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    Solved MS SQL export / import

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    • JaredBuschJ
      JaredBusch @pchiodo
      last edited by

      @pchiodo said in MS SQL export / import:

      @Minion-Queen AKA @scottalanmiller

      @Minion-Queen said in MS SQL export / import:

      Has to be Express as this is Windows 7 to Windows 10. No Server OS.

      I think this changed with SQL Server 2012. Fairly certain it could be installed on Windows 7:

      https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms143506(v=sql.110).aspx

      SQL Server 2005 and 2008 and 2008 R2 all installed on desktop OS also.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • thwrT
        thwr @Mike Davis
        last edited by thwr

        @JaredBusch said in MS SQL export / import:

        @pchiodo said in MS SQL export / import:

        @Minion-Queen AKA @scottalanmiller

        @Minion-Queen said in MS SQL export / import:

        Has to be Express as this is Windows 7 to Windows 10. No Server OS.

        I think this changed with SQL Server 2012. Fairly certain it could be installed on Windows 7:

        https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms143506(v=sql.110).aspx

        SQL Server 2005 and 2008 and 2008 R2 all installed on desktop OS also.

        Any SQL Server Express (2005 and up) can be installed on any NT based OS as far as I remember, as long as minimum requirements are met.

        @Mike-Davis said in MS SQL export / import:

        @pchiodo said in MS QL export / import:

        Is this full blown SQL Server? or is this SQL Serve Express?

        Fairly certain it's express, but I'll double check before getting started.

        Express or not doesn't matter at all: Express is a cost-free version meant for very small and predictable workloads, primary use case is development or very small scale applications. Restrictions in Express apply to the # of CPU cores (locked down to a single core), RAM (1GB per instance) and database size (10GB in newer versions). Oh, and there's no SQL Server service agent installed.

        If you are using a full blown SQL server, be sure you got the license and the CAL. But this would be a total waste of money in next to all cases anyway.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • DashrenderD
          Dashrender @Minion Queen
          last edited by

          @Minion-Queen said in MS SQL export / import:

          Has to be Express as this is Windows 7 to Windows 10. No Server OS.

          Why does it HAVE to be? sure it's likely, but nothing stops you from install SQL server on Win 7 or Win10.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Mike DavisM
            Mike Davis
            last edited by

            It is Express. Couldn't do a simple export to the new server. It wouldn't connect. New machine is not domain joined and couldn't connect with Windows creds. My thought was to backup the database on the old box, copy the backup file to the new box and then restore it. It seemed to need a database target to restore to, so I tried to create one. That failed and I noticed that the connection type was Windows auth, and the old database was using SQL Server mode with the SA account.

            Couldn't switch the new database to SA authentication.
            0_1474312520403_database-SA.png

            I could be going about this totally wrong.

            thwrT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • thwrT
              thwr @Mike Davis
              last edited by

              @Mike-Davis said in MS SQL export / import:

              It is Express. Couldn't do a simple export to the new server. It wouldn't connect. New machine is not domain joined and couldn't connect with Windows creds. My thought was to backup the database on the old box, copy the backup file to the new box and then restore it. It seemed to need a database target to restore to, so I tried to create one. That failed and I noticed that the connection type was Windows auth, and the old database was using SQL Server mode with the SA account.

              Just create a normal backup (Task -> Backup). Setup the new SQL Server Express, create a new database and restore the backup. Job done. Make sure you install the new SQL Server with mixed mode authentication if you want to use non-Windows users to connect to the DB

              Mike DavisM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • Mike DavisM
                Mike Davis @thwr
                last edited by Mike Davis

                @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                Just create a normal backup (Task -> Backup). Setup the new SQL Server Express, create a new database and restore the backup. Job done. Make sure you install the new SQL Server with mixed mode authentication if you want to use non-Windows users to connect to the DB

                OK, that's what I was trying to do. It looks like in SQL 2016 you have to select "Enable server proxy account" in order to enable SQL server mode auth. Does that account have to get created somewhere else before you can use it, or by putting in what you want to use are you creating it there?

                thwrT JaredBuschJ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • thwrT
                  thwr @Mike Davis
                  last edited by

                  @Mike-Davis said in MS SQL export / import:

                  @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                  Just create a normal backup (Task -> Backup). Setup the new SQL Server Express, create a new database and restore the backup. Job done. Make sure you install the new SQL Server with mixed mode authentication if you want to use non-Windows users to connect to the DB

                  OK, that's what I was trying to do. It looks like in SQL 2016 you have to select "Enable server proxy account" in order to enable SQL server mode auth. Does that account have to get created somewhere else before you can use it, or by putting in what you want to use are you creating it there?

                  Uhm, wait. Are you installing that new version on the machine where the old version is installed? This may work, but you should not have multiple versions of SQL server installed on the same machine. You will most probably face problems identifying the instances etc.

                  I've never installed 2016 myself yet, but Microsoft provides decent instructions. The proxy account (https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms190698(v=sql.105).aspx) seems to be related to the Agent, which should not be available on Express.

                  JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch @thwr
                    last edited by

                    @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                    @Mike-Davis said in MS SQL export / import:

                    @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                    Just create a normal backup (Task -> Backup). Setup the new SQL Server Express, create a new database and restore the backup. Job done. Make sure you install the new SQL Server with mixed mode authentication if you want to use non-Windows users to connect to the DB

                    OK, that's what I was trying to do. It looks like in SQL 2016 you have to select "Enable server proxy account" in order to enable SQL server mode auth. Does that account have to get created somewhere else before you can use it, or by putting in what you want to use are you creating it there?

                    Uhm, wait. Are you installing that new version on the machine where the old version is installed? This may work, but you should not have multiple versions of SQL server installed on the same machine. You will most probably face problems identifying the instances etc.

                    Mixing SQL instances on the same machine works fine. Each version gets a specific instance name. and only one can be the default instance that you access without specifying the instance name. Definitely and advanced configuration though. Not for a novice.

                    thwrT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JaredBuschJ
                      JaredBusch @Mike Davis
                      last edited by

                      @Mike-Davis said in MS SQL export / import:

                      @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                      Just create a normal backup (Task -> Backup). Setup the new SQL Server Express, create a new database and restore the backup. Job done. Make sure you install the new SQL Server with mixed mode authentication if you want to use non-Windows users to connect to the DB

                      OK, that's what I was trying to do. It looks like in SQL 2016 you have to select "Enable server proxy account" in order to enable SQL server mode auth. Does that account have to get created somewhere else before you can use it, or by putting in what you want to use are you creating it there?

                      Cannot help you here. I've not install 2016 yet. Too many other things to do.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Mike DavisM
                        Mike Davis
                        last edited by

                        @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                        Are you installing that new version on the machine where the old version is installed?

                        no, the 2016 version is on a new Windows 10 computer.

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                        • Mike DavisM
                          Mike Davis
                          last edited by

                          @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                          I've never installed 2016 myself yet, but Microsoft provides decent instructions. The proxy account (https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms190698(v=sql.105).aspx) seems to be related to the Agent, which should not be available on Express.

                          I think this is the part I missed:
                          Note that you must create a credential first before you create a proxy if one is not already available. For more information about creating a credential, see How to: Create a Credential (SQL Server Management Studio) or CREATE CREDENTIAL (Transact-SQL).

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                          • Mike DavisM
                            Mike Davis
                            last edited by

                            So the sa account is there, but disabled. When I , it errors out with a permissions error. 0_1474318476706_sql-error.png

                            thwrT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • dafyreD
                              dafyre
                              last edited by

                              Check the SQL Server's authentication mode and see that it is set to Mixed?

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • thwrT
                                thwr @JaredBusch
                                last edited by

                                @JaredBusch said in MS SQL export / import:

                                @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                                @Mike-Davis said in MS SQL export / import:

                                @thwr said in MS SQL export / import:

                                Just create a normal backup (Task -> Backup). Setup the new SQL Server Express, create a new database and restore the backup. Job done. Make sure you install the new SQL Server with mixed mode authentication if you want to use non-Windows users to connect to the DB

                                OK, that's what I was trying to do. It looks like in SQL 2016 you have to select "Enable server proxy account" in order to enable SQL server mode auth. Does that account have to get created somewhere else before you can use it, or by putting in what you want to use are you creating it there?

                                Uhm, wait. Are you installing that new version on the machine where the old version is installed? This may work, but you should not have multiple versions of SQL server installed on the same machine. You will most probably face problems identifying the instances etc.

                                Mixing SQL instances on the same machine works fine. Each version gets a specific instance name. and only one can be the default instance that you access without specifying the instance name. Definitely and advanced configuration though. Not for a novice.

                                That's why I said it's better not to mix them (or run multiple instances) 😉

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • thwrT
                                  thwr @Mike Davis
                                  last edited by thwr

                                  @Mike-Davis said in MS SQL export / import:

                                  So the sa account is there, but disabled. When I , it errors out with a permissions error. 0_1474318476706_sql-error.png

                                  Sorry, like others said, check the authentication mode again. Every prior version supports the mixed mode, and I never heard about the proxy account before. Guess its new in 2016.

                                  Mike DavisM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Mike DavisM
                                    Mike Davis @thwr
                                    last edited by

                                    I resinstalled and added the sa account this time. (I don't know if the user installed it the first time.) I did a named instance, so when I logged in I had to choose .\sqlexpress as the server. Once I did that I was able to just right click databases -> restore and select the files I had copied to the back up folder from the old server. Then it worked like it should.

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