Consolidating triggers can make a huge performance boost. For example consider the following table, two triggers, and an update:
CREATE TABLE dbo.TriggerTest(ID INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
s INT NOT NULL)
GO
INSERT INTO dbo.TriggerTest(ID, s)
SELECT n, 1 FROM dbo.Numbers
WHERE n BETWEEN 1 AND 100000;
GO
CREATE TRIGGER TriggerTestNoSignChange
ON dbo.TriggerTest
AFTER UPDATE
AS
BEGIN
IF EXISTS(SELECT * FROM INSERTED AS i JOIN DELETED AS d
ON i.id = d.id WHERE sign(i.s)*sign(d.s)<0)
BEGIN
RAISERROR('s cannot change sign', 16, 1);
ROLLBACK ;
END
END
GO
CREATE TRIGGER TriggerTestNoBigChange
ON dbo.TriggerTest
AFTER UPDATE
AS
BEGIN
IF EXISTS(SELECT * FROM INSERTED AS i JOIN DELETED AS d
ON i.id = d.id WHERE ABS(i.s - d.s)>5)
BEGIN
RAISERROR('s cannot change by more than 5', 16, 1);
ROLLBACK ;
END
END
GO
UPDATE dbo.TriggerTest SET s=s+1
WHERE ID BETWEEN 1 AND 1000;
This update uses 1671 ms CPU and 4M reads. Let's consolidate two triggers and rerun the update:
DROP TRIGGER TriggerTestNoSignChange;
DROP TRIGGER TriggerTestNoBigChange;
GO
CREATE TRIGGER TriggerTestNoBigChangeOrSignChange
ON dbo.TriggerTest
AFTER UPDATE
AS
BEGIN
IF EXISTS(SELECT * FROM INSERTED AS i JOIN DELETED AS d
ON i.id = d.id WHERE sign(i.s)*sign(d.s)<0 OR ABS(i.s - d.s)>5)
BEGIN
RAISERROR('s cannot change sign or change by more than 5', 16, 1);
ROLLBACK ;
END
END
GO
UPDATE dbo.TriggerTest SET s=s+1
WHERE ID BETWEEN 1 AND 1000;
The same update runs twice us fast. Big surprise. ;)
INSERTEDandDELETEDpseudo tables? You might as well just join once especially as these aren't indexed. – Martin Smith Feb 6 '12 at 22:43