How to restore a database from different computers into one - sql

I have 3 computers having the same sql server 2005 database, I would like to gather the data from the 3 computers to another computer which has the same database. Please help me.

This is called "data conversion" and a lot of your work will be to determine uniqueness on each one of them and coming up with strategies to prevent collisions, mainly primary keys that likely are the same across these databases. No simple answer here, it can be a project in itself.

It might be difficult without any manual data transformation. It depends on your database and type of the data. For example what do you use as a keys? If you have sequential integers as a primary/foreign keys, then you will have to do some manual data transformation. IF you use GUIDS, it will get slightly easier, but you still have to ensure that for example some lookup tables doesn't have different guid keys for same items etc.. But there is no took for doing this automatically.
Maybe if you have some very simple data without any relations to other tables (like table with one column with text messages etc) you can script the data with SQL Server Database Publishing Wizard, and then execute the scripts against your target database.

You need to backup your databases by right clicking in Enterprise Manager and choosing backup before choosing the location etc.
After backing up you can then restore to your local Sql Server by right clicking and choosing restore.
After you have the data locally you will need to write queries to transfer the data to your local database.
Alternatively you can use something like Red Gates Sql Data Compare to compare and transfer data using a visual interface. Although this costs money.

Redgate SQL Toolbelt may be able to help you. You would first copy database to that another computer and then compare it with Sql Data Compare against 3 databases always copying data only one way (to your new database). However I am not 100% sure if it will work like i think it would. You would have to verify it yourself.
Like other people suggested some things like primary keys etc may be problematic.

Related

connecting to remote oracle database in SQL

I need to do some data migration between two oracle databases that in different servers. I've thought of some ways to do it like writing a jdbc program but i think the best way is to do it in SQL itself. I can also copy the entire table over to the database I am migrating to but these tables are big and doesnt seem like a "elegant" solution.
Is it possible to open a connection to one DB in SQL developer then connect to the other one using SQL and writing update/insert functions on tables as if they were both in the same connection?
I have read some examples on creating linked tables but none seem to be oracle specific or tell me how to open the external connection by supplying it the server hostname/port/SID/user credentials.
thanks for the help!
If you create a Database Link, you can just select a from different database by querying TABLENAME#dblink.
You can create such a link using the CREATE DATABASE LINK statement.
It depends if its a one time thing or a normal process and if you need to do ETL (Extract, Transform and Load) or not, but ill help you out based on what you explained.
From what i can gather from your explanation, what you attempt to accomplish is to copy a couple of tables from one db to another, if they can reach one another then its really simple, you could just create a DBLINK (http://www.dba-oracle.com/t_how_create_database_link.htm) and then do a SELECT AS INSERT from either side using the DBLINK for one of the tables and the local table as the receiver or sender. Its pretty straight forward.
But if its a one time thing i would just move the table with expdp and impdp since that will be a lot faster and a lot less strain on the DB.
If its something you need to maintain and keep updated, why not just add the DBLINK and use that on both sides, this will be dependent on network performance though.
If this is a bit out of you depth or you cant create dblinks due to restrictions, SQL Developer has had a database copy option for a while and you can go as far a copying individual tables, but its very heavy on the system where its being run (http://deepak-sharma.net/2014/01/12/copy-database-objects-between-two-databases-in-oracle-using-sql-developer/).

Create SQL Script to Change Old Database to Current One

I'm creating the front-end for a project and I made a copy of the back-end database from the company's server and put it on my computer. I needed to make some changes (a few new tables and two new columns in an existing table) for security roles and other things so I duplicated the copied database and made my changes on the new one.
I want to deploy my project to the company's server now but we need to modify the original back-end database. I need to generate a SQL script that finds the changes between the old-database and my newer database, which can be run on the old database to create the new tables and columns. The script should retain the data from the old database and NOT add any junk/testing data I made in my new database.
By the way, I'm using SQL Server 2008 R2 and the old database on the server is on 2005. I've been looking around for utilities to use and found tablediff. However, it looks like it will copy the data and I can't see an argument on the information page to toggle this.
I'm sure it's simple but I'm not really sure how to do this. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.
By far the solution I trust most to handle schema comparisons is Red Gate's SQL Compare:
http://www.red-gate.com/products/sql-development/sql-compare/
It has a companion called Data Compare which is designed specifically for data. You can grab the free trial to see if it does what you need in this case.
There are other options as well, for example SQL Server Data Tools has this functionality, though I haven't tested it to any degree that I could compare feature sets, performance, etc.
I've also blogged about why you want to use a tool and just pay for this functionality, rather than solve it programmatically yourself. The post also mentions a variety of alternatives if budget is a primary blocker:
http://bertrandaaron.wordpress.com/2012/04/20/re-blog-the-cost-of-reinventing-the-wheel/

Methods of maintaining sample data in a database

Firstly, let me apologize for the title, as it probably isn't as clear as I think it is.
What I'm looking for is a way to keep sample data in a database (SQL, 2005 2008 and Express) that get modified every so often. At present I have a handful of scripts to populate the database with a specific set of data, but every time the database is changed all the scripts have to be more or less rewritten and I was looking for some alternatives.
I've seen a number of tools and other software for creating sample data in a database, some free and some not. Are there any other methods I haven’t considered?
Thanks in advance for any input.
Edit: Also, if anyone has any advice at all in dealing with keeping data in sync with a changing application or database, that would be of some help as well.
If you are looking for tools for SQL server, go visit Red Gate Software, they have the best tools. They have a data compare tool that you can use to keep lookup type tables up-to-date and a SQL compare tool that you can use to keep the tables synched up between two datbases. So using SQL data compare, create a datbase with all the sample data you want. Then periodically refresh your testing db (or your prod db if these are strictly lookup type tables) using the compare tool.
I also like the alternative of having a script (you can use Red Gate's tool to create scripts) because that means you can store this info in your source control and use it as part of a deployment package to other servers.
You could save them in another database or the same db in different tables distinguished by the name, like employee_test
Joseph,
Do you need to keep just the data in sync, or the schema as well?
One solution to the data question would be SQL Server snapshots. You create a snapshot of your initial configuration, so any changes to the "real" database don't show up in the snapshot. Then, when you need to reset the table, select from the snapshot into a new table. I'm not sure how it will work if the schema changes, but it might be worth a try.
For generation of sample data, the Database project in Visual Studio has functionality that will create fake/random data.
Let me know if this make sense.
Erick

How do I keep a table synchronized with a query in SQL Server - ETL?

I wan't sure how to word this question so I'll try and explain. I have a third-party database on SQL Server 2005. I have another SQL Server 2008, which I want to "publish" some of the data in the third-party database too. This database I shall then use as the back-end for a portal and reporting services - it shall be the data warehouse.
On the destination server I want store the data in different table structures to that in the third-party db. Some tables I want to denormalize and there are lots of columns that aren't necessary. I'll also need to add additional fields to some of the tables which I'll need to update based on data stored in the same rows. For example, there are varchar fields that contain info I'll want to populate other columns with. All of this should cleanse the data and make it easier to report on.
I can write the query(s) to get all the info I want in a particular destination table. However, I want to be able to keep it up-to-date with the source on the other server. It doesn't have to be updated immediately (although that would be good) but I'd like for it be updated perhaps every 10 minutes. There are 100's of thousands of rows of data but the changes to the data and addition of new rows etc. isn't huge.
I've had a look around but I'm still not sure the best way to achieve this. As far as I can tell replication won't do what I need. I could manually write the t-sql to do the updates perhaps using the Merge statement and then schedule it as a job with sql server agent. I've also been having a look at SSIS and that looks to be geared at the ETL kind of thing.
I'm just not sure what to use to achieve this and I was hoping to get some advice on how one should go about doing this kind-of thing? Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
For that tables whose schemas/realtions are not changing, I would still strongly recommend Replication.
For the tables whose data and/or relations are changing significantly, then I would recommend that you develop a Service Broker implementation to handle that. The hi-level approach with service broker (SB) is:
Table-->Trigger-->SB.Service >====> SB.Queue-->StoredProc(activated)-->Table(s)
I would not recommend SSIS for this, unless you wanted to go to something like dialy exports/imports. It's fine for that kind of thing, but IMHO far too kludgey and cumbersome for either continuous or short-period incremental data distribution.
Nick, I have gone the SSIS route myself. I have jobs that run every 15 minutes that are based in SSIS and do the exact thing you are trying to do. We have a huge relational database and then we wanted to do complicated reporting on top of it using a product called Tableau. We quickly discovered that our relational model wasn't really so hot for that so I built a cube over it with SSAS and that cube is updated and processed every 15 minutes.
Yes SSIS does give the aura of being mainly for straight ETL jobs but I have found that it can be used for simple quick jobs like this as well.
I think, staging and partitioning will be too much for your case. I am implementing the same thing in SSIS now but with a frequency of 1 hour as I need to give some time for support activities. I am sure that using SSIS is a good way of doing it.
During the design, I had thought of another way to achieve custom replication, by customizing the Change Data Capture (CDC) process. This way you can get near real time replication, but is a tricky thing.

Create a database from another database?

Is there an automatic way in SQL Server 2005 to create a database from several tables in another database? I need to work on a project and I only need a few tables to run it locally, and I don't want to make a backup of a 50 gig DB.
UPDATE
I tried the Tasks -> Export Data in Management studio, and while it created a new sub database with the tables I wanted, it did not copy over any table metadata, ie...no PK/FK constraints and no Identity data (Even with Preserve Identity checked).
I obviously need these for it to work, so I'm open to other suggestions. I'll try that database publishing tool.
I don't have Integration Services available, and the two SQL Servers cannot directly connect to each other, so those are out.
Update of the Update
The Database Publishing Tool worked, the SQL it generated was slightly buggy, so a little hand editing was needed (Tried to reference nonexistent triggers), but once I did that I was good to go.
You can use the Database Publishing Wizard for this. It will let you select a set of tables with or without the data and export it into a .sql script file that you can then run against your other db to recreate the tables and/or the data.
Create your new database first. Then right-click on it and go to the Tasks sub-menu in the context menu. You should have some kind of import/export functionality in there. I can't remember exactly since I'm not at work right now! :)
From there, you will get to choose your origin and destination data sources and which tables you want to transfer. When you select your tables, click on the advanced (or options) button and select the check box called "preserve primary keys". Otherwise, new primary key values will be created for you.
I know this method can hardly be called automatic but why don't you use a few simple SELECT INTO statements?
Because I'd have to reconstruct the schema, constraints and indexes first. Thats the part I want to automate...Getting the data is the easy part.
Thanks for your suggestions everyone, looks like this is easy.
Integration Services can help accomplish this task. This tool provids advanced data transformation capabilities so you will be able to get exact subset of data that you need from large database.
Assuming that such data is needed for testing/debugging you may consider applying Row Sampling to reduce amount of data exported.
Create new database
Right click on it,
Tasks -> Import Data
Follow instructions