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posted on August 11th 2015, at 10:48
by lunarg
I noticed there's many conflicting information on the internet about the need for page locking and its required privileges (Lock page in memory) for the instance's service account for 64-bit SQL Server. As part of a SQL Server health check, I decided to look more closely into the matter and came up with the conclusion that setting the page locking privilege for the SQL Server instance's service account is indeed still important, despite many other sources claiming otherwise. And here's why...

In the past, during the 32-bit era, a single process was limited to a maximum of 4GB of memory. This would become a problem with databases which would often require more than that in order to maintain   ...
 
On March 18th 2016 at 23:39, Xexilia wrote:
 
Back in school, I'm doing so much leainrng.
 
 
 
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