The process of combining data from multiple indexes into a single index is called merging. Merging results in getting rid of some redundant data and also freeing resources. Queries are also resolved faster with fewer indexes. There are three types of merges:
After a merge is completed, the multiple source indexes are replaced by a single target index.
Combining multiple word lists and shadow indexes into a single shadow index is called a shadow merge. A shadow merge is performed to free memory used by word lists and also to make the filtered data persistent; it is usually a quick operation.
In the most common case, the source indexes for a shadow merge are word lists. However, if the total number of shadow indexes exceeds MaxIndexes, some of the shadow indexes are also used as source indexes. Shadow indexes are also used as source indexes during an annealing merge.
A shadow merge is triggered by one of the following conditions:
For a master merge, the source indexes are all of the existing shadow indexes and the current master index (if any). At the end of a master merge, all the source indexes are replaced by a single target master index. Although the master merge itself is a very resource-intensive (both for CPU and disk space) operation, after the completion of a master merge, resources are freed. Redundant data is deleted and queries run faster.
Depending upon the size of the source indexes, a master merge can be a very long-running operation. However, it is fully restartable after failures and shutdowns. A master merge will continue from where it left off.
Whenever a master merge is started, restarted, or paused, an event is written to the event log. There are several reasons for starting a master merge. Some reasons for starting a master merge follow.
An annealing merge is a special kind of shadow merge performed when the system is idle for a certain length of time and the total number of persistent indexes exceed MaxIdealIndexes. The registry parameter MinMergeIdleTime specifies the percentage of CPU time that must be idle during a time period to trigger an annealing merge. An annealing merge improves query performance and disk space usage by reducing the number of shadow indexes.
© 1997 by Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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