External Article

How to determine SQL Server database transaction log usage

One crucial aspect of all databases is the transaction log. The transaction log is used to write all transactions prior to committing the data to the data file. In some circumstances the transaction logs can get quite large and not knowing what is in the transaction log or how much space is being used can become a problem. So how to you determine how much of the transaction log is being used and what portions are being used?

External Article

Overview of Azure Data Lake

Azure Data Lake stores petabytes of data and analyzes trillions of objects in one place with no constraints. Data Lake Store can store any type of data including massive data like high-resolution video, medical data, and data from a wide variety of industries. Data Lake Store scales throughput to support any size of analytic workload with low latency. Read on to learn more.

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

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...

Half of All Engineers

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Half of All Engineers

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