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Posted by Razvan Socol on 11/01/06 14:49
Hi, Joey
The new thing in SQL 2005 are DDL triggers, including triggers for:
- CREATE_LOGIN (Applies to CREATE LOGIN statement, sp_addlogin,
sp_grantlogin, xp_grantlogin, and sp_denylogin when used on a
nonexistent login that must be implicitly created.)
- ALTER_LOGIN (Applies to ALTER LOGIN statement, sp_defaultdb,
sp_defaultlanguage, sp_password, and sp_change_users_login when
Auto_Fix is specified.)
- DROP_LOGIN (Applies to DROP LOGIN statement, sp_droplogin,
sp_revokelogin, and xp_revokelogin.)
If you want a trigger that fires when a user logs-in on SQL Server
(i.e. when a new connection is created), I'm afraid that it's nothing
new here, so you will have to use the clasic tools: SQL Profiler. If
you want to do this programatically, I think you can create a trace
(see Books Online for more info).
Razvan
JoeyD wrote:
> With SQL 2005, did Microsoft introduce login triggers? I seem to
> remember hearing something about it but, I don't remember exactly what
> I heard.
>
> Thanks,
> JD
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