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1. What�s the difference between a primary key and a unique key?
Both primary key and unique 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.
2. Write a SQL Query to find first Week Day of month?
SELECT DATENAME(dw, DATEADD(dd, - DATEPART(dd, GETDATE()) + 1,
GETDATE())) AS FirstDay
3. How to find 6th highest salary from Employee table
SELECT TOP 1 salary FROM (SELECT DISTINCT TOP 6 salary FROM employee
ORDER BY salary DESC) a ORDER BY salary
4. What is a join and List different types of joins.
Joins are used in queries to explain how different tables are related.
Joins also let you select data from a table depending upon data from another table.
Types of joins: INNER JOINs, OUTER JOINs, CROSS JOINs. OUTER JOINs are further classified
as LEFT OUTER JOINS, RIGHT OUTER JOINS and FULL OUTER JOINS.
5. How can I enforce to use particular index?
You can use index hint (index=index_name) after the table name.
SELECT au_lname FROM authors (index=aunmind)
6. What is sorting and what is the difference between sorting and clustered indexes?
The ORDER BY clause sorts query results by one or more columns
up to 8,060 bytes. This will happen by the time when we retrieve data from database.
Clustered indexes physically sorting data, while inserting/updating the table.
7. What are the differences between UNION and JOINS?
A join selects columns from 2 or more tables. A union selects rows.
8. 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
9. What is the row size in SQL Server 2000?
8060 bytes.
10. 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)
11. 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.
12. What is the use of SCOPE_IDENTITY() function?
Returns the most recently created identity value for the tables
in the current execution scope.
13. What are the different ways of moving data/databases between servers and databases
in SQL Server?
There are lots of options available, you have to choose your option
depending upon your requirements. Some of the options you have are: BACKUP/RESTORE,
detaching and attaching databases, replication, DTS, BCP, logshipping, INSERT...SELECT,
SELECT...INTO, creating INSERT scripts to generate data.
14. How do you transfer data from text file to database (other than DTS)?
Using the BCP (Bulk Copy Program) utility.
15. What's the difference between DELETE TABLE and TRUNCATE TABLE commands?
DELETE TABLE is a logged operation, so the deletion of each row
gets logged in the transaction log, which makes it slow. TRUNCATE TABLE also deletes
all the rows in a table, but it won't log the deletion of each row, instead it logs
the deallocation of the data pages of the table, which makes it faster. Of course,
TRUNCATE TABLE can be rolled back.
16. What is a deadlock?
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.
17. What is a LiveLock?
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.
18. How to restart SQL Server in single user mode?
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.
19. Does SQL Server 2000 clustering support load balancing?
SQL Server 2000 clustering does not provide load balancing; it
provides failover support. To achieve load balancing, you need software that balances
the load between clusters, not between servers within a cluster.
20. 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.
21. What is 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.
22. 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.
23. What are the constraints ?
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.
24. 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.
25. 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:
Read uncommitted (the lowest level where transactions are isolated only enough to
ensure that physically corrupt data is not read).
Read committed (SQL Server default level).
Repeatable read.
Serializable (the highest level, where transactions are completely isolated from
one another).
26. 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.
27. How do you implement one-to-one, one-to-many and many-to-many relationships while
designing tables?
One-to-One relationship can be implemented as a single table
and rarely as two tables with primary and foreign key relationships.
One-to-Many relationships are implemented by splitting the data into two
tables with primary key and foreign key relationships.
Many-to-Many relationships are implemented using a junction table with the
keys from both the tables forming the composite primary key of the junction table.
It will be a good idea to read up a database designing fundamentals text book.
28. What's the difference between a primary key and a unique key?
Both primary key and unique 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.
29. What are user defined datatypes and when you should go for them?
User defined datatypes let you extend the base SQL Server datatypes
by providing a descriptive name, and format to the database. Take for example, in
your database, there is a column called Flight_Num which appears in many tables.
In all these tables it should be varchar(8). In this case you could create a user
defined datatype called Flight_num_type of varchar(8) and use it across all your
tables.
See sp_addtype, sp_droptype in books online.
30. What is bit datatype and what's the information that can be stored inside a bit
column?
Bit datatype is used to store boolean information like 1 or 0 (true
or false). Untill SQL Server 6.5 bit datatype could hold either a 1 or 0 and there
was no support for NULL. But from SQL Server 7.0 onwards, bit datatype can represent
a third state, which is NULL.
31. 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.
32. 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. See CREATE DEFUALT in books online.
33. What is a transaction and what are ACID properties?
A transaction is a logical unit of work in which, all the steps
must be performed or none. ACID stands for Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, Durability.
These are the properties of a transaction. For more information and explanation
of these properties, see SQL Server books online or any RDBMS fundamentals text
book.
34. Explain different isolation levels
An isolation level determines the degree of isolation of data between
concurrent transactions. The default SQL Server isolation level is Read Committed.
Here are the other isolation levels (in the ascending order of isolation): Read
Uncommitted, Read Committed, Repeatable Read, Serializable. See SQL Server books
online for an explanation of the isolation levels. Be sure to read about SET TRANSACTION
ISOLATION LEVEL, which lets you customize the isolation level at the connection
level.
35. CREATE INDEX myIndex ON myTable(myColumn)
What type of Index will get created after executing the above statement?
Non-clustered index. Important thing to note: By default a clustered
index gets created on the primary key, unless specified otherwise.
36. What is lock escalation?
Lock escalation is the process of converting a lot of low level
locks (like row locks, page locks) into higher level locks (like table locks). Every
lock is a memory structure too many locks would mean, more memory being occupied
by locks. To prevent this from happening, SQL Server escalates the many fine-grain
locks to fewer coarse-grain locks. Lock escalation threshold was definable in SQL
Server 6.5, but from SQL Server 7.0 onwards it's dynamically managed by SQL Server.
37. What�s the difference between DELETE TABLE and TRUNCATE TABLE commands?
DELETE TABLE is a logged operation, so the deletion of each row
gets logged in the transaction log, which makes it slow. TRUNCATE TABLE also deletes
all the rows in a table, but it won't log the deletion of each row, instead it logs
the deallocation of the data pages of the table, which makes it faster. Of course,
TRUNCATE TABLE can be rolled back.
38. What are constraints? Explain different types of constraints.
Constraints enable the RDBMS enforce the integrity of the database
automatically, without needing you to create triggers, rule or defaults.
Types of constraints: NOT NULL, CHECK, UNIQUE, PRIMARY KEY, FOREIGN KEY
For an explanation of these constraints see books online for the pages titled: "Constraints"
and "CREATE TABLE", "ALTER TABLE"
39. What is an index? What are the types of indexes? How many clustered indexes can
be created on a table? I create a separate index on each column of a table. what
are the advantages and disadvantages of this approach?
Indexes in SQL Server are similar to the indexes in books. They
help SQL Server retrieve the data quicker.
Indexes are of two types. Clustered indexes and non-clustered indexes. When you
craete a clustered index on a table, all the rows in the table are stored in the
order of the clustered index key. So, there can be only one clustered index per
table. Non-clustered indexes have their own storage separate from the table data
storage. Non-clustered indexes are stored as B-tree structures (so do clustered
indexes), with the leaf level nodes having the index key and it's row locater. The
row located could be the RID or the Clustered index key, depending up on the absence
or presence of clustered index on the table.
If you create an index on each column of a table, it improves the query performance,
as the query optimizer can choose from all the existing indexes to come up with
an efficient execution plan. At the same t ime, data modification operations (such
as INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE) will become slow, as every time data changes in the table,
all the indexes need to be updated. Another disadvantage is that, indexes need disk
space, the more indexes you have, more disk space is used.
40. 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. MSDN has some information about
RAID levels and for detailed information, check out the RAID advisory board's homepage
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