Audit Logons with Extended Events
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
2 reads
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
2 reads
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
3 reads
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
2 reads
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
7 reads
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
2 reads
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
1 reads
This article shows how to audit the logon events for SQL Server 2012 and beyond through the use of XEvents.
Related Posts:
Life Support 2008 - Audit Logons July 17, 2019...
2020-04-20
5 reads
Auto-generated statistics names can seem like they are entirely random, but there is a method to the madness. With a little effort and a bit of TSQL trickery, we...
2020-05-04 (first published: 2020-04-17)
611 reads
Auto-generated statistics names can seem like they are entirely random, but there is a method to the madness. With a little effort and a bit of TSQL trickery, we...
2020-04-17
4 reads
The default collation for SQL Server is a pretty bad idea. Sure, it works but so does SQL Server 7. When you have the opportunity to update to more...
2020-03-12
167 reads
By Chris Yates
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Comments posted to this topic are about the item Cleaning Up the Cloud
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I have a table with this data:
TravelLogID CityID StartDate EndDate 1 1 2025-01-01 2025-01-06 2 2 2025-01-01 2025-01-06 3 3 2025-01-01 2025-01-06 4 4 2025-01-01 2025-01-06 5 5 2025-01-01 2025-01-06I run this code:
SELECT IDENT_CURRENT('TravelLog')I get the value 5 back. Now I do this:
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.TravelLog ON INSERT dbo.TravelLog ( TravelLogID, CityID, StartDate, EndDate ) VALUES (25, 5, '2025-09-12', '2025-09-17') SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.TravelLog OFFI now run this code.
DBCC CHECKIDENT(TravelLog) GO INSERT dbo.TravelLog ( CityID, StartDate, EndDate ) VALUES (4, '2025-10-14', '2025-10-17') GOWhat is the value for TravelLogID for the row I inserted for CityID 4 and dates starting on 14 Oct 2025? See possible answers