External Article

Testing a Flyway Database Migration

Often, we want to test the new version of a database, produced by a Flyway migration, before committing the new migration file, or to test the same migration run on a number of different databases. This article demonstrates how to do it, by generating and using JSON parameter files to run a series of Flyway actions on any number of databases, on any number of servers.

SQLServerCentral Editorial

Knowing When to Respond

I ran into this quote on the Microsoft Learn site, which I thought was a great way to think about how to administer a system: "Without a baseline, every issue encountered could be considered normal and therefore not require any additional intervention." When I've had users file tickets or complain about things not working well, […]

Blogs

How to Find Expensive Queries in Amazon Redshift

By

Slow-running queries can degrade your Redshift cluster’s performance and lead to increased costs. Identifying...

The Notification Trap: How Input Fatigue Is Killing Deep Work in Tech

By

If you've been here before, you know this blog is usually about SQL Server,...

Designing a Storage Load Test for SQL Server

By

I’ve been doing storage load tests for SQL Server for a long time, both...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Make your moments memorable with Fildena 200mg

By freyasmith

Make your moments memorable with Fildena 200mg, a high-strength option designed to support men...

How Long is a Long I/O?

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item How Long is a Long...

T-SQL Trigonometric Functions in SQL Server

By Imran2629

Comments posted to this topic are about the item T-SQL Trigonometric Functions in SQL...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

How Long is a Long I/O?

In SQL Server 2025, a long I/O is recorded in the error log with message 833. How long much an I/O request be outstanding before this message is written to the log?

See possible answers