But, from reading into it more, separate physical disks for mdf and ldf files don't really apply when it comes to SSD's. Correct?
The original reason for splitting log and data files off onto seperate disks was 2 fold - latency and bandwidth on the drives.
SSDs don't remove these restrictions, but they do decrease/increase the limits quite significantly (7.9ms for a read with a single HDD vs 0.1ms for a read in a single SSD, roughly).
So ultimately yes and no - it doesn't apply AS MUCH as with HDDs, but those limits are still there and can still be met. It all depends on your workload.
Is my "thinking" setup good or just simply a waste (i.e. no reason to separate out tempdb) where I now have an extra SSD to make use of elsewhere?
Assuming that
- You have 3 physical SSD's
- You have 1 physical HDD
- You need the data to be redundant, but not necessarily the system itself
Your proposed setup would have a few issues (as mentioned before), and a single drive failing is the main one.
You could go for something like this.
Single 7200rpm drive - Windows OS
RAID 5 array (3 SSDs) - Broken down into 4 drives (D for Data, L for Logs, S for Swap and T for Temp)
OR
Single 7200rpm drive - Windows OS
Single SSD - Temp and Swap
RAID 1 array (2 SSDs) - Data and Logs
It's personal preference of mine offloading Windows onto a non-SSD drive when you only have a limited number, but this entirely depends on what the server is doing and how much of a risk you're willing to take.
The Best way to delete databases in sql server is using DROP DATABASE command .
If you right click and delete in SSMS you will end up with files left in folder .
Then You have to manually remove the files from server folder .
To remove these files from folder , first bring sql server to online then go the folder and start deleting the files , when deleting mdf or ldf files you will get error like files in use means that database you are using and you can remove remaining .
Best Answer
Are you attempting this with SSMS? I followed this process using SSMS v18.4:
This worked just fine for me.