Ms Sql Server Express Portable 【REAL · BREAKDOWN】
else Remove"
Between SQL Server 2005 and 2012, Microsoft experimented with (also called RANU — Run As Normal User). An application could attach a database file ( .mdf ) directly via a connection string without a full service installation.
Yet, developers, trainers, and data analysts frequently search for the holy grail: They envision a USB stick containing a database engine that can run on any machine without admin rights, leaving no trace behind. ms sql server express portable
if (-NOT ([Security.Principal.WindowsPrincipal] [Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent()).IsInRole([Security.Principal.WindowsBuiltInRole] "Administrator")) Write-Host "Administrator rights required to create/remove service." -ForegroundColor Red exit 1
E:\SQL2019_Setup.exe /Q /ACTION=Install /FEATURES=SQLENGINE /INSTANCENAME=SQLEXPRESS /SQLSVCACCOUNT="NT AUTHORITY\NETWORK SERVICE" /AGTSVCACCOUNT="NT AUTHORITY\NETWORK SERVICE" /SQLSYSADMINACCOUNTS="BUILTIN\ADMINISTRATORS" /INSTANCEDIR="E:\SQLExpress" /SQLUSERDBDIR="E:\SQLExpress\Data" /SQLUSERDBLOGDIR="E:\SQLExpress\Logs" /TCPENABLED=1 /BROWSERSVCSTARTUPTYPE="Automatic" /IACCEPTSQLSERVERLICENSETERMS This forces all binaries, system databases, user databases, and logs onto the USB drive. Save the following PowerShell script as StartSQL.ps1 on the root of the USB drive. else Remove" Between SQL Server 2005 and 2012,
@echo off set DRIVE=%~d0 set SQLROOT=%DRIVE%\SQLPortable set INSTANCE=SQLEXPRESS net session >nul 2>&1 if %errorLevel% neq 0 ( echo Admin required & pause & exit /b )
Introduction: The Portable Paradox In the world of enterprise software, "portability" is often a dirty word. Applications are expected to hook into registries, spawn Windows services, and embed themselves deeply into the operating system. Microsoft SQL Server Express—the free, entry-level version of the world’s most popular enterprise RDBMS—is the epitome of this "installed" philosophy. if (-NOT ([Security
elseif ($Action -eq "Remove") net stop "MSSQL $$InstanceName" 2>$null sc.exe delete "MSSQL $$InstanceName" Remove-Item -Path $RegPath -Recurse -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue Write-Host "Service removed from this machine."















