I have a SQL Server 2008 R2 implementation with Service Broker turned on for a .Net/IIS website running on the same box.
It doesn't throw an error when the global.asax application_startup event fires, however the event log is spammed every second with:
[dbo].[SqlQueryNotificationStoredProcedure-e6946263-93b8-445e-9d92-6fbd49a4b089]' running on queue 'XXXXXX.dbo.SqlQueryNotificationService-e6946263-93b8-445e-9d92-6fbd49a4b089' output the following: 'The database owner SID recorded in the master database differs from the database owner SID recorded in database 'XXXXXXX'. You should correct this situation by resetting the owner of database 'XXXXXXX' using the ALTER AUTHORIZATION statement.'
Also, the Service Broker is not correctly sending messages (for a SqlCacheDependency) - it basically doesn't work.
I have run the following query and determined there is an ownership mismatch:
SELECT
SUSER_SNAME(d.owner_sid) AS OwnerName
,d.owner_sid AS OwnerSID
,dp.sid AS DboUserSID
,SUSER_SNAME(dp.sid) AS DboUserMapping
FROM sys.databases AS d
JOIN sys.database_principals AS dp ON
dp.name = 'dbo'
WHERE d.database_id = DB_ID();
OwnerName: usrAAAAA
OwnerSID: 0xAAAAA
DboUserMapping: sa
DboUserSID: 0x01
Most places I have seen suggest that I should use ALTER AUTHORIZATION to explicitly set "sa" as the database owner. However, I am unsure if it should be set to sa
or usrAAAAA
, and I'm not sure if there are any likely implications (what other things could I break? if any).
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated.