DigitalFool
IS-IT--Management
I have a client that just migrated to a new 'beefy' system for a SQL 2000 application, SQL 2000 Standard. The issue is that basic SQL queries are now taking 10x as long to generate results. What once took 10 seconds takes 100 seconds. Overall performance generally seems to be sluggish.
The old system was dual/dual, Windows 2003 Standard, 4GB, SQL 2000 Standard. (had /3GB and /PAE switch in boot.ini)
The new system is dual/quad, Windows 2003 Enteprise, 32GB, SQL 2000 Standard.
I would imagine at the very least it would have similar performance if not better. I understand the limitations of 2GB of memory for SQL Standard 2000, and was curious if anyone had suggestions to where the bottleneck might be? Any utilities that might shed some light?
It would be great to move to SQL 2005 Standard at the very least, but that is not in their budget at the moment.
Page Life Expectancy has a moving average of 150 whereas the previous server was well over 300, so it really seems like a memory problem. CPU is barely being touched.
Thanks in advance!
The old system was dual/dual, Windows 2003 Standard, 4GB, SQL 2000 Standard. (had /3GB and /PAE switch in boot.ini)
The new system is dual/quad, Windows 2003 Enteprise, 32GB, SQL 2000 Standard.
I would imagine at the very least it would have similar performance if not better. I understand the limitations of 2GB of memory for SQL Standard 2000, and was curious if anyone had suggestions to where the bottleneck might be? Any utilities that might shed some light?
It would be great to move to SQL 2005 Standard at the very least, but that is not in their budget at the moment.
Page Life Expectancy has a moving average of 150 whereas the previous server was well over 300, so it really seems like a memory problem. CPU is barely being touched.
Thanks in advance!