I know this has been answered already but this worked for me.
Add a Linked Server under Server Objects | Linked Servers:
Microsoft documentation.
Name the Linked Server [SERVER-NAME or <some ipaddress>, <some-port>]
e.g. [10.0.0.200,2345]
- I am using port 2345 but the standard MS SQL port is 1433.
Example:
- We have a
[Customers]
table
- We want to update
[CustomerAddress]
-field for CustomerId = 123
- We want to use backup data from a server called
[backupServer]
- The
[backupServer]
is the machine where we execute the SQL
This is the SQL-code:
UPDATE production
SET
CustomerAddress = backupServer.CustomerAddress
FROM
[10.0.0.200,2345].[ProductionDatabase].[dbo].[Customers] production
INNER JOIN
[BackupDatabase].[dbo].[Customers] backupServer
ON
production.CustomerId = backupServer.CustomerId
WHERE
backupServer.CustomerId = 123
Generalized format:
UPDATE production
SET
columnName = backupServer.columnName
FROM
[SERVER-NAME or IP,PORT].[ProductionDatabase].[dbo].[tableName] production
INNER JOIN
[BackupDatabase].[dbo].[tableName] backupServer
ON
production.SomeId = backupServer.SomeId
WHERE
backupServer.SomeId = <id>
For those wanting to copy all data (INSERT) from a table from one server to another, it can be done with a command like this:
SELECT * INTO TargetTable
FROM
[SERVER-NAME or IP, PORT].[SourceDatabase].[dbo].[SourceTable]
This will create a new table called TargetTable
using data from the SourceTable
at the SourceDatabase
at SERVER-NAME or IP, PORT
.