Technical Article

SQL Server 2005 Partitioned Tables and Indexes

Although partitioning tables and indexes has always been a design tactic chosen to improve performance and manageability in larger databases, Microsoft SQL Server 2005 has new features that simplify the design. This whitepaper describes the logical progression from manually partitioning data by creating your own tables to the preliminary features, which enabled partitioning through views in SQL Server 7.0 and SQL Server 2000, to the true partitioned table features available in SQL Server 2005. In SQL Server 2005, the new table-based partitioning features significantly simplify design and administration of partitioned tables while continuing to improve performance.

SQLServerCentral Article

Unified Database Toolkit - Scheduling

SQL Server has a great scheduling system in SQLAgent. But sometimes SQLAgent won't work or isn't available. Author Andre Vigneau has built a solid system for auomtating the management of SQL Server, one that he deploys with the software that his company sells. Read about the basics of this system and get some code that might come in handy for you.

Technical Article

WebService - Enabling SQL Server 2005 Procedures

One of the most interesting features that I'll explore is that you can now create WebServices in the database tier directly, without resorting to "add ons" or even the use of IIS at all. One of the many extensions to Transact SQL is the new CREATE ENDPOINT statement, which allows the developer to create an endpoint directly from SQL Server 2005, which hooks right into the Kernel Mode HTTP.SYS driver, exposing functions and stored procedures written either in T-SQL or native CLR methods/classes.

SQLServerCentral Article

Basics of C2 Auditing

Auditing in SQL Server is something that is becoming more and more prevelant, and will likely become more regulated over time. Dinesh Asanka brings us a new article on the basics of SQL Servers most powerful auditing configuration, C2 level auditing.

Technical Article

An Overview of SQL Server 2005 for the Database Developer

With the release of Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Beta 2, the world of database development is changing. As a database developer, you now have the option to appropriately locate your code in relation to its functionality, to access data in native formats such as XML, and to build complex systems that are driven by the power of the database server. Database development is becoming more integrated than ever before, and all of the tools that you need are available right at your fingertips.

Blogs

Changing the Cardinality of a FK in Redgate Data Modeler

By

One of the things a customer asked recently about Redgate Data Modeler was how...

Future-Proofing: How to Stay Ahead in FinOps

By

Cloud environments don’t sit still. Pricing models change, services evolve, workloads grow, and suddenly...

Introducing the SQL Server on Kubernetes Operator

By

Are you considering replatforming your SQL Server workload due to recent vendor changes, but...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Removing TDE

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Removing TDE

Poor Names

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Poor Names

The day-to-day pressures of a DBA team, and how we can work smarter with automation and AI

By Terry Jago

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The day-to-day pressures of a...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Removing TDE

How do I remove TDE encryption of data from database xxx?

See possible answers