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SQL Server 2019 Administrator's Guide - Second Edition

You're reading from  SQL Server 2019 Administrator's Guide - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789954326
Pages 522 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Marek Chmel Marek Chmel
Profile icon Marek Chmel
Vladimír Mužný Vladimír Mužný
Profile icon Vladimír Mužný
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Provisioning the SQL Server Environment
2. Chapter 1: Setting Up SQL Server 2019 3. Chapter 2: Keeping Your SQL Server Environment Healthy 4. Section 2: Server and Database Maintenance
5. Chapter 3: Implementing Backup and Recovery 6. Chapter 4: Securing Your SQL Server 7. Chapter 5: Working with Disaster Recovery Options 8. Chapter 6: Indexing and Performance 9. Section 3: High Availability and the Cloud with SQL Server 2019
10. Chapter 7: Planning Migration and Upgrade 11. Chapter 8: Automation – Using Tools to Manage and Monitor SQL Server 2019 12. Chapter 9: Configuring Always On High Availability Features 13. Chapter 10: In-Memory OLTP – Why and How to Use it 14. Chapter 11: Combining SQL Server 2019 with Azure 15. Chapter 12: Taming Big Data with SQL Server 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

SQL Server Agent security

As was discussed at the beginning of this chapter, SQL Server Agent is a service that logs itself into the host operating system. However, we should also take into consideration two more things about security – who is allowed to create jobs and what the user context of the executed job steps is. The following paragraphs explain how to properly secure SQL Server Agent.

SQL Server Agent security roles

SQL Server Agent is almost useless without jobs. As jobs execute a bunch of repetitive administrative tasks, such as backups, database consistency checks, and more, we should carefully control who is allowed to define jobs. Most jobs created in real-life scenarios are created by members of the sysadmin group, but sometimes the DBA is asked to allow job creation for users who are not DBAs. In this case, the job creation and execution rights are pre-defined in the msdb database with the following database roles, sorted from the weakest role to the strongest...

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