SQLServerCentral Article

Ownership Chaining

Security in SQL Server is not too complex, following a fairly simple framework for allowing and preventing access to data. However there are a few places where it can get tricky and some concepts that many people do not understand. Rob Farley brings us an explanation of one of those areas: ownership chaining. Read about how ownership chaining can be useful and also how it may open security holes in your environment.

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

Auto Update Statistics not triggering on filtered indexes

By Leo.Miller

I've got a table with 186,703,969 rows, about 300GB of data. There are several...

What is the difference between SQL Server and SQL Database?

By kamiiteore

I created a SQL Database in Azure Portal but I've just noticed it also...

An Unusual Identity

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item An Unusual Identity

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

An Unusual Identity

What values are returned when I run this code?

CREATE TABLE dbo.IdentityTest2
(
     id NUMERIC(10,0) IDENTITY(10,10) PRIMARY KEY,
     somevalue VARCHAR(20)
)
GO
INSERT dbo.IdentityTest2
(
    somevalue
)
VALUES
( 'Steve')
, ('Bill')
GO
SELECT top 10
 id
 FROM dbo.IdentityTest2

See possible answers