• Interests: SQL Server Performance and Code-Quality

SQLServerCentral Article

The Fundamentals of SQL Server Replication by Sebastian Meine

Many of my clients need to make data that lives on one server available on another server. There are many reasons for such a requirement. You might want to speed up cross-server queries by providing a local copy of the data. Or you might want to make the data available to resource intensive reporting queries without impacting the OLTP load, maybe even with an intentional delay so you're always reporting against complete days only. Finally, you might be looking to implement high availability. In all these situations, SQL Server Replication is a viable option to look at when planning for the implemen­tation of such a requirement.

2 (7)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2013-09-30

6,460 reads

Blogs

Enabling an Index: #SQLNewBlogger

By

I don’t do a lot of work with disabled index, but I learned how...

Back to Boston for SQL Saturday

By

I’m leaving again tomorrow for a trip. This time I head back to Boston...

T-SQL Tuesday #179: What’s In Your Data Detective Toolkit?

By

Most of us who work with data have, at least a few times, been...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

7 sept, scheduled book

By philip.scott

Comments posted to this topic are about the item 7 sept, scheduled book

7 sept, schedlued article

By philip.scott

Comments posted to this topic are about the item 7 sept, schedlued article

6 sept, published book

By philip.scott

Comments posted to this topic are about the item 6 sept, published book

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Azure Data Lake Storage Gen 2

Azure Data Lake Storage Gen 2 is built on ...?

See possible answers