How do you check what version of SQL Server for a

2019-01-30 04:02发布

问题:

Is there a system stored procedure to get the version #?

回答1:

Try

SELECT @@VERSION 

or for SQL Server 2000 and above the following is easier to parse :)

SELECT SERVERPROPERTY('productversion')
     , SERVERPROPERTY('productlevel')
     , SERVERPROPERTY('edition')

From: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/321185



回答2:

SELECT @@VERSION



回答3:

I know this is an older post but I updated the code found in the link (which is dead as of 2013-12-03) mentioned in the answer posted by Matt Rogish:

DECLARE @ver nvarchar(128)
SET @ver = CAST(serverproperty('ProductVersion') AS nvarchar)
SET @ver = SUBSTRING(@ver, 1, CHARINDEX('.', @ver) - 1)

IF ( @ver = '7' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 7'
ELSE IF ( @ver = '8' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 2000'
ELSE IF ( @ver = '9' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 2005'
ELSE IF ( @ver = '10' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 2008/2008 R2'
ELSE IF ( @ver = '11' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 2012'
ELSE IF ( @ver = '12' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 2014'
ELSE IF ( @ver = '13' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 2016'
ELSE IF ( @ver = '14' )
   SELECT 'SQL Server 2017'
ELSE
   SELECT 'Unsupported SQL Server Version'


回答4:

For SQL Server 2000 and above, I prefer the following parsing of Joe's answer:

declare @sqlVers numeric(4,2)
select @sqlVers = left(cast(serverproperty('productversion') as varchar), 4)

Gives results as follows:

Result   Server Version
8.00     SQL 2000
9.00     SQL 2005
10.00    SQL 2008
10.50    SQL 2008R2
11.00    SQL 2012
12.00    SQL 2014

Basic list of version numbers here, or exhaustive list from Microsoft here.



回答5:

CREATE FUNCTION dbo.UFN_GET_SQL_SEVER_VERSION 
(
)
RETURNS sysname
AS
BEGIN
    DECLARE @ServerVersion sysname, @ProductVersion sysname, @ProductLevel sysname, @Edition sysname;

    SELECT @ProductVersion = CONVERT(sysname, SERVERPROPERTY('ProductVersion')), 
           @ProductLevel = CONVERT(sysname, SERVERPROPERTY('ProductLevel')),
           @Edition = CONVERT(sysname, SERVERPROPERTY ('Edition'));
    --see: http://support2.microsoft.com/kb/321185
    SELECT @ServerVersion = 
        CASE 
            WHEN @ProductVersion LIKE '8.00.%' THEN 'Microsoft SQL Server 2000'
            WHEN @ProductVersion LIKE '9.00.%' THEN 'Microsoft SQL Server 2005'
            WHEN @ProductVersion LIKE '10.00.%' THEN 'Microsoft SQL Server 2008'
            WHEN @ProductVersion LIKE '10.50.%' THEN 'Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2'
            WHEN @ProductVersion LIKE '11.0%' THEN 'Microsoft SQL Server 2012'
            WHEN @ProductVersion LIKE '12.0%' THEN 'Microsoft SQL Server 2014'
        END

    RETURN @ServerVersion + N' ('+@ProductLevel + N'), ' + @Edition + ' - ' + @ProductVersion;

END
GO


回答6:

There is another extended Stored Procedure which can be used to see the Version info:

exec [master].sys.[xp_msver]


回答7:

Here's a bit of script I use for testing if a server is 2005 or later

declare @isSqlServer2005 bit
select @isSqlServer2005 = case when CONVERT(int, SUBSTRING(CONVERT(varchar(15), SERVERPROPERTY('productversion')), 0, CHARINDEX('.', CONVERT(varchar(15), SERVERPROPERTY('productversion'))))) < 9 then 0 else 1 end
select @isSqlServer2005

Note : updated from original answer (see comment)



回答8:

The KB article linked in Joe's post is great for determining which service packs have been installed for any version. Along those same lines, this KB article maps version numbers to specific hotfixes and cumulative updates, but it only applies to SQL05 SP2 and up.



回答9:

Try this:

if (SELECT LEFT(CAST(SERVERPROPERTY('productversion') as varchar), 2)) = '10'
BEGIN


回答10:

SELECT 
@@SERVERNAME AS ServerName,
CASE WHEN LEFT(CAST(serverproperty('productversion') as char), 1) = 9 THEN '2005'
 WHEN LEFT(CAST(serverproperty('productversion') as char), 2) = 10 THEN '2008'
 WHEN LEFT(CAST(serverproperty('productversion') as char), 2) = 11 THEN '2012'
END AS MajorVersion,
SERVERPROPERTY ('productlevel') AS MinorVersion, 
SERVERPROPERTY('productversion') AS FullVersion, 
SERVERPROPERTY ('edition') AS Edition


回答11:

Getting only the major SQL Server version in a single select:

SELECT  SUBSTRING(ver, 1, CHARINDEX('.', ver) - 1)
FROM (SELECT CAST(serverproperty('ProductVersion') AS nvarchar) ver) as t

Returns 8 for SQL 2000, 9 for SQL 2005 and so on (tested up to 2012).



回答12:

Try

SELECT @@MICROSOFTVERSION / 0x01000000 AS MajorVersionNumber

For more information see: Querying for version/edition info



回答13:

select substring(@@version,0,charindex(convert(varchar,SERVERPROPERTY('productversion')) ,@@version)+len(convert(varchar,SERVERPROPERTY('productversion')))) 


回答14:

If all you want is the major version for T-SQL reasons, the following gives you the year of the SQL Server version for 2000 or later.

SELECT left(ltrim(replace(@@Version,'Microsoft SQL Server','')),4)

This code gracefully handles the extra spaces and tabs for various versions of SQL Server.



回答15:

Try this:

SELECT @@VERSION[server], SERVERPROPERTY('productversion'), SERVERPROPERTY ('productlevel'), SERVERPROPERTY ('edition')


回答16:

Try this:

SELECT
    'the sqlserver is ' + substring(@@VERSION, 21, 5) AS [sql version]