Disaster Recovery (DR)

Technical Article

RE: Reducing allocated space

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If the initial file size is so big, you can't shrink it to smaller. If the log file grows so big, you can do the follows: 1, Back up the database, 2, Run dbcc shrinkdatabase(dbname, truncateonly) 3, Change the db option to truncate log on checkpoint for sql7, recovery model to simple for sql2k. 4, […]

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2003-04-23

SQLServerCentral Article

Another Disaster (Almost)

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Andy had a semi-disaster similar to the one he wrote about last year. Interesting to see the kinds of problems that happen to other people. This article raises some interesting points that are outside the scope of basic disaster recovery, looking at how/when to move databases to a different server and how to reduce the server load dynamically.

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2003-01-14

7,048 reads

SQLServerCentral Article

Backup and Restore Back to Basics with SQL LiteSpeed

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This article analyzes the various options available for your backup and recovery process with SQL Server 2000 as well as an enhancement to your SQL Server backup and recovery process using a highly efficient backup and restore utility that provides significant time and disk space savings called SQL LiteSpeed.

4 (1)

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2002-12-23

10,603 reads

SQLServerCentral Article

Streamlining the Database Server Recovery Process

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Are you tired of manually restoring each database on a new server when the original server has a melt down? Does the manual process seem slow, and prone to keystoke and mouse click errors? Would you like to have those restore scripts automatically built, so you only have to fire them off? Well this article will show you one possible method for speeding up and reducing errors will trying to perform a restore of all databases on a server.

5 (2)

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2002-11-05

9,001 reads

SQLServerCentral Article

Disaster In The Real World - #2

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Back in April Steve Jones wrote up a disaster at work. Andy had one this week and wrote up the story too. Copy cat! Pretty soon everyone will be having a disaster and writing a story about it! Give these guys credit for letting you see what happens when it ALL goes bad. Disaster recovery is hard to sell and hard to do, reading the article might give you an idea that will save you some time and/or data one day.

4.75 (4)

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2012-12-14 (first published: )

10,531 reads

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