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How Do You Shrink Your Azure SQL Database?

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In the early days of Azure SQL Database (ne SQL Azure) we had size limits that were minuscule–I vaguely remember 5 and 10 GB, but it could have been smaller. Back then space was at a premium. In 2021, we have hyperscale that allows us to have an Azure SQL Database of up to 100 TB (or more) in size. However data size in the cloud means costs, so space management can matter, right?

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Let’s Talk About Your Log File

While many DBAs will never ever want to shrink a data file, sometimes your transaction log file can grow for external reasons. Typically these reasons are as follows:

You will note that I didn’t mention that “your log file grew because of a large index rebuild”. That’s because that is probably roughly (this is a really rough rule of thumb) how big your transaction log needs to be. But, anyway, we’re talking about Azure SQL Database, so you don’t need to worry about your transaction log file. Microsoft takes care of that for you: ‘Unlike data files, Azure SQL Database automatically shrinks log files since that operation does not impact database performance.’

What About My Data Files?

In an on-premises world, shrinking data files should come down to two scenarios:

The first one is easy–since SQL Server never wrote data to those pages, SHRINKDB will quickly reallocate them. The second one is much harder and depends on your data types and how busy your server is. In that case SHRINK may never complete–especially if you used LOB data types. Besides that SHRINK will fragment your data massively. So you should basically never run it.

Disk space is mostly cheap, so unless you are extremely storage constrained you should just live with empty space. In Azure SQL this is even more complex, because the ghost cleanup process, which cleans up unused dirty pages can take a long time to run. So it can be days or weeks before you can reclaim your space, if ever.

So Really, How Do I Shrink My Azure SQL Database?

You don’t. Space, even in the cloud is really cheap. If you really want to make the database smaller, you can extract the data into a new database, and then drop the original database. Congratulations, you just took downtime and took several hours of your life to save $30/month. That doc from Microsoft recommends (with a warning) enabling autoshrink on your databases. Don’t do that. Ever. It’s really, really bad for your performance. Relax and enjoy the fact that your don’t have to bug the SAN admin for space in the cloud.

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