SQLServerCentral Article

Improving SQL Server Performance and Availability with Accelerated Database Recovery

For many businesses, database performance and availability are crucial elements. A database crash or a lengthy transaction can cause a lot of downtime and have a negative effect on business operations. However, with the introduction of Accelerated Database Recovery (ADR), Microsoft SQL Server has added a potent new feature that greatly enhances database availability and […]

External Article

Working with Flyway And Entity Framework Code First: An Overview

This article presents an approach to database development and deployment that combines the strengths of Entry Framework Code First for .NET-driven development with the control and database versioning provided by Flyway's SQL migrations. It allows every database change to be reviewed and tested for integrity, performance, and stability in the same way as any application change. It should make a Database CI process much easier to sustain.

Blogs

SQL Server Journey Part 2: Modern Era (2017 – 2026) – AI/Cloud First

By

Following up on my Part 1 baseline, the journey from 2017 onward changed how...

Google Moves Up Post-Quantum Cryptography Timeline

By

In cryptography, the RSA and ECC algorithms which we use primarily for asymmetric cryptography...

The Book of Redgate: No Politics

By

In today’s world, this might mean something different, but in 2010, we had this...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Dancing Robot Goes Rogue

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Dancing Robot Goes Rogue

advice as i migrate my winscp based ssis pkg to our prod server

By stan

Hi , i installed winscp on my pc, added it to GAC thru vs...

Identities and Sequences II

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Identities and Sequences II

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Identities and Sequences II

In thinking about the differences between the identity property and a sequence object, which of these two guarantees that there are consecutive numbers (according to the increment) inserted in a single table?

See possible answers