Blog Post

Monday Monitor Tips–Finding CUs for My Instance

,

How can I quickly get a CU patch for a system that’s out of date? I’ll discuss that situation.

You might think you get to patch every instance every few months, and you may be able to. But most of us have laggards in any decent-sized estate. Someone always wants to avoid patching, or skip patching on the day you’ve scheduled every other system.

This is part of a series of posts on Redgate Monitor. Click to see the other posts

Tracking Versions

The Estate page in Redgate Monitor contains quite a few different views of your entire estate. This section is designed to aggregate data across all the systems you are monitoring. If I look at https://monitor.red-gate.com/Estate/Versions, I see this as a default.

2024-08_0041

This gives me an overview of what SQL Server versions I’m monitoring. As you can see, our test estate has a mix of versions, from 2008R2 through 2022 and one Managed Instance. The counts are in the pie chart, and we can see how many are up to date in the bars to the right of each version. As you can see, lots of our estate needs patching.

I can also see at a glance for each version that the latest update is and its release date. The download link is a quick way to download the latest patch from Microsoft. We maintain this list and Redgate Monitor will update it on a regular basis.

When I scroll down, I see the details of individual instances. These are grouped, though I can change that with the toggle in the upper left. For each instance, I have the name and the major version,

2024-08_0042

The current status and the latest patch are listed next to each other, with an icon and color coding that let’s me know I need to upgrade (yellow up arrow) or I’m patched (green checkmark). I once again have the latest patch, linked to the MS article as well as text that let’s me know how out of date I am.  You can see these patches are a month old. Auditors are potentially OK with that.

2024-08_0043

However, for my 2012 instances, I’m way out of date. No excuse for that. We keep these firewalled and protected, and they are available here only for demonstration purposes.

2024-08_0045

To the right of this we have our support dates. If a date is past, we mark it with a triangle to let you know that you have unsupported versions. That may or may not be an issue for your organization.

2024-08_0044

Summary

This section of the Estate tab isn’t something I expect DBAs or sysadmins to check often, but I would schedule a reminder to do this quarterly. Knowing the state of our patching process is important, especially when there are security updates being released. We have had a few in the last year for SQL Server, and it is important to patch and apply those.

Seeing not only the status, but having an easy download link makes this a very handy tab that I wish I’d have had in quite a few jobs during the 90s and early 2000s. If you haven’t checked your estate tab in Redgate Monitor, you might do that today.

Redgate Monitor is a world class monitoring solution for your database estate. Download a trial today and see how it can help you manage your estate more efficiently.

Original post (opens in new tab)
View comments in original post (opens in new tab)

Rate

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

Share

Share

Rate

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating