Articles

External Article

Find SQL Server databases where log file is too large

I support thousands of databases and I'm running across situations where I have a database that has a data file of a couple hundred megabytes and the associated log file is gigabytes in size! I understand this is because I may not have my transaction log backups scheduled properly. What I'm interested in is an easy way to identify these situations where the SQL log file is too large, so I can go in and further analyze these problem databases without needing to look at each database.

2011-05-09

5,073 reads

External Article

How to remove parent as a child from a SSAS parent child dimension

In a parent child dimension, when an attribute's usage type is set as Parent and browsed from a client tool, many designers as well as users may get confused based on the displayed results. For example, when you browse a parent attribute in a parent child dimension like Employee and say the parent attribute is Employees, you can browse data members from the parent node until the deepest available level of the child node. By default you will find each parent member having a child member with the same name even though this member might not exist in the data. From a user experience point of view this is not a desirable way of browsing a parent child hierarchy because it may get confusing. In this tip we will look at an example of this issue and how to solve this problem.

2011-05-06

2,757 reads

External Article

SQL Server Foreign Key Update and Delete Rules

Foreign key constraints are an integral part of SQL Server database design. These are used to maintain integrity among related data in different tables. While implementing update and delete operations on values in the parent table (referenced table with primary key) we have to consider the impact on related values in the child table. SQL Server provides different rules for managing the effect of updates and deletes on child table values. How can these rules be used effectively without threatening the relational integrity?

2011-05-03

4,940 reads

Blogs

A Cloud Dependency Failure from Amazon

By

I went to sleep while reading a Kindle book on my phone. I know...

Deploying AI in logistics (the unfiltered version)

By

A conversation with Jan Laš, CIO at HOPI, about what deploying a data agent...

T-SQL Tuesday #198 Invitation: How Do You Detect Data Changes?

By

It's time for T-SQL Tuesday #198! This month's topic is change detection. The post T-SQL...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

SPAM Issues May 2026

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

We suffered a SPAM attack from May 1-6, which unfortunately corresponded with time off...

SQL Password enforcing

By Andre 425568

Hi to all We have situation at a client where someone is illegally changing...

SQL Password enforcing

By Andre 425568

Hi to all We have situation at a client where someone is illegally changing...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Creating a JSON Document III

I have this data in a table called dbo.NFLTeams

TeamID  TeamName       City             YearEstablished
------  --------       ----             ---------------
1       Cowboys        Dallas           1960
2       Eagles         Philadelphia     1933
3       Packers        Green Bay        1919
4       Chiefs         Kansas City      1960
5       49ers          San Francisco    1946
6       Broncos        Denver           1960
7       Seahawks       Seattle          1976
8       Patriots       New England      1960
If I run this code, how many rows are returned?
SELECT TOP 2 
  json_objectagg('Team' : TeamName)
FROM dbo.NFLTeams;

See possible answers