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Which three actions should you perform in sequence?

DRAG DROP

Note: This question is part of a series of questions that use the same scenario. For your convenience, the scenario is repeated in each question. Each question presents a different goal and answer choices, but the next of the scenario is exactly the same in each question in this series.

Start of repeated scenario

Contoso, Ltd. has Microsoft SQL Server databases that support a custom application. The current SQL Server environment consists of two servers: ContosoSQL1 and ContosoSQL2. These two servers participate in an Always On Availability Group named ContosoAG1 that is configured to use synchronous-commit with automatic failover. The secondary replica is not configured for read-only access.

The application performs both transactional processing and historical data retrieval in a database named ContosoDB. The application includes an inventory management module. The inventory management module and database have experienced performance issues.

Users report that a query named InventoryQuery1 takes a long time to complete. The query is shown as follows:

SELECT ProductNumber, Name, ProductLine

FROM Production.Product

WHERE ProductNumber = N'<specific product>’

The query plan used by SQL Server for this query is shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit tab.) Various performance issues, including frequent long-term blocking episodes, prevent business users from completing their daily tasks. You suspect the tempdb database resources could be responsible. You must create Blocking reports for the ContosoDB database to identify issues.

Exhibit.

You plan to use Extended Events to review all Transact-SQL statements that are run against the ContosoSQL1 instance. The output from the Extended Events session must contain both start and stop events and must be written to a file. You must configure the Extended Events session to minimize possible data loss and reduce the effect on server performance.

You plan to deploy an additional secondary replica named ContosoSQL3 to ContosoAG1. Read-only traffic must be load-balanced between the two secondary replicas, regardless of which instance is the primary replica. Contoso plans to add an additional dedicated reporting system that will rely on real-time data from the transactional databases.

End of repeated scenario

You need to create the blocking reports.

Which three actions should you perform in sequence? To answer, move the appropriate actions from the list of actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.

Answer:

Explanation:

Scenario: Various performance issues, including frequent long-term blocking episodes, prevent business users from completing their daily tasks. You suspect the tempdb database resources could be responsible. You must create Blocking reports for the ContosoDB database to identify issues.

Step 1: Enable the Show advanced options server configuration option First, you need to decide how many seconds a process should be blocked for in order for it to be included in the report, i.e. the blocked process threshold. If you set this value too low you may generate too much noise in the report. If you set it too high you might not get any processes waiting long enough to appear in the report. For Microsoft Dynamics NAV environments, the value should be less than any “Lock Timeout” setting which may be enabled (as set in the NAV Development Environment, see File -> Database -> “Alter Database” -> “Advanced” tab).

Step 2: Set the Blocked process threshold server configuration option to 60 By default, the “blocked process threshold” is zero, meaning that SQL Server won’t generate the blocked process reports. We need to configure by the “blocked process threshold” to a specific value (in seconds) using the sp_configure option. For example, if we set it to 15 seconds, then the event will fire three times if a session is blocked for 45 seconds.

Step 3: Use Extended Events to capture blocking reports for review If blocking is causing issues, we can run an Extended Events event session, to log occurrences of blocking that exceed a specific time threshold, and capture the blocked_process_report event.

References: https://cloudblogs.microsoft.com/dynamics365/no-audience/2015/01/16/using-sql-server­extended-events-to-produce-a-blocked-process-report/

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