasks or that queries for finding out relatively straightforward information are not efficient, then you probably have a poor data model.
In some ways this point summarizes all the earlier ones but it's more of a cautionary tale that doing things like query optimisation is often done first when it should be done second. First and foremost you should ensure you have a good data model before trying to optimize the performance. As Knuth said:
Premature optimization is the root of all evil
16. Incorrect use of Database Transactions
All data changes for a specific process should be atomic. I.e. If the operation succeeds, it does so fully. If it fails, the data is left unchanged. - There should be no possibility of 'half-done' changes.
Ideally, the simplest way to achieve this is that the entire system design should strive to support all data changes through single INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE statements. In this case, no special transaction handling is needed, as your database engine should do so automatically.
However, if any processes do require multiple statements be performed as a unit to keep the data in a consistent state, then appropriate Transaction Control is necessary.
Begin a Transaction before the first statement.
Commit the Transaction after the last statement.
On any error, Rollback the Transaction. And very NB! Don't forget to skip/abort all statements that follow after the error.
Also recommended to pay careful attention to the subtelties of how your database connectivity layer, and database engine interact in this regard.
17. Not understanding the 'set-based' paradigm
The SQL language follows a specific paradigm suited to specific kinds of problems. Various vendor-specific extensions notwithstanding, the language struggles to deal with problems that are trivial in langues like Java, C#, Delphi etc.
This lack of understanding manifests itself in a few ways.
Inappropriately imposing too much procedural or imperative logic on the databse.
Inappropriate or excessive use of cursors. Especially when a single query would suffice.
Incorrectly assuming that triggers fire once per row affected in multi-row updates.
Determine clear division of responsibility, and strive to use the appropriate tool to solve each problem.
Key database design and programming mistakes made by developers
Selfish database design and usage. Developers often treat the database as their personal persistent object store without considering the needs of other stakeholders in the data. This also applies to application architects. Poor database design and data integrity makes it hard for third parties working with the data and can substantially increase the system's life cycle costs. Reporting and MIS tends to be a poor cousin in application design and only done as an afterthought.
Abusing denormalised data. Overdoing denormalised data and trying to maintain it within the application is a recipe for data integrity issues. Use denormalisation sparingly. Not wanting to add a join to a query is not an excuse for denormalising.
Scared of writing SQL. SQL isn't rocket science and is actually quite good at doing its job. O/R mapping layers are quite good at doing the 95% of queries that are simple and fit well into that model. Sometimes SQL is the best way to do the job.
Dogmatic 'No Stored Procedures' policies. Regardless of whether you believe stored procedures are evil, this sort of dogmatic attitude has no place on a software project.
Not understanding database design. Normalisation is your friend and it's not rocket science. Joining and cardinality are fairly simple concepts - if you're involved in database application development there's really no excuse for not understanding them.
Not using version control on the database schema
Working directly against a live database
Not reading up and understanding more advanced database concepts (indexes, clustered indexes, constraints, materialized views, etc)
Failing to test for scalability ... test data of only 3 or 4 rows will never give you the real picture of real live performance
Over-use and/or dependence on stored procedures.
Some application developers see stored procedures as a direct extension of middle tier/front end code. This appears to be a common trait in Microsoft stack developers, (I'm one, but I've grown out of it) and produces many stored procedures that perform complex business logic and workflow processing. This is much better done elsewhere.
Stored procedures are useful where it has actuallly been proven that some real technical factor necessitates their use (for example, performance and security) For example, keeping aggregation/filtering of large data sets "close to the data".
I recently had to help maintain and enhance a large Delphi desktop application of which 70% of the business logic and rules were implemented in 1400 SQL Server stored procedures (the remainder in UI event handlers). This was a nightmare, primarily due to the difficuly of introducing effective unit testing to TSQL, lack of encapsulation and poor tools (Debuggers, editors).
Working with a Java team in the past I quickly found out that often the complete opposite holds in that environment. A Java Architect once told me: "The database is for data, not code.".
These days I think it's a mistake to not consider stored procs at all, but they should be used sparingly (not by default) in situations where they provide useful benefits (see the other answers).
Number one problem? They only test on toy databases. So they have no idea that their SQL will crawl when the database gets big, and someone has to come along and fix it later (that sound you can hear is my teeth grinding).
Not using indexes.
Poor Performance Caused by Correlated Subqueries
Most of the time you want to avoid correlated subqueries. A subquery is correlated if, within the subquery, there is a reference to a column from the outer query. When this happens, the subquery is executed at least once for every row returned and could be executed more times if other conditions are applied after the condition containing the correlated subquery is applied.
Forgive the contrived example and the Oracle syntax, but let's say you wanted to find all the employees that have been hired in any of your stores since the last time the store did less than $10,000 of sales in a day.
select e.first_name, e.last_name
from employee e
where e.start_date >
(select max(ds.transaction_date)
from daily_sales ds
where ds.store_id = e.store_id and
ds.total < 10000)
The subquery in this example is correlated to the outer query by the store_id and would be executed for every employee in your system. One way that this query could be optimized is to move the subquery to an inline-view.
select e.first_name, e.last_name
from employee e,
(select ds.store_id,
max(s.transaction_date) transaction_date
from daily_sales ds
where ds.total < 10000
group by s.store_id) dsx
where e.store_id = dsx.store_id and
e.start_date > dsx.transaction_date
In this example, the query in the from clause is now an inline-view (again some Oracle specific syntax) and is only executed once. Depending on your data model, this query will probably execute much faster. It would perform better than the first query as the number of employees grew. The first query could actually perform better if there were few employees and many stores (and perhaps many of stores had no employees) and the daily_sales table was indexed on store_id. This is not a likely scenario but shows how a correlated query could possibly perform better than an alternative.
I've seen junior developers correlate subqueries many times and it usually has had a severe impact on performance. However, when removing a correlated subquery be sure to look at the explain plan before and after to make sure you are not making the performance worse.
In my experience:
Not communicating with experienced DBAs.
Using Access instead of a "real" database. There are plenty of great small and even free databases like SQL Express, MySQL, and SQLite that will work and scale much better. Apps often need to scale in unexpected ways.
Forgetting to set up relationships between the tables. I remember having to clean this up when I first started working at my current employer.
Using Excel for storing (huge amounts of) data.
I have seen companies holding thousands of rows and using multiple worksheets (due to the row limit of 65535 on previous versions of Excel).
Excel is well suited for reports, data presentation and other tasks, but should not be treated as a database.
I'd like to add:
Favoring "Elegant" code over highly performing code. The code that works best against databases is often ugly to the application developer's eye.
Believing that nonsense about premature optimization. Databases must consider performance in the original design and in any subsequent development. Performance is 50% of database design (40% is data integrity and the last 10% is security) in my opinion. Databases which are not built from the bottom up to perform will perform badly once real users and real traffic are placed against the database. Premature optimization doesn't mean no optimization! It doesn't mean you should write code that will almost always perform badly because you find it easier (cursors for example which should never be allowed in a production database unless all else has failed). It means you don't need to look at squeezing out that last little bit of performance until you need to. A lot is known about what will perform better on databases, to ignore this in design and development is short-sighted at best.
Not using parameterized queries. They're pretty handy in stopping SQL Injection.
This is a specific example of not sanitizing input data, mentioned in another answer.
I hate it when developers use nested select statements or even functions the return the result of a select statement inside the "SELECT" portion of a query.
I'm actually surprised I don't see this anywhere else here, perhaps I overlooked it, although #adam has a similar issue indicated.
Example:
SELECT
(SELECT TOP 1 SomeValue FROM SomeTable WHERE SomeDate = c.Date ORDER BY SomeValue desc) As FirstVal
,(SELECT OtherValue FROM SomeOtherTable WHERE SomeOtherCriteria = c.Criteria) As SecondVal
FROM
MyTable c
In this scenario, if MyTable returns 10000 rows the result is as if the query just ran 20001 queries, since it had to run the initial query plus query each of the other tables once for each line of result.
Developers can get away with this working in a development environment where they are only returning a few rows of data and the sub tables usually only have a small amount of data, but in a production environment, this kind of query can become exponentially costly as more data is added to the tables.
A better (not necessarily perfect) example would be something like:
SELECT
s.SomeValue As FirstVal
,o.OtherValue As SecondVal
FROM
MyTable c
LEFT JOIN (
SELECT SomeDate, MAX(SomeValue) as SomeValue
FROM SomeTable
GROUP BY SomeDate
) s ON c.Date = s.SomeDate
LEFT JOIN SomeOtherTable o ON c.Criteria = o.SomeOtherCriteria
This allows database optimizers to shuffle the data together, rather than requery on each record from the main table and I usually find when I have to fix code where this problem has been created, I usually end up increasing the speed of queries by 100% or more while simultaneously reducing CPU and memory usage.
For SQL-based databases:
Not taking advantage of CLUSTERED INDEXES or choosing the wrong column(s) to CLUSTER.
Not using a SERIAL (autonumber) datatype as a PRIMARY KEY to join to a FOREIGN KEY (INT) in a parent/child table relationship.
Not UPDATING STATISTICS on a table when many records have been INSERTED or DELETED.
Not reorganizing (i.e. unloading, droping, re-creating, loading and re-indexing) tables when many rows have been inserted or deleted (some engines physically keep deleted rows in a table with a delete flag.)
Not taking advantage of FRAGMENT ON EXPRESSION (if supported) on large tables which have high transaction rates.
Choosing the wrong datatype for a column!
Not choosing a proper column name.
Not adding new columns at the end of the table.
Not creating proper indexes to support frequently used queries.
creating indexes on columns with few possible values and creating unnecessary indexes.
...more to be added.
Not taking a backup before fixing some issue inside production database.
Using DDL commands on stored objects(like tables, views) in stored procedures.
Fear of using stored proc or fear of using ORM queries wherever the one is more efficient/appropriate to use.
Ignoring the use of a database profiler, which can tell you exactly what your ORM query is being converted into finally and hence verify the logic or even for debugging when not using ORM.
Not doing the correct level of normalization. You want to make sure that data is not duplicated, and that you are splitting data into different as needed. You also need to make sure you are not following normalization too far as that will hurt performance.
Treating the database as just a storage mechanism (i.e. glorified collections library) and hence subordinate to their application (ignoring other applications which share the data)
Dismissing an ORM like Hibernate out of hand, for reasons like "it's too magical" or "not on my database".
Relying too heavily on an ORM like Hibernate and trying to shoehorn it in where it isn't appropriate.
1 - Unnecessarily using a function on a value in a where clause with the result of that index not being used.
Example:
where to_char(someDate,'YYYYMMDD') between :fromDate and :toDate
instead of
where someDate >= to_date(:fromDate,'YYYYMMDD') and someDate < to_date(:toDate,'YYYYMMDD')+1
And to a lesser extent: Not adding functional indexes to those values that need them...
2 - Not adding check constraints to ensure the validity of the data. Constraints can be used by the query optimizer, and they REALLY help to ensure that you can trust your invariants. There's just no reason not to use them.
3 - Adding unnormalized columns to tables out of pure laziness or time pressure. Things are usually not designed this way, but evolve into this. The end result, without fail, is a ton of work trying to clean up the mess when you're bitten by the lost data integrity in future evolutions.
Think of this, a table without data is very cheap to redesign. A table with a couple of millions records with no integrity... not so cheap to redesign. Thus, doing the correct design when creating the column or table is amortized in spades.
4 - not so much about the database per se but indeed annoying. Not caring about the code quality of SQL. The fact that your SQL is expressed in text does not make it OK to hide the logic in heaps of string manipulation algorithms. It is perfectly possible to write SQL in text in a manner that is actually readable by your fellow programmer.
This has been said before, but: indexes, indexes, indexes. I've seen so many cases of poorly performing enterprise web apps that were fixed by simply doing a little profiling (to see which tables were being hit a lot), and then adding an index on those tables. This doesn't even require much in the way of SQL writing knowledge, and the payoff is huge.
Avoid data duplication like the plague. Some people advocate that a little duplication won't hurt, and will improve performance. Hey, I'm not saying that you have to torture your schema into Third Normal Form, until it's so abstract that not even the DBA's know what's going on. Just understand that whenever you duplicate a set of names, or zipcodes, or shipping codes, the copies WILL fall out of synch with each other eventually. It WILL happen. And then you'll be kicking yourself as you run the weekly maintenance script.
And lastly: use a clear, consistent, intuitive naming convention. In the same way that a well written piece of code should be readable, a good SQL schema or query should be readable and practically tell you what it's doing, even without comments. You'll thank yourself in six months, when you have to to maintenance on the tables. "SELECT account_number, billing_date FROM national_accounts" is infinitely easier to work with than "SELECT ACCNTNBR, BILLDAT FROM NTNLACCTS".
Not executing a corresponding SELECT query before running the DELETE query (particularly on production databases)!
The most common mistake I've seen in twenty years: not planning ahead. Many developers will create a database, and tables, and then continually modify and expand the tables as they build out the applications. The end result is often a mess and inefficient and difficult to clean up or simplify later on.
a) Hardcoding query values in string
b) Putting the database query code in the "OnButtonPress" action in a Windows Forms application
I have seen both.
Not paying enough attention towards managing database connections in your application. Then you find out the application, the computer, the server, and the network is clogged.
Thinking that they are DBAs and data modelers/designers when they have no formal indoctrination of any kind in those areas.
Thinking that their project doesn't require a DBA because that stuff is all easy/trivial.
Failure to properly discern between work that should be done in the database, and work that should be done in the app.
Not validating backups, or not backing up.
Embedding raw SQL in their code.
Here is a link to video called ‘Classic Database Development Mistakes and five ways to overcome them’ by Scott Walz
Not having an understanding of the databases concurrency model and how this affects development. It's easy to add indexes and tweak queries after the fact. However applications designed without proper consideration for hotspots, resource contention
and correct operation (Assuming what you just read is still valid!) can require significant changes within the database and application tier to correct later.
Not understanding how a DBMS works under the hood.
You cannot properly drive a stick without understanding how a clutch works. And you cannot understand how to use a Database without understanding that you are really just writing to a file on your hard disk.
Specifically:
Do you know what a Clustered Index is? Did you think about it when you designed your schema?
Do you know how to use indexes properly? How to reuse an index? Do you know what a Covering Index is?
So great, you have indexes. How big is 1 row in your index? How big will the index be when you have a lot of data? Will that fit easily into memory? If it won't it's useless as an index.
Have you ever used EXPLAIN in MySQL? Great. Now be honest with yourself: Did you understand even half of what you saw? No, you probably didn't. Fix that.
Do you understand the Query Cache? Do you know what makes a query un-cachable?
Are you using MyISAM? If you NEED full text search, MyISAM's is crap anyway. Use Sphinx. Then switch to Inno.
Using an ORM to do bulk updates
Selecting more data than needed. Again, typically done when using an ORM
Firing sqls in a loop.
Not having good test data and noticing performance degradation only on live data.
I have to run a SELECT statement across several tables. I am sure the tables return different records. I am anyway using UNION ALL.
Is it better to use UNION or of UNION ALL in performance terms when I am sure the tables return different records?
UNION ALL will perform better than UNION when you're not concerned about eliminating duplicate records because you're avoiding an expensive distinct sort operation. See: SQL SERVER – Difference Between Union vs. Union All – Optimal Performance Comparison
UNION ALL always is faster, because UNION exclude duplicated entries
UNION implement internally two queries.
1.SELECT which will return a dataset
2.DISTINCT.
Anyone who has studied database internals can easily understand that a DISTINCT clause is extremely costly in terms of processing.
If you are pretty sure that the resultant dataset need not have unique rows then we can skip UNION and use UNION ALL instead.
UNION ALL will be same as UNION except that it doesn't fire a DISTINCT internally sparing us costly operations
It is better to use UNION ALL when you know you want all the result rows, whether or not you know they'll be distinct or not. UNION without "all" will always perform the "distinct check", regardless of what the data actually is.
Why is UNION ALL faster? Because UNION must do a sort to remove the duplicates. If you do not need to remove duplicates then UNION ALL is the better option, however UNION does have a purpose and should be used when appropriate.
I'm going to go out on a limb and suggest that it depends on your data.
If performance is measured end-to-end (from the moment the client sends the first byte of the request to the moment it gets the last byte of the response) then you have the following two extremes:
The vast minority (say 1%) of the result set contains duplicates
The vast majority (say 99%) of the result set contains duplicates
In case 1, UNION ALL will be faster simply because it does not need to sort the data (to remove duplicates) before returning it.
In case 2, UNION will be faster because it's much quicker to remove duplicates in memory than sending them over the wire. If your result set contains 1 million rows with only 2 unique values then your network time will be much smaller once those duplicates have been removed.
We are trying to optimize some of our queries.
One query is doing the following:
SELECT t.TaskID, t.Name as Task, '' as Tracker, t.ClientID, (<complex subquery>) Date,
INTO [#Gadget]
FROM task t
SELECT TOP 500 TaskID, Task, Tracker, ClientID, dbo.GetClientDisplayName(ClientID) as Client
FROM [#Gadget]
order by CASE WHEN Date IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END , Date ASC
DROP TABLE [#Gadget]
(I have removed the complex subquery. I don't think it's relevant other than to explain why this query has been done as a two stage process.)
I thought it would be far more efficient to merge this down into a single query using subqueries as:
SELECT TOP 500 TaskID, Task, Tracker, ClientID, dbo.GetClientDisplayName(ClientID)
FROM
(
SELECT t.TaskID, t.Name as Task, '' as Tracker, t.ClientID, (<complex subquery>) Date,
FROM task t
) as sub
order by CASE WHEN Date IS NULL THEN 1 ELSE 0 END , Date ASC
This would give the optimizer better information to work out what was going on and avoid any temporary tables. I assumed it should be faster.
But it turns out it is a lot slower. 8 seconds vs. under 5 seconds.
I can't work out why this would be the case, as all my knowledge of databases imply that subqueries would always be faster than using temporary tables.
What am I missing?
Edit --
From what I have been able to see from the query plans, both are largely identical, except for the temporary table which has an extra "Table Insert" operation with a cost of 18%.
Obviously as it has two queries the cost of the Sort Top N is a lot higher in the second query than the cost of the Sort in the Subquery method, so it is difficult to make a direct comparison of the costs.
Everything I can see from the plans would indicate that the subquery method would be faster.
"should be" is a hazardous thing to say of database performance. I have often found that temp tables speed things up, sometimes dramatically. The simple explanation is that it makes it easier for the optimiser to avoid repeating work.
Of course, I've also seen temp tables make things slower, sometimes much slower.
There is no substitute for profiling and studying query plans (read their estimates with a grain of salt, though).
Obviously, SQL Server is choosing the wrong query plan. Yes, that can happen, I've had exactly the same scenario as you a few times.
The problem is that optimizing a query (you mention a "complex subquery") is a non-trivial task: If you have n tables, there are roughly n! possible join orders -- and that's just the beginning. So, it's quite plausible that doing (a) first your inner query and (b) then your outer query is a good way to go, but SQL Server cannot deduce this information in reasonable time.
What you can do is to help SQL Server. As Dan Tow writes in his great book "SQL Tuning", the key is usually the join order, going from the most selective to the least selective table. Using common sense (or the method described in his book, which is a lot better), you could determine which join order would be most appropriate and then use the FORCE ORDER query hint.
Anyway, every query is unique, there is no "magic button" to make SQL Server faster. If you really want to find out what is going on, you need to look at (or show us) the query plans of your queries. Other interesting data is shown by SET STATISTICS IO, which will tell you how much (costly) HDD access your query produces.
I have re-iterated this question here: How can I force a subquery to perform as well as a #temp table?
The nub of it is, yes, I get that sometimes the optimiser is right to meddle with your subqueries as if they weren't fully self contained but sometimes it makes a bad wrong turn when it tries to be clever in a way that we're all familiar with. I'm saying there must be a way of switching off that "cleverness" where necessary instead of wrecking a View-led approach with temp tables.