December 2013
Intermediate to advanced
1872 pages
153h 31m
English
A policy is a standard for a single setting of an object. It ultimately acts as a verification mechanism of one or more conditions of the required state of SQL Server targets. Typical scenarios for creating policies include imposing Surface Area Configuration settings, enforcing naming conventions on database objects, enforcing database and transaction log placement, and controlling recovery models. As mentioned earlier, a tremendous number of policies can be created against SQL Server 2012 systems. Surface Area Configurations are a common policy, especially because the SQL Server 2005 Surface Area Configuration tool no longer ships with SQL Server 2008 and later.
Note
A policy can contain only one condition and can be either enabled ...