With the newly published SUSE Best Practices document “Microsoft SQL Server on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server – Getting Started“, my colleague James Yang recently provided a long-awaited and easy-to-follow guide that helps users install and configure a basic Microsoft SQL Server deployment on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.
BackgroundSince Microsoft released SQL Server for Linux in 2017, the feature gap for SQL Server between Windows and Linux has been closing quickly with each update. Aside from some niche features, it’s now extremely viable to consider running SQL Server workloads on Linux, with the 2019 release.
AudienceThe new guide addresses SQL Server DBAs, Developers, and DevOps/SRE engineers who are familiar with SQL Server on Windows and are looking to migrate to Linux. Operators who are adding an SQL Server requirement into a primarily Linux environment may prefer tools that run only on Linux servers for consistency and simplicity. Another reason for a use case may be lower negotiated pricing for Linux subscriptions to replace existing SQL Servers on Windows machines.
ScopeThe guide covers a basic installation of SQL Server on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. It is meant to be agnostic of underlying infrastructure excepting the nuance of registering your server discussed in the section “Server registration”, of course.
Curious now? Check the guide out yourself and share your feedback!
Disclaimer: The text at hand has not been reviewed by a native speaker. If you find typos or language mistakes, please send them to me (meike.chabowski@suse.com) – or if you like them, just keep them and feed them.
(Visited 43 times, 1 visits today)
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4