I have a strange situation on a SQL Server 2014 Express edition server. The database reached 10 GB limit, but it continued to auto-grow the data file to a current size of 80 GB. There are a lot of auto-growing events.
I checked sp_spaceused and I have a few unallocated MB, also checked sys.master_files. In logs, I get the error:
CREATE DATABASE or ALTER DATABASE failed because the resulting cumulative database size would exceed your licensed limit of 10240 MB per database.
How can the data file grow beyond 10 GB? What am I missing?
We have a SQL Server 2012 Enterprise Edition, 128GB of RAM, Windows 2008R2. The SQL Server job runs every day at 3 AM and takes 5 hrs to load data into the database. During this process, SQL Server utilizes 123GB (max memory allocated).
After the job completes, SQL Server is not releasing the RAM.
Queried memory utilization where buffer pool shows 97GB. Users don't access database during this time. I restarted SQL Server services to bring RAM down. I didn't find a correct answer related to this issue. Why is it not releasing the RAM? How can we bring RAM utilization down?
SQL Server Job -> SSIS package -> Import data from Mysql to SQL Server database
Thanks
This is by design once SQL Server uses memory, it keeps hold of it and does not release it back to OS.
Your Task Manager may show all/nearly all memory used by SQL Server but if you want to see how much memory SQL Server is actually using you can use the following query.
SELECT (physical_memory_in_use_kb/1024) AS Memory_usedby_Sqlserver_MB
FROM sys.dm_os_process_memory;
By design, SQL Server holds on to the RAM that is has allocated. Much of the RAM is used for the buffer pool. The buffer pool is a cache that holds database pages in memory for fast retrieval.
If SQL Server were to release some memory, and someone were to run a query that requests it right afterwards, the query would have to wait for expensive physical I/O to produce the data. Therefore, SQL Server tries to hold as much memory as possible (and as configured) for as long as possible.
The RAM settings here specify the min server memory and the max server memory. Careful setting of the max memory setting allows room for other processes to run. The article quotes a complicated formula for determining how much room to leave:
From the total OS memory, reserve 1GB-4GB to the OS itself.
Then subtract the equivalent of potential SQL Server memory allocations
outside the max server memory control, which is comprised of stack
size 1 * calculated max worker threads 2 + -g startup parameter 3 (or
256MB by default if -g is not set). What remains should be the
max_server_memory setting for a single instance setup.
In our servers, we usually just wing it and set the max memory option to several GB below the total physical memory. This leaves plenty of room for the OS and other applications.
If SQL Server memory is over the min server memory, and the OS is under memory pressure, SQL Server can release memory until it is at the min server memory setting.
Reference: Memory Management Architecture Guide.
One of the primary design goals of all database software is to
minimize disk I/O because disk reads and writes are among the most
resource-intensive operations. SQL Server builds a buffer pool in
memory to hold pages read from the database. Much of the code in SQL
Server is dedicated to minimizing the number of physical reads and
writes between the disk and the buffer pool. SQL Server tries to reach
a balance between two goals:
Keep the buffer pool from becoming so big that the entire system is low on memory.
Minimize physical I/O to the database files by maximizing the size of the buffer pool.
When SQL Server is using memory dynamically, it queries the system
periodically to determine the amount of free memory. Maintaining this
free memory prevents the operating system (OS) from paging. If less
memory is free, SQL Server releases memory to the OS. If more memory
is free, SQL Server may allocate more memory. SQL Server adds memory
only when its workload requires more memory; a server at rest does not
increase the size of its virtual address space.
...
As more users connect and run queries, SQL Server acquires the
additional physical memory on demand. A SQL Server instance continues
to acquire physical memory until it either reaches its max server
memory allocation target or Windows indicates there is no longer an
excess of free memory; it frees memory when it has more than the min
server memory setting, and Windows indicates that there is a shortage
of free memory.
As other applications are started on a computer running an instance of
SQL Server, they consume memory and the amount of free physical memory
drops below the SQL Server target. The instance of SQL Server adjusts
its memory consumption. If another application is stopped and more
memory becomes available, the instance of SQL Server increases the
size of its memory allocation. SQL Server can free and acquire several
megabytes of memory each second, allowing it to quickly adjust to
memory allocation changes.
If, for some reason:
You absolutely MUST have that memory back
You know you do not need it for a while
You are willing to pay a penalty for virtual memory allocation and physical I/O to retrieve data from disk the next time you need that memory
Then you can temporarily reconfigure the database max server memory setting to a lower value. This can be done through the SSMS user interface, or you can use an sp_configure 'max server memory' followed by reconfigure to make the changes programatically.
Full disclosure: I did not try it myself.
You should not try it on your production environment before testing it somewhere else.
This is from a DBA answer:
sp_configure 'show advanced options', 1;
GO
RECONFIGURE;
GO
sp_configure 'max server memory', 4096;
GO
RECONFIGURE;
GO
4096 should be replaced by the value that you find acceptable as the minimum.
Should be followed by a similar command to increase the memory back to your original maximum.
I have 32 GB physical memory server. When I am starting my server its taking 18gb memory when the server and SQL Server 2008 R2 will up. But after few hours SQL Server will be taking up 23gb or more cached size going 4939 or more. What is the cause of this problem and how can I see which queries making this problem?`
SQL loves memory, it'll use what it needs to, especially when caching data. The very nature of caching data is using memory. If your concerned about leaving a little memory for the server or other processes running on your server, then set a max memory amount to SQL.
I am trying to run a large query that writes to a custom table in my database. The databases I am calling on are about 6-7 million rows per table. The query includes join statements and sub-queries.
Previously when I have run this query, my raw data databases were significantly smaller. In the range of 1-2 million rows per table. Everything was working up until I imported more data... I've run into this error a few times prior to this addition of data and clearing the working memory cache's worked well
The host computer currently has 8GB of RAM. That computer is used solely for uploading data to the server and hosting the server. The laptop I am calling the commands from only has 4 GB of RAM.
1) Do I have enough memory on my server computer and my laptop? When I run a large query is it using the memory on my laptop or on my host computer? When answering, can you please explain how the working memory of the computer works in conjunction with SQL?
2) If I do not need to add memory, how do I configure my server to prevent this error from occurring?
Additional Information from Server Properties:
Indexing Memory Creation is set to 0 (Dynamic Memory)
Minimum memory per query = 1024 KB
Maximum server memory = maxed out # 21474836447 MB
Minimum Server Memory = 10 MB
How do I find out the max and min memory allocated for SQL Server 2005? My sql server appears to have maxed out its memory on my box and does not seem to be doing any garbage collection.
No SQL Server will not release Memory unless it receives pressure from OS.This is by design
Read these threads
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/sqldatabaseengine/thread/90d5422f-c924-4211-9323-7373e9d5ad1f/
https://serverfault.com/questions/108192/how-do-i-get-sql-server-to-release-its-memory
However you can allocate MAX memory in SQL Server 2008.I hope this will be true for SQL Server 2005 as-well.Right click on your Server Instance in SSMS and goto properties.And then Memory.
Normally it is advised to allocate MAX memory slightly less than Physical memory of the Server.read the above threads for details.