![]() ![]() There are many different components that improve overall price-performance, but one of the key aspects for SQL Server customers is that Azure Boost enables Azure current customers to achieve an industry leading remote storage throughput and IOPS performance of 10 GBps and 400K IOPS with our memory optimized E112ibsv5 VM using NVMe-enabled Premium SSD v2 or Ultra Disk options.įor Hybrid, we released several things related to deployment of Azure Arc including: at scale deployment of Best Practices Assessments using Azure policy, simplified deployment of Arc SQL Server extension for software assurance (SA) customers, easily subscribe to Extended Security updates. Microsoft Azure Boost is the infrastructure technology behind the improved I/O performance on Ebdsv5 (#DoubleSprinklesVMs). Pam Lahoud came on and told us about the preview of Microsoft Azure Boost ( ). SQL Server on Azure Virtual Machines is powered by the SQL IaaS Agent extension, which enables you to get a lot of benefits for managing your SQL Server Azure VMs with ease. Additionally, the team added some great options including all subscription types in large Azure regions are available for SQL MI, license-free Geo-DR through passive standby replica (GA), higher CPU vCores available for Premium Hardware on BC tier, and export capability for Data Virtualization in SQL MI (GA). We also recently added updates to SSDT including support for Ledger. This is available in Azure SQL Database and so it’s exciting to see that parity land in Azure SQL Managed Instance. So the summary is if you are trying to migrate from Oracle to Azure SQL, we got your back and are here to help, just get the extensions in Azure Data Studio!įor Azure SQL Managed Instance, one big announcement was the public preview of blockchain capabilities with Ledger in Azure SQL Managed Instance. We also have been releasing several things in the migrating from Oracle space – Database Migration Assessment for Oracle extension GA in Azure Data Studio, Database Migration Service Pack for Oracle in preview, Database Schema Conversion Toolkit for Oracle GA in Azure Data Studio, and the Data Migration for Oracle extension preview in Azure Data Studio. Go-sqlcmd, a tool you should probably go try out now, added more enhancements to connectivity, querying, and setting up your environment.įor Migrations, we released a new SQL Migration journey planning experience and offline migrations to Azure SQL Database in Azure Data Studio. In July, we added more connection improvements, Object Explorer functionality, addressed your feedback and more ( release notes here). ![]() On the tooling and experiences front, since our last episode we released updates to Azure Data Studio.! In May, we added support for GitHub Copilot in Azure Data Studio, GA-ed the SQL Database Projects extension, and improved connectivity ( release blog here). These developer focused updates include Azure Functions SQL Bindings GA, go-sqlcmd GA, Data API Builder public preview, new JSON type and JSON aggregates preview. Yes, a lot to unpack there, but basically we’re enabling you to take advantage of more cores and Always Encrypted together, more details here.įor developers, we released things for Azure SQL Database, but many of those updates apply to SQL Server as well. In the security space, Always Encrypted with Intel SGX enclaves in Azure SQL Database with up to 40 vCores was released in public preview on the DC-series hardware. XML compression became Generally Available (GA) in SQL DB and SQL MI, which provides a method to compress off-row XML data for both XML columns and indexes, improving capacity requirements. Serverless for Hyperscale (preview) also now supports zone redundancy. On the show, we talked more about what Elastic Pools for Hyperscale means and how to get started. We released Elastic Pools for Hyperscale as public preview at Microsoft Build. Many of the updates in this blog for Azure SQL Database started at Microsoft Build. It’s a great one to see what landed and some awesome demos from the team. In May, we released a short episode on all the updates at Microsoft Build. You can read this blog to get all the updates and references mentioned in the show. If you want a summary of all the updates in 2023’s first quarter,, or from April. ![]() This was a fun and informative episode, and we had great guests (and fun) with the product group and our MVP community.īy the way, if you want to see a summary of all the updates in 2022, check out the blog. This month we’ll recap all the updates from May through July. If you missed the episode, you can find them all at. Today Data Exposed went live at 9AM PT for a special Ask Me Anything and news update. ![]()
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