SQL Server 2014 :: Relation Between Login And Session?
Oct 19, 2015how can I determine the relation between MS SQL Server user (SQL login ) and his session , when it connect to SQL Server
View 1 Replieshow can I determine the relation between MS SQL Server user (SQL login ) and his session , when it connect to SQL Server
View 1 RepliesI have a Windows NT group that is used to delegate certain database responsibilities to other members of staff and I am trying to grant permissions for the members of the group to be be able to establish database mirroring sessions, as in run the following:
ALTER DATABASE <database>
SET PARTNER = 'tcp://principal_server.domain.com:port';
Although the group has db_owner role membership to the user database which grants the ALTER permission on the database, the following is being generated in the error log when they get to this step on the intended Mirror instance after restoring the database correctly in preperation:
SqlDumpExceptionHandler: Process 59 generated fatal exception c0000005 EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION. SQL Server is terminating this process.
* *******************************************************************************
*
* BEGIN STACK DUMP:
* 10/29/15 11:16:15 spid 59
*
*
* Exception Address = 00007FF9A6AF838C Module(sqlmin+000000000003838C)
* Exception Code = c0000005 EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION
* Access Violation occurred reading address 00000000000000D8
* Input Buffer 210 bytes -
* alter database <redacted> set partner = '<redacted>';
As you can see, the statement is denied to the user. There are no issues with the database as I am able to run the same query successfully using my own sysadmin account after the failed attempt. What other minimum permissions the group might need to successfully enable them to setup a mirroring session?
Oracle and Teradata are able to capture the windows/client login that connects to their database with a functionnal ID.I've searched around and I don't think MS SQL can do this...I administer SQL 2014 server and also SAS Enterprise guide product. I've created sql server logins for several teams so everyone shares the same sql server login which is used to bind the SAS library to my SQL server database.
However, when looking at activity monitor, I can't drill down to which user is executing a particular query. I only see the SQL login which is share amongs 200 other folks.On the other hand, when they connect from SAS to Oracle or Teradata, I can see the shared login + additionally their windows NT login used to connect to SAS which is awesome....they can't fool me by using a shared/funcionnal ID....i still see who's using that ID...
1. Once fail over to secondary replica, what will happen to connected session in primary node? can the session fail over to secondary seamlessly or need to re-login. what happen committed transactions which has not write to disk.
2. Assume I have always on cluster with three nodes, if primary fails, how second node make write/ read mode.
3. after fail over done to 2nd secondary node what mode in production(readonly or read write).
4. how to rollback to production primary ,will change data in secondary will get updated in primary.
I'm getting this warning each time I auto-generate my model. I'm using named queries with logical primary keys.
The relation property of the role "xxx" refers to the target end of relation "xxx" which is not bound to a set of uniquely contrained columns.
I've searched and can't figured out what I am being warned about and whether I need to fix something. Can you help?
Thanks,
Toni
I am trying to learn how to store a web form password and than check it when the user log in. So far none of the code I can find works.
Why the following test does not work and what the correct code should be?
Insert Into [user]
values ('name', 'email', HashBytes('SHA1', 'bob'))
GO
Why does the following produce no rows?
SELECT *
From [user]
Where HashBytes('SHA1', password) = HashBytes('SHA1', 'bob')
I need to create a website which has login details and then shows a list of reports for my clients?
Clients are external so would be website based with a login screen.
I am planning to delete a login from SQL logins because he moved out from project .when i try to delete the login , it throws an error saying " The server principal owns an endpoint and cannot be dropped , error 15141 "
Same problem facing on different servers.
Note : Environment is SQL 2012,SQL 2008 including cluster servers .
SQL server job or SP to deny access to an AD login for certain period of time to SQL server instance...i.e. to deny access to login ADxyz from 12 PM to 10 PM and revoke access to same login at 10:01 PM...
View 3 Replies View RelatedI am trying to import this years worth of failed logins and last successful login for each user out of the logs using master.dbo.xp_readerrorlog. The script essentially loops through the linked servers I have on my DBA box and reaches out for the log data. It works, but here is the error I am getting on most of our production servers:
OLE DB provider "SQLNCLI11" for linked server "AWSCADENCEDB01" returned message "The partner transaction manager has disabled its support for remote/network transactions.".
Msg 7391, Level 16, State 2, Line 17
The operation could not be performed because OLE DB provider "SQLNCLI11" for linked server "AWSCADENCEDB01" was unable to begin a distributed transaction.
I know how to enable distributed transactions on the servers that error out, but if it is not needed for anything other then my audit script, I doubt the business will approve me turning on distributed transactions at those locations (so I am not even going to ask).
I am attempting to setup a singular audit .rdl with the information I want to review quarterly.
CREATE PROC [dbo].[Import_Login_Data]
AS
IF EXISTS (
SELECT 1
FROM master.sys.servers
WHERE is_linked = 1
[Code] ....
The 2.0 version of ASPSTATE is slightly different than the 1.1 version in that one table has one additional column and another table uses a different data type and size for the key. The 2.0 version also has a couple additional stored procedures.
We'd like to manage just one session state database if possible so we're trying to figure out if Microsoft supports using the new schema for 1.1 session state access (it seems to work, but our testing has been very light).
Is there any official support line on this? If not, can anyone comment on whether or not you'd expect it to work and why?
Thanks.
I want to set up a database role so that users can use sp_readerrorlog through SSMS. It does a check on membership in the securityadmin role.
I have tested it and can see you can grant execute on xp_readerrorlog but the SSMS GUI uses sp_readerrorlog.
I thought I could create a user/certificate and add the signature to sp_readerrorlog but it's not permitted (likely because it's not a normal database object).
So the other solution is to add the users to the securityadmin role but then explicitly deny alter any login (best done with a custom server role in 2012+ but otherwise just manually in 2008). I tested this out and it works, I'm not able to alter any logins or increase my own permissions, I also did a check of what's reported from fn_my_permissions(null, null) and it shows minimal permissions like I'd expect.
Hi Listers,
Can any one clarify me on the following doubt.
I have 2 w2k servers with different domains and On which SQL2k is running on both the Servers. Both the servers don't have any Trust Relations between them.
My questions is, Is it possible to create Linked Servers between sql servers but their Operating Systems doesn't have Trust Relationships?.
Any help would be appreciated.
tks in advance,
Sam
Hi Group,(I am just starting with SQL Server 2005.)On SQL Server 7 I used often the nice relation schema, where I used todraw out the whole database, especially the Foreign Keys constraints.I found these relational schemas very handy to study an old database Ibuild a few years earlier that needs some updating.I tried to find such an utility in SQL Server 2005, but cannot find it.I did found the FK-constraints, but it is just an popup where I candefine them.The overview such a visual schema gave was really great and I miss it.Question: Is it gone in SQL Sevrer 2005, or do I just not know where tolook? If the latter, please guide me. :)Thanks for your time.Regards,Erwin Moller
View 1 Replies View Related
Hi,
There alot of talk about Service Master and DB Master keys and the importance of backing them up seperately.
What about the DPAPI keys used to protect the Service Master keys. What procedures to I take to back those up during my database backup.
If I understand correctly, if I do a backup on one machine, and then try to restore in a different machine, I won't be able to decrypt data becuase the DPAPI keys don't "match".
This is assumming I don't use a password to protect my DB Master keys, I just rely on the service master to protect them.
Thanks for any help,
I have got a question on max degree of parallelism and CPU cores.
If max degree of parallelism = 1, this signifies that sql will use serial execution plan (unless u change it in query level with MAXDOP hint). In serial plan, will the query use all CPU cores (say in my server I have 16 core processors)?
If in serial execution plan only one thread works, then what the other threads doing ? Idle (I may have a defined max server worker thread = 32767(by default)
Unable to create a relationship between this parameters.
Hi all,
Have just tried my sql server 2005 connected asp classic website on II7 for the first time and have gotten some errors.
First off I have unchecked show friendly errors in IE and have enabled ASP to send error messages to the browser.
My error I get is when I execute a basic .asp page:
Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers error '80004005'
[Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver][SQL Server]Cannot open database "mydatabasename" requested by the login. The login failed.
/index.asp, line 10 which is dbConnect.Open cstring
from this peice of code:
sub dbOpen()
set dbConnect = Server.CreateObject("ADODB.Connection")
cstring = "DSN=mysqldsn; Trusted Connection=yes"
dbConnect.Open cstring
end sub
I have gone into ODBC and have setup both a user dsn and file dsn that equals mysqldsn and points to my database (I know you only need to set up one DSN but I'm not sure which)
I also notice under mywebsite home panel there is a connection string option. Do I do anything with that?
Definatley a lot more to it than XP's II6!
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated.
I have some C# code that iterates through the session state, serializes each object and stores the binary representation in an SQL table with an 'image' column. The problem is: it doesn't work. SQL server doesn't throw an error (at least ADO.NET doesnt propagate it); the table is just left unchanged. The SP works (I tested it with a few simple values); the MemoryStream and byte array are being populated correctly and bound to the parameter correctly.
What am I doing wrong? Anyone have a better approach? I know there is a builtin way of storing state in an SQL server, but I only need to do this once--namely, when a user is redirected from non-secure to secure pages--so I don't want to take that performance hit,
string uid = _session.SessionID;
object toSerialize;
BinaryFormatter formatter = new BinaryFormatter();
MemoryStream stream;
SqlConnection dbConn = SupportClasses.SqlUtilities.DBConn();
SqlCommand cmd;
SqlTransaction storeSession = null;
SqlParameter uidParam, keyParam, objParam;
try
{
dbConn.Open();
storeSession = dbConn.BeginTransaction();
foreach (string key in _session.Keys)
{
toSerialize = _session[ key ];
stream = new MemoryStream();
formatter.Serialize(stream, toSerialize);
cmd = new SqlCommand("store_session_object", dbConn, storeSession);
cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
uidParam = new SqlParameter("@uid", SqlDbType.VarChar);
uidParam.Value = uid;
cmd.Parameters.Add(uidParam);
keyParam = new SqlParameter("@object_key", SqlDbType.VarChar);
keyParam.Value = key;
cmd.Parameters.Add(keyParam);
objParam = new SqlParameter("@data", SqlDbType.Image);
objParam.Value = stream.ToArray();
cmd.Parameters.Add(objParam);
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
}
}
catch (SqlException ex)
{
SupportClasses.ErrorHandler.HandleSQLError(ex);
storeSession.Rollback();
}
catch (System.Runtime.Serialization.SerializationException exs)
{
// do something
}
finally
{
dbConn.Close();
}
For those interested, here is the code for the SP:
CREATE PROCEDURE store_session_object
@uid varchar(50),
@object_key varchar(25),
@data image
AS
INSERT INTO session_hold (uid, object_key, object)
VALUES (@uid, @object_key, @data)
[Cross-posted because issue spans several topics.]
when i start mail session
there is a message poping up as
"Error 17952:Faild to Start SQl Mail Session"
When i test From Sql Mail Configuration
i get a message "succesfully Started(and stopped)a MAPI session with this profile"
& still i cannot start the sql mail service"
i still get a error
what could case for this error
Hey,
Does SQL Server have a session browser similar to Oracle and if so, how can I use it? I am looking to retrieve the SQL being ran when users are running particular reports from a gui tool.
Thanks
I'm not sure what happened, but all of a sudden my SQL Server Agent service won't start. When I try to start it, I get the following error in the event logs:
"SQLServerAgent could not be started. Error creating a new session".
When I look in the Agent log file, i see the following:
Execute permission denied on object sp_sqlagent_has_server_access
Execute permission denied on object sp_sqlagent_get_startup_info
Insert permission denied on object syssession
What happened?
Thanks...
I have an ASP.Net (C# 2.0) application that has been using SQL Server 2005 Standard Edition with Service Pack 1 to hold the session state in a testing environment. Currently, the session state is being stored in TempDB, rather than the ASPState database. This has worked very well for us until yesterday. We installed SQL Server 2005 Service Pack 2, as well as the Critical Update for Service Pack 2 (KB933508). Once the SQL server was rebooted, I got the following error message when I tried to access the web application.
The SELECT permission was denied on the object 'ASPStateTempApplications', database 'tempdb', schema 'dbo'.The SELECT permission was denied on the object 'ASPStateTempApplications', database 'tempdb', schema 'dbo'.The INSERT permission was denied on the object 'ASPStateTempApplications', database 'tempdb', schema 'dbo'.
In the web.config file for the application, I have a SQL username and password defined that can access the ASPState database. To correct this issue, I had to give this user db_datareader and db_datawriter access to tempDB.
Has anyone else run across this problem, and is it related to SQL Server 2005 Service Pack 2?
I am contemplating storing session state data in a SQL server database (created by running the installSqlState.sql script included in the .NET framework installation) and have established a functioning connection to the database but I am constantly getting "access denied". I've found that tweeking the permission settings in SQL for the ASP.NET user is resolving each specific error that arises but was wondering if there is a more "global" resolution? I'm finding myself having to manually check off each individual object and every option or is this what is needed to resolve the "access denied" error?
Thank you.
Hi all;
I want to implement "Auto disconnection" (or kill) of user session that exceed a specified idle duration in SQL Server 2005.
I know how do that in oracle by creating a profile and set the IDLE_TIME paramter and asign that profile to all users. But in SQL Server i don't know how to do it.
Can anyone help me.
Kindly
Hi All,
Great forum y'all have going here.
Just wondering if anyone else has experienced this?
Enterprise Manager:
I have setup and 'sucessfully tested a MAPI session' with a mail profile via support services > sql mail. That works fine, however in sql server agent properties the mail session section on the first general tab appears to be greyed out.
scenario is:
Windows Server 2003 SBS edition
SQL Server 2000 SP3
Exchange Server 2003 is also running on the server, with Outlook 2003 client (so i suspect side chaining issue).
Any help appreciated! did not have any luck googling or using microsoft KB.
I use this code in a utility procedure (for performance testing) but it is really slow.
For example, a session with three events is taking 5 seconds to complete this query:
DECLARE @xml xml=
(
SELECT CAST(xet.target_data AS xml)
FROM sys.dm_xe_session_targets AS xet
JOIN sys.dm_xe_sessions AS xe
ON (xe.address = xet.event_session_address)
WHERE xe.name = @name
);
with data as
(
select
convert(varchar(128),convert(varbinary(128),'0x'+n.value('(action[@name="context_info"]/value/text())[1]','varchar(128)'),1)) context
, n.value('(data[@name="duration"]/value/text())[1]','int')/1000.0 duration
, n.value('(data[@name="cpu_time"]/value/text())[1]','bigint')/1000.0 cpu_time
, n.value('(data[@name="physical_reads"]/value/text())[1]','bigint') physical_reads
[code].....
So, I was wondering (considering the buffer is usually only holding a few hundred events)
1. Is this the wrong way to query data from a ring buffer?
2. Is there any way to make this code quicker?
3. Is it better to target a file store rather than a ring buffer for this?
select geometry::STGeomFromWKB(0x0106000000020000000103000000010000000B0000001000000000000840000000000000003D
D8CCCCCCCCCC0840000000000000003DD8CCCCCCCCCC08408014AE47E17AFC3F040000000000104000
[Code] .....
I have two extended events sessions running on a server. I do have sql jobs that automatically stop the XE sessions and import the results to working tables. I see two "ALTER EVENT SESSION XXXX ON SERVER STATE = STOP" statements that are being executed for more than 2 days, the wait types are XE_SERVICES_MUTEX and PREEMPTIVE_XE_SESSIONCOMMIT. This is not the first time I see this behavior.I do not want to kill the sessions (I guess the sessions won't die anyway) neither restart the sql service
View 7 Replies View Related
Hi,
I have a script component. What it does, it queries the a table using a connectionstring assigned to it in the Connection Managers Editor (which is an ado.net adapter). this works fine when i'm using a windows login in the ado.net connection manager. But when i changed my connection to use SQL server login, I encounter this error:
OnError,,,Add new records to Dim_T_Status (Case),,,10/14/2007 5:54:47 PM,10/14/2007 5:54:47 PM,-1073450910,0x,System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException: Login failed for user 'CS_REPORT'.
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ScriptComponentHost.HandleUserException(Exception e)
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ScriptComponentHost.ProcessInput(Int32 inputID, PipelineBuffer buffer)
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ManagedComponentHost.HostProcessInput(IDTSManagedComponentWrapper90 wrapper, Int32 inputID, IDTSBuffer90 pDTSBuffer, IntPtr bufferWirePacket)
OnError,,,LOAD AND UPDATE OCEAN Dimension Tables,,,10/14/2007 5:54:47 PM,10/14/2007 5:54:47 PM,-1073450910,0x,System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException: Login failed for user 'CS_REPORT'.
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ScriptComponentHost.HandleUserException(Exception e)
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ScriptComponentHost.ProcessInput(Int32 inputID, PipelineBuffer buffer)
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ManagedComponentHost.HostProcessInput(IDTSManagedComponentWrapper90 wrapper, Int32 inputID, IDTSBuffer90 pDTSBuffer, IntPtr bufferWirePacket)
OnError,,,LoadOCEANDimensions,,,10/14/2007 5:54:47 PM,10/14/2007 5:54:47 PM,-1073450910,0x,System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException: Login failed for user 'CS_REPORT'.
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ScriptComponentHost.HandleUserException(Exception e)
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ScriptComponentHost.ProcessInput(Int32 inputID, PipelineBuffer buffer)
at Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.ManagedComponentHost.HostProcessInput(IDTSManagedComponentWrapper90 wrapper, Int32 inputID, IDTSBuffer90 pDTSBuffer, IntPtr bufferWirePacket)
How to go about this?
cherriesh
All the logins with sysadmin role are locked out in one of the SQL server. Also in that instance Logon trigger is implemented which allows only certain users with Windows Authentication to logon.
This server is converted into single user mode by using command prompt. Now we are attempting to connect to SQLServer using command sqlcmd -S FTCPU3239 (since we do not have any other login) and create a new login with sysadmin role but are refused due to logon trigger. it says Login failed for login 'DomainNameUserName' due to trigger execution.
I have a server that has 20 databases . I have tested with few users with different level of access and all of them were able to connect to the server and also see, select, update , delete from a particular database which is kind of weird because they do not have a user login associated or mapped to that database. I checked and no user is part of any group in AD that would give them permission to connect . I need a query that would find the permission path of a user. I already queried with xp_logininfo but I am not getting any thing.
View 9 Replies View Relatedcreate login dave with password='abc', default_database=tempdb
View 6 Replies View Related
Hi,
I am using SQL Server 2005 at home.
My problem is I forgot my password to log in to my server.
I only remember user name is 'sa'.
I haven't used it for two to three months. So I forgot password.
Previously, When I used sql server 2000, my login is as windows login. so no problem.
But this time, I set seperate log in and I got this problem.
Any help will be appreciated.
Thanks
George
Hello everyone,
Since last so many days i am seeing that someone is trying to login to sql server through login name sa.but that login is failed.and this is occuring constantly.
Earlier i had same login failed message for another ip address.i have blocked that ip address through access-list in firewall.but now i am seeing the same message for another ip address.
(1).how can i permenently remove this message from Event log.
(2).What is the impact of this on sql server performance.is sql server performance degraded by this kind of contineous attack?
here i am attaching that report from event viewer log file.
2/26/2007 1:48:18 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:17 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:17 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:17 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:16 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:16 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:16 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:15 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:15 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:15 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:14 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:14 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:14 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:13 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:13 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:12 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:12 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:12 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:11 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:11 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:11 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:10 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:10 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:10 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:09 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:09 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:09 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:08 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:08 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:08 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:07 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:07 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:07 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:06 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:06 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:06 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:05 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:05 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:05 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:04 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:04 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:04 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:03 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:02 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:02 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:02 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:01 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:01 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:01 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:00 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:00 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:48:00 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:59 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:59 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:59 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:58 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:58 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:57 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:57 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:57 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:56 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:56 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:55 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:55 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:54 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:54 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:54 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:53 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:53 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:53 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:52 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:52 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:52 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:51 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:51 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:50 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:50 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:50 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:49 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:49 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:49 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:48 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:48 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:48 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:48 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:47 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:47 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:47 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:46 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:46 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:45 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:45 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:45 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:44 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:44 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:44 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:43 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:43 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
2/26/2007 1:47:43 AM MSSQL$CASHMAX Failure Audit (4) 18456 N/A CASHMAX Login failed for user 'sa'. [CLIENT: 192.192.81.126]
Needs your help to resolve this issue.
Thanks,
Bharat