Bill Wunder

Bill is a specialist in installation, configuration, development, upgrades, performance tuning, security, forward recovery modeling and replication of Microsoft SQL Server databases with over 10 years experience.  He currently lives in Colorado and is interetsed in providing virtual and onsight contract DBA services anywhere in the world. He has extensive experience administering SQL Servers remotely via secure VPN and Terminal Services.
  • Interests: alternative energy, music, helping out when I can where I am able

SQLServerCentral Article

Freeware : DDL Source Safe Archive Utility

If your shop is even close to the typical Microsoft SQL Server environment there are several people that can make changes to the production environment and what's in SourceSafe does not match what's on the SQL Server. This freeware by Bill Wunder will make archiving DDL and DTS packages a piece of cake and simplify deployment of SQL Server code. Available exclusivily for SQLServerCentral.com members.

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2003-07-17

826 reads

Blogs

More fun with Git: git restore

By

The setup My day job involves babysitting a lot of Git repositories hosted on...

When the Internet Stumbles: Lessons from Cloudflare & Azure Front Door Outages

By

Recently, the world was reminded of just how fragile the internet can be.  Two...

Prepping for Certification, Part 4 of 4

By

In Parts 1-3, I covered how I prepare for a certification exam. In this...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

CAST datetimeoffset(7) as a datetime in UK format

By tylerschuler75

I have a view where I am casting a datetimeoffset(7) field to smalldatetime or...

what are the downsides of TDE not running vs running?

By stan

hi for the 2 years i've been here I believe we've had "encryption" turned...

Help! MEMORY_ALLOCATION_EXT wait stalls

By krypto69

Hi I have an overnight process that moves allot of claims records Been working...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Putting the Player with the Number

In SQL Server 2025, what does this return?

DECLARE @player varchar(20) = 'Bo Nix',
@num VARCHAR = '10'

SELECT @player || @num

See possible answers