I ran across an interesting problem when trying to tune some SSIS data source performance issues the other day. I had noticed that we were doing a pretty large select out of a table filtered on a
A while back I received a review copy of Windows PowerShell 2.0 Best Practices by Ed Wilson (blog | twitter) and the Windows PowerShell Teams at Microsoft. Having finally found the time to sit down
I recently presented for the SQLPASS AppDev Virtual Chapter on “Powershell for Database Developers”. I promised that I’d get the files used in the demos up to my blog shortly so wanted to make good on that
I was recently trying to generate a bunch of data that I needed to pass through one of our in-house DLLs in order to use some custom encryption algorithms. Thanks to the wonderful Powershell community, I found
Here are some of the more interesting Powershell links I came across recently, along with some thoughts about them. Powershell, String Encryption, and GPG – SQLServerCentral.com brought this one to my attention. Chad Miller discusses working with
I’ve run across this before so wanted to write up a solution to keeping track of schema changes we’ve used. We trust our team to make DDL changes, additions, drops in order to get their job done.
While with the time and knowledge we can write a lot of the things we’ll use in Powershell, it’s often not worth it to re-invent the wheel. There’s a group of Powershell coders who have put together
I’m writing this one so I remember these operators. Powershell doesn’t use standard operators such as =, <, , !=, etc. These operators are used in the following manner. Operator Conventional Operator -eq = -ne or !=
I’m sure this comes as no surprise to anyone who’s dabbled in Powershell, but just about everything in Powershell has an Object underneath. The results we see on screen come from those objects and it’s only when
One of the most often-used features I’ve seen so far in Powershell has been the concept of piping the results of commands into other commands to ultimately return something formatted, limited, or otherwise morphed into the desired