Stairway to SQL Server Security

Stairway to SQL Server Security Level 4: Permissions

A permission gives a principal access to an object to perform certain actions on or with the object. SQL Server has a mind-numbingly huge number of permissions that you can grant to a principal, and you can even deny or revoke those permissions. This sounds a bit complicated, but by the end of this stairway level you’ll understand how SQL Server permissions work and how you can exert very granular control over object creation, data access, and other types of actions on database and server objects.

External Article

Redgate Summit: The Database DevOps Transformation

Digital transformation and data modernization are frequently cited as high-value strategic projects that are crucial to achieving competitive advantage. At the same time, delivery of code in agile and predictable ways has led to many businesses adopting DevOps practices. Throughout this event we will explore how Database DevOps can be the function that accelerates transformation projects.

Join us On October 6th as we invite experts to share their insider tips and tricks.

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