On the first day after release my developer gave to me
- a performance problem on a crucial query
On the second day after release my developer gave to me
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the third day after release my developer gave to me
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the fourth day after release my developer gave to me
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the fifth day after release my developer gave to me
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the sixth day after release my developer gave to me
- 6 indexed views
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the seventh day after release my developer gave to me
- 7 schema changes
- 6 indexed views
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the eighth day after release my developer gave to me
- 8 gigs of ram
- 7 schema changes
- 6 indexed views
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the ninth day after release my developer gave to me
- 9 stored procedures
- 8 gigs of ram
- 7 schema changes
- 6 indexed views
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the tenth day after release my developer gave to me
- 10 sparse columns
- 9 stored procedures
- 8 gigs of ram
- 7 schema changes
- 6 indexed views
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the eleventh day after release my developer gave to me
- 11 urgent pages
- 10 sparse columns
- 9 stored procedures
- 8 gigs of ram
- 7 schema changes
- 6 indexed views
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem on a crucial query
On the twelfth day after release my developer gave to me
- 12 CPUs
- 11 urgent pages
- 10 sparse columns
- 9 stored procedures
- 8 gigs of ram
- 7 schema changes
- 6 indexed views
- 5 missed permissions
- 4 secondary replicas
- 3 failed backups
- 2 deadlocked queries
- and a performance problem
that we finally solved!
Filed under: DBA Humor, SQLServerPedia Syndication Tagged: Humor