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An Overview of the Fixed Server Roles for SQL Server 2000
Creating SQL Server Authentication Logins in the Enterprise Manag...
Creating Windows Authentication Logins in the Enterprise Manager
How to Increase a Database's Size - Multiple Techniques for Incre...
How to Increase a Database's Size Using the SQL Server Enterprise...
SQL Server 2000 Video Tutorial
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Database Compatibility Levels and sp_dbcmptlevel
- Training Video
Category:
Working with SQL Server Databases: Creation, Management and Best Practices
Skill Level:
300 (Intermediate)
Duration:
11:25
Size:
7.5MB
Versions/Editions Covered:
SQL Server 2005
,
SQL Server 2008
,
SQL Server 2000
Added/Updated:
Dec 10, 2006
Database Compatibility levels are very important when upgrading from SQL Server 2000 to 2005 or 7.0 to 2000, for example, but db compatibility levels are also important for software testing and unit testing. You can test your applications that run on SQL Server 2005 as though they were running on SQL Server 2000 - a very handy backward compatibility feature! The ability to set the compatibility level of your SQL Server database is a tremendous feature, one that is not highlighted often or championed nearly often enough. This video gives you the how and the why of using database compatibility levels including scenarios when this is appropriate and even talks about how when you do certain actions in SQL Server, your database may automatically use an older compatibility level.
NOTE: This video is shot using SQL Server 2005 but the concepts are valid for all versions of SQL Server
Highlights from this video:
Valid compatibility levels
How to force SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) in SQL Server 2005 to use the 65 compatibility mode
sp_dbcmptlevel and its parameters
Upgrading and migrating from previous versions
Backwards compatibility options in SQL Server
Uses both SQL Server 2005 and SQL Server 2000
Changing Compatibility levels with dbcmptlevel and the GUI (SSMS and SQLEM)
Migration scenarios and testing scenarios where older compatibility levels are appropriate
How to force SQL Server 2005 to use 65 compatibility level
Discussions of 60, 65, 70, 80 and 90 compatibility modes
and much more
Tags for this video:
sp_dbcmptlevel
<
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About the Instructor:
Scott Whigham is the founder of LearnItFirst.com, one of the web's most extensive video training libraries focusing on technical training. Scott is also an experienced consultant, trainer, and author with more than a decade of hands-on experience working with SQL Server databases, writing and debugging applications using Visual Studio, and performance tuning. Scott designed the architecture (websites, class libraries, and database) for the LearnItFirst.com websites and, most re...
(Scott Whigham's full bio can be found on the
About the Author
page)
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7/3/2008 6:30:14 PM