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Dynamic Management Views and Functions

Dynamic management views and functions return server state information that can be used to monitor the health of a server instance, diagnose problems, and tune performance.

Important

Dynamic management views and functions return internal, implementation-specific state data. Their schemas and the data they return may change in future releases of SQL Server. Therefore, dynamic management views and functions in future releases may not be compatible with the dynamic management views and functions in SQL Server 2005.

Dynamic management views can be referenced in Transact-SQL statements by using two-part, three-part, or four-part names. Dynamic management functions on the other hand can be referenced in Transact-SQL statements by using either two-part or three-part names.

Note

Dynamic management views and functions cannot be referenced in Transact-SQL statements by using one-part names.

There are two types of dynamic management views and functions:

  • Server-scoped dynamic management views and functions. These require VIEW SERVER STATE permission on the server.
  • Database-scoped dynamic management views and functions. These require VIEW DATABASE STATE permission on the database.

To query a dynamic management view or function requires SELECT permission on object and VIEW SERVER STATE or VIEW DATABASE STATE permission. This lets you selectively restrict access of a user or login to dynamic management views and functions. To do this, first create the user in master and then deny the user SELECT permission on the dynamic management views or functions that you do not want them to access. After this, the user cannot select from these dynamic management views or functions, regardless of database context of the user.

Note

Because DENY takes precedence, if a user has been granted VIEW SERVER STATE permissions but denied VIEW DATABASE STATE permission, the user can see server-level information, but not database-level information.

All dynamic management views and functions exist in the sys schema and follow this naming convention dm_*. When you use a dynamic management view or function, you must prefix the name of the view or function by using the sys schema. For example, to query the dm_os_wait_stats dynamic management view, run the following query:

SELECT wait_type, wait_time_ms

FROM sys.dm_os_wait_stats

GO

Dynamic management views and functions have been organized into the following categories.

Common Language Runtime Related Dynamic Management Views

I/O Related Dynamic Management Views and Functions

Database Mirroring Related Dynamic Management Views

Query Notifications Related Dynamic Management Views

Database Related Dynamic Management Views

Replication Related Dynamic Management Views

Execution Related Dynamic Management Views and Functions

Service Broker Related Dynamic Management Views

Full-Text Search Related Dynamic Management Views

SQL Server Operating System Related Dynamic Management Views

Index Related Dynamic Management Views and Functions

Transaction Related Dynamic Management Views and Functions

See Also

Reference

GRANT Server Permissions (Transact-SQL)
GRANT Database Permissions (Transact-SQL)
System Views (Transact-SQL)

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance