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)

Introducing data virtualization

Data virtualization is the name given to any approach that enables you to query across disparate systems from a single source without having to know where that data physically resides.

Queries can be executed against a wide variety of relational and non-relational datasets, some of which may have their own compute engines, while others may not. When a remote compute engine exists, data virtualization technology enables you to push down computation to that data source. Advanced data virtualization engines also provide additional transparent caching of data to reduce the impact on the source system. These capabilities achieve a number of important benefits, which are summarized here for you:

  • Consolidate query processing at the source, reducing spend on resources.
  • Manage a single, semantic, and logical view of your data, avoiding duplication.
  • Address data issues at the source, improving data quality.
  • Query disparate data in real...