Friday, March 30, 2012

Investigating Deleted Records

I am investigating an issue where a bunch (6000) records got deleted
from a table. I am using SQL 2000 Standard and have my data recovery
model set to Full. I am using Red-Gate SQL log rescue to look at the
log and to recover the records.
My real question is: Is there a way to find out what SQL statement
created a given log entry? Is there some way to match a log entry to a
trace in the SQL Profiler?
--
Japheth Nolt
Microsoft SBF Specialist
Landis Computer
www.landiscomputer.com
3/27/2007 5:51:50 PMTransaction logging only log the effect of the commands submitted. So, any log mining tool cannot
get the actual command from the transaction log. However, you might be able to correlated the log
records with a profiler trace based on things like spid, date and time. I would assume that a log
mining tool could do this if provided with a profiler trace, but the tool would of course need to
have such feature.
--
Tibor Karaszi, SQL Server MVP
http://www.karaszi.com/sqlserver/default.asp
http://www.solidqualitylearning.com/
"Japheth Nolt" <japheth.remove@.landiscomputer.com> wrote in message
news:xn0f47mo0ktq9v001@.msnews.microsoft.com...
>I am investigating an issue where a bunch (6000) records got deleted
> from a table. I am using SQL 2000 Standard and have my data recovery
> model set to Full. I am using Red-Gate SQL log rescue to look at the
> log and to recover the records.
> My real question is: Is there a way to find out what SQL statement
> created a given log entry? Is there some way to match a log entry to a
> trace in the SQL Profiler?
> --
> Japheth Nolt
> Microsoft SBF Specialist
> Landis Computer
> www.landiscomputer.com
> 3/27/2007 5:51:50 PMsql

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