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Placing Indexes on Filegroups

As you develop your index design strategy, you should consider the placement of the indexes on the filegroups associated with the database. Careful selection of the filegroup or partition scheme can improve query performance.

By default, indexes are stored in the same filegroup as the base table on which the index is created. A nonpartitioned clustered index and the base table always reside in the same filegroup. However, you can do the following:

  • Create nonclustered indexes on a filegroup other than the filegroup of the base table.
  • Partition clustered and nonclustered indexes to span multiple filegroups.
  • Move a table from one filegroup to another by dropping the clustered index and specifying a new filegroup or partition scheme in the MOVE TO clause of the DROP INDEX statement or by using the CREATE INDEX statement with the DROP_EXISTING clause.

By creating the nonclustered index on a different filegroup, you can achieve performance gains if the filegroups are using different physical drives with their own controllers. Data and index information can then be read in parallel by the multiple disk heads. For example, if Table_A on filegroup f1 and Index_A on filegroup f2 are both being used by the same query, performance gains can be achieved because both filegroups are being fully used without contention. However, if Table_A is scanned by the query but Index_A is not referenced, only filegroup f1 is used. This creates no performance gain.

Because you cannot predict what type of access will occur and when it will occur, it could be a better decision to spread your tables and indexes across all filegroups. This would guarantee that all disks are being accessed because all data and indexes are spread evenly across all disks, regardless of which way the data is accessed. This is also a simpler approach for system administrators.

Partitions Across Multiple Filegroups

You can also consider partitioning clustered and nonclustered indexes across multiple filegroups. Partitioned indexes are partitioned horizontally, or by row, based on a partition function. The partition function defines how each row is mapped to a set of partitions based on the values of certain columns, called partitioning columns. A partition scheme specifies the mapping of the partitions to a set of filegroups.

Partitioning an index can provide the following benefits:

  • Provide scalable systems that make large indexes more manageable. OLTP systems, for example, can implement partition-aware applications that deal with large indexes.
  • Make queries run faster and more efficiently. When queries access several partitions of an index, the query optimizer can process individual partitions at the same time and exclude partitions that are not affected by the query.

For more information, see Partitioned Tables and Indexes.

To create a new index on a specific filegroup

CREATE INDEX

To move an existing index or table to a different filegroup

How to: Move an Existing Index to a Different Filegroup (SQL Server Management Studio)

DROP INDEX MOVE TO

CREATE INDEX WITH DROP_EXISTING

See Also

Concepts

General Index Design Guidelines
Index Design Basics
Physical Database Files and Filegroups
Understanding Files and Filegroups

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance