SQL Server 2000 Faqs
SQL Server 2000 Faqs
SQL Server 2000 Faqs
Microsoft SQL Server # Interview Questions - (last updated on Friday, 12. March 2004)
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This can reduce network traffic, because your client will not receive the message indicating the number of
rows affected by a T-SQL statement.
l Try to restrict the queries result set by using the WHERE clause.
This can results in good performance benefits, because SQL Server will return to client only particular
rows, not all rows from the table(s). This can reduce network traffic and boost the overall performance
of the query.
l Use the select statements with TOP keyword or the SET ROWCOUNT statement, if you
need to return only the first n rows.
This can improve performance of your queries, because the smaller result set will be returned. This
can also reduce the traffic between the server and the clients.
l Try to restrict the queries result set by returning only the particular columns from the table,
not all table's columns.
This can results in good performance benefits, because SQL Server will return to client only particular
columns, not all table's columns. This can reduce network traffic and boost the overall performance of the
query.
1.Indexes
2.avoid more number of triggers on the table
3.unnecessary complicated joins
4.correct use of Group by clause with the select list
5.in worst cases Denormalization
l Every index increases the time in takes to perform INSERTS, UPDATES and DELETES, so the
number of indexes should not be very much. Try to use maximum 4-5 indexes on one table, not
more. If you have read-only table, then the number of indexes may be increased.
l Keep your indexes as narrow as possible. This reduces the size of the index and reduces the
number of reads required to read the index.
l Try to create indexes on columns that have integer values rather than character values.
l If you create a composite (multi-column) index, the order of the columns in the key are very
important. Try to order the columns in the key as to enhance selectivity, with the most selective
columns to the leftmost of the key.
l If you want to join several tables, try to create surrogate integer keys for this purpose and create
indexes on their columns.
l Create surrogate integer primary key (identity for example) if your table will not have many
insert operations.
l Clustered indexes are more preferable than nonclustered, if you need to select by a range of values
or you need to sort results set with GROUP BY or ORDER BY.
l If your application will be performing the same query over and over on the same table, consider
creating a covering index on the table.
l You can use the SQL Server Profiler Create Trace Wizard with "Identify Scans of Large Tables"
trace to determine which tables in your database may need indexes. This trace will show which
tables are being scanned by queries instead of using an index.
l You can use sp_MSforeachtable undocumented stored procedure to rebuild all indexes
in your database. Try to schedule it to execute during CPU idle time and slow production
periods. sp_MSforeachtable @command1="print '?' DBCC DBREINDEX ('?')"
T-SQL Queries
1. 2 tables
Employee Phone
empid
empname empid
salary phnumber
mgrid
Select all employees who doesn't have phone?
SELECT empname
FROM Employee
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Empid
empName
City
Salary
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gets the movie details where Mr. Amitabh and Mr. Vinod acted and their role is actor.
SELECT DISTINCT m1.moviename
FROM MovieTable m1 INNER JOIN
MovieTable m2 ON m1.moviename = m2.moviename
WHERE (m1.person = 'amitabh' AND m2.person = 'vinod' OR
m2.person = 'amitabh' AND m1.person = 'vinod') AND (m1.role = 'actor')
AND (m2.role = 'actor')
ORDER BY m1.moviename
10. There are two employee tables named emp1 and emp2. Both contains same structure (salary details).
But Emp2 salary details are incorrect and emp1 salary details are correct. So, write a query which
corrects salary details of the table emp2
update a set a.sal=b.sal from emp1 a, emp2 b where a.empid=b.empid
11. Given a Table named “Students” which contains studentid, subjectid and marks. Where there are 10
subjects and 50 students. Write a Query to find out the Maximum marks obtained in each subject.
12. In this same tables now write a SQL Query to get the studentid also to combine with previous results.
13. Three tables – student , course, marks – how do go at finding name of the students who got max
marks in the diff courses.
SELECT student.name, course.name AS coursename, marks.sid,
marks.mark FROM marks INNER JOIN
student ON marks.sid = student.sid INNER
JOIN course ON marks.cid = course.cid
WHERE (marks.mark =
(SELECT MAX(Mark)
FROM Marks MaxMark
WHERE MaxMark.cID = Marks.cID))
14. There is a table day_temp which has three columns dayid, day and temperature. How do I write a
query to get the difference of temperature among each other for seven days of a week?
SELECT a.dayid, a.dday, a.tempe, a.tempe - b.tempe AS
Difference FROM day_temp a INNER JOIN
day_temp b ON a.dayid = b.dayid +
1 OR
Select a.day, a.degree-b.degree from temperature a, temperature b
where a.id=b.id+1
15. There is a table which contains the names like this. a1, a2, a3, a3, a4, a1, a1, a2 and their salaries.
Write a query to get grand total salary, and total salaries of individual employees in one query.
SELECT empid, SUM(salary) AS
salary FROM employee
GROUP BY empid WITH
ROLLUP ORDER BY empid
16. How to know how many tables contains empno as a column in a database?
SELECT COUNT(*) AS
Counter FROM syscolumns
WHERE (name = 'empno')
17. Find duplicate rows in a table? OR I have a table with one column which has many records
which are not distinct. I need to find the distinct values from that column and number of times
it’s repeated.
SELECT sid, mark, COUNT(*) AS
Counter FROM marks
GROUP BY sid, mark
HAVING (COUNT(*) > 1)
18. How to delete the rows which are duplicate (don’t delete both duplicate records).
SET ROWCOUNT 1
DELETE yourtable
FROM yourtable a
WHERE (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM yourtable b WHERE b.name1 = a.name1 AND b.age1 =
a.age1) > 1
WHILE @@rowcount > 0
DELETE yourtable
FROM yourtable a
WHERE (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM yourtable b WHERE b.name1 = a.name1 AND b.age1 =
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a.age1) > 1
SET ROWCOUNT 0
19. How to find 6th highest salary
SELECT TOP 1 salary
FROM (SELECT DISTINCT TOP 6
salary FROM employee
ORDER BY salary DESC)
a ORDER BY salary
20. Find top salary among two tables
SELECT TOP 1 sal
FROM (SELECT MAX(sal) AS
sal FROM sal1
UNION
SELECT MAX(sal) AS
sal FROM sal2) a
ORDER BY sal DESC
21. Write a query to convert all the letters in a word to upper case
SELECT UPPER('test')
22. Write a query to round up the values of a number. For example even if the user enters 7.1 it
should be rounded up to 8.
SELECT CEILING (7.1)
23. Write a SQL Query to find first day of month?
SELECT DATENAME(dw, DATEADD(dd, - DATEPART(dd, GETDATE()) + 1, GETDATE()))
AS FirstDay
yy, yyyy
Datepart Abbreviations
year
quarter qq, q
month mm, m
dayofyear dy, y
day dd, d
week wk, ww
weekday dw
hour hh
minute mi, n
second ss, s
millisecond ms
24. Table A contains column1 which is primary key and has 2 values (1, 2) and Table B contains column1
which is primary key and has 2 values (2, 3). Write a query which returns the values that are not
common for the tables and the query should return one column with 2 records.
SELECT tbla.a
FROM tbla, tblb
WHERE tbla.a <>
(SELECT tblb.a
FROM tbla, tblb
WHERE tbla.a =
tblb.a) UNION
SELECT tblb.a
FROM tbla, tblb
WHERE tblb.a <>
(SELECT tbla.a
FROM tbla, tblb
WHERE tbla.a = tblb.a)
OR (better approach)
SELECT a
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FROM tbla
WHERE a NOT
IN (SELECT a
FROM tblb)
UNION ALL
SELECT a
FROM tblb
WHERE a NOT
IN (SELECT a
FROM tbla)
25. There are 3 tables Titles, Authors and Title-Authors (check PUBS db). Write the query to get the
author name and the number of books written by that author, the result should start from the author
who has written the maximum number of books and end with the author who has written the
minimum number of books.
SELECT authors.au_lname, COUNT(*) AS
BooksCount FROM authors INNER JOIN
titleauthor ON authors.au_id = titleauthor.au_id INNER
JOIN titles ON titles.title_id = titleauthor.title_id
GROUP BY authors.au_lname
ORDER BY BooksCount DESC
26.
UPDATE
emp_master SET
emp_sal = CASE
WHEN emp_sal > 0 AND emp_sal <= 20000 THEN (emp_sal *
1.01) WHEN emp_sal > 20000 THEN (emp_sal * 1.02)
END
27. List all products with total quantity ordered, if quantity ordered is null show it as 0.
SELECT name, CASE WHEN SUM(qty) IS NULL THEN 0 WHEN SUM(qty) > 0 THEN
SUM(qty) END AS tot
FROM [order] RIGHT OUTER JOIN
product ON [order].prodid =
product.prodid GROUP BY name
Result:
coke 60
mirinda 0
pepsi 10
28. ANY, SOME, or ALL?
ALL means greater than every value--in other words, greater than the maximum value. For example, >ALL
(1, 2, 3) means greater than 3.
ANY means greater than at least one value, that is, greater than the minimum. So >ANY (1, 2, 3) means
greater than 1. SOME is an SQL-92 standard equivalent for ANY.
29. IN & = (difference in correlated sub query)
INDEX
30. What is Index? It’s purpose?
Indexes in databases are similar to indexes in books. In a database, an index allows the database
program to find data in a table without scanning the entire table. An index in a database is a list of values
in a table with the storage locations of rows in the table that contain each value. Indexes can be created on
either a single column or a combination of columns in a table and are implemented in the form of B-trees.
An index contains an entry with one or more columns (the search key) from each row in a table. A B-tree is
sorted on the search key, and can be searched efficiently on any leading subset of the search key. For
example, an index on columns A, B, C can be searched efficiently on A, on A, B, and A, B, C.
31. Explain about Clustered and non clustered index? How to choose between a Clustered Index
and a Non-Clustered Index?
There are clustered and nonclustered indexes. A clustered index is a special type of index that reorders
the way records in the table are physically stored. Therefore table can have only one clustered index. The
leaf nodes of a clustered index contain the data pages.
A nonclustered index is a special type of index in which the logical order of the index does not match the
physical stored order of the rows on disk. The leaf nodes of a nonclustered index does not consist of the
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reorganize the storage of the data in the table to make room for the new row and maintain the ordered
storage of the data. This also applies to nonclustered indexes. When data is added or changed, SQL
Server may have to reorganize the storage of the data in the nonclustered index pages. When a new row is
added to a full index page, SQL Server moves approximately half the rows to a new page to make room for
the new row. This reorganization is known as a page split. Page splitting can impair performance and
fragment the storage of the data in a table.
When creating an index, you can specify a fill factor to leave extra gaps and reserve a percentage of free
space on each leaf level page of the index to accommodate future expansion in the storage of the table's
data and reduce the potential for page splits. The fill factor value is a percentage from 0 to 100 that
specifies how much to fill the data pages after the index is created. A value of 100 means the pages will
be full and will take the least amount of storage space. This setting should be used only when there will be
no changes to the data, for example, on a read-only table. A lower value leaves more empty space on the
data pages, which reduces the need to split data pages as indexes grow but requires more storage space.
This setting is more appropriate when there will be changes to the data in the table.
DATA TYPES
40. What are the data types in SQL
bigint Binary bit char cursor
datetime Decimal float image int
money Nchar ntext nvarchar real
smalldatetime Smallint smallmoney text timestamp
tinyint Varbinary Varchar uniqueidentifier
Difference between char and nvarchar / char and varchar data-type?
char[(n)] - Fixed-length non-Unicode character data with length of n bytes. n must be a value from 1
through 8,000. Storage size is n bytes. The SQL-92 synonym for char is character.
nvarchar(n) - Variable-length Unicode character data of n characters. n must be a value from 1 through
4,000. Storage size, in bytes, is two times the number of characters entered. The data entered can be 0
characters in length. The SQL-92 synonyms for nvarchar are national char varying and national character
varying.
varchar[(n)] - Variable-length non-Unicode character data with length of n bytes. n must be a value from 1
through 8,000. Storage size is the actual length in bytes of the data entered, not n bytes. The data entered
can be 0 characters in length. The SQL-92 synonyms for varchar are char varying or character varying.
41. GUID datasize?
128bit
42. How GUID becoming unique across machines?
To ensure uniqueness across machines, the ID of the network card is used (among others) to compute the
number.
43. What is the difference between text and image data type?
Text and image. Use text for character data if you need to store more than 255 characters in SQL Server
6.5, or more than 8000 in SQL Server 7.0. Use image for binary large objects (BLOBs) such as digital
images. With text and image data types, the data is not stored in the row, so the limit of the page size does
not apply.All that is stored in the row is a pointer to the database pages that contain the data.Individual
text, ntext, and image values can be a maximum of 2-GB, which is too long to store in a single data row.
JOINS
44. What are joins?
Sometimes we have to select data from two or more tables to make our result complete. We have to
perform a join.
45. How many types of Joins?
Joins can be categorized as:
l Inner joins (the typical join operation, which uses some comparison operator like =
or <>). These include equi-joins and natural joins.
Inner joins use a comparison operator to match rows from two tables based on the values in
common columns from each table. For example, retrieving all rows where the student
identification number is the same in both the students and courses tables.
l Outer joins. Outer joins can be a left, a right, or full outer join.
Outer joins are specified with one of the following sets of keywords when they are specified in the
FROM clause:
l LEFT JOIN or LEFT OUTER JOIN -The result set of a left outer join
includes all the rows
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from the left table specified in the LEFT OUTER clause, not just the ones in which the joined
columns match. When a row in the left table has no matching rows in the right table, the
associated result set row contains null values for all select list columns coming from the right
table.
l RIGHT JOIN or RIGHT OUTER JOIN - A right outer join is the reverse
of a left outer join. All rows from the right table are returned. Null
values are returned for the left table any time a right table row has no
matching row in the left table.
l FULL JOIN or FULL OUTER JOIN - A full outer join returns all rows in
both the left and right tables. Any time a row has no match in the other
table, the select list columns from the other table contain null values.
When there is a match between the tables, the entire result set row
contains data values from the base tables.
l Cross joins - Cross joins return all rows from the left table, each row from the left table is
combined with all rows from the right table. Cross joins are also called Cartesian
products. (A Cartesian join will get you a Cartesian product. A Cartesian join is when
you join every row of one table to every row of another table. You can also get one by
joining every row of a table to every row of itself.)
48. What is self join?
A table can be joined to itself in a self-join.
49. What are the differences between UNION and JOINS?
A join selects columns from 2 or more tables. A union selects rows.
50. Can I improve performance by using the ANSI-style joins instead of the old-style joins?
Code Example 1:
select o.name, i.name
from sysobjects o, sysindexes
i where o.id = i.id
Code Example 2:
select o.name, i.name
from sysobjects o inner join sysindexes
i on o.id = i.id
You will not get any performance gain by switching to the ANSI-style JOIN syntax.
Using the ANSI-JOIN syntax gives you an important advantage: Because the join logic is cleanly separated
from the filtering criteria, you can understand the query logic more quickly.
The SQL Server old-style JOIN executes the filtering conditions before executing the joins, whereas the
ANSI-style JOIN reverses this procedure (join logic precedes filtering).
Perhaps the most compelling argument for switching to the ANSI-style JOIN is that Microsoft has explicitly
stated that SQL Server will not support the old-style OUTER JOIN syntax indefinitely. Another important
consideration is that the ANSI-style JOIN supports query constructions that the old-style JOIN syntax does
not support.
51. What is derived table?
Derived tables are SELECT statements in the FROM clause referred to by an alias or a user-specified
name. The result set of the SELECT in the FROM clause forms a table used by the outer SELECT
statement. For example, this SELECT uses a derived table to find if any store carries all book titles in the
pubs database:
SELECT ST.stor_id, ST.stor_name
FROM stores AS ST,
(SELECT stor_id, COUNT(DISTINCT title_id) AS
title_count FROM sales
GROUP BY
stor_id ) AS SA
WHERE ST.stor_id = SA.stor_id
AND SA.title_count = (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM titles)
STORED PROCEDURE
51. What is Stored procedure?
A stored procedure is a set of Structured Query Language (SQL) statements that you assign a name
to and store in a database in compiled form so that you can share it between a number of programs.
¡ They allow modular programming.
¡ They allow faster execution.
¡ They can reduce network traffic.
¡ They can be used as a security mechanism.
52. What are the different types of Storage Procedure?
a. Temporary Stored Procedures - SQL Server supports two types of temporary procedures: local and
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global. A local temporary procedure is visible only to the connection that created it. A global
temporary procedure is available to all connections. Local temporary procedures are automatically
dropped at the end of the current session. Global temporary procedures are dropped at the end of
the last session using the procedure. Usually, this is when the session that created the procedure
ends. Temporary procedures named with # and ## can be created by any user.
b. System stored procedures are created and stored in the master database and have the
sp_ prefix. (or xp_) System stored procedures can be executed from any database
without having to qualify the stored procedure name fully using the database name
master. (If any user-created stored procedure has the same name as a system stored
procedure, the user-created stored procedure will never be executed.)
c. Automatically Executing Stored Procedures - One or more stored procedures can
execute automatically when SQL Server starts. The stored procedures must be
created by the system administrator and executed under the sysadmin fixed server
role as a background process. The procedure(s) cannot have any input parameters.
d. User stored procedure
53. How do I mark the stored procedure to automatic execution?
You can use the sp_procoption system stored procedure to mark the stored procedure to automatic
execution when the SQL Server will start. Only objects in the master database owned by dbo can have
the startup setting changed and this option is restricted to objects that have no parameters.
USE master
EXEC sp_procoption 'indRebuild', 'startup', 'true')
54. How can you optimize a stored procedure?
55. How will know whether the SQL statements are executed?
When used in a stored procedure, the RETURN statement can specify an integer value to return to the
calling application, batch, or procedure. If no value is specified on RETURN, a stored procedure returns the
value 0. The stored procedures return a value of 0 when no errors were encountered. Any nonzero value
indicates an error occurred.
56. Why one should not prefix user stored procedures with sp_?
It is strongly recommended that you do not create any stored procedures using sp_ as a prefix. SQL
Server always looks for a stored procedure beginning with sp_ in this order:
1. The stored procedure in the master database.
2. The stored procedure based on any qualifiers provided (database name or owner).
3. The stored procedure using dbo as the owner, if one is not specified.
Therefore, although the user-created stored procedure prefixed with sp_ may exist in the current database,
the master database is always checked first, even if the stored procedure is qualified with the database
name.
57. What can cause a Stored procedure execution plan to become invalidated and/or fall out of
cache?
1. Server restart
2. Plan is aged out due to low use
3. DBCC FREEPROCCACHE (sometime desired to force it)
58. When do one need to recompile stored procedure?
if a new index is added from which the stored procedure might benefit, optimization does not automatically
happen (until the next time the stored procedure is run after SQL Server is restarted).
59. SQL Server provides three ways to recompile a stored procedure:
l The sp_recompile system stored procedure forces a recompile of a stored
procedure the next time it is run.
l Creating a stored procedure that specifies the WITH RECOMPILE option in its
definition indicates that SQL Server does not cache a plan for this stored
procedure; the stored procedure is recompiled each time it is executed. Use
the WITH RECOMPILE option when stored procedures take parameters
whose values differ widely between executions of the stored procedure,
resulting in different execution plans to be created each time. Use of this
option is uncommon, and causes the stored procedure to execute more slowly
because the stored procedure must be recompiled each time it is executed.
l You can force the stored procedure to be recompiled by specifying the
WITH RECOMPILE option when you execute the stored procedure. Use
this option only if the parameter you are supplying is atypical or if the data
has significantly changed since the stored procedure was created.
60. How to find out which stored procedure is recompiling? How to stop stored procedures
from recompiling?
61. I have Two Stored Procedures SP1 and SP2 as given below. How the Transaction works,
whether SP2 Transaction succeeds or fails?
CREATE PROCEDURE SP1 AS
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BEGIN TRAN
INSERT INTO MARKS (SID,MARK,CID) VALUES (5,6,3)
EXEC SP2
ROLLBACK
GO
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GO
CREATE PROC dbo.sp_calcfactorial
@base_number int, @factorial int
OUT AS
DECLARE @previous_number int
IF (@base_number<2) SET @factorial=1 -- Factorial of 0 or
1=1 ELSE BEGIN
SET @previous_number=@base_number-1
EXEC dbo.sp_calcfactorial @previous_number, @factorial OUT -- Recursive
call IF (@factorial=-1) RETURN(-1) -- Got an error, return
SET @factorial=@factorial*@base_number
END
RETURN(0)
GO
calling proc.
DECLARE @factorial int
EXEC dbo.sp_calcfactorial 4, @factorial
OUT SELECT @factorial
70. Nested Triggers
Triggers are nested when a trigger performs an action that initiates another trigger, which can initiate
another trigger, and so on. Triggers can be nested up to 32 levels, and you can control whether
triggers can be nested through the nested triggers server configuration option.
71. What is an extended stored procedure? Can you instantiate a COM object by using T-SQL?
An extended stored procedure is a function within a DLL (written in a programming language like C, C++
using Open Data Services (ODS) API) that can be called from T-SQL, just the way we call normal
stored procedures using the EXEC statement.
72. Difference between view and stored procedure?
Views can have only select statements (create, update, truncate, delete statements are not allowed)
Views cannot have “select into”, “Group by” “Having”, ”Order by”
73. What is a Function & what are the different user defined functions?
Function is a saved Transact-SQL routine that returns a value. User-defined functions cannot be used to
perform a set of actions that modify the global database state. User-defined functions, like system
functions, can be invoked from a query. They also can be executed through an EXECUTE statement like
stored procedures.
1. Scalar Functions
Functions are scalar-valued if the RETURNS clause specified one of the scalar data types
2. Inline Table-valued Functions
If the RETURNS clause specifies TABLE with no accompanying column list, the function is an
inline function.
3. Multi-statement Table-valued Functions
If the RETURNS clause specifies a TABLE type with columns and their data types, the function is a
multi-statement table-valued function.
74. What are the difference between a function and a stored procedure?
1. Functions can be used in a select statement where as procedures cannot
2. Procedure takes both input and output parameters but Functions takes only input
parameters
3. Functions cannot return values of type text, ntext, image & timestamps where as
procedures can
4. Functions can be used as user defined datatypes in create table but procedures cannot
***Eg:-create table <tablename>(name varchar(10),salary getsal(name))
Here getsal is a user defined function which returns a salary type, when table is created no storage
is allotted for salary type, and getsal function is also not executed, But when we are fetching some
values from this table, getsal function get’s executed and the return
Type is returned as the result set.
75. How to debug a stored procedure?
TRIGGER
76. What is Trigger? What is its use? What are the types of Triggers? What are the new
kinds of triggers in sql 2000?
Triggers are a special class of stored procedure defined to execute automatically when an UPDATE, INSERT,
or DELETE statement is issued against a table or view. Triggers are powerful tools that sites can
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Shared (S) Used for operations that do not change or update data (read-only
operations), such as a SELECT statement.
Update (U) Used on resources that can be updated. Prevents a common form of
deadlock that occurs when multiple sessions are reading, locking, and potentially updating resources later.
Exclusive (X) Used for data-modification operations, such as INSERT, UPDATE, or
DELETE. Ensures that multiple updates cannot be made to the same resource at the same time.
Intent Used to establish a lock hierarchy. The types of intent locks are: intent shared (IS), intent
exclusive (IX), and shared with intent exclusive (SIX).
Schema Used when an operation dependent on the schema of a table is executing. The types of
schema locks are: schema modification (Sch-M) and schema stability (Sch-S).
Bulk Update Used when bulk-copying data into a table and the TABLOCK hint is specified.
(BU)
83. What is a dead lock? Give a practical sample? How you can minimize the deadlock situation?
What is a deadlock and what is a live lock? How will you go about resolving deadlocks?
Deadlock is a situation when two processes, each having a lock on one piece of data, attempt to acquire a
lock on the other's piece. Each process would wait indefinitely for the other to release the lock, unless one
of the user processes is terminated. SQL Server detects deadlocks and terminates one user's process.
A livelock is one, where a request for an exclusive lock is repeatedly denied because a series of
overlapping shared locks keeps interfering. SQL Server detects the situation after four denials and refuses
further shared locks. (A livelock also occurs when read transactions monopolize a table or page, forcing a
write transaction to wait indefinitely.)
84. What is isolation level?
An isolation level determines the degree of isolation of data between concurrent transactions. The default
SQL Server isolation level is Read Committed. A lower isolation level increases concurrency, but at the
expense of data correctness. Conversely, a higher isolation level ensures that data is correct, but can
affect concurrency negatively. The isolation level required by an application determines the locking
behavior SQL Server uses.
SQL-92 defines the following isolation levels, all of which are supported by SQL Server:
l Read uncommitted (the lowest level where transactions are isolated only enough to
ensure that
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Uncommitted Dependency (Dirty Read) - Uncommitted dependency occurs when a second transaction
selects a row that is being updated by another transaction. The second transaction is reading data that
has not been committed yet and may be changed by the transaction updating the row. For example, an
editor is making changes to an electronic document. During the changes, a second editor takes a copy of
the document that includes all the changes made so far, and distributes the document to the intended
audience.
Inconsistent Analysis (Nonrepeatable Read) Inconsistent analysis occurs when a second transaction
accesses the same row several times and reads different data each time. Inconsistent analysis is similar
to uncommitted dependency in that another transaction is changing the data that a second transaction is
reading. However, in inconsistent analysis, the data read by the second transaction was committed by the
transaction that made the change. Also, inconsistent analysis involves multiple reads (two or more) of the
same row and each time the information is changed by another transaction; thus, the term nonrepeatable
read. For example, an editor reads the same document twice, but between each reading, the writer
rewrites the document. When the editor reads the document for the second time, it has changed.
Phantom Reads Phantom reads occur when an insert or delete action is performed against a row that
belongs to a range of rows being read by a transaction. The transaction's first read of the range of rows
shows a row that no longer exists in the second or succeeding read, as a result of a deletion by a different
transaction. Similarly, as the result of an insert by a different transaction, the transaction's second or
succeeding read shows a row that did not exist in the original read. For example, an editor makes changes
to a document submitted by a writer, but when the changes are incorporated into the master copy of the
document by the production department, they find that new unedited material has been added to the
document by the author. This problem could be avoided if no one could add new material to the document
until the editor and production department finish working with the original document.
85. nolock? What is the difference between the REPEATABLE READ and SERIALIZE isolation
levels? Locking Hints - A range of table-level locking hints can be specified using the SELECT,
INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statements to direct Microsoft® SQL Server 2000 to the type of
locks to be used. Table-level locking hints can be used when a finer control of the types of locks
acquired on an object is required. These locking hints override the current transaction isolation level
for the session.
Hold a shared lock until completion of the transaction
Locking hint Description
HOLDLOCK
instead of releasing the lock as soon as the required table,
row, or data page is no longer required. HOLDLOCK is
equivalent to SERIALIZABLE.
NOLOCK Do not issue shared locks and do not honor exclusive
locks. When this option is in effect, it is possible to read an
uncommitted transaction or a set of pages that are rolled
back in the middle of a read. Dirty reads are possible. Only
applies to the SELECT statement.
PAGLOCK Use page locks where a single table lock would usually be
taken.
READCOMMITTED Perform a scan with the same locking semantics as a
transaction running at the READ COMMITTED isolation
Hold a shared lock until completion of the transaction
Locking hint Description
HOLDLOCK
level. By default, SQL Server 2000 operates at this
isolation level.
READPAST Skip locked rows. This option causes a transaction to skip
rows locked by other transactions that would ordinarily
appear in the result set, rather than block the transaction
waiting for the other transactions to release their locks on
these rows. The READPAST lock hint applies only to
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Views or tables participating in a view created with the SCHEMABINDING clause cannot be dropped. If
the view is not created using SCHEMABINDING, then we can drop the table.
90. Why doesn't SQL Server permit an ORDER BY clause in the definition of a view?
SQL Server excludes an ORDER BY clause from a view to comply with the ANSI SQL-92 standard.
Because analyzing the rationale for this standard requires a discussion of the underlying structure of the
structured query language (SQL) and the mathematics upon which it is based, we can't fully explain the
restriction here. However, if you need to be able to specify an ORDER BY clause in a view, consider using
the following workaround:
USE
pubs GO
CREATE VIEW
AuthorsByName AS
SELECT TOP 100 PERCENT
* FROM authors
ORDER BY au_lname,
au_fname GO
The TOP construct, which Microsoft introduced in SQL Server 7.0, is most useful when you combine it with
the ORDER BY clause. The only time that SQL Server supports an ORDER BY clause in a view is when it
is used in conjunction with the TOP keyword. (Note that the TOP keyword is a SQL Server extension to
the ANSI SQL-92 standard.)
TRANSACTION
91. What is Transaction?
A transaction is a sequence of operations performed as a single logical unit of work. A logical unit of work
must exhibit four properties, called the ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, and Durability)
properties, to qualify as a transaction:
¡ Atomicity - A transaction must be an atomic unit of work; either all of its data
modifications are performed or none of them is performed.
¡ Consistency - When completed, a transaction must leave all data in a consistent
state. In a relational database, all rules must be applied to the transaction's
modifications to maintain all data integrity. All internal data structures, such as B-tree
indexes or doubly-linked lists, must be correct at the end of the transaction.
¡ Isolation - Modifications made by concurrent transactions must be isolated from the
modifications made by any other concurrent transactions. A transaction either sees
data in the state it was in before another concurrent transaction modified it, or it sees
the data after the second transaction has completed, but it does not see an
intermediate state. This is referred to as serializability because it results in the ability
to reload the starting data and replay a series of transactions to end up with the data
in the same state it was in after the original transactions were performed.
¡ Durability - After a transaction has completed, its effects are permanently in place
in the system. The modifications persist even in the event of a system failure.
92. After one Begin Transaction a truncate statement and a RollBack statements are there. Will it
be rollbacked? Since the truncate statement does not perform logged operation how does it
RollBack?
It will rollback.
**
93. Given a SQL like
Begin Tran
Select @@Rowcount
Begin Tran
Select @@Rowcount
Begin Tran
Select @@Rowcount
Commit Tran
Select @@Rowcount
RollBack
Select @@Rowcount
RollBack
Select @@Rowcount
What is the value of @@Rowcount at each stmt levels?
Ans : 0 – zero.
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OTHER
94. What are the constraints for Table Constraints define rules regarding the values allowed in
columns and are the standard mechanism for enforcing integrity. SQL Server 2000 supports
five classes of constraints.
NOT NULL
CHECK
UNIQUE
PRIMARY KEY
FOREIGN KEY
95. There are 50 columns in a table. Write a query to get first 25 columns
Ans: Need to mention each column names.
96. How to list all the tables in a particular database?
USE
pubs GO
sp_help
97. What are cursors? Explain different types of cursors. What are the disadvantages of cursors?
How can you avoid cursors?
Cursors allow row-by-row processing of the result sets.
Types of cursors: Static, Dynamic, Forward-only, Keyset-driven.
Disadvantages of cursors: Each time you fetch a row from the cursor, it results in a network roundtrip.
Cursors are also costly because they require more resources and temporary storage (results in more IO
operations). Further, there are restrictions on the SELECT statements that can be used with some types of
cursors.
How to avoid cursor:
1. Most of the times, set based operations can be used instead of cursors. Here
is an example: If you have to give a flat hike to your employees using the
following criteria:
Salary between 30000 and 40000 -- 5000 hike
Salary between 40000 and 55000 -- 7000 hike
Salary between 55000 and 65000 -- 9000 hike
In this situation many developers tend to use a cursor, determine each employee's salary and
update his salary according to the above formula. But the same can be achieved by multiple update
statements or can be combined in a single UPDATE statement as shown below:
UPDATE tbl_emp SET salary =
CASE WHEN salary BETWEEN 30000 AND 40000 THEN salary + 5000
WHEN salary BETWEEN 40000 AND 55000 THEN salary + 7000
WHEN salary BETWEEN 55000 AND 65000 THEN salary +
10000 END
2. You need to call a stored procedure when a column in a particular row meets
certain condition. You don't have to use cursors for this. This can be achieved
using WHILE loop, as long as there is a unique key to identify each row. For
examples of using WHILE loop for row by row processing, check out the 'My
code library' section of my site or search for WHILE.
98. What is Dynamic Cursor? Suppose, I have a dynamic cursor attached to table in a database. I
have another means by which I will modify the table. What do you think will the values in the
cursor be?
Dynamic cursors reflect all changes made to the rows in their result set when scrolling through the cursor. The
data values, order, and membership of the rows in the result set can change on each fetch. All UPDATE,
INSERT, and DELETE statements made by all users are visible through the cursor. Updates are visible
immediately if they are made through the cursor using either an API function such as SQLSetPos or the
Transact-SQL WHERE CURRENT OF clause. Updates made outside the cursor are not visible until they are
committed, unless the cursor transaction isolation level is set to read uncommitted.
99. What is DATEPART?
Returns an integer representing the specified datepart of the specified date.
100.Difference between Delete and Truncate?
TRUNCATE TABLE is functionally identical to DELETE statement with no WHERE clause: both remove all
rows in the table.
(1) But TRUNCATE TABLE is faster and uses fewer system and transaction log resources than
DELETE. The DELETE statement removes rows one at a time and records an entry in the
transaction log for each
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deleted row. TRUNCATE TABLE removes the data by deallocating the data pages used to store the
table's data, and only the page deallocations are recorded in the transaction log.
(2) Because TRUNCATE TABLE is not logged, it cannot activate a trigger.
(3) The counter used by an identity for new rows is reset to the seed for the column. If you
want to retain the identity counter, use DELETE instead.
Of course, TRUNCATE TABLE can be rolled back.
101.Given a scenario where two operations, Delete Stmt and Truncate Stmt, where the Delete
Statement was successful and the truncate stmt was failed. – Can u judge why?
**
102.What are global variables? Tell me some of them?
Transact-SQL global variables are a form of function and are now referred to as functions.
ABS - Returns the absolute, positive value of the given numeric expression.
SUM
AVG
AND
103.What is DDL?
Data definition language (DDL) statements are SQL statements that support the definition or declaration
of database objects (for example, CREATE TABLE, DROP TABLE, and ALTER TABLE).
You can use the ADO Command object to issue DDL statements. To differentiate DDL statements from a
table or stored procedure name, set the CommandType property of the Command object to adCmdText.
Because executing DDL queries with this method does not generate any recordsets, there is no need for a
Recordset object.
104.What is DML?
Data Manipulation Language (DML), which is used to select, insert, update, and delete data in the
objects defined using DDL
105.What are keys in RDBMS? What is a primary key/ foreign key?
There are two kinds of keys.
A primary key is a set of columns from a table that are guaranteed to have unique values for each row of
that table.
Foreign keys are attributes of one table that have matching values in a primary key in another table,
allowing for relationships between tables.
106.What is the difference between Primary Key and Unique Key?
Both primary key and unique key enforce uniqueness of the column on which they are defined. But by
default primary key creates a clustered index on the column, where are unique creates a nonclustered
index by default. Another major difference is that, primary key doesn't allow NULLs, but unique key
allows one NULL only.
107.Define candidate key, alternate key, composite key?
A candidate key is one that can identify each row of a table uniquely. Generally a candidate key
becomes the primary key of the table. If the table has more than one candidate key, one of them will
become the primary key, and the rest are called alternate keys.
A key formed by combining at least two or more columns is called composite key.
108.What is the Referential Integrity?
Referential integrity refers to the consistency that must be maintained between primary and foreign keys,
i.e. every foreign key value must have a corresponding primary key value.
109.What are defaults? Is there a column to which a default can't be bound?
A default is a value that will be used by a column, if no value is supplied to that column while inserting data.
IDENTITY columns and timestamp columns can't have defaults bound to them.
110.What is Query optimization? How is tuning a performance of query done?
111.What is the use of trace utility?
**
112.What is the use of shell commands? xp_cmdshell
Executes a given command string as an operating-system command shell and returns any output as rows
of text. Grants nonadministrative users permissions to execute xp_cmdshell.
113.What is use of shrink database?
Microsoft® SQL Server 2000 allows each file within a database to be shrunk to remove unused pages.
Both data and transaction log files can be shrunk.
114.If the performance of the query suddenly decreased where you will check?
115.What is a pass-through query?
Microsoft® SQL Server 2000 sends pass-through queries as un-interpreted query strings to an OLE DB
data source. The query must be in a syntax the OLE DB data source will accept. A Transact-SQL
statement uses the results from a pass-through query as though it is a regular table reference.
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This example uses a pass-through query to retrieve a result set from a Microsoft Access version of the
Northwind sample database.
SELECT *
FROM OpenRowset('Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0',
'c:\northwind.mdb';'admin'; '',
'SELECT CustomerID,
CompanyName FROM Customers
WHERE Region = ''WA'' ')
116.How do you differentiate Local and Global Temporary table?
You can create local and global temporary tables. Local temporary tables are visible only in the current
session; global temporary tables are visible to all sessions. Prefix local temporary table names with single
number sign (#table_name), and prefix global temporary table names with a double number sign
(##table_name). SQL statements reference the temporary table using the value specified for table_name
in the CREATE TABLE statement:
CREATE TABLE #MyTempTable (cola INT PRIMARY
KEY) INSERT INTO #MyTempTable VALUES (1)
117.How the Exists keyword works in SQL Server?
USE pubs
SELECT au_lname, au_fname
FROM authors
WHERE exists
(SELECT *
FROM publishers
WHERE authors.city = publishers.city)
When a subquery is introduced with the keyword EXISTS, it functions as an existence test. The WHERE
clause of the outer query tests for the existence of rows returned by the subquery. The subquery does not
actually produce any data; it returns a value of TRUE or FALSE.
118.ANY?
USE pubs
SELECT au_lname,
au_fname FROM authors
WHERE city = ANY
(SELECT city
FROM publishers)
119.to select date part only
SELECT CONVERT(char(10),GetDate(),101)
--to select time part only
SELECT right(GetDate(),7)
120.How can I send a message to user from the SQL Server?
You can use the xp_cmdshell extended stored procedure to run net send command. This is the example to
send the 'Hello' message to JOHN:
EXEC master..xp_cmdshell "net send JOHN 'Hello'"
To get net send message on the Windows 9x machines, you should run the WinPopup utility. You
can place WinPopup in the Startup group under Program Files.
121.What is normalization? Explain different levels of normalization? Explain Third normalization
form with an example?
The process of refining tables, keys, columns, and relationships to create an efficient database is called
normalization. This should eliminates unnecessary duplication and provides a rapid search path to all
necessary information.
Some of the benefits of normalization are:
l Data integrity (because there is no redundant, neglected data)
l Optimized queries (because normalized tables produce rapid, efficient joins)
l Faster index creation and sorting (because the tables have fewer columns)
l Faster UPDATE performance (because there are fewer indexes per table)
l Improved concurrency resolution (because table locks will affect less data)
l Eliminate redundancy
There are a few rules for database normalization. Each rule is called a "normal form." If the first rule is
observed, the database is said to be in "first normal form." If the first three rules are observed, the
database is considered to be in "third normal form." Although other levels of normalization are possible,
third normal form is considered the highest level necessary for most applications.
1. First Normal Form (1NF)
n Eliminate repeating groups in individual tables
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Subordinate1 Subordinate
Subordinate2 Subordinate3 4
Bob
Mary Mike Jason Carol Mark
Jim Alan
Eliminate duplicative columns from the same table. Clearly, the Subordinate1-Subordinate4
columns are
duplicative.
What happens
when we need
to add or
remove a
subordinate?
Subordinates
Subordinate
Bob Jim
Bob Mary
Bob Beth
Mary Mike
Mary Jason
Mary Carol
Mary Mark
Jim Alan
2. Second Normal Form (2NF)
n Create separate tables for sets of values that apply to multiple records.
n Relate these tables with a foreign key.
Records should not depend on anything other than a table's primary key (a compound key, if
necessary).
For example, consider a customer's address in an accounting system. The address is needed by the
Customers table, but also by the Orders, Shipping, Invoices, Accounts Receivable, and Collections
tables. Instead of storing the customer's address as a separate entry in each of these tables, store
it
in one place, either in the Customers table or in a separate Addresses table.
3. Third Normal Form (3NF)
Eliminate fields that do not depend on the key.
Values in a record that are not part of that record's key do not belong in the table. In general, any
time the contents of a group of fields may apply to more than a single record in the table, consider
placing those fields in a separate table.
For example, in an Employee Recruitment table, a candidate's university name and address may
be
included. But you need a complete list of universities for group mailings. If university information is
stored in the Candidates table, there is no way to list universities with no current candidates. Create
a separate Universities table and link it to the Candidates table with a university code key.
Another Example :
MemberId Name Company CompanyLoc
1 John Smith ABC Alabama
2 Dave Jones MCI Florida
The Member table satisfies first normal form - it contains no repeating groups. It satisfies second
normal form - since it doesn't have a multivalued key. But the key is MemberID, and the company
name and location describe only a company, not a member. To achieve third normal form, they
must be moved into a separate table. Since they describe a company, CompanyCode becomes the
key of the new "Company" table.
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The motivation for this is the same for second normal form: we want to avoid update and delete
anomalies. For example, suppose no members from the IBM were currently stored in the database.
With the previous design, there would be no record of its existence, even though 20 past members
were from IBM!
Member Table
John Smith 1
MemberId Name
CID
1
2 Dave Jones 2
Company
Table
CId Name Location
1 ABC Alabama
2 MCI Florida
A relation is in Boyce/Codd normal form if and only if the only determinants are candidate key. Its a
different version of 3NF, indeed, was meant to replace it. [A determinant is any attribute on which
some other attribute is (fully) functionally dependent.]
5. 4th Normal Form (4NF)
A table is in 4NF if it is in BCNF and if it has no multi-valued dependencies. This applies primarily
to key-only associative tables, and appears as a ternary relationship, but has incorrectly merged 2
distinct, independent relationships.
Eg: This could be any 2 M:M relationships from a single entity. For instance, a member could
know many software tools, and a software tool may be used by many members. Also, a member
could have recommended many books, and a book could be recommended by many members.
Software member
Book
The correct solution, to cause the model to be in 4th normal form, is to ensure that all M:M
Software
membersoftware member memberBook book
6. 5th Normal Form (5NF)(PJNF)
A table is in 5NF, also called "Projection-Join Normal Form", if it is in 4NF and if every
join dependency in the table is a consequence of the candidate keys of the table.
7. Domain/key normal form (DKNF). A key uniquely identifies each row in a table. A domain is the
set of permissible values for an attribute. By enforcing key and domain restrictions, the database is
assured of being freed from modification anomalies. DKNF is the normalization level that most
designers aim to achieve.
**
Remember, these normalization guidelines are cumulative. For a database to be in 2NF, it must first fulfill
all the criteria of a 1NF database.
122.If a database is normalized by 3 NF then how many number of tables it should contain in
minimum? How many minimum if 2NF and 1 NF?
123.What is denormalization and when would you go for it?
As the name indicates, denormalization is the reverse process of normalization. It's the controlled
introduction of redundancy in to the database design. It helps improve the query performance as the
number of joins could be reduced.
124.How can I randomly sort query results?
To randomly order rows, or to return x number of randomly chosen rows, you can use the RAND function
inside the SELECT statement. But the RAND function is resolved only once for the entire query, so every
row will get same value. You can use an ORDER BY clause to sort the rows by the result from the NEWID
function, as the following code shows:
SELECT *
FROM Northwind..Orders
ORDER BY NEWID()
125.sp_who
Provides information about current Microsoft® SQL Server™ users and processes. The information
returned can be filtered to return only those processes that are not idle.
126.Have you worked on Dynamic SQL? How will You handled “ (Double Quotes) in Dynamic SQL?
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context - Specifies the execution context in which the newly created OLE object runs. If specified, this
value must be one of the following:
1 = In-process (.dll) OLE server only
4 = Local (.exe) OLE server only
5 = Both in-process and local OLE server allowed
Examples
A. Use Prog ID - This example creates a SQL-DMO SQLServer object by using its ProgID.
B. Use CLSID - This example creates a SQL-DMO SQLServer object by using its CLSID.
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//details about database pubs. .mdf, .ldf file locations, size of database
sp_helpdb pubs
//lists all tables under current
database sp_tables
OR
SELECT * FROM information_schema.tables WHERE (table_type = 'base table')
OR
SELECT * FROM sysobjects WHERE type = 'U' //faster
133.B-tree indexes or doubly-linked lists?
134.What is the system function to get the current user's user id?
USER_ID(). Also check out other system functions like USER_NAME(), SYSTEM_USER,
SESSION_USER, CURRENT_USER, USER, SUSER_SID(), HOST_NAME().
135.What are the series of steps that happen on execution of a query in a Query Analyzer?
1) Syntax checking 2) Parsing 3) Execution plan
136.Which event (Check constraints, Foreign Key, Rule, trigger, Primary key check) will be
performed last for integrity check?
Identity Insert
Check Nullability
constraint Data type
check Instead of
trigger Primary key
Check constraint
Foreign key
DML Execution (update
statements) After Trigger
**
137.How will you show many to many relation in sql?
Create 3rd table with 2 columns which having one to many relation to these tables.
138.When a query is sent to the database and an index is not being used, what type of execution
is taking place?
A table scan.
139.What is #, ##, @, @@ means?
@@ - System variables
@ - user defined variables
140.What is the difference between a Local temporary table and a Global temporary table? How is
each one denoted?
Local temporary table will be accessible to only current user session, its name will be preceded with a
single hash (#mytable)
Global temporary table will be accessible to all users, & it will be dropped only after ending of all
active connections, its name will be preceded with double hash (##mytable)
141.What is covered queries in SQL Server?
142.What is HASH JOIN, MERGE
JOIN? TOOLS
143.Have you ever used DBCC command? Give an example for it.
The Transact-SQL programming language provides DBCC statements that act as Database Console
Commands for Microsoft® SQL Serve 2000. These statements check the physical and logical
consistency of a database. Many DBCC statements can fix detected problems. Database Console
Command statements are grouped into these categories.
Maintenance tasks on a database, index, or filegroup.
Statement category Perform
Maintenance statements
Miscellaneous Miscellaneous tasks such as enabling row-level locking or removing a dynamic-l
statements memory.
Status statements Status checks.
Validation statements Validation operations on a database, table, index, catalog, filegroup, system
Maintenance tasks on a database, index, or filegroup.
Statement category Perform
Maintenance statements
tabl
database pages.
DBCC CHECKDB, DBCC CHECKTABLE, DBCC CHECKCATALOG, DBCC CHECKALLOC, DBCC SHOW
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144.How do you use DBCC statements to monitor various aspects of a SQL server installation?
**
145.What is the output of DBCC Showcontig statement?
Displays fragmentation information for the data and indexes of the specified table.
146.How do I reset the identity column?
You can use the DBCC CHECKIDENT statement, if you want to reset or reseed the identity column. For
example, if you need to force the current identity value in the jobs table to a value of 100, you can use the
following:
USE
pubs GO
DBCC CHECKIDENT (jobs, RESEED,
100) GO
147.About SQL Command line executables
Utilities
bcp
console
isql
sqlagent
sqldiag
sqlmaint
sqlservr
vswitch
dtsrun
dtswiz
isqlw
itwiz
odbccmpt
osql
rebuildm
sqlftwiz
distrib
logread
replmerg
snapshot
scm
regxmlss
148.What is DTC?
The Microsoft Distributed Transaction Coordinator (MS DTC) is a transaction manager that allows
client applications to include several different sources of data in one transaction. MS DTC coordinates
committing the distributed transaction across all the servers enlisted in the transaction.
149.What is DTS? Any drawbacks in using DTS?
Microsoft® SQL Server™ 2000 Data Transformation Services (DTS) is a set of graphical tools and
programmable objects that lets you extract, transform, and consolidate data from disparate sources into
single or multiple destinations.
150.What is BCP?
The bcp utility copies data between an instance of Microsoft® SQL Server™ 2000 and a data file in a user-
specified format.
C:\Documents and Settings\sthomas>bcp
usage: bcp {dbtable | query} {in | out | queryout | format}
datafile [-m maxerrors] [-f formatfile] [-e errfile]
[-F firstrow] [-L lastrow] [-b batchsize]
[-n native type] [-c character type] [-w wide character type]
[-N keep non-text native] [-V file format version] [-q quoted identifier] [-
C code page specifier] [-t field terminator] [-r row terminator]
[-i inputfile] [-o outfile] [-a packetsize] [-
S server name] [-U username] [-P password]
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to review any of the auditing events, including the success and failure of a login attempt and the
success and failure of permissions in accessing statements and objects.
Permissions
159.A user is a member of Public role and Sales role. Public role has the permission to select on all
the table, and Sales role, which doesn’t have a select permission on some of the tables. Will that
user be able to select from all tables?
**
160.If a user does not have permission on a table, but he has permission to a view created on it, will
he be able to view the data in table?
Yes.
161.Describe Application Role and explain a scenario when you will use it?
**
162.After removing a table from database, what other related objects have to be dropped explicitly?
(view, SP)
163.You have a SP names YourSP and have the a Select Stmt inside the SP. You also have a
user named YourUser. What permissions you will give him for accessing the SP.
**
164.Different Authentication modes in Sql server? If a user is logged under windows
authentication mode, how to find his userid?
There are Three Different authentication modes in sqlserver.
1. Windows Authentication Mode
2. SqlServer Authentication Mode
3. Mixed Authentication Mode
“system_user” system function in sqlserver to fetch the logged on user name.
165.Give the connection strings from front-end for both type logins(windows,sqlserver)?
This are specifically for sqlserver not for any other RDBMS
Data Source=MySQLServer;Initial Catalog=NORTHWIND;Integrated
Security=SSPI (windows)
Data Source=MySQLServer;Initial Catalog=NORTHWIND;Uid=” ”;Pwd=” ”(sqlserver)
166.What are three SQL keywords used to change or set someone’s permissions?
Grant, Deny and Revoke
Administration
167.Explain the architecture of SQL Server?
**
168.Different types of Backups?
¡ A full database backup is a full copy of the database.
¡ A transaction log backup copies only the transaction log.
¡ A differential backup copies only the database pages modified after the last full
database backup.
¡ A file or filegroup restore allows the recovery of just the portion of a database
that was on the failed disk.
169.What are ‘jobs’ in SQL Server? How do we create one? What is tasks?
Using SQL Server Agent jobs, you can automate administrative tasks and run them on a recurring basis.
**
170.What is database replication? What are the different types of replication you can set up in
SQL Server? How are they used? What is snapshot replication how is it different from
Transactional replication?
Replication is the process of copying/moving data between databases on the same or different servers.
SQL Server supports the following types of replication scenarios:
1. Snapshot replication - It distributes data exactly as it appears at a specific moment in
time and doesn’t monitor for updates. It can be used when data changes are
infrequent. It is often used for browsing data such as price lists, online catalog, or data
for decision support where the current data is not required and data is used as read
only.
2. Transactional replication (with immediate updating subscribers, with queued updating
subscribers) - With this an initial snapshot of data is applied, and whenever data
modifications are made at the publisher, the individual transactions are captured and
propagated to the subscribers.
3. Merge replication - It is the process of distributing the data between publisher and
subscriber, it allows the publisher and subscriber to update the data while connected
or disconnected, and then merging the updates between the sites when they are
connected.
171.How can u look at what are the process running on SQL server? How can you kill a process in
SQL
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server?
¡ Expand a server group, and then expand a server.
¡ Expand Management, and then expand Current Activity.
¡ Click Process Info. The current server activity is displayed in
the details pane. In the details pane, right-click a Process ID,
and then click Kill Process.
173.What is RAID and what are different types of RAID configurations?
RAID stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks, used to provide fault tolerance to database
servers. There are six RAID levels 0 through 5 offering different levels of performance, fault tolerance.
173.
Some of the tools/ways that help you troubleshooting performance problems are: SET SHOWPLAN_ALL
ON, SET SHOWPLAN_TEXT ON, SET STATISTICS IO ON, SQL Server Profiler, Windows NT /2000
Performance monitor, Graphical execution plan in Query Analyzer.
174.How to determine the service pack currently installed on SQL Server?
The global variable @@Version stores the build number of the sqlservr.exe, which is used to determine
the service pack installed.
eg: Microsoft SQL Server 2000 - 8.00.760 (Intel X86) Dec 17 2002 14:22:05 Copyright (c) 1988-2003
Microsoft Corporation Enterprise Edition on Windows NT 5.0 (Build 2195: Service Pack 3)
175.What is the purpose of using COLLATE in a query?
The term, collation, refers to a set of rules that determine how data is sorted and compared. In Microsoft®
SQL Server 2000, it is not required to separately specify code page and sort order for character data, and
the collation used for Unicode data. Instead, specify the collation name and sorting rules to use. Character
data is sorted using rules that define the correct character sequence, with options for specifying case-
sensitivity, accent marks, kana character types, and character width. Microsoft SQL Server 2000
collations include these groupings:
l Windows collations - Windows collations define rules for storing character data based
on the rules defined for an associated Windows locale. The base Windows collation
rules specify which alphabet or language is used when dictionary sorting is applied, as
well as the code page used to store non-Unicode character data. For Windows
collations, the nchar, nvarchar, and ntext data types have the same sorting behavior
as char, varchar, and text data types
l SQL collations - SQL collations are provided for compatibility with sort orders in
earlier versions of Microsoft SQL Server.
Sort Order
Binary is the fastest sorting order, and is case-sensitive. If Binary is selected, the Case-sensitive,
Accent-sensitive, Kana-sensitive, and Width-sensitive options are not available.
Sort order Description
Binary Sorts and compares data in Microsoft® SQL Server™ tables based on the bit
patterns defined for each character. Binary sort order is case-sensitive, that is
lowercase precedes uppercase, and accent-sensitive. This is the fastest sorting
order.
If this option is not selected, SQL Server follows sorting and comparison rules
as defined in dictionaries for the associated language or alphabet.
Case-sensitive Specifies that SQL Server distinguish between uppercase and lowercase
letters.
If not selected, SQL Server considers the uppercase and lowercase versions of
letters to be equal. SQL Server does not define whether lowercase letters sort
lower or higher in relation to uppercase letters when Case-sensitive is not
selected.
Accent-sensitive Specifies that SQL Server distinguish between accented and unaccented
characters. For example, 'a' is not equal to 'á'.
If not selected, SQL Server considers the accented and unaccented versions of
letters to be equal.
Kana-sensitive Specifies that SQL Server distinguish between the two types of Japanese kana
characters: Hiragana and Katakana.
If not selected, SQL Server considers Hiragana and Katakana characters to be
equal.
Width-sensitive Specifies that SQL Server distinguish between a single-byte character (half-
width) and the same character when represented as a double-byte character
(full-width).
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REPLACE - Replaces all occurrences of the second given string expression in the first string expression
with a third expression.
SELECT
REPLACE('abcdefghicde','cde','xxx') GO
Here is the result set:
------------
abxxxfghixxx
177.What does it mean to have quoted_identifier on? What are the implications of having it off?
When SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is OFF (default), literal strings in expressions can be delimited by
single or double quotation marks.
When SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is ON, all strings delimited by double quotation marks are
interpreted as object identifiers. Therefore, quoted identifiers do not have to follow the Transact-SQL
rules for identifiers.
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER must be ON when creating or manipulating indexes on computed columns or
indexed views. If SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is OFF, CREATE, UPDATE, INSERT, and DELETE
statements on tables with indexes on computed columns or indexed views will fail.
The SQL Server ODBC driver and Microsoft OLE DB Provider for SQL Server automatically set
QUOTED_IDENTIFIER to ON when connecting.
When a stored procedure is created, the SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER and SET ANSI_NULLS settings are
captured and used for subsequent invocations of that stored procedure. When executed inside a stored
procedure, the setting of SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is not changed.
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER
OFF GO
- Attempt to create a table with a reserved keyword as a
name
- should fail.
CREATE TABLE "select" ("identity" int IDENTITY, "order" int)
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER
ON GO
-- Will succeed.
CREATE TABLE "select" ("identity" int IDENTITY, "order"
int) GO
178.What is the purpose of UPDATE STATISTICS?
Updates information about the distribution of key values for one or more statistics groups (collections)
in the specified table or indexed view.
179.Fundamentals of Data warehousing & olap?
180.What do u mean by OLAP server? What is the difference between OLAP and OLTP?
181.What is a tuple?
A tuple is an instance of data within a relational database.
182.Services and user Accounts maintenance
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183.sp_configure commands?
Displays or changes global configuration settings for the current server.
184.What is the basic functions for master, msdb, tempdb databases?
Microsoft® SQL Server 2000 systems have four system databases:
l master - The master database records all of the system level information for a SQL
Server system. It records all login accounts and all system configuration settings.
master is the database that records the existence of all other databases, including
the location of the database files.
l tempdb - tempdb holds all temporary tables and temporary stored procedures. It also
fills any other temporary storage needs such as work tables generated by SQL
Server. tempdb is re-created every time SQL Server is started so the system starts
with a clean copy of the database.
By default, tempdb autogrows as needed while SQL Server is running. If the size defined for
tempdb is small, part of your system processing load may be taken up with autogrowing tempdb
to the size needed to support your workload each time to restart SQL Server. You can avoid this
overhead by using ALTER DATABASE to increase the size of tempdb.
l model - The model database is used as the template for all databases created on a
system. When a CREATE DATABASE statement is issued, the first part of the
database is created by copying in the contents of the model database, then the
remainder of the new database is filled with empty pages. Because tempdb is
created every time SQL Server is started, the model database must always exist on
a SQL Server system.
l msdb - The msdb database is used by SQL Server Agent for scheduling alerts
and jobs, and recording operators.
185.What are sequence diagrams? What you will get out of this sequence diagrams?
Sequence diagrams document the interactions between classes to achieve a result, such as a use case.
Because UML is designed for object-oriented programming, these communications between classes are
known as messages. The sequence diagram lists objects horizontally, and time vertically, and models
these messages over time.
186.What are the new features of SQL 2000 than SQL 7? What are the new datatypes in sql?
¡ XML Support - The relational database engine can return data as
Extensible Markup Language (XML) documents. Additionally, XML can
also be used to insert, update, and delete values in the database. (for xml
raw - to retrieve output as xml type)
¡ User-Defined Functions - The programmability of Transact-SQL can be
extended by creating your own Transact-SQL functions. A user-defined
function can return either a scalar value or a table.
¡ Indexed Views - Indexed views can significantly improve the performance
of an application where queries frequently perform certain joins or
aggregations. An indexed view allows indexes to be created on views,
where the result set of the view is stored and indexed in the database.
¡ New Data Types - SQL Server 2000 introduces three new data types.
bigint is an 8-byte integer type. sql_variant is a type that allows the
storage of data values of different data types. table is a type that allows
applications to store results temporarily for later use. It is supported for
variables, and as the return type for user-defined functions.
¡ INSTEAD OF and AFTER Triggers - INSTEAD OF triggers are executed
instead of the triggering action (for example, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE).
They can also be defined on views, in which case they greatly extend the
types of updates a view can support. AFTER triggers fire after the
triggering action. SQL Server 2000 introduces the ability to specify which
AFTER triggers fire first and last.
¡ Multiple Instances of SQL Server - SQL Server 2000 supports running
multiple instances of the relational database engine on the same computer.
Each computer can run one instance of the relational database engine from
SQL Server version 6.5 or 7.0, along with one or more instances of the
database engine from SQL Server 2000. Each instance has its own set of
system and user databases.
¡ Index Enhancements - You can now create indexes on computed columns.
You can specify whether indexes are built in ascending or descending order,
and if the database engine should use parallel scanning and sorting during
index creation.
188.How do we open SQL Server in single user mode?
We can accomplish this in any of the three ways given below :-
a. From
Command
Prompt :
-sqlservr
-m
b. From Startup Options :-
Go to SQL Server Properties by right-clicking on the Server name in the Enterprise manager.
Under the 'General' tab, click on 'Startup Parameters'.
Enter a value of -m in the Parameter.
c. From Registry :-
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Go to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\MSSQLServer\MSSQLServer\Parameters.
Add new string value.
Specify the 'Name' as SQLArg(n) & 'Data' as -m.
Where n is the argument number in the list of arguments.
188.Difference between clustering and NLB (Network Load Balancing)?
**
189.Explain Active/Active and Active/Passive cluster configurations?
**
190.What is Log Shipping?
In Microsoft® SQL Server™ 2000 Enterprise Edition, you can use log shipping to feed transaction logs
from one database to another on a constant basis. Continually backing up the transaction logs from a
source database and then copying and restoring the logs to a destination database keeps the
destination database synchronized with the source database. This allows you to have a backup server
and also provides a way to offload query processing from the main computer (the source server) to read-
only destination servers.
191.What are the main steps you take care for enhancing SQL Server performance?
**
192.You have to check whether any users are connected to sql server database and if any user is
connected to database, you have to disconnect the user(s) and run a process in a job. How do
you do the above in a job?
**
XML
193.How can I convert data in a Microsoft Access table into XML format?
The following applications can help you convert Access data into XML format: Access 2002, ADO 2.5, and
SQLXML. Access 2002 (part of Microsoft Office XP) enables you to query or save a table in XML format.
You might be able to automate this process. ADO 2.5 and later enables you to open the data into a
recordset, then persist the recordset in XML format, as the following code shows:
rs.Save "c:\rs.xml", adPersistXML
You can use linked servers to add the Access database to your SQL Server 2000 database so you can run
queries from within SQL Server to retrieve data. Then, through HTTP, you can use the SQLXML
technology to extract the Access data in the XML format you want.
NEW
194.@@IDENTITY ?
Ans: Returns the last-inserted identity value.
195.If a job is fail in sql server, how do find what went wrong?
196.Have you used Error handling in DTS?
http://www.smartdraw.com/resources/centers/software/erd.htm ER Diagram
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