Articles

External Article

Application Containers For Cloud Computing

Containers promise to make applications more portable and efficient. The technology, originally based on Linux's cgroups, provides a way of running several applications as modular, platform-agnostic packages in isolation on the same server. Docker's open-source approach to containers has dominated the market, and Microsoft is producing its own equivalent Windows system. What next? Will Containers replace VMS? Robert Sheldon investigates.

2015-02-18

8,746 reads

External Article

Managing Test Data as a Database CI Component - Part 1

Constructing a test environment for your databases can be a difficult task at the best of times. Once you’ve actually acquired the hardware needed and architected the environment, you still have to arrange and securely transport the data. And with the rising demand for fast feedback and continuously integrated processes, having all of this automated and operating at speed is a challenge all of its own.

2015-02-16

7,538 reads

Blogs

Programmatically Retrieving MLV Lineage and Refresh Times

By

Materialized lake views (MLVs) in Microsoft Fabric are an effective way to implement medallion...

SWAG Saves the Day

By

PASS Summit East is in one week. I was on the road last week...

Upgrading SQL Server Containers on the Laptop

By

I don’t have SQL Server installed on my laptop. In an effort to keep...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Having Issue deploying a report to an on prem server from PowerBI desktop

By daniel.manke

Using PowerBI Version1.25.9508.3237(January 2026). Installed Microsoft Power BI Desktop (Optimized for Power BI Report...

SQL 2019 instance with AG, across 2 Windows 2016 OS servers - OSin-place upgrade

By millardus

Hi all Can I get some perspective from the community please on performing in-place...

How Long is a Long I/O?

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item How Long is a Long...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

How Long is a Long I/O?

In SQL Server 2025, a long I/O is recorded in the error log with message 833. How long much an I/O request be outstanding before this message is written to the log?

See possible answers