How are the system health extended events files rolling over?Failover Cluster Diagnostic Logswhat are the...

When Are Enum Values Defined?

Cat is tipping over bed-side lamps during the night

Renting a 2CV in France

Possible issue with my W4 and tax return

Does an Eldritch Knight's Weapon Bond protect him from losing his weapon to a Telekinesis spell?

Why does 0.-5 evaluate to -5?

Taking headphones when quitting job

How much mayhem could I cause as a fish?

Which RAF squadrons and aircraft types took part in the bombing of Berlin on the 25th of August 1940?

What can I do to encourage my players to use their consumables?

Why is it that Bernie Sanders is always called a "socialist"?

Why did Luke use his left hand to shoot?

Single-row INSERT...SELECT much slower than separate SELECT

What's this assembly doing?

Has any human ever had the choice to leave Earth permanently?

Does it take energy to move something in a circle?

Why didn't the 2019 Oscars have a host?

What is the difference between "...", '...', $'...', and $"..." quotes?

Why avoid shared user accounts?

What is a good reason for every spaceship to carry a weapon on board?

The No-Straight Maze

What makes papers publishable in top-tier journals?

How vim overwrites readonly mode?

Should I cite R or RStudio?



How are the system health extended events files rolling over?


Failover Cluster Diagnostic Logswhat are the costs of enabling extended events?How to prevent Extended Events from tracking system fired events?How do you use Extended Events to find port numbers?How to use two actions and a function in an Extended Events Histogram for deadlocks?Multiple transaction logs and preferred order of usehow to find out what process(es) caused the autogrowth of a database or a database file?how to use fn_xe_file_target_read_file to read files over networkRead system_health event_file instead of ring_buffer for deadlocks extended eventsTruncation of transaction logs













4















I see the default system health session events within SQL Server are 5 MB each with 4 files in total.



We are trying to fetch data from the system health in historical events but for some critical production servers they just keep rolling over very fast. For some they stay there even for weeks



How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?



Edit@ Per Answer




  1. Event is not restarted

  2. Server is also not restarted and it happens per scheduled once a month


Therefore i am thinking there could be possibly lot of unwanted events being captured in system health. How can i find them and filter them out in this system health ?



Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?



Update@ I've already marked this an answer, but while checking another thing that popped out:



The files are not filling in sequential order ; say i increased to 10 files to 10 MB each. we see 1-6 files couple of days old seems all filled with 10 MB, while file 7 and 8 for the same day is 2 MB and file 9 and 10 filled up completely 10 MB. I guess this is expected, just curious why it's like this?










share|improve this question





























    4















    I see the default system health session events within SQL Server are 5 MB each with 4 files in total.



    We are trying to fetch data from the system health in historical events but for some critical production servers they just keep rolling over very fast. For some they stay there even for weeks



    How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?



    Edit@ Per Answer




    1. Event is not restarted

    2. Server is also not restarted and it happens per scheduled once a month


    Therefore i am thinking there could be possibly lot of unwanted events being captured in system health. How can i find them and filter them out in this system health ?



    Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?



    Update@ I've already marked this an answer, but while checking another thing that popped out:



    The files are not filling in sequential order ; say i increased to 10 files to 10 MB each. we see 1-6 files couple of days old seems all filled with 10 MB, while file 7 and 8 for the same day is 2 MB and file 9 and 10 filled up completely 10 MB. I guess this is expected, just curious why it's like this?










    share|improve this question



























      4












      4








      4








      I see the default system health session events within SQL Server are 5 MB each with 4 files in total.



      We are trying to fetch data from the system health in historical events but for some critical production servers they just keep rolling over very fast. For some they stay there even for weeks



      How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?



      Edit@ Per Answer




      1. Event is not restarted

      2. Server is also not restarted and it happens per scheduled once a month


      Therefore i am thinking there could be possibly lot of unwanted events being captured in system health. How can i find them and filter them out in this system health ?



      Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?



      Update@ I've already marked this an answer, but while checking another thing that popped out:



      The files are not filling in sequential order ; say i increased to 10 files to 10 MB each. we see 1-6 files couple of days old seems all filled with 10 MB, while file 7 and 8 for the same day is 2 MB and file 9 and 10 filled up completely 10 MB. I guess this is expected, just curious why it's like this?










      share|improve this question
















      I see the default system health session events within SQL Server are 5 MB each with 4 files in total.



      We are trying to fetch data from the system health in historical events but for some critical production servers they just keep rolling over very fast. For some they stay there even for weeks



      How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?



      Edit@ Per Answer




      1. Event is not restarted

      2. Server is also not restarted and it happens per scheduled once a month


      Therefore i am thinking there could be possibly lot of unwanted events being captured in system health. How can i find them and filter them out in this system health ?



      Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?



      Update@ I've already marked this an answer, but while checking another thing that popped out:



      The files are not filling in sequential order ; say i increased to 10 files to 10 MB each. we see 1-6 files couple of days old seems all filled with 10 MB, while file 7 and 8 for the same day is 2 MB and file 9 and 10 filled up completely 10 MB. I guess this is expected, just curious why it's like this?







      sql-server sql-server-2012 sql-server-2014 extended-events






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 5 hours ago







      BeginnerDBA

















      asked 9 hours ago









      BeginnerDBABeginnerDBA

      5441417




      5441417






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          5















          How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files




          The files will roll over when any of the following occurs:




          • the file reaches its max size (in this case, 5 MB)

          • the XE session is stopped and restarted for any reason


          This could be someone actually running the command:



          ALTER EVENT SESSION [session_name]  
          ON SERVER
          STATE = STOP;


          Or it could be that the server or SQL Server instance was restarted (this seems unlikely given you mentioned this is a critical production server).






          and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?




          If all of your files are at or around 5 MB, your server is just generating a lot of events. I have a production server that's not very busy, and it still takes less than 24 hours to fill up one of the 4 XE files with 5 MB of events. Here's a screenshot, check out the modified dates on those files:



          screenshot of Windows Explorer showing system_health XE logs



          To see what events are included in the event session in SSMS, you can go to Management → Extended Events → Sessions → right-click "system_health" and choose "Script Session as" → "CREATE to" → "New Query Editor Window".



          However, note this from the Microsoft docs article Use the system_health Session:




          We recommend that you do not stop, alter, or delete the system health session.




          So your best bet would be to create a new XE session with just the subset of events you want, and the specific Event File Target settings that work for your system.



          If the files are less than 5 MB, then the server or event session is being restarted. You can check the SQL Server error log for when restarts are happening, and you'll have to check with those who have CONTROL SERVER permissions to see who is stopping the XE session if that's the case.






          Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?




          It depends. Querying (reading) from a bunch of different files can be inconvenient. So I'd lean towards a lower total number of files, and just increasing the size of each one.



          That being said, I've never tried parsing through a really large XE file, so there might be issues with that. You'll have to test and see which one is better for your system.






          share|improve this answer


























          • @ Thanks for the answer. Just came up with question on how these files are filling up. if you have any idea?

            – BeginnerDBA
            5 hours ago











          • @BeginnerDBA You're welcome! I'm glad I could help =) That seems like a fairly independent question. You should post it as a new question rather than adding it to this one.

            – jadarnel27
            5 hours ago













          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "182"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });














          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdba.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f230689%2fhow-are-the-system-health-extended-events-files-rolling-over%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          5















          How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files




          The files will roll over when any of the following occurs:




          • the file reaches its max size (in this case, 5 MB)

          • the XE session is stopped and restarted for any reason


          This could be someone actually running the command:



          ALTER EVENT SESSION [session_name]  
          ON SERVER
          STATE = STOP;


          Or it could be that the server or SQL Server instance was restarted (this seems unlikely given you mentioned this is a critical production server).






          and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?




          If all of your files are at or around 5 MB, your server is just generating a lot of events. I have a production server that's not very busy, and it still takes less than 24 hours to fill up one of the 4 XE files with 5 MB of events. Here's a screenshot, check out the modified dates on those files:



          screenshot of Windows Explorer showing system_health XE logs



          To see what events are included in the event session in SSMS, you can go to Management → Extended Events → Sessions → right-click "system_health" and choose "Script Session as" → "CREATE to" → "New Query Editor Window".



          However, note this from the Microsoft docs article Use the system_health Session:




          We recommend that you do not stop, alter, or delete the system health session.




          So your best bet would be to create a new XE session with just the subset of events you want, and the specific Event File Target settings that work for your system.



          If the files are less than 5 MB, then the server or event session is being restarted. You can check the SQL Server error log for when restarts are happening, and you'll have to check with those who have CONTROL SERVER permissions to see who is stopping the XE session if that's the case.






          Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?




          It depends. Querying (reading) from a bunch of different files can be inconvenient. So I'd lean towards a lower total number of files, and just increasing the size of each one.



          That being said, I've never tried parsing through a really large XE file, so there might be issues with that. You'll have to test and see which one is better for your system.






          share|improve this answer


























          • @ Thanks for the answer. Just came up with question on how these files are filling up. if you have any idea?

            – BeginnerDBA
            5 hours ago











          • @BeginnerDBA You're welcome! I'm glad I could help =) That seems like a fairly independent question. You should post it as a new question rather than adding it to this one.

            – jadarnel27
            5 hours ago


















          5















          How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files




          The files will roll over when any of the following occurs:




          • the file reaches its max size (in this case, 5 MB)

          • the XE session is stopped and restarted for any reason


          This could be someone actually running the command:



          ALTER EVENT SESSION [session_name]  
          ON SERVER
          STATE = STOP;


          Or it could be that the server or SQL Server instance was restarted (this seems unlikely given you mentioned this is a critical production server).






          and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?




          If all of your files are at or around 5 MB, your server is just generating a lot of events. I have a production server that's not very busy, and it still takes less than 24 hours to fill up one of the 4 XE files with 5 MB of events. Here's a screenshot, check out the modified dates on those files:



          screenshot of Windows Explorer showing system_health XE logs



          To see what events are included in the event session in SSMS, you can go to Management → Extended Events → Sessions → right-click "system_health" and choose "Script Session as" → "CREATE to" → "New Query Editor Window".



          However, note this from the Microsoft docs article Use the system_health Session:




          We recommend that you do not stop, alter, or delete the system health session.




          So your best bet would be to create a new XE session with just the subset of events you want, and the specific Event File Target settings that work for your system.



          If the files are less than 5 MB, then the server or event session is being restarted. You can check the SQL Server error log for when restarts are happening, and you'll have to check with those who have CONTROL SERVER permissions to see who is stopping the XE session if that's the case.






          Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?




          It depends. Querying (reading) from a bunch of different files can be inconvenient. So I'd lean towards a lower total number of files, and just increasing the size of each one.



          That being said, I've never tried parsing through a really large XE file, so there might be issues with that. You'll have to test and see which one is better for your system.






          share|improve this answer


























          • @ Thanks for the answer. Just came up with question on how these files are filling up. if you have any idea?

            – BeginnerDBA
            5 hours ago











          • @BeginnerDBA You're welcome! I'm glad I could help =) That seems like a fairly independent question. You should post it as a new question rather than adding it to this one.

            – jadarnel27
            5 hours ago
















          5












          5








          5








          How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files




          The files will roll over when any of the following occurs:




          • the file reaches its max size (in this case, 5 MB)

          • the XE session is stopped and restarted for any reason


          This could be someone actually running the command:



          ALTER EVENT SESSION [session_name]  
          ON SERVER
          STATE = STOP;


          Or it could be that the server or SQL Server instance was restarted (this seems unlikely given you mentioned this is a critical production server).






          and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?




          If all of your files are at or around 5 MB, your server is just generating a lot of events. I have a production server that's not very busy, and it still takes less than 24 hours to fill up one of the 4 XE files with 5 MB of events. Here's a screenshot, check out the modified dates on those files:



          screenshot of Windows Explorer showing system_health XE logs



          To see what events are included in the event session in SSMS, you can go to Management → Extended Events → Sessions → right-click "system_health" and choose "Script Session as" → "CREATE to" → "New Query Editor Window".



          However, note this from the Microsoft docs article Use the system_health Session:




          We recommend that you do not stop, alter, or delete the system health session.




          So your best bet would be to create a new XE session with just the subset of events you want, and the specific Event File Target settings that work for your system.



          If the files are less than 5 MB, then the server or event session is being restarted. You can check the SQL Server error log for when restarts are happening, and you'll have to check with those who have CONTROL SERVER permissions to see who is stopping the XE session if that's the case.






          Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?




          It depends. Querying (reading) from a bunch of different files can be inconvenient. So I'd lean towards a lower total number of files, and just increasing the size of each one.



          That being said, I've never tried parsing through a really large XE file, so there might be issues with that. You'll have to test and see which one is better for your system.






          share|improve this answer
















          How is the mechanism working in SQL Server of rolling over the files




          The files will roll over when any of the following occurs:




          • the file reaches its max size (in this case, 5 MB)

          • the XE session is stopped and restarted for any reason


          This could be someone actually running the command:



          ALTER EVENT SESSION [session_name]  
          ON SERVER
          STATE = STOP;


          Or it could be that the server or SQL Server instance was restarted (this seems unlikely given you mentioned this is a critical production server).






          and is there a way I can check when and how this is happening?




          If all of your files are at or around 5 MB, your server is just generating a lot of events. I have a production server that's not very busy, and it still takes less than 24 hours to fill up one of the 4 XE files with 5 MB of events. Here's a screenshot, check out the modified dates on those files:



          screenshot of Windows Explorer showing system_health XE logs



          To see what events are included in the event session in SSMS, you can go to Management → Extended Events → Sessions → right-click "system_health" and choose "Script Session as" → "CREATE to" → "New Query Editor Window".



          However, note this from the Microsoft docs article Use the system_health Session:




          We recommend that you do not stop, alter, or delete the system health session.




          So your best bet would be to create a new XE session with just the subset of events you want, and the specific Event File Target settings that work for your system.



          If the files are less than 5 MB, then the server or event session is being restarted. You can check the SQL Server error log for when restarts are happening, and you'll have to check with those who have CONTROL SERVER permissions to see who is stopping the XE session if that's the case.






          Also, should we be increasing file sizes say 200 MB 4 files or just keep small size files like 10 MB 80 files? Which one is better?




          It depends. Querying (reading) from a bunch of different files can be inconvenient. So I'd lean towards a lower total number of files, and just increasing the size of each one.



          That being said, I've never tried parsing through a really large XE file, so there might be issues with that. You'll have to test and see which one is better for your system.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 7 hours ago









          MDCCL

          6,84331745




          6,84331745










          answered 9 hours ago









          jadarnel27jadarnel27

          5,85411938




          5,85411938













          • @ Thanks for the answer. Just came up with question on how these files are filling up. if you have any idea?

            – BeginnerDBA
            5 hours ago











          • @BeginnerDBA You're welcome! I'm glad I could help =) That seems like a fairly independent question. You should post it as a new question rather than adding it to this one.

            – jadarnel27
            5 hours ago





















          • @ Thanks for the answer. Just came up with question on how these files are filling up. if you have any idea?

            – BeginnerDBA
            5 hours ago











          • @BeginnerDBA You're welcome! I'm glad I could help =) That seems like a fairly independent question. You should post it as a new question rather than adding it to this one.

            – jadarnel27
            5 hours ago



















          @ Thanks for the answer. Just came up with question on how these files are filling up. if you have any idea?

          – BeginnerDBA
          5 hours ago





          @ Thanks for the answer. Just came up with question on how these files are filling up. if you have any idea?

          – BeginnerDBA
          5 hours ago













          @BeginnerDBA You're welcome! I'm glad I could help =) That seems like a fairly independent question. You should post it as a new question rather than adding it to this one.

          – jadarnel27
          5 hours ago







          @BeginnerDBA You're welcome! I'm glad I could help =) That seems like a fairly independent question. You should post it as a new question rather than adding it to this one.

          – jadarnel27
          5 hours ago




















          draft saved

          draft discarded




















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Database Administrators Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid



          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdba.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f230689%2fhow-are-the-system-health-extended-events-files-rolling-over%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Couldn't open a raw socket. Error: Permission denied (13) (nmap)Is it possible to run networking commands...

          VNC viewer RFB protocol error: bad desktop size 0x0I Cannot Type the Key 'd' (lowercase) in VNC Viewer...

          Why not use the yoke to control yaw, as well as pitch and roll? Announcing the arrival of...