How do I find out when a node was added to an availability group?





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Ideally, I am looking for T-SQL that returns two columns: the node name, and the date/time that node was added to the availability group, for all nodes in a given availability group.










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    5















    Ideally, I am looking for T-SQL that returns two columns: the node name, and the date/time that node was added to the availability group, for all nodes in a given availability group.










    share|improve this question

























      5












      5








      5








      Ideally, I am looking for T-SQL that returns two columns: the node name, and the date/time that node was added to the availability group, for all nodes in a given availability group.










      share|improve this question














      Ideally, I am looking for T-SQL that returns two columns: the node name, and the date/time that node was added to the availability group, for all nodes in a given availability group.







      sql-server availability-groups






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      asked 13 hours ago









      Mark RaymondMark Raymond

      15614




      15614






















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          This is as far as I can see not possible with a single T-SQL statement as individual nodes hold only their own create date.



          The sys.availability_replicas page makes reference to a column create_date. This is the datetime value of when the node was added.



          To find the create_date for each replica you would need to first connect that replica and query the table for that instance only as below.



          SELECT [replica_server_name],
          [create_date]
          FROM [master].[sys].[availability_replicas]
          WHERE replica_server_name = @@SERVERNAME





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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes








            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            6














            This is as far as I can see not possible with a single T-SQL statement as individual nodes hold only their own create date.



            The sys.availability_replicas page makes reference to a column create_date. This is the datetime value of when the node was added.



            To find the create_date for each replica you would need to first connect that replica and query the table for that instance only as below.



            SELECT [replica_server_name],
            [create_date]
            FROM [master].[sys].[availability_replicas]
            WHERE replica_server_name = @@SERVERNAME





            share|improve this answer




























              6














              This is as far as I can see not possible with a single T-SQL statement as individual nodes hold only their own create date.



              The sys.availability_replicas page makes reference to a column create_date. This is the datetime value of when the node was added.



              To find the create_date for each replica you would need to first connect that replica and query the table for that instance only as below.



              SELECT [replica_server_name],
              [create_date]
              FROM [master].[sys].[availability_replicas]
              WHERE replica_server_name = @@SERVERNAME





              share|improve this answer


























                6












                6








                6







                This is as far as I can see not possible with a single T-SQL statement as individual nodes hold only their own create date.



                The sys.availability_replicas page makes reference to a column create_date. This is the datetime value of when the node was added.



                To find the create_date for each replica you would need to first connect that replica and query the table for that instance only as below.



                SELECT [replica_server_name],
                [create_date]
                FROM [master].[sys].[availability_replicas]
                WHERE replica_server_name = @@SERVERNAME





                share|improve this answer













                This is as far as I can see not possible with a single T-SQL statement as individual nodes hold only their own create date.



                The sys.availability_replicas page makes reference to a column create_date. This is the datetime value of when the node was added.



                To find the create_date for each replica you would need to first connect that replica and query the table for that instance only as below.



                SELECT [replica_server_name],
                [create_date]
                FROM [master].[sys].[availability_replicas]
                WHERE replica_server_name = @@SERVERNAME






                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered 13 hours ago









                George.PalaciosGeorge.Palacios

                2,527826




                2,527826






























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