Security Queries: Server-level
A set of queries which attempt to gather as much security-related information on a server instance as possible.
2013-11-06 (first published: 2013-10-24)
3,164 reads
A set of queries which attempt to gather as much security-related information on a server instance as possible.
2013-11-06 (first published: 2013-10-24)
3,164 reads
This query gives you an idea of the growth of your database over time.
2013-11-01 (first published: 2008-03-10)
14,389 reads
Fourth in a series of scripts demonstrating a quantitative comparison between the text of two stored procedures
2013-10-31 (first published: 2009-02-17)
10,583 reads
This script pivots 1 to N numeric columns, grouping by 1 to N (N)(Var)char columns, pivoting by distinct date.
2013-10-30 (first published: 2013-10-15)
1,102 reads
This will sum all of the records of a specified database, excluding the 'sysdiagrams' table.
2013-10-23 (first published: 2007-12-17)
19,853 reads
2013-10-22 (first published: 2007-10-10)
30,316 reads
I have used the following function to convert dates according to desired textual formats that were not immediately available in the standard styles on offer.
2013-10-18 (first published: 2013-10-01)
2,013 reads
This script selects clustered indexes containing only a uniqueidentifier column
2013-10-17 (first published: 2013-10-02)
1,223 reads
This script finds the size of all indexes in a database along with the table and the filegroup on which the index resides.
2013-10-15 (first published: 2013-09-23)
1,878 reads
Top 5 expensive Queries from a Write IO perspective
2013-10-03 (first published: 2013-09-09)
2,370 reads
By James Serra
Microsoft Purview can be the best data governance tool in the world, but it...
By Arun Sirpal
Second in a series on Ai and databases. One Story, three signals – I...
I’ve been working on a project that combines two things I spend a lot...
Are there any good articles on all the trace flags that are enabled on...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Data Model Matters
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Understanding SQL Server PARTITION BY...
I run the SQLCMD utility as follows:
lcmd -S localhost -EI then type this (the 1> is the prompt):
1> select @@version goIf I hit enter, what happens? See possible answers