Technical Article

Declarative Management Framework - Performing Policy Management

The Declarative Management Framework is a new policy based management framework included with the upcoming SQL Server 2008. Using this feature administrators can define policies to govern their SQL Server environments much like in the Windows environment. This article, written based on the SQL Server "Katmai" July CTP introduces you to the DMF and shows you how you can perform policy management.

Technical Article

Brad McGehee On Being a Better DBA!

Brad McGehee discusses the career path of a professional database administrator. Often the DBA role is thrust upon an IT professional or developer without much in the way of specific training. Growing into the role is largely a self-motivated exercise. Brad talks about the habits that successful DBAs have, focused on on-going education and working to protect their organizations data.

Blogs

Learn about Modern Microsoft Apps in San Diego

By

I wrote about learning today for the editorial: I Can’t Make You Learn. I...

How To Deploy Fabric SQL and Azure SQL Databases with Azure DevOps

By

Fabric has CI/CD built in, but if you've tried to use it for database...

A New Word: Attriage

By

attriage – n. the state of having lost all control over how you feel...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Impact of Single-Threaded PVS Cleanup on ADR in SQL Server 2019

By abdalah.mehdoini

We want to enable ADR on our SQL Server 2019 instances. I’ve heard that...

Forward Deployed Engineers

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Forward Deployed Engineers

TRY_PARSE vs TRY_CONVERT in SQL Server: From Basics to Practical Usage

By john.martin

Comments posted to this topic are about the item TRY_PARSE vs TRY_CONVERT in SQL...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

DBCC CHECKDB Limits II

I have a SQL Server 2025 database that I want to check for corruption every night. One of the things we do is disable indexes used for ETL loads during the weekend and re-enable them on Monday morning. If we run DBCC over the weekend, are our disabled indexes checked for consistency?

See possible answers