Remove a Primary Database from an Availability Group (SQL Server)
This topic describes how to remove both the primary database and the corresponding secondary database(s) from an AlwaysOn availability group by using SQL Server Management Studio, Transact-SQL, or PowerShell in SQL Server 2014.
Before you begin:
To remove an availability database, using:
Follow Up: After Removing an Availability Database from an Availability Group
Before You Begin
Prerequisites and Restrictions
- This task is supported only on primary replicas. You must be connected to the server instance that hosts the primary replica.
Security
Permissions
Requires ALTER AVAILABILITY GROUP permission on the availability group, CONTROL AVAILABILITY GROUP permission, ALTER ANY AVAILABILITY GROUP permission, or CONTROL SERVER permission.
Using SQL Server Management Studio
To remove an availability database
In Object Explorer, connect to the server instance that hosts the primary replica of the database or databases to be removed, and expand the server tree.
Expand the AlwaysOn High Availability node and the Availability Groups node.
Select the availability group, and expand the Availability Databases node.
This step depends on whether you want to remove multiple databases groups or only one database, as follows:
To remove multiple databases, use the Object Explorer Details pane to view and select all the databases that you want to remove. For more information, see Use the Object Explorer Details to Monitor Availability Groups (SQL Server Management Studio).
To remove a single database, select it in either the Object Explorer pane or the Object Explorer Details pane.
Right-click the selected database or databases, and select Remove Database from Availability Group in the command menu.
In the Remove Databases from Availability Group dialog box, to remove all the listed databases, click OK. If you do not want to remove all them, click Cancel.
Using Transact-SQL
To remove an availability database
Connect to the server instance that hosts the primary replica.
Use the ALTER AVAILABILITY GROUP statement, as follows:
ALTER AVAILABILITY GROUP group_name REMOVE DATABASE availability_database_name
where group_name is the name of the availability group and database_name is the name of the database to be removed.
The following example removes a databases named
Db6
from theMyAG
availability group.ALTER AVAILABILITY GROUP MyAG REMOVE DATABASE Db6;
Using PowerShell
To remove an availability database
Change directory (
cd
) to the server instance that hosts the primary replica.Use the
Remove-SqlAvailabilityDatabase
cmdlet, specifying the name of the availability database to be removed from the availability group. When you are connected to the server instance that hosts the primary replica, the primary database and its corresponding secondary databases are all removed from the availability group.For example, the following command removes the availability database
MyDb9
from the availability group namedMyAg
. Because the command is executed on the server instance that hosts the primary replica, the primary database and all its corresponding secondary databases are removed from the availability group. Data synchronization will no longer occur for this database on any secondary replica.Remove-SqlAvailabilityDatabase -Path SQLSERVER:\Sql\PrimaryComputer\InstanceName\AvailabilityGroups\MyAg\Databases\MyDb9
Note
To view the syntax of a cmdlet, use the
Get-Help
cmdlet in the SQL Server 2014 PowerShell environment. For more information, see Get Help SQL Server PowerShell.
To set up and use the SQL Server PowerShell provider
Follow Up: After Removing an Availability Database from an Availability Group
Removing an availability database from its availability group ends data synchronization between the former primary database and the corresponding secondary databases. The former primary database remains online. Every corresponding secondary database is placed in the RESTORING state.
At this point there are alternative ways of dealing with a removed secondary database:
If you no longer need a given secondary database, you can drop it.
For more information, see Delete a Database.
If you want to access a removed secondary database after it has been removed from the availability group, you can recover the database. However, if you recover a removed secondary database, two divergent, independent databases that have the same name are online. You must make sure that clients can access only one of them, typically the most recent primary database.
For more information, see Recover a Database Without Restoring Data (Transact-SQL).
See Also
Overview of AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server)
Remove a Secondary Database from an Availability Group (SQL Server)