首页 > 代码库 > 几个未公开的 DBCC 命令

几个未公开的 DBCC 命令

https://ask.hellobi.com/blog/lyhabc/1612

1. DBCC BUFFER

This command can be used to display buffer headers and pages from the buffer cache.
Syntax: 
dbcc buffer ([dbid|dbname] [,objid|objname] [,nbufs], [printopt])

where

 

  dbid|dbname   - database id|database name

  objid|objname - object id|object name

  nbufs         - number of buffers to examine

  printopt      - print option

                  0 - print out only the buffer header and page header

                      (default)

                  1 - print out each row separately and the offset table

                  2 - print out each row as a whole and the offset table

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

dbcc buffer(master,‘sysobjects‘)

2. DBCC BYTES

This command can be used to dump out bytes from a specific address.
Syntax: 
dbcc bytes ( startaddress, length )

where

 

  startaddress  - starting address to dump 

  length         - number of bytes to dump

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

dbcc bytes (10000000, 100)

3. DBCC DBINFO

Displays DBINFO structure for the specified database.
Syntax: 
DBCC DBINFO [( dbname )]

where

 

  dbname - is the database name.

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DBCC DBINFO (master)

4. DBCC DBTABLE

This command displays the contents of the DBTABLE structure.
Syntax: 
DBCC DBTABLE ({dbid|dbname})

where

 

  dbid|dbname  - database name or database ID

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DBCC DBTABLE (master)

The DBTABLE structure has an output parameter called dbt_open. This parameter keeps track of how many users are in the database.
Look at here for more details: FIX: Database Usage Count Does Not Return to Zero

5. DBCC DES

Prints the contents of the specified DES (descriptor).
Syntax: 
dbcc des [( [dbid|dbname] [,objid|objname] )]

where

 

dbid|dbname   - database id|database name.

objid|objname - object id|object name

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DBCC DES

6. DBCC HELP

DBCC HELP returns syntax information for the specified DBCC statement. In comparison with DBCC HELP command in version 6.5, it returns syntax information only for the documented DBCC commands.
Syntax: 
DBCC HELP (‘dbcc_statement‘ | @dbcc_statement_var | ‘?‘) 
This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DECLARE @dbcc_stmt sysname

SELECT @dbcc_stmt = ‘CHECKTABLE‘

DBCC HELP (@dbcc_stmt)

7. DBCC IND

Shows all pages in use by indexes of the specified table.
Syntax: 
dbcc ind( dbid|dbname, objid|objname, printopt = {-2|-1|0|1|2|3} )

where

 

  dbid|dbname   - database id|database name.

  objid|objname - object id|object name

  printopt      - print option

There is change in this command in how it is used in SQL Server 7.0, in that the printopt parameter is now no longer optional.
This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DBCC IND (master, sysobjects, 0)

8. DBCC log

This command is used to view the transaction log for the specified database.
Syntax: 
DBCC log ( {dbid|dbname}, [, type={-1|0|1|2|3|4}] )

PARAMETERS:

   Dbid or dbname - Enter either the dbid or the name of the database

                    in question.

 

      type - is the type of output:

 

      0 - minimum information (operation, context, transaction id)

 

      1 - more information (plus flags, tags, row length, description)

 

      2 - very detailed information (plus object name, index name,

          page id, slot id)

 

      3 - full information about each operation

 

      4 - full information about each operation plus hexadecimal dump

          of the current transaction log‘s row.

 

     -1 - full information about each operation plus hexadecimal dump

          of the current transaction log‘s row, plus Checkpoint Begin,

          DB Version, Max XDESID

 

by default type = 0

To view the transaction log for the master database, run the following command:
DBCC log (master)

9. DBCC PAGE

You can use this command to view the data page structure.
Syntax: 
DBCC PAGE ({dbid|dbname}, pagenum [,print option] [,cache] [,logical])

PARAMETERS:

   Dbid or dbname - Enter either the dbid or the name of the database

                    in question.

 

   Pagenum - Enter the page number of the SQL Server page that is to

             be examined.

 

   Print option - (Optional) Print option can be either 0, 1, or 2.

 

                  0 - (Default) This option causes DBCC PAGE to print

                      out only the page header information.

                  1 - This option causes DBCC PAGE to print out the

                      page header information, each row of information

                      from the page, and the page‘s offset table. Each

                      of the rows printed out will be separated from

                      each other.

                  2 - This option is the same as option 1, except it

                      prints the page rows as a single block of

                      information rather than separating the

                      individual rows. The offset and header will also

                      be displayed.

 

   Cache - (Optional) This parameter allows either a 1 or a 0 to be

           entered.

           0 - This option causes DBCC PAGE to retrieve the page

               number from disk rather than checking to see if it is

               in cache.

           1 - (Default) This option takes the page from cache if it

               is in cache rather than getting it from disk only.

 

   Logical - (Optional) This parameter is for use if the page number

             that is to be retrieved is a virtual page rather then a

             logical page. It can be either 0 or 1.

 

             0 - If the page is to be a virtual page number.

             1 - (Default) If the page is the logical page number.

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DBCC PAGE (master, 1, 1)

Look at here for more details: Data page structure in MS SQL 6.5

10. DBCC procbuf

This command displays procedure buffer headers and stored procedure headers from the procedure cache.
Syntax: 
DBCC procbuf( [dbid|dbname], [objid|objname], [nbufs], [printopt = {0|1}] )

where

 

  dbid|dbname   - database id|database name.

  objid|objname - object id|object name

  nbufs         - number of buffers to print   

  printopt - print option

             (0  print out only the proc buff and proc header (default) 

              1  print out proc buff, proc header and contents of buffer)

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DBCC procbuf(master,‘sp_help‘,1,0)

11. DBCC prtipage

This command prints the page number pointed to by each row on the specified index page.
Syntax: 
DBCC prtipage( dbid, objid, indexid, indexpage )

where

 

  dbid      - database ID 

  objid     - object ID 

  indexid   - index ID 

  indexpage - the logical page number of the index page to dump

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DECLARE @dbid int, @objectid int

SELECT @dbid = DB_ID(‘master‘)

SELECT @objectid = object_id(‘sysobjects‘)

DBCC prtipage(@dbid,@objectid,1,0)

12. DBCC pss

This command shows info about processes currently connected to the server.
Syntax: 
DBCC pss( suid, spid, printopt = { 1 | 0 } )

where

 

  suid     - server user ID    

  spid     - server process ID   

  printopt - print option

             (0  standard output,

              1  all open DES‘s and current sequence tree)

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

dbcc pss

13. DBCC resource

This command shows the server‘s level RESOURCE, PERFMON and DS_CONFIG information. RESOURCE shows addresses of various data structures used by the server. PERFMON structure contains master..spt_monitor field info. DS_CONFIG structure contains master..syscurconfigs field information.
Syntax: 
DBCC resource 
This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DBCC resource

14. DBCC TAB

You can use the following undocumented command to view the data pages structure (in comparison with DBCC PAGE, this command will return information about all data pages for viewed table, not only for particular number).
Syntax: 
DBCC tab (dbid, objid)

where

 

  dbid  - is the database id

  objid - is the table id

This is the example:

DBCC TRACEON (3604)

DECLARE @dbid int, @objectid int

SELECT @dbid = DB_ID(‘master‘)

SELECT @objectid = object_id(‘sysdatabases‘)

DBCC TAB (@dbid,@objectid)

 

几个未公开的 DBCC 命令