I want to create a linked server in one sql server to another using the sp_addlinkedserver procedure. When i access the remote server I would like it to logon as me (i.e. using my windows account). How do I do this?
4 Answers
You can do this with the sp_addlinkedsrvlogin procedure:
EXEC master.dbo.sp_addlinkedsrvlogin
@rmtsrvname=N'<your linked server name>',
@useself=N'True',
@locallogin=NULL,
@rmtuser=NULL,
@rmtpassword=NULL
This assumes you log in to the server on which the link was created using Windows authentication.
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Thanks Ed. I tried this and now I get the message: Login failed for user '(null)'. Reason: Not associated with a trusted SQL Server connection.– cindiDec 4, 2008 at 12:44
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It sounds like you're using SQL Server authentication when you connect to SQL server. If so, your SQL Server session does not know what your Windows identity is. You can set the linked server up to explicitly use your Windows identity, but other people who log on to SQL will be able to access the... Dec 4, 2008 at 12:59
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...linked server using your identity. For this reason, it's not normally recommended. Dec 4, 2008 at 13:01
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After creating the linked server using
sp_addlinkedserver
, and creating a linked server login using the above syntax withsp_addlinkedsrvlogin
, and connecting to the initial SQL Server using integrated/Windows authentication (e.g. STACKOVERFLOW\Ian), i still get the errorLogin failed for user 'NT AUTHORITY\ANONYMOUS LOGON'.
. The SQL Server service i connect to was configured (out of the box) to run NetworkService (Which is a bonus, because it's what a guy from Microsoft recommends)– Ian BoydJun 3, 2013 at 18:26
Following on from Ed Harper above:
You need to set "Security Account Delegation" for the SQL service account to enable it to pass through your login token.
Edit:
This is not a SQL problem. Delegation/pass through authentication is a Windows/AD feature.
It's also used to enable an intranet web site to use the end user windows login to authenticate onto the SQL box where (of course) the web server is a separate box. In this scenario, you configure the web server for delegation.
In the OP's scenario, we are enabling the 1st SQL box to delegate credentials onto the 2nd box.
Edit2:
The other thread explains this too.
Finally, nothing to do with SQL logins.
This can be maddening to set up. Check this related question:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/33153/sql-server-to-sql-server-linked-server-setup
With Sql Server 2005 on a 2K3 domain, the most secure way to set up a linked server, unfortunately, is probably to use an old fashioned Sql Login. You have to make a lot of what I consider risky changes to your domain security settings to get it to work with a domain account.
Use SQL Management Studio to see the properties for the linked server. There you will find your logon information