I am supporting a customer of ours who has an enterprise edition of our web application living on virtualized servers at their location. They have 3 web servers and 1 DB server. All 4 servers are virtualized with vCenter and have Windows Server 2008 R2 installed.
The DB server is running SQL Server 2008 R2 with 36 GB of RAM, and separate drives for the DB, logs, backups, etc. (7 virtual in total) on a SAS setup, though the backups occur onto a SSD drive.
The web servers are 4 GB RAM each and load balanced. We have a few processes that import data from third parties into our application for end-users, but recently one of these processes have bottle-necked on the server and caused issues. A process that should take hours takes days, and often times fails out, so I have to manually queue up the process in SQL and let it run.
After much investigation, I'm at a loss as to what the issue it. I've confirmed all of the Web Application settings are the same as our hosted environment, which houses customers much larger than this and our DB server is more robust, but the overall load onto the server is great.
Some metrics that I have included cause me to worry about the processes that are actually occurring on the server. I've included these below but I am specifically worried about the Lazy writes/sec and free list stalls/sec, as to me this is indicating that the process is overloading the server in memory and dumping the page to hard disk, which would drive down performance. Is this correct? Can anyone give me ideas on where to go from here? The customer definitely is not liking the idea of adding more resources to the DB server, so I want to be able to prove, definitively, where the issue is at.
Since this is in a virtualized environment, could it also be that the resources just happen to be shared, driving down the performance of the VM and causing this to be flushed to the drive? Any help would be greatly appreciated. My hardware experience has met its limits and I am not a DBA, so I am trying to wrap my head around what all actually goes on in the background with SQL Server.
Thanks!
-Buffer cache hit ratio 1363657/sec
-Buffer cache hit ratio base 1363687/sec
-Page lookups/sec 28043473454/sec
-Free list stalls/sec 621/sec
-Free pages 1438/sec
-Total pages 3932160/sec
-Target pages 3932160/sec
-Database pages 3846600/sec
-Reserved pages 0/sec
-Stolen pages 84122/sec
-Lazy writes/sec 77354/sec
-Readahead pages/sec 15305687/sec
-Page reads/sec 16859120/sec
-Page writes/sec 7751703/sec
-Checkpoint pages/sec 5408194/sec
-AWE lookup maps/sec 0/sec
-AWE stolen maps/sec 0/sec
-AWE write maps/sec 0/sec
-AWE unmap calls/sec 0/sec
-AWE unmap pages/sec 0/sec
-Page life expectancy 16434/sec