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    • OksanaO

      Choose the Right High Availability Path for your Microsoft SQL Server

      Starwind
      • starwind sql server microsoft failover cluster • • Oksana
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    • OksanaO

      SQL Server 2022 and a: New hybrid cloud capabilities.

      Starwind
      • starwind sql sql server azure azure arc hybrid cloud • • Oksana
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    • OksanaO

      Real-World Production Scenario: Squeezing all possible performance out of Microsoft SQL Server AGs (Availability Groups). Local NVMe Vs. RDMA-mapped (NVMe-oF) remote NVMe storage. Does the juice worth a squeeze?

      Starwind
      • starwind sql sql server nvme nvme-of availability groups • • Oksana
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    • OksanaO

      StarWind and Pavilion Accelerate Windows Apps by 2X

      Starwind
      • starwind nvme-of nvme sql server • • Oksana
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    • scottalanmillerS

      MS SQL Server 2016 on Windows Server 2019?

      IT Discussion
      • sql server sql server 2016 windows server 2019 • • scottalanmiller
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      ObsolesceO

      @scottalanmiller said in MS SQL Server 2016 on Windows Server 2019?:

      Trust me, we tried to go Linux. But it just didn't work out.

      OH NOES!

    • JaredBuschJ

      MS SQL Express cannot create compressed backups

      IT Discussion
      • sql server • • JaredBusch
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      scottalanmillerS

      @JaredBusch said in MS SQL Express cannot create compressed backups:

      @scottalanmiller said in MS SQL Express cannot create compressed backups:

      Would not have expected that.

      It is not a game breaker. The DB is only 1.2GB, but out of habit, i always compress backups with the native tools.

      This time I have to compress it after the fact. not a huge deal. Just annoying.

      Yeah, it's Express. Just seems like an odd feature to remove there. Definitely not a big deal, you can compress manually later.

    • JaredBuschJ

      MS SQL on Linux rpm missing in repo

      IT Discussion
      • microsoft sql microsoft linux sql server yum • • JaredBusch
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      dafyreD

      @JaredBusch said in MS SQL on Linux rpm missing in repo:

      Good work Microsoft......

      4fa92e0a-5451-4bf7-a310-aaad98001f48-image.png

      msodbcsql17-17.4.1.1-1.x86_64. FAILED https://packages.microsoft.com/rhel/7/prod/msodbcsql17-17.4.1.1-1.x86_64.rpm: [Errno 14] HTTPS Error 404 - Not Found --:--:-- ETA Trying other mirror. To address this issue please refer to the below wiki article https://wiki.centos.org/yum-errors If above article doesn't help to resolve this issue please use https://bugs.centos.org/. mssql-tools-17.4.1.1-1.x86_64. FAILED https://packages.microsoft.com/rhel/7/prod/mssql-tools-17.4.1.1-1.x86_64.rpm: [Errno 14] HTTPS Error 404 - Not Found --:--:-- ETA Trying other mirror. Error downloading packages: mssql-tools-17.4.1.1-1.x86_64: [Errno 256] No more mirrors to try. msodbcsql17-17.4.1.1-1.x86_64: [Errno 256] No more mirrors to try.

      There is no 17.4 in the repo... https://packages.microsoft.com/rhel/7/prod/

      Something they released and then pulled, maybe?

    • scottalanmillerS

      Unsolved Veeam Agent for Windows VSS Snapshot Error with SqlServerWriter

      IT Discussion
      • veeam vss shadow copy sql server veeam agent for windows windows server windows backup disaster recovery windows server 2012 r2 • • scottalanmiller
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      notverypunnyN

      Our go-to solution for VSS problems is to set up a dedicated snapshot volume. Otherwise we were getting timeouts and M$ does ugly things that don't make sense when VSS doesn't work properly.

    • scottalanmillerS

      Make MS SQL Server 2014 Log Every Query

      IT Discussion
      • sql server sql server 2014 logging • • scottalanmiller
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      JaredBuschJ

      @pete-s said in Make MS SQL Server 2014 Log Every Query:

      @romo said in Make MS SQL Server 2014 Log Every Query:

      @pete-s said in Make MS SQL Server 2014 Log Every Query:

      Extended Events

      @Pete-S happen to know where the default location of the event files are saved?

      I created a new session and I believe it is properly showing the queries ran, but if I try to change the place where the file is logged to is doesn't start, but if I leave the default set I can't find the file!!

      I'm not sure the default is actually a file at all, it may be memory buffers.
      However it sound like you have a user rights issue. Make sure SQL server is allowed to write to the file where you put it.

      Also remember The SQL instance is usually not running with a user context. Generally a system service.

    • scottalanmillerS

      RDS 2012 R2 SQL Server Windows NT

      IT Discussion
      • sql server rds windows server 2012 r2 • • scottalanmiller
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      scottalanmillerS

      @donahue that's more of what we would expect.

    • dave247D

      Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion)

      IT Discussion
      • sql server sql server 2016 microsoft microsoft licensing licensing • • dave247
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      PhlipElderP

      @scottalanmiller said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @jaredbusch said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @dave247 said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @jaredbusch said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @dave247 said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @jaredbusch said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @dave247 said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @phlipelder said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      @dave247 said in Need some help with SQL Server 2016 Standard licensing (price confusion):

      Hi friends.

      I am working on building a new physical server to replace one which is running older versions of Windows and SQL server, plus it is almost out of storage space so this needs to be done sooner than later.

      This SQL server is running a 3rd party application and they currently only support up to SQL 2016, so that's what I have to install - not 2017. And it's going to be SQL 2016 Standard Edition running on Windows 2016 Server Standard with 16 cores.

      I spent a while researching SQL sever licensing to try and get an idea of how much it's going to cost. I haven't dealt with SQL server licensing yet.

      First, I assumed that I would still have to purchase SQL Server 2017 core licenses with downgrade rights. So looking on the SQL Sever Pricing page, it looks as though Standard - per core price is $3,717 (2 pack). So if my server has a total of 16 cores, this is going to cost about $29,736 to cover SQL licensing.

      Then I checked over on CDW just to get an idea of prices and things and I had the idea to search "SQL 2016" when I found this: SQL Server 2016 Standard - license - 16 cores - with Server 2016 Standard for like $1,900.

      Is this even applicable to what I'm doing or am I missing something? It does say in the technical details "BIOS locked (Lenovo)" but I have no idea what that refers to. But other than that, it looks like it's licensing SQL Server 2016 for 16 cores and bundled with Windows Server 2016. Surly this can't be correct... or is it? If it is actually what I would need to be covered, I would purchase it, of course.

      Otherwise, can someone help me get an idea of what I should be paying for SQL Server 2016 Standard Edition for 16 cores if not the cost I initially calculated ($29,736)? And I don't think we'd do the server + cal licensing as we have about 80 users and 100 or more systems which would connect to the SQL server.

      Simple rule of thumb to ask your Microsoft licensing rep for the following:
      First option is license + CALs that allows internal access only with unlimited instances on the server and unlimited cores:

      SQL Server Standard License SQL Server Standard User CALs (80 Users)

      Second option is per core with a minimum of 4 to purchase:

      SQL Server Standard Per Core 2-Pack (2x)

      In the Per Core scenario we can license for the number of physical cores to use and delimit that in SQL Studio Management. When it comes to audit, a snip of that setting that only allows the four threads should be just fine.

      So if you license + CAL, do you have to cover all users AND computers?

      If you license by user you cover users. If you license by device you cover devices.

      Well what constitutes as a device? I mean, users use a device to connect to the SQL server... so wouldn't I have to cover both? I don't get it.

      That is never how Microsoft CALs have worked.

      ok, I finally re-read the overview.. makes sense again. We have a pretty even user/device ratio with slight fluctuations in both over time. I suppose we'd just do user CALs..

      There is almost no reason for anyone in the normal, day to day, business world to use device CALs.

      Agreed, this is super specific niche stuff normally reserved for manufacturing shift work.

      We have a few clients that run two or three shifts across one or more facilities. A shared device by two or three peeps per day is about the only time we've ever deployed Device CALs.

    • OksanaO

      How to back up your SQL Server databases to Azure without a hassle

      Starwind
      • sql server sql microsoft sql database azure azure backup • • Oksana
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    • scottalanmillerS

      Verifying MS SQL Server 2017 Licensing

      IT Discussion
      • licensing sql server sql server 2017 microsoft microsoft licensing • • scottalanmiller
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      scottalanmillerS

      @dustinb3403 said in Verifying MS SQL Server 2017 Licensing:

      @jaredbusch said in Verifying MS SQL Server 2017 Licensing:

      @scottalanmiller said in Verifying MS SQL Server 2017 Licensing:

      @jaredbusch said in Verifying MS SQL Server 2017 Licensing:

      @scottalanmiller said in Verifying MS SQL Server 2017 Licensing:

      @jaredbusch one of the complications is that there IS no virtual core. vCPU is NOT core.

      a vCPU has vCores. Always. It might just be one. That is how it works.

      Not in any system I've seen. What people call vCores are actually vCPUs. The vCPU might tell the OS it has multiple cores, but the idea of a vCore has never existed, only vCPUs. Vmware, KVM, etc. all the same. Core means physical, it's like having a physical virtual, it cancels itself out.

      I am almost certain that VMWare lets you make a 1 CPU VM with 2 cores.

      Hyper-V just says virtual processors.
      0_1536703623096_9bebc766-93a2-498e-aa75-f621eb5bb0da-image.png

      KVM says CPUs.
      0_1536703642847_0252def6-e3e4-40f0-93ec-98417b2bb6ff-image.png

      But I very clearly remember some hypervisor letting me specify a vCPU and vCores.

      XenServer and XCP-ng also allow this.

      1cpu 2 core etc.

      Topology lets you state presented cores, not vCores. Totally different things.

    • N

      Reindex WSUS Database on Windows Server 2016

      IT Discussion
      • wsus windows server 2016 sql server • • Neil Klawitter
      12
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      N

      I finally got this to work if anyone is interested. The sql file is fine, but I had to change my batch file. The correct one looks like this:

      "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\Client SDK\ODBC\110\Tools\Binn\sqlcmd" -I -S \.\pipe\MICROSOFT##WID\tsql\query -i C:\Scripts\WSUSDBMaintenance.sql

      It must be run from an Administrator command prompt. This took me several days to figure out so I hope it can benefit someone else. Everything I found about reindexing the WSUS database was on Server 2008 or 2012. This works on Server 2016.

    • OksanaO

      Microsoft SQL Server. AlwaysOn AGs. DR & BC

      Starwind
      • microsoft sql server failover cluster • • Oksana
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    • OksanaO

      Learn how to keep your sensitive data safe with SQL Server Always Encrypted

      Starwind
      • sql server always on sql server sql server management studio ssms azure powershell starwind • • Oksana
      1
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    • OksanaO

      SQL Server Always On FCIs: whatever goes wrong, database and production survive

      News
      • sql server high availability failover cluster instances alwayson fci • • Oksana
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    • OksanaO

      Squeeze all the performance out of your Hyper-V with SMB Direct

      Starwind
      • windows server sql server smb smb 3.0 smb direct hyper-v rdma • • Oksana
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    • EddieJenningsE

      System center configuration manager and SQL server

      IT Discussion
      • sccm system center configuration manager sql server design • • EddieJennings
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      745
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      dafyreD

      @eddiejennings said in System center configuration manager and SQL server:

      For those who use SCCM, do you host the database on the same server as the SCCM application, or do you have SQL server as its own VM?

      I am replacing SCCM in our test environment, and will be doing the same eventually in our production environment. The current one has SQL server host locally. But since were looking to start over, I figured it would be worth weighing the pros and cons of keeping SQL Server local or having you be on the remote server.

      In my last job, we ran SCCM for a while and we had everything on one VM. (Small set up with ~200 PCs). It ran OK.

      I'd suggest keeping it to one host for your test environment, and separating them out for your production setup.

    • JaredBuschJ

      Machine software unabel to connect to new SQL server

      IT Discussion
      • sql server encryption connection string • • JaredBusch
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      momurdaM

      Do you have .net4 installed on this xp client?

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