SQL Server 2012 Express Connection Timeout Expired - connection-timeout

Error Message Picture
I installed SQL Server 2012 Express from scratch, but it is not working. Same problem again.

By default, SQL Server Express will install as a named SQLEXPRESS instance - so you need to use your IP address with \SQLEXRPESS added to it as your server name:
Server Name: 192.168.1.199\SQLEXPRESS
Update: you need to go to SQL Server Configuration Manager and find out what your instance name is.
Start Menu
> Microsoft SQL Server 2012
> Configuration Tools
> SQL Server 2012 Configuration Manager
You should see a screen something like this:
Find the entry for SQL Server that is in the "running" state - what does it say in the brackets after SQL Server? That's your instance name - if it's a default SQL Server Express installation, it should say SQLEXPRESS. If it doesn't - well then that's your instance name right there (unless when it's MSSQLSERVER - then it's the unnamed instance).
Use 192.168.1.199\instance-name as your server name

Related

How to know my server name in SQL Server?

I installed SQL Server but I forgot my server name and now that I install SQL Server Management Studio, it needs the server name.
How can I get server name again?
You can get your server name with Transact-SQL(T-SQL) as shown below:
SELECT ##SERVERNAME -- DESKTOP-OVPADTC\SQLEXPRESS
SELECT SERVERPROPERTY ('ServerName') -- DESKTOP-OVPADTC\SQLEXPRESS
If you installed SQL Server on your local machine, you can get to the installed server using
.
(local)
localhost
YourMachineName
as the server/instance name.
If you installed SQL Server Express with the defaults, you can reach your instance with:
.\SQLEXPRESS
(local)\SQLEXPRESS
localhost\SQLEXPRESS
YourMachineName\SQLEXPRESS
Otherwise, you need to go to Start Menu > SQL Server > Configuration Tools > SQL Server Configuration Manager and see which SQL Server services are running:
If you find a Service Type = SQL Server with a State = Running, the instance name is provided in the brackets behind the "SQL Server" in the Name column - here it is SQL2014. In that case, you can connect to this running SQL Server instance on your local machine using:
.\SQL2014
(local)\SQL2014
localhost\SQL2014
YourMachineName\SQL2014
If the instance name (in brackets) is MSSQLSERVER, this means it's the default, unnamed instance - and you can connect to it with just one of the first four options - just the "local machine server name" - no instance needs to be provided.
When the ssms's launched, the "Connect to Server" appears first,
then in the Server name field it'll have already selected (probably your pc name if you gave default on server installation) the server name.
If it isn't there, then click on it (Server name drop down)
<Browse for more...>
then on the popup "Browse for Servers"
click on "Database Engine"
and you can find your server name there.
There will be only one server name there ,if this is the first server you've created.
Click on the server name and hit OK!

I cannot find my server name in Microsoft SQL Server 2012

I have just set up Microsoft SQL Server 2012 to my computer. However, server name: is empty and I do not know how to handle with it.
Thanks all of you
Which edition of SQL Server did you set up?
If you setup SQL Server 2012 Express, then the default instance name is SQLEXPRESS, so you should be able to use any of these server names:
.\SQLEXPRESS
(local)\SQLEXPRESS
localhost\SQLEXRPESS
If you've set up any other edition of SQL Server 2012, and picked the default instance, then your server name would be:
.
(local)
localhost
and if you picked a different instance name during setup - well, I hope you see how to concatenate together . (or (local) or localhost) with the instance name to get connected.

Unable to connect to SQL Server 2005

I am trying to connect to SQL Server 2005 express edition from SQL Server Management.
From the server configuration manager, I found the SQL Server Service to be running and within bracket, it's written(SQLEXPRESS). I understand SQLEXPRESS is the instance name, therefore I have to use following string for server name: \SQLEXPRESS.
I am using windows authentication. I am logged into an account that is non admin.
Can someone suggest me how I can establish the connection.
Thanks.
Try .\SQLEXPRESS..
From here:
By default, SQL Server Express
installs as an instance named
"SQLEXPRESS," for example. You connect
to a named instance by specifying the
instance name with the server name in
the connection string. That is why you
normally specify ".\SQLEXPRESS" as the
server name when connecting to a local
SQL Server Express database. The dot
means the local server and \SQLEXPRESS
specifies the SQLEXPRESS named
instance.

Why there is no any Sql Server in Add Connection list

I use Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Professional (I installed all components).
Here is what I'm trying to do. I create a new ASP.NET project. Then I open Server Explorer (View->Server Explorer), right click on Data Connections and choose Add Connection. Then I choose Microsoft SQL Server and press Continue, but the 'Server name' list is empty.
I launch Sql Server Configuration Manager and it shows that SQL Server is in running state (Agent and Browser are stopped)
Why there is no any Sql Server in Add Connection list?
--------------------------------------------------------------
I allow remote filestream for SQl Server, so no I can choose server in the list, but when I enter new database name and click Ok I get a error "sql server was not found or was not accessible"
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Here is a list of installed programs with 'SQL' filter
Have you configured SQL Server to allow remote connections? By default, SQL Server Express Edition and SQL Server Developer Edition do not allow remote connections.
For SQL Server 2005:
How to configure SQL Server 2005 to allow remote connections
For SQL Server 2008:
From start menu of SQL Server 2008, run SQL Server Configuration Manager.
From left side view of SQL Server Configuration Manager, expand SQL Server Network Configuration.
In the right view, you will see the list of SQL Server protocols. By default only Shared Memory is enabled. Enable the other protocols to get your SQL server to accept connections over the network.
Your problem appears to be that you have more than one SQL Server instance installed locally. You will need to use the fully qualified name.

SQL SERVER 2005 Connectivity Problems

I am having a hell of a time trying to connect to the SQL SERVER 2005 database. I am using Windows 7.
Here is the screenshot of the error thrown:
(source: highoncoding.com)
I have been battling this issue for the past week and still no progress.
I have tried the following in the server name:
(local)
localhost
computername
none of them worked!
I just checked in the services section and SQLSERVER EXPRESS is not even there. I am using the following post as a reference:
https://serverfault.com/questions/11745/i-cannot-connect-to-my-local-sql-server-2008
This instance of SQL Server is running on the same PC you're connecting from? That's the implication of 'local'.
Possibilities :
1) Try (local) instead of local for the server name
2) Try 'MSSQLSERVER' as the name
3) Check the SQL Server Configuration Manager shows the same configuration options you're attempting to connect with, eg the same instance name, Named Pipes enabled, services running ok, etc.
EDIT :
Ok, what are you using to connect with? SQL Server Management Studio Express? Are you sure you installed an instance? The lack of SQLExpress in the services list would seem to indicate otherwise.
When you connect to a SQL Server you specify the name in the form {computername}\{instancename}. The {instancename} is the name of the SQL instance which was chosen during the SQL Server installation. For {computername} you can substitute the special names . or local when connecting to the localhost machine. If the SQL Server was installed as the Default instance then the instance name part must be omitted, so the connection Server name becomes just the computer name.
SQL Server Express installs by default an instance named SQLEXPRESS. The corresponding NT service name is MSSQL$SQLEXPRESS. The Server name in the connection dialog is .\SQLEXPRESS, local\SQLEXPRESS, localhost\SQLEXPRESS or {computername}\SQLEXPRESS (they're all the same).
If the SQL Server was installed as the Default instance name then the corresponding NT service name is MSSQLSERVER. The Server name in the connection dialog is ., local, localhost or {computername} (they're all the same).
If the SQL Server was installed as a named instance then the corresponding NT service name is MSSQL${INSTANCENAME}. The Server name in the connection dialog is .\{INSTANCENAME}, local\{INSTANCENAME}, localhost\{INSTANCENAME} or {computername}\{INSTANCENAME} (they're all the same).
When connecting from a remote computer to a SQL Server instance the SQL has to be configured to allow remote connection How to configure SQL Server 2005 to allow remote connections.
Check your SQL server configuration, make sure the TCP connections are enabled. You can also check that the SQL Browser service is started. Make sure you do not have a firewall that gets on the way. Make sure the SQL Server service is also started.
Did you install SQL Server on the default instance, or have you used named instances? If you've used named instances then the server will be server\instancename. If you don't know, then have a look in the Services administrative tool; you'll be able to determine the instance name, if any, from there).
You could also try connecting with the server name as a single period (i.e. simply ".") [caveat... I've not got access to SQL Server at the moment, but I think I've used this before now].