External Article

Redgate Instant Clone Beta

Redgate is in an early research phase of a tool that helps provision production-like databases for dev and test in a way that saves both time and storage. The team involved are looking for volunteers to provide feedback on the product as it's developed. If you think you'd be interested in trying out the tool, sign up for the beta program now.

External Article

SQL Server Performance Troubleshooting with SQL Monitor 5

Any SQL Server monitoring tool must gather the metrics that will allow a DBA to diagnose CPU, memory or I/O issues on their SQL Servers. It should also provide a set of accurate, reliable, configurable alerts that will inform the DBA of any abnormal or undesirable conditions and properties, as well as specific errors, on any of the monitored servers. This article provides an in-depth guide to the monitoring and alerting functionality available in one such tool, Redgate SQL Monitor. It focuses on the latest edition (5.0), which includes several key new features, such as performance diagnosis using wait statistics, the ability to compare to baselines, and more.

Blogs

KDA: Echoes of Deception - Case 6

By

A cryptic message, a book cipher hidden in art provenance records, and a trail...

Capturing My Own Metrics: #SQLNewBlogger

By

A customer was trying to compare two tables and capture a state as a...

Red Flags in Your Query (T-SQL Tuesday #200)

By

When I'm looking at a query, I bet it's bad if I see... a...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

BIT_COUNT II

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item BIT_COUNT II

I Can't Make You Learn

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item I Can't Make You Learn

Why Your SQL Permissions Disappeared

By deepeshdhake

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Why Your SQL Permissions Disappeared

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

BIT_COUNT II

In SQL Server 2025, I have a table (dbo.UserPermission) that contains this data:

UserID  UserPermissions
15
23
37
4       NULL
What is returned when I run this code:
select bit_count(UserPermissions) as PermissionCount
from dbo.UserPermission
where UserID = 4;

See possible answers