|  | Posted by Neil on 06/20/07 22:06 
I'm not familiar with DBCC. Can you point me in the right direction?
 Thanks.
 
 "Erland Sommarskog" <esquel@sommarskog.se> wrote in message
 news:Xns9955ED0DF77BAYazorman@127.0.0.1...
 > Neil (nospam@nospam.net) writes:
 >> So, while I have a hard time believing that SQL Server would just "lose"
 >> a record, I also know that anything's possible, so I thought I'd ask if
 >> anyone had ever heard of such a thing.
 >
 > Well, I have lost rows, but that was a on a system where no one was
 > looking
 > at the event log or the DBCC logs, and finally the database broke down,
 > with several levels of corruption.
 >
 > As Roy said, run DBCC. If it comes up with corruption, then that may be
 > the answer.
 >
 > But I'm prepared to place my bets that there was a human involved.
 >
 >
 > --
 > Erland Sommarskog, SQL Server MVP, esquel@sommarskog.se
 >
 > Books Online for SQL Server 2005 at
 > http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/sql/2005/downloads/books.mspx
 > Books Online for SQL Server 2000 at
 > http://www.microsoft.com/sql/prodinfo/previousversions/books.mspx
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