Description
This wait occurs when a request is waiting to acquire a Shared-Range Share lock with the low priority options added in SQL Server 2014. This mechanism acquires locks on a subset of rows in an index but only when the transaction isolation SERIALIZABLE is used. A share lock typically occurs when read requests are blocked by another transaction (implicit of explicit) that has been kept open for an extended period of time. The low priority operations must not be set to abort blockers for this wait type to accumulate
Resolved by
DBAs and Developers
Suggested solutions
- Ensure transactions isolation levels are appropriate (avoid SERIALIZEABLE and REPEATABLE READ if possible)
- If possible, run low priority tasks outside regular business hours. Using abort blockers will cause interruption to users and could cause application issues
- Keep transaction durations short
- Investigate enabling the READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT database setting
- Run trace/Profiler/Extended Event session in conjunction with Blocked Process Threshold to determine which queries are being blocked
- Indexing, ensure long running queries and transactions are optimised
- Ensure locks being escalated correctly: row, page or table (if table is partitioned considered enabling partition escalation)
Additional research
Key-Range Locking
Exploring Low Priority Lock Wait Options
Reducing SQL Server Locks
Understanding Isolation Levels
Identify the Cause of SQL Server Blocking
Lock Escalations