FREE PDF

SQL Server Source Control Basics

Download free PDF

Download your free eBook.

About the eBook

by Robert Sheldon, Rob Richardson & Tony Davis

This book provides just the right combination of theory and practical example to get you started quickly.

Topics include:

  • Source control core concepts
  • Choosing a database version control system and structure
  • Branching and merging strategies
  • Automating database versioning and deployment from source control
  • An introduction to database continuous integration

The eBook gives a detailed walkthrough of database source control concepts, with code samples and clear examples – check it out.

Buy from Amazon.comKindle
Buy from Amazon.co.ukKindle

Free PDF download

About the authors

Robert Sheldon has worked as a technical consultant and written numerous books, articles, and training material related to Microsoft Windows, various relational database management systems, and business intelligence design and implementation. He has also written news stories, feature articles, restaurant reviews, the novel, Dancing the River Lightly, the publishing guide Ebook Now, and six books in the 5-Spot ebook travel series.

Rob Richardson is a software craftsman from Phoenix, Arizona building web properties in ASP.NET and Node. Rob specializes in translating business requirements into technical solutions for small- to medium-sized businesses. He has created software applications ranging from enterprise-scale applications to PDA-based systems, web applications to embedded database synchronization and postscript processing systems. You can find recent talks on his blog at http://robrich.org/ and follow him on Twitter at @rob_rich.

Tony Davis is an Editor with Redgate Software, based in Cambridge (UK), specializing in databases, and especially SQL Server. He edits articles and writes editorials for both the Simple-talk.com and SQLServerCentral.com websites and newsletters, with a combined audience of over 1.5 million subscribers. You can sample his short-form written wisdom at either his Simple-Talk.com blog, or his SQLServerCentral.com author page.

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn