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Salesforce Data Architect Certification Guide

You're reading from   Salesforce Data Architect Certification Guide Comprehensive coverage of the Salesforce Data Architect exam content to help you pass on the first attempt

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801813556
Length 254 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Aaron Allport Aaron Allport
Author Profile Icon Aaron Allport
Aaron Allport
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Salesforce Data Architect Theory
2. Chapter 1: Introducing the Salesforce Data Architect Journey FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Data Modeling and Database Design 4. Chapter 3: Master Data Management 5. Chapter 4: Salesforce Data Management 6. Chapter 5: Data Governance 7. Chapter 6: Understanding Large Data Volumes 8. Chapter 7: Data Migration 9. Section 2: Salesforce Data Architect Design
10. Chapter 8: Accounts and Contacts 11. Chapter 9: Data APIs and Apex 12. Chapter 10: Tuning Performance 13. Chapter 11: Backup and Restore 14. Chapter 12: Territory Management 15. Section 3: Applying What We've Learned – Practice Questions and Revision Aids
16. Chapter 13: Practice Exam Questions 17. Chapter 14: Cheat Sheets 18. Chapter 15: Further Resources 19. Chapter 16: How to Take the Exam 20. Chapter 17: Answers to Practice Questions 21. Index 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Overcoming data skew

Automatic scaling is an expected feature of the Salesforce platform, particularly as the count of records for a particular object increases. Customers will demand a consistent level of performance when tens of thousands of records of the same type are present within the system. There are a couple of performance degradations that happen in a couple of select use cases. These are as follows:

  • A user owns more than 10,000 records of the same type (such as a user owning over 10,000 account records). This is known as ownership skew.
  • A single account record has a large number of child records, such as 10,000 or more contact records with the same account as their AccountId lookup. This is known as account skew.
  • Similar to account skew, when a large number of child records (10,000+) are associated with the same parent there can be performance problems. This is known as lookup skew.

We'll look at the causes for each of these and how they can be...

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