August 28, 2018 at 2:19 pm
Hello experts,
There's an application change being done here and it involved a new host for the application that is pointing to our SQL Server. I now see two kinds of connections -
1. Connections with a login_name and hostname filled in.
2. Connections with the same login_name but where the hostname column is blank.
I assume the connections with the blank hostname are stale connections that are still there because I did not disconnect them before (future checklist item, I know) - is that correct?
If so, will they eventually die off on their own, or do I need to kill them? And is it safe to kill them?
Thanks for any help.
- webrunner
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A SQL query walks into a bar and sees two tables. He walks up to them and asks, "Can I join you?"
Ref.: http://tkyte.blogspot.com/2009/02/sql-joke.html
August 28, 2018 at 3:35 pm
webrunner - Tuesday, August 28, 2018 2:19 PMHello experts,There's an application change being done here and it involved a new host for the application that is pointing to our SQL Server. I now see two kinds of connections -
1. Connections with a login_name and hostname filled in.
2. Connections with the same login_name but where the hostname column is blank.I assume the connections with the blank hostname are stale connections that are still there because I did not disconnect them before (future checklist item, I know) - is that correct?
If so, will they eventually die off on their own, or do I need to kill them? And is it safe to kill them?Thanks for any help.
- webrunner
No those aren't necessarily stale connections. Did you check if these are user or system processes?
Query sys.dm_exec_sessions where is_user_process = 1
Sue
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