So be careful if you intend to upgrade your SQL Server version to a newer one. ![]() You also have to consider the applications that use SQL Server - they are sometimes restricted to a SQL version and will not be supported if your SQL version is 'not on the list' for the applications concerned. If you update Windows Server 2016 to 2019, this does NOT update SQL Server 2016 to 2019. They are DIFFERENT software packages Windows Server is the operating system while SQL Server is an application.įor example you can have SQL Server 2016 running on Windows Server 2016 and also on Windows Server 2019. Please, when you are referring to your software versions, you must separate Windows Server versions from SQL Server versions. Should I upgrade the server and then SQL and Management studio? ![]() Can you suggest in what order I should upgrade. We're just trying to make sure that when we are upgrading our servers, and applications, that it doesn't break anything. Thanks for the response Alec6638! There's no reason.
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