Book Image

Introducing Microsoft SQL Server 2019

By : Kellyn Gorman, Allan Hirt, Dave Noderer, Mitchell Pearson, James Rowland-Jones, Dustin Ryan, Arun Sirpal, Buck Woody
Book Image

Introducing Microsoft SQL Server 2019

By: Kellyn Gorman, Allan Hirt, Dave Noderer, Mitchell Pearson, James Rowland-Jones, Dustin Ryan, Arun Sirpal, Buck Woody

Overview of this book

Microsoft SQL Server comes equipped with industry-leading features and the best online transaction processing capabilities. If you are looking to work with data processing and management, getting up to speed with Microsoft Server 2019 is key. Introducing SQL Server 2019 takes you through the latest features in SQL Server 2019 and their importance. You will learn to unlock faster querying speeds and understand how to leverage the new and improved security features to build robust data management solutions. Further chapters will assist you with integrating, managing, and analyzing all data, including relational, NoSQL, and unstructured big data using SQL Server 2019. Dedicated sections in the book will also demonstrate how you can use SQL Server 2019 to leverage data processing platforms, such as Apache Hadoop and Spark, and containerization technologies like Docker and Kubernetes to control your data and efficiently monitor it. By the end of this book, you'll be well versed with all the features of Microsoft SQL Server 2019 and understand how to use them confidently to build robust data management solutions.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

3. High Availability and Disaster Recovery

It is important to safeguard your data not only from a security perspective but to ensure that it is available during an outage – planned or unplanned. This is known as providing business continuity. The ability to respond to local incidents and get back up and running is known as High Availability (HA). For example, say the storage on a physical server fails and you need to switch production to another server quickly. That should be possible within the same data center with minimal impact.

A more catastrophic event, such as the loss of a data center, triggers what is commonly referred to as Disaster Recovery (DR or D/R). D/R generally involves more than just ensuring that a database is ready for use elsewhere. For example, before bringing a database or instance online, ensuring that core aspects of the infrastructure are functioning is crucial.

Both HA and D/R matter and have one purpose: business continuity. Microsoft...