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Author: Joe Webb

SQL Server Configuration settings

Webinar: Is Your SQL Server Healthy?

SQL Server. Many business depend on it. But how can you tell if your SQL Server is healthy? It’s not always obvious. SQL Server can be pretty forgiving in many ways, until it’s not. And that can put your performance and even your data at risk. The right configuration settings are critical. Unfortunately, it’s easy…
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SQL Server FCI or AG?

What’s the Difference in SQL Server FCIs and AGs?

“What’s the difference in SQL Server FCIs and AGs?” That question comes up frequently when talking High Availability and Disaster Recovery (HADR). It’s especially important when “Everything stops and people can’t do their jobs if SQL Server is unavailable.” There are a lot of how-to articles on the internet for setting up Always On Failover…
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SQL Server disk IO traffic jam

Identifying SQL Server Disk Latency

When SQL Server is not as fast as users think it ought to be, how can you tell where the slowdown is? Where’s the performance bottleneck? Where’s the traffic jam? Is it waiting on CPU? Does it needs memory? What about the disks? Could SQL Server be slow because of disk latency? Could be. But…
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waiting for sql server

How Much Longer Will CHECKDB Take?

You’ve manually started DBCC CHECKDB to verify the integrity of a database. It churns. And churns. You check the Messages tab on Management Studio. Nothing. So, you start to wonder: Just how much longer will CHECKDB take to complete? A couple of minutes? A couple of hours? Who knows? How long will DBCC CHECKDB take?…
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SQL Server Security

What Takes Precedent db_datareader (GRANT) or db_denydatareader (DENY)?

If a user is a member of db_datareader, which grants access to a table, and db_denydatareader, which denies access to a table, which role will take precedent? That’s the question someone on LinkedIn recently posted in the SQL Server Administrators group recently. Here’s a link to the question. The LinkedIn poster essentially wanted to know…
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disaster recovery in SQL Server

Where to Start with Disaster Recovery in SQL Server

Backup and restore? Log shipping? Maybe Failover Clustered Instances or Availability Groups can be used? Oh, what about Azure or another cloud provider? Some data centers offer “push button DR,” will that work? There are so many options. Where should we start with Disaster Recovery for our SQL Server? The point of Disaster Recovery Disasters…
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Learning SQL Server

Learn SQL Server with PluralSight’s FreeApril

“I want to learn [a technology]. Where should I start?” Since I’ve spent the last 25 year working with SQL Server (no exaggeration, see footnote), the question is usually about learning SQL Server. Sometimes it’s about learning related technologies such as data analytics and visualization, scripting languages such as Python or PowerShell, or the burgeoning…
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Testing sql server backup files before you need them

How to Test SQL Server Backups Using dbatools

The call comes in. “Something’s happened. We need to restore the production database. Can you do it? And how long will it take?” No DBA wants to receive that call but, frankly, answering those calls and the ensuing questions are part of a DBA’s job. And there’s no better way to know that you can,…
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The future of the SQLSaturday community

The Future of SQLSaturday

The SQL Server community is vibrant, caring, and close-knit. Now, with recent news about the future of SQLSaturday, we can add resilient to that list. The gift of SQLSaturday If you’ve been around SQL Server very long, you know just how wonderful the SQL Server community is. People around the world regularly and selflessly share…
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some things in sql server are scary but not dangerous

Scary and Dangerous Things in SQL Server

Some things are scary. Other things are dangerous. And in SQL Server, you can have both scary and dangerous at the same time. Scary, that we can deal with. But dangerous, particularly things that are deceptively dangerous, is bad. Scary things Let’s start with scary. Some things give us pause. We see them, think about…
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