How It Works: System Sessions
The Senior Escalation Engineers do various training and mentoring activities. As I do this I thought I would try to propagate some of this information on the blog.
Looking at a SQL Server error log it is formatted with the date, time and session identifier. Many of the identifiers contain the s following the spid value.
2008-01-08 20:03:36.12 spid5s
The s indicates that the session is a system session. Prior to SQL Server 2005 all system sessions were limited to session ids less than 50. SQL Server 2005 lifted that restriction. In order identify a session performing system actives (lazy writer, ghost record cleanup, DTC commit/abort, ...) the sessions are identified as system sessions.
Instead of the older "select * from sysprocesses where spid < 50" you should use "select * from sys.dm_exec_sessions where is_user_process = 0" to identify system processes.
Bob Dorr
SQL Server Senior Escalation Engineer
Comments
Anonymous
January 10, 2008
PingBack from http://msdnrss.thecoderblogs.com/2008/01/10/how-it-works-system-sessions/Anonymous
October 08, 2012
写得很好,受教了