SQL Server Database real-time replication - sql-server

I have a database on an SQL Server instance hosted on Azure Windows VM. There are two things I need to achieve.
Create a real-time duplicate of the database on another server. i.e. I need my database to make a copy of itself and then copy all of it's data to the duplicate at regular intervals. Let's say, 2 hours.
If my original database fails due to some reason, I need it to redirect all read/write requests to the duplicate database.
Any elaborate answer or links to any articles you deem helpful are welcome. Thank you!

You can have a high availability solution for your SQL Server databases in Azure using AlwaysOn Availability Groups or database mirroring.
Basically, you need 3 nodes for true HA. The third one can be a simple file server that will work as the witness to complete the quorum for your failover cluster. Primary and Secondary will be synchronized and in case of a failure, secondary will take over. You can also configure read requests to be split among instances.
If HA is not really that important for your use case, disaster recovery will be a cheaper solution. Check the article below for more info.
High Availability and Disaster Recovery for SQL Server in Azure Virtual Machines
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/virtual-machines-sql-server-high-availability-and-disaster-recovery-solutions/

Related

db replication vs mirroring

Can anyone explain the differences from a replication db vs a mirroring db server?
I have huge reports to run. I want to use a secondary database server to run my report so I can off load resources from the primary server.
Should I setup a replication server or a mirrored server and why?
For your requirements the replication is the way to go. (asumming you're talking about transactional replication) As stated before mirroring will "mirror" the whole database but you won't be able to query unless you create snapshots from it.
The good point of the replication is that you can select which objects will you use and you can also filter it, and since the DB will be open you can delete info if it's not required( just be careful as this can lead to problems maintaining the replication itself), or create specific indexes for the report which are not needed in "production". I used to maintain this kind of solutions for a long time with no issues.
(Assuming you are referring to Transactional Replication)
The biggest differences are: 1) Replication operates on an object-by-object basis whereas mirroring operates on an entire database. 2) You can't query a mirrored database directly - you have to create snapshots based on the mirrored copy.
In my opinion, mirroring is easier to maintain, but the constant creation of snapshots may prove to be a hassle.
As mentioned here
Database mirroring and database replication are two high data
availability techniques for database servers. In replication, data and
database objects are copied and distributed from one database to
another. It reduces the load from the original database server, and
all the servers on which the database was copied are as active as the
master server. On the other hand, database mirroring creates copies of
a database in two different server instances (principal and mirror).
These mirror copies work as standby copies and are not always active
like in the case of data replication.
This question can also be helpful or have a look at MS Documentation

Sociable SQL Server instance replication - Best practice

I would like to know what are best practices for using SQL Server replication on a SQL Server instance that may have other application databases that may also use replication. That is, our product needs to play well with other users of the instance.
The product currently uses SQL Server replication to create a copy database used for reporting. It is always the sole user of the SQL Server instance. But we now need to document and test (regulatory requirements) how the product can share the instance.
I'm making the assumption here that we still need replication as we do not see another way to isolate reporting load from the application's database.
Has anybody done this successfully?
If we are using instance level replication:
Is there a way we can stop/start/modify replication for our application without affecting others?
Do setting differ greatly? That is, is it realistic to share instance level replication settings across applications?
Non-instance replication just looks hard, do I have the wrong view here?
Our customers use SQL Server 2008 R2 or SQL Server 2012.
At an instance level, replication configures only one distributor. That is, regardless of how many databases you have configured for replication on an instance, they'll all share one distributor. You do have the option to make that distributor local (i.e. on the same instance) or remote. So, if you find that distribution is taking up considerable resources (or anticipate that that's going to be the case), configure remote distribution.
Whatever drive holds your databases' log files will need to have sufficient headroom in their throughput to handle the logreader agent. If you're concerned that your database's activity will be impacting to other databases, isolate.
As for other concerns, replication is a lot like your line of business application. That is, it needs to read data (from the publisher and distributor depending on which phase of replication you're talking about) and write data (from the distributor and subscriber again depending on which phase of replication you're talking about). Provision resources accordingly and you should be just fine.

Multipurposing a failover server?

I'm not a DBA so this may be a stupid question but I'll ask it anyway. We're upgrading our SQL Servers from 2000 to 2005 and we will probably use either database replication or database mirroring. Our DBA would like to "multipurpose" the standby server meaning that he'd like to increase our capabilities and capacity by running other database applications on the standby server since "it's just going to be sitting there anyway" (his words, not mine). Is this such a good idea? Right now, our main application server uses only one instance that contains 50+ databases. As I understand it, what we're doing now and what our DBA is proposing for a failover server is a bad idea because all of these databases are sharing memory, CPUs, and working areas. If one applications starts behaving badly, the other DBs could be affected.
Any thoughts?
It's really a business question that needs to be answered?? is a slow app better then no app if you can't afford the expense of extra hardware?
Standby and mirrored db's can be used for reporting. Using it as the failover db can work if you have enough headroom (i.e. both databases will comfortably run on the server)
Will you depend on these extra applications? Where do they run in the failover case?
You really need to understand your failure modes.
If you look at it as basic resource math, that doesn't often make sense unless the resources you have running in the failure scenarios can handle the entire expected load. Sometimes this is the case, but not always. In this case, to handle the actual load you may need yet another server to come in (like RAID - perhaps your load needs a minimum of 5 servers, but you have a farm of 6, then you need 1 standby server for ever server to fail above 1). Sometimes a farm can run degraded, but sometimes they just puke and die.
And in the case of out of normal operation, you often have accident cascading where a legitimate incident causes a cascade of issues - e.g. your backup tape is busy restoring a server from a backup (to a test environment, even - there are no real "failures"), now your sql server or exhcange server (or both) is not backed up and your log gets full.
Database Mirroring would not be the way to go here in my opinion as it provides redundancy at the database level only. So you would need to configure database mirroring for up to 50 databases based on the information you provided. The chances are that if one DB where to fail all, 50 would probably follow, as failures typically occur at the hardware level rather than a specific database.
It sounds to me like you should be using SQL Server Clustering technology. You could create an Active/Active cluster to support your requirements.
What is an Active/Active Cluster?
An Active/Active SQL Server cluster means that SQL Server is running on both nodes of a two-way cluster. Each copy of SQL Server acts independently, and users see two different SQL Servers. If one of the SQL Servers in the cluster should fail, then the failed instance of SQL Server will failover to the remaining server. This means that then both instances of SQL Server will be running on one physical server, instead of two.
Applying this to your scenario
You could then split the databases between two instances of SQL server, one active instance on each node. Should one node fail, the other node will pick up the slack and vice versa.
Further Reading
An introduction to SQL Server Clustering
I suspect that you will find the following MSDN thread useful reading also
"it's just going to be sitting there anyway"
It will be sitting there applying transactions...
Take note of John Sansom's recommendation. Keep in mind that a Active/Active cluster requires two sql server licenses and a failover cluster/mirror only needs one.
Setting up mirroring for a large number of db's could turn into a big pain. You need any jobs/maintenance to move over as well - which can be achieved with alerts on WMI failover events. There's probably more to think about that could complicate things.

What is the use of replication in SQLSERVER2005

Hi can any body tell me what is use of replication in sqlserver2005.
backup and replicaton looks same?what is diference b/w them
Backups are exactly that: backups. They enable you to recover the data if something bad happens.
Replication is another beast entirely. It basically distributes the data across multiple nodes so that each node has a complete, (close to) up-to-date copy of the data.
There are a number of reasons why you would use replication including, but not limited to:
High availability so that, if one node goes down, other nodes can still service requests.
Geographical distribution, meaning your data can be placed close to those that need it. Clients in Belarus don't need to go all the way to Montana to get the data if you maintain a local replica in Belarus (or somewhere close) - this is for performance. You may have 10,000 clients in Belarus - it's quicker to send one copy over than have all 10,000 request data [although this depends on how often they request data].
Prioritization. If your reporting users (bank management) have a lower service level agreement than your customer-facing staff (bank tellers) [and they should], you can put all the management onto a replica so as not to slow down the primary copy.
Replication is used for a different purpose, for example to make reports without putting that load on the 'real' database.
Replication increases system availability. If one set of database is down, you can serve out of replica.
Backup saves you from catastrophic errors such as human error that dropped the production database. Note that in this case, replication won't save you as it will dutifully replicate drop command.
SQL Server replication is the process of distributing data from a source database to one or more destination databases throughout the enterprise.
Replication is a great solution for maintaining a reporting server.
Clients at the site to which the data is replicated experience improved performance because those clients can access data locally rather than connecting to a remote database server over a network.
Clients at all sites experience improved availability of replicated data. If the local copy of the replicated data is unavailable, clients can still access the remote copy of the data.
Replication: Lots of data, fast and most recent.
Backup/Restore: Some data, perhaps a bit slower, and a specific point in time.
Replication can be used to address a number of different scenarios as detailed below.
Just to be clear however, Replication is not the same as Database Backup
Scenarios:
Server to server: Replicating Data in a Server to Server Environment
Improving Scalability and Availability
Data Warehousing and Reporting
Integrating Data from Multiple Sites(Server)
Integrating Heterogeneous
Data Offloading Batch Processing
Server to client: Replicating Data Between a Server and Clients
Exchanging Data with Mobile Users
Consumer Point of Sale (POS)
Applications Integrating Data from
Multiple Sites (Client)
For a full overview of Microsoft SQL Server Replication see the following Microsoft reference.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms151198(SQL.90).aspx
Choose the track that is most appropriate to you (i.e. Developer / Architect) and all shall be revealed :-)

Database mirroring/Replication, SQL Server 2005

I have two database servers running SQL Server 2005 Enterprise that I want to make one of them as mirror database server.
What I need is; to create an exact copy database from primary server on mirror server, so when the primary server was down, we could switch database IP on application to use mirror server.
I have examined "mirror" feature on SQL Server 2005, and based on this article:
http://aspalliance.com/1388_Database_Mirroring_in_Microsoft_SQL_Server_2005.all
The mirror database cannot be accessed directly; however snapshots of the mirror database can be taken for read only purposes. (Prerequisites no. 4)
So how it can be useful when I can't access it when primary server was down?
I've been thinking about creating a regular backup on primary server and restore it on mirror server on hourly basis, but that's quite inefficient (slow) especially if I want an exact copy (since hundreds data's are added once in minute).
Any other suggestion?
EDIT:
Maybe what I mean was a replication thing, not a mirror (thanks JP for commenting)
They are referring to the fact that you can't perform queries on the mirrored copy, but you can get around that limitation by creating a snapshot of the mirrored database. This is often done to create a read-only database copy for reporting uses. You would have full access of the mirror if the primary were to fail, but it will not failover automatically.
Log shipping is another option, which allows you to query (read-only) the standby database without having to create a snapshot.
If I understand your question correctly, you shouldn't have to do that. There are several role switching forms you can use to have your mirror take over as primary. You don't change the IP address at the application level, the cluster itself has a virtual IP address that allows access to the data at any given time (given a reasonable amount of time for the switch over to the mirror from a primary failure). The mirror stays in synch by itself. :) There are good articles here and here on clustering.
Edit: Okay, based on the comments, check out the various options for replication.
Your confusion is common - there's a lot of ways to do disaster recovery planning with SQL Server. I've recorded a 10-minute video tutorial of SQL Server disaster recovery options including log shipping, mirroring, replication and more. If you like that one, we've got a longer one at Quest called Disaster Recovery Techniques but that one requires registration.
Instead of investigating a specific technology here, what you might want to do is tell us what your needs are, and then we can help you find out what option is right for you. The videos will give you an idea of what kinds of information you need to know before selecting a particular solution.
When using only two SQL Servers, you need to do the fail-over manually. The 'backup' database will be usable after you do two things;
Disable mirroring on it
Restore the database with RECOVERY (but without a backup file, this will make the database usable).
Therefore mirroring in this manner does make scense, however it is hard to maintain;
Moving back from the backup database to the primary is a 'pain' as you have to set-up the complete mirroring again using a backup of the redundant server. This is needed to get the primary back up to speed.
My recommendation would be to get a thrid SQL Server into the picture that can act as a witness. The witness will monitor the status of the mirroring databases. Your bonus; you will get automatic failover, and will not have the fail-over (and after fail-over) issues.
If I remeber correct, the witness server can be running SQL Express so no need for the Enterprise version on all three - just the two where the actual mirroring will take place.
Let me know if you need Transact SQL for the commands to fail-over and 'anti-fail-over' in a two server scenario, and I can dig them up.

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