Hi gurus.
I want to catch execution statistics like 'reads', 'execution time' for some
reports.
I know I can run it with 'set statistics io on' but it does not effectively
servers the purpose since output can be truncated from sql agent history.
Or I could achiveve it by calling tsql from command line shell, catching
output and parsing it.
Or I can run profiler and catch statistics to table and than browse this
table.
Is there any more elegant and simple way doing it? I was thinking about
executing it and then being able to find execution statistics in system views.
Thank you for your input.
Gene.You could set up a server-side trace to a file with a very tight filter of
just the few sprocs you wish to track. The file could be loaded into a
table for historical tracking and analysis.
--
Kevin G. Boles
TheSQLGuru
Indicium Resources, Inc.
"Gene." <Gene@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:A7D159E0-B654-47F3-8CBE-EB374CA2ADDA@.microsoft.com...
> Hi gurus.
> I want to catch execution statistics like 'reads', 'execution time' for
> some
> reports.
> I know I can run it with 'set statistics io on' but it does not
> effectively
> servers the purpose since output can be truncated from sql agent history.
> Or I could achiveve it by calling tsql from command line shell, catching
> output and parsing it.
> Or I can run profiler and catch statistics to table and than browse this
> table.
> Is there any more elegant and simple way doing it? I was thinking about
> executing it and then being able to find execution statistics in system
> views.
> Thank you for your input.
> Gene.
>
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