SQL Server 2000 Black Book
A review of the SQL Server 2000 Black Book from the Coriolis Black Book series.
A review of the SQL Server 2000 Black Book from the Coriolis Black Book series.
In SQL Server 7.0 Data Transformation Services (DTS), dynamically configuring packages was difficult. With the aid of a new Dynamic Properties task in SQL Server 2000, this assignment is easy.
This article by Andy Warren provides an introduction to some of the fixed database roles and things to consider when using them.
These are some stories that show the downside of everyone having cell phones.
The Index Wizard is a handy tool shipped as part of the SQL 7 Profiler that can analyze a set of SQL queries and suggest index changes that could improve their performance.
Global variables are a little known solution in Data Transformation Services (DTS). Often packages become "stale", where you must develop a package for each client.
The CASE statement is a very flexible tool. Here are just a few of the tricks you can work with it.
In this article, we get you started with the core knowledge you'll need to transform your data using DTS.
If you use performance log data and need to conduct time-sensitive analysis, watch out for this little feature in Windows 2000.
Replicating continuously minimizes latency, but at a cost. If you're replicated a lot of databases, read this article for some ideas about how to trade latency for overhead by runnig your agents in non-continous mode.
Buckle up, database wranglers! Nowadays, SQL DBAs hold the keys to a company's most...
By DataOnWheels
Picture this, your data ingestion team has created a table that has the sales...
By Brian Kelley
I did a post last month titled RTO and RPO are myths unless you've...
I have the user Managed identity <myusermanagedidentity> , granted it carte blanche alter...
First off, my apologies for what could potentially be a bad title! I am...
I've inherited a couple of rather large databases from my ex-colleague when I join...
I have marked a few transactions in my code. How can I find out which marks were stored in a transaction log?
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