Sql Server Interview Questions and Answers
by Nithyanandham, on Sep 11, 2022 6:09:47 PM
Q1. WHICH TCP/IP PORT DOES SQL SERVER RUN ON? HOW CAN IT BE CHANGED?
Ans: SQL Server runs on port 1433. It can be changed from the Network Utility TCP/IP properties.
Q2. WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CLUSTERED AND A NON-CLUSTERED INDEX?
Ans:
- A clustered index is a special type of index that reorders the way records in the table are physically stored. Therefore table can have only one clustered index. The leaf nodes of a clustered index contain the data pages.
- A non clustered index is a special type of index in which the logical order of the index does not match the physical stored order of the rows on disk. The leaf node of a non clustered index does not consist of the data pages. Instead, the leaf nodes contain index rows.
Q3. WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENT INDEX CONFIGURATIONS A TABLE CAN HAVE?
Ans: A table can have one of the following index configurations:
- No indexes
- A clustered index
- A clustered index and many nonclustered indexes
- A nonclustered index
- Many nonclustered indexes
Q4.WHAT ARE DIFFERENT TYPES OF COLLATION SENSITIVITY?
Ans:
- Case sensitivity – A and a, B and b, etc.
- Accent sensitivity
- Kana Sensitivity – When Japanese kana characters Hiragana and Katakana are treated differently, it is called Kana sensitive.
- Width sensitivity – A single-byte character (half-width) and the same character represented as a double-byte character (full-width) are treated differently than it is width sensitive.
Q5. WHAT IS OLTP (ONLINE TRANSACTION PROCESSING)?
Ans: In OLTP – online transaction processing systems relational database design use the discipline of data modeling and generally follow the Codd rules of data normalization in order to ensure absolute data integrity. Using these rules complex information is broken down into its most simple structures (a table) where all of the individual atomic level elements relate to each other and satisfy the normalization rules.
Q6. WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A PRIMARY KEY AND A UNIQUE KEY?
Ans: Both primary key and unique key enforces 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.
Q7. WHEN IS THE USE OF UPDATE_STATISTICS COMMAND?
Ans: This command is basically used when a large processing of data has occurred. If a large amount of deletions any modification or Bulk Copy into the tables has occurred, it has to update the indexes to take these changes into account. UPDATE_STATISTICS updates the indexes on these tables accordingly.
Q8. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A HAVING CLAUSE AND A WHERE CLAUSE?
Ans: They specify a search condition for a group or an aggregate. But the difference is that HAVING can be used only with the SELECT statement. HAVING is typically used in a GROUP BY clause. When GROUP BY is not used, HAVING behaves like a WHERE clause. Having Clause is basically used only with the GROUP BY function in a query whereas WHERE Clause is applied to each row before they are part of the GROUP BY function in a query.
Q9. WHAT ARE THE PROPERTIES AND DIFFERENT TYPES OF SUB-QUERIES?
- Properties of Sub-Query
- A sub-query must be enclosed in the parenthesis.
- A sub-query must be put in the right hand of the comparison operator, and
- A sub-query cannot contain an ORDER-BY clause.
- A query can contain more than one sub-query.
- Types of Sub-Query
- Single-row sub-query, where the sub-query returns only one row.
- Multiple-row sub-query, where the sub-query returns multiple rows,. and
- Multiple column sub-query, where the sub-query returns multiple columns
Q10. WHAT IS SQL PROFILER?
Ans: SQL Profiler is a graphical tool that allows system administrators to monitor events in an instance of Microsoft SQL Server. You can capture and save data about each event to a file or SQL Server table to analyze later. For example, you can monitor a production environment to see which stored procedures are hampering performances by executing too slowly.
Use SQL Profiler to monitor only the events in which you are interested. If traces are becoming too large, you can filter them based on the information you want, so that only a subset of the event data is collected. Monitoring too many events adds overhead to the server and the monitoring process and can cause the trace file or trace table to grow very large, especially when the monitoring process takes place over a long period of time.
Q11. WHAT ARE THE AUTHENTICATION MODES IN SQL SERVER? HOW CAN IT BE CHANGED?
Ans: Windows mode and Mixed Mode – SQL and Windows. To change authentication mode in SQL Server click Start, Programs, Microsoft SQL Server and click SQL Enterprise Manager to run SQL Enterprise Manager from the Microsoft SQL Server program group. Select the server then from the Tools menu select SQL Server Configuration Properties, and choose the Security page.
Q12. WHICH COMMAND USING QUERY ANALYZER WILL GIVE YOU THE VERSION OF SQL SERVER AND OPERATING SYSTEM?
Ans: SELECT SERVERPROPERTY (‘productversion’), SERVERPROPERTY (‘productlevel’), SERVERPROPERTY (‘edition’).
Q13.WHAT IS SQL SERVER AGENT?
Ans: SQL Server agent plays an important role in the day-to-day tasks of a database administrator (DBA). It is often overlooked as one of the main tools for SQL Server management. Its purpose is to ease the implementation of tasks for the DBA, with its full- function scheduling engine, which allows you to schedule your own jobs and scripts.
Q14.CAN A STORED PROCEDURE CALL ITSELF OR RECURSIVE STORED PROCEDURE? HOW MUCH LEVEL SP NESTING IS POSSIBLE?
Ans: Yes. Because Transact-SQL supports recursion, you can write stored procedures that call themselves. Recursion can be defined as a method of problem solving wherein the solution is arrived at by repetitively applying it to subsets of the problem. A common application of recursive logic is to perform numeric computations that lend themselves to repetitive evaluation by the same processing steps. Stored procedures are nested when one stored procedure calls another or executes managed code by referencing a CLR routine, type, or aggregate. You can nest stored procedures and managed code references up to 32 levels.
Q16. WHAT IS LOG SHIPPING?
Ans: Log shipping is the process of automating the backup of database and transaction log files on a production SQL server, and then restoring them onto a standby server. Enterprise Editions only supports log shipping. In log shipping the transactional log file from one server is automatically updated into the backup database on the other server. If one server fails, the other server will have the same db and can be used this as the Disaster Recovery plan. The key feature of log shipping is that it will automatically backup transaction logs throughout the day and automatically restore them on the standby server at defined interval.
Q17. NAME 3 WAYS TO GET AN ACCURATE COUNT OF THE NUMBER OF RECORDS IN A TABLE?
- SELECT * FROM table1
- SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table1
- SELECT rows FROM sysindexes WHERE id = OBJECT_ID(table1) AND indid < 2
Q18. WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO HAVE QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON? WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS OF HAVING IT OFF?
Ans: When SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is ON, identifiers can be delimited by double quotation marks, and literals must be delimited by single quotation marks. When SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER is OFF, identifiers cannot be quoted and must follow all Transact-SQL rules for identifiers.
Q19. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A LOCAL AND A GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE?
Ans:
- A local temporary table exists only for the duration of a connection or, if defined inside a compound statement, for the duration of the compound statement.
- A global temporary table remains in the database permanently, but the rows exist only within a given connection. When connection is closed, the data in the global temporary table disappears. However, the table definition remains with the database for access when database is opened next time.
Q20. WHAT IS PRIMARY KEY?
Ans: A PRIMARY KEY constraint is a unique identifier for a row within a database table. Every table should have a primary key constraint to uniquely identify each row and only one primary key constraint can be created for each table. The primary key constraints are used to enforce entity integrity.
Q21. WHAT IS UNIQUE KEY CONSTRAINT?
Ans: A UNIQUE constraint enforces the uniqueness of the values in a set of columns, so no duplicate values are entered. The unique key constraints are used to enforce entity integrity as the primary key constraints.