Skip to main content

SQL Saturday #232 Orlando - I'm speaking!



I'll be speaking at SQL Saturday #232 in Orlando, FL on Saturday, September 14, 2013.

The information for this always outstanding event can be found here.

I will be presenting "Cure your sysadmin addiction".  If you have the requirement to reduce DBA permissions in your Production environment due to Risk and Compliance mandates, you should attend. 

This will be my third time speaking in Orlando and my eleventh SQL Saturday overall.

SQL Saturdays are an extremely inexpensive way for IT Pros to gain an edge in a competitive job market and to develop a network that can help you at your current job or find that next job.

Get an edge, attend!



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Modifying Endpoint URLs on Availability Group Replicas

I recently had to modify the Endpoint URLs on our SQL Server Availability Group replicas.  The reason for this blog post is that I could not answer the following questions: Do I need to suspend data movement prior to making this change?  Would this change require a restart of the database instance? I spent enough time searching on my own to no avail that I tossed the question to the #sqlhelp hashtag on Twitter and Slack but didn't get an answer prior to executing the change request. After reading the relevant documentation, I think it's probably a good idea to suspend data movement for this change. The T-SQL is straightforward.  USE MASTER GO ALTER AVAILABILITY GROUP [AG1]  MODIFY REPLICA ON 'SQL2012-1' WITH (ENDPOINT_URL = 'TCP://10.10.10.1:5022'); ALTER AVAILABILITY GROUP [AG1]  MODIFY REPLICA ON 'SQL2012-2' WITH (ENDPOINT_URL = 'TCP://10.10.10.2:5022'); ALTER AVAILABILITY GROUP [AG2]  MODIFY REPLICA ON 'SQL2012-1

Set Azure App Service Platform Configuration to 64 bit.

If you need to update several Azure App Services' Configuration to change the Platform setting from 32 bit to 64 bit under Configuration | General settings, this script will save you about six clicks per service and you won't forget to press the SAVE button. Ask me I know. 🙄 Login-AzureRmAccount Set-AzureRmContext  -SubscriptionName  "Your Subscription" $ResourceGroupName  =  'RG1' ,  'RG2', 'RG3' foreach  ( $g   in   $ResourceGroupName ) {       # Set PROD slot to use 64 bit Platform Setting      Get-AzureRmWebApp  -ResourceGroupName  $g  | Select Name |  %  {  Set-AzureRmWebApp  -ResourceGroupName  $g  -Name  $_ .Name  -Use32BitWorkerProcess  $false  }       # Set staging slot to use 64 bit Platform setting      Get-AzureRmWebApp  -ResourceGroupName  $g  | Select Name |  %  {  Set-AzureRmWebAppSlot  -ResourceGroupName  $g  -Name  $_ .Name  -Slot  "staging"  -Use32BitWorkerProcess  $false  }  }

Rediscovering SQL Server Agent Alerts...

Having moved from a Fortune 50 company using BMC Patrol for SQL Server Monitoring to a small software company of less than 200 people, I'm rediscovering SQL Server Agent Alerts. Why might you ask? Because small companies can't afford expensive tools and need to use the out-of-the-box features as much as possible. This past week, I rediscovered that you can alert on SQL Server performance conditions using SQL Server Agent. I needed to alert on database transaction log usage.  How to create SQL Server Agent alerts can be found at the link below. https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms180982.aspx Under Options, I suggest you set a delay of 10 minutes. Unless you like to be spammed every minute when bad things happen. I'm hoping it will provide enough notice to prevent an undesirable event from complicating my life. Do this before your storage runs out of space on a holiday. ;-)