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 Lock Pages

Author  Topic 

john.burns
Posting Yak Master

100 Posts

Posted - 2009-12-03 : 08:37:06
Now that Lock Pages is available for STD edition in SP3CU4 I've installed this on a dev box and am currently testing.
One of my many sql servers (ver 9.00.3054) is exhibiting strange memory behaviour (high pages/sec etc..under medium workload)

Has anyone had any benefit with employing lock pages.. does this result in faster batch runtime executions for anyone??

thanks

tkizer
Almighty SQL Goddess

38200 Posts

Posted - 2009-12-03 : 12:25:19
We use lock pages in memory on all of our systems. We use 64-bit Enterprise Edition. And yes it does make a performance difference.

Tara Kizer
Microsoft MVP for Windows Server System - SQL Server
http://weblogs.sqlteam.com/tarad/

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"Let's begin with the premise that everything you've done up until this point is wrong."
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john.burns
Posting Yak Master

100 Posts

Posted - 2009-12-03 : 13:20:51
Tara,

I just ran a subset of our reporting flow (3 1/4 hrs) and came up with no runtime difference.

Do you any evidence on performance gains in your environment??
thanks
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russell
Pyro-ma-ni-yak

5072 Posts

Posted - 2009-12-03 : 16:09:44
Look at the perfmon counter Page Life Expectancy. that will show you a difference.

By the way, depending on how large the dataset you're processing for your reporting, and how much physical RAM, you can still shuffle pages in and out of memory.

We enable lock pages in memory on all of our servers too.
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john.burns
Posting Yak Master

100 Posts

Posted - 2009-12-03 : 16:58:37
Even if PLE measures are better... would'nt you expect better runtimes...by a sizeable percent?
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russell
Pyro-ma-ni-yak

5072 Posts

Posted - 2009-12-03 : 17:13:12
Not if you're plowing through more data than you have RAM
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john.burns
Posting Yak Master

100 Posts

Posted - 2009-12-04 : 08:54:06
Yes I am .. my bottleneck is IO ... I just thought that enhancing memory mgmt./capability would produce a net gain in runtimes.
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