A support engineer reports that inserting new sales transactions in a SQL Server 2005 database results in an error. You investigate the error. You discover that in one of the databases, a developer has accidentally deleted some data in a table that is critical for transaction processing. The database uses the full recovery model. You need to restore the table.
You need to achieve this goal without affecting the availability of other data in the database. What should you do?
A.
Back up the current transaction log. Restore the database with a different name and stop at the point just before the data loss. Copy the table back into the original database.
B.
Back up the current transaction log. Restore the database to the point just before the data loss.
C.
Restore the database from the existing backup files to a time just before the data loss.
D.
Restore the database to the point of the last full backup.
Explanation:
You only want to restore the table that has been accidentally altered.
All other suggestions to solution will restore the complete database and therefore you will lose data that may have been written to other tables after the point in time where you stop the recovery.