I recently discovered that I could use the sp_help to get a table definition and have been hooked onto it since then. Before my discovery, I had to open up the Object explorer in SQL Management studio, manually search for the table name, right click on the table and select Design. That was a lot of effort!

What other system stored procedures do you all use that you can't simply live without?

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73% accept rate
Should be community wiki – bdukes Feb 23 '09 at 17:37
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11 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

Alt + F1 is a good shortcut key for sp_help :)

sp_helptext is another goodie for getting stored proc text..

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Nice.. Can I use Alt + F1 on a particular table similar to sp_help myTable? – DotnetDude Feb 23 '09 at 17:13
yep. just click Alt+F1 on a table name in the editor.. – Gulzar Nazim Feb 23 '09 at 17:15
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All of these undocumented ones

xp_getnetname

xp_fileexist

xp_dirtree

xp_subdirs

sp_who2

xp_getfiledetails

xp_fixeddrives

Sp_tempdbspace

xp_enumdsn

xp_enumerrorlogs

sp_MSforeachtable

sp_MSforeachDB

See here: Undocumented stored procedures

And now since SQl Server 2005 all the Dynamic Management Views like sys.dm_db_index_usage_stats

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sp_who/sp_who2 - lets you know who is doing what on the server.

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sp_spaceused, you can use it to determine the size of a table or the entire database. If you pass the table name, it returns the space used for that table, when called with no argument it gives the space of the database

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What a confusing name, by the way! One could think, it was about how many times the space character was used. :) – Andriy M Feb 23 '11 at 5:49
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sp_rename

for renaming database objects (tables, columns, indexes, etc.)

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sp_ helpindex [table] - shows you index info (same info as sp_help)

sp_helpconstraint [table] - shows you primary/foreign key/defaults and other constraints *

sp_depends [obj] - shows dependencies of an object, for example:

sp_depends [table] - shows you what stored procs, views, triggers, UDF affect this table

sp_depends [sproc] - shows what tables etc are affected/used by this stored proc

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master.dbo.xp_cmdshell

I can't list the number of times I didn't have RDP access to a box but did have a SQL login with sufficient permissions to execute that in order to run shell commands on it.

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Select * From sysobjects where xtype='U' order by Name

Gives a list of all user-defined tables in a database.

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highlight any proc or other system object name in your query editor and hit shift-f1 to get help for that word.

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sp_catalogs 
sp_column_privileges
sp_column_privileges_ex
sp_columns
sp_columns_ex
sp_databases
sp_cursor
sp_cursorclose
sp_cursorexecute
sp_cursorfetch
sp_cursoroption
sp_cursoropen
sp_cursorprepare
sp_cursorprepexec
sp_cursorunprepare
sp_execute
sp_datatype_info
sp_fkeys
sp_foreignkeys
sp_indexes
sp_pkeys
sp_primarykeys
sp_prepare
sp_prepexec
sp_prepexecrpc
sp_unprepare
sp_server_info
sp_special_columns
sp_sproc_columns
sp_statistics
sp_table_privileges
sp_table_privileges_ex
sp_tables
sp_tables_ex 

Check This link also

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms176007.aspx

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