Chapter 15: Performance Tuning & Best Practices When your SQL queries work correctly but run painfully slow on large tables, it’s time to diagnose, optimize, and monitor. This chapter covers the full lifecycle of performance tuning: reading execution plans, spotting bottlenecks, rewriting queries, tuning indexes, and tracking metrics over time. Whether you manage a handful of gigabytes or petabytes of data, these techniques will elevate your SQL from functional to blazing fast. 1. Reading and Interpreting Execution Plans Execution plans reveal how the database engine executes your queries. They show join strategies, index usage, sort operations, and estimated vs. actual row counts. Learning to read them is the first step toward optimization. 1.1 Generating an Execution Plan PostgreSQL : sql EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT * FROM orders WHERE order_date > '2025-01-01'; MySQL : sql EXPLAIN FORMAT=JSON SELECT * FROM orders WHERE order_date > '2025-01-01'; SQL Server : sql...
Chapter 14: Transactions and Concurrency In a multiuser environment, concurrent access to the same data can lead to inconsistencies, lost updates, and other anomalies. Transactions and concurrency control ensure that your database remains accurate, reliable, and performant even under heavy load. In this chapter you’ll explore: The ACID properties: Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, Durability Transaction control commands and best practices Isolation levels (READ UNCOMMITTED, READ COMMITTED, REPEATABLE READ, SERIALIZABLE) Techniques for detecting and resolving deadlocks Strategies for building robust, concurrent applications 1. The ACID Properties ACID defines the four guarantees every transaction must uphold: Atomicity A transaction is an all-or-nothing unit. Either every operation succeeds, or all effects are rolled back on failure. Consistency A transaction transforms the database from one valid state to another, respecting all schema constraints, triggers, and business r...