I'm not a SQL expert, and I'm reminded of the fact every time I need to do something beyond the basics. I have a test database that is not large in size, but the transaction log definitely is. How do I clear out the transaction log?
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Right click on the database name. Select Tasks -> Shrink -> Database Then click OK! NB: I was actually quite surprised this worked. Normally I've used DBCC before, but I just tried that and it didnt shrink anything so I tried the GUI (2005) and it worked great - freeing up 17Gb in 10 seconds |
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Here is a simple and very inelegant way.
I'm guessing that you are not doing log backups. (Which truncate the log). My advice is to change recovery model from full to simple. This will prevent log bloat. |
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If you do not use the transaction logs for restores (i.e. You only ever do full backups), you can set Recovery Mode to "Simple", and the transaction log will very shortly shrink and never fill up again. If you are using SQL 7 or 2000, you can enable "truncate log on checkpoint" in the database options tab. This has the same effect. This is not recomended in production environments obviously, since you will not be able to restore to a point in time. |
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Or you could also use a Maintenance Task that does this for you periodically. Create a new maintenance task and the wizard will -at some point- ask you to shrink the Transaction Log. You have a few options to set there. Schedule that to be executed every morning and your test db will stay clean most of the time. Edit: in order to schedule a Maintenance Task, you'll need the SQL Agent service to be running. |
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To Truncate the log file:
To Shrink the log file:
You can find the logical name of the log file by running sp_helpdb or by looking in the properties of the database in Enterprise Manager. |
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To my experience on most SQL Servers there is no backup of the transaction log. Full backups or differential backups are common practice, but transaction log backups are really seldom. So the transaction log file grows forever (until the disk is full). In this case the recovery model should be set to "simple". Don't forget to modify the system databases "model" and "tempdb", too. A backup of the database "tempdb" makes no sense, so the recovery model of this db should always be "simple". |
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This technique that John recommends is not recommended as there is no guarantee that the database will attach without the log file. Change the database from full to simple, force a checkpoint and wait a few minutes. The SQL Server will clear the log, which you can then shrink using DBCC SHRINKFILE. |
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If I need to shrink the files quickly, I 1.first change the recovery model to simple 2.Then the transaction log files goes away 3.Change back the recovery model. Its a little bit ugly perhaps, but it works for me |
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First check the database Recovery model. By default SQL Server Epxress edition create database in Simple recovery model (if iam not mistaken). Backup Log DatabaseName With Truncate_Only DBCC ShrinkFile(yourLogical_LogFileName, 50) SP_helpfile will give you the logical log file name Refer : http://support.microsoft.com/kb/873235. If your database is in Full Recovery Model and if you are not taking TL backup , then change it to SIMPLE. |
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To clear a 14GB transaction log file (Backups of transaction log were 11GB and taking ages), With DB Recovery set to FULL as we are cautious with recovery. Why have tranaction logging if you don't recover them in a DR situation? Using SQL Maint plans & Job Activity Monitor TSQL for DBCCshrinkfile . In Maint plan Step 1 - Back up database (Full) Step 2 - Back up Transaction Log (Truncate set) Run DB Maint Plan Then run TSQL Job for the database using cmd: DBCC SHRINKFILE (dbaselogname, 50) This reduced by half the transaction log size, Repeated above - reduced transaction log down to 50MB - which is ideal for database size I have now scheduled to do this early hours every morning to keep the log size down and performance up. |
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Hi, I wanted to know that Is the Backup for the transactional log is automatic if my recovery model is Full ? Can I change my transactional log backup frequency through the management studio or bt T-SQL ? -Aditya |
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Depending on your circumstancces, each one of these might or might not be what you actually need to do. Just go down the list. If one doesn't work, try the next. |
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Worked for me thanks. |
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