The calculation of scheduled event times is done when the database server starts, and each time a scheduled event handler completes.
The calculation of the next scheduled time is based on the increment specified in the schedule definition, with the increment being added to the previous start time. If the event handler takes longer to execute than the specified increment, so that the next time is earlier than the current time, the database server increments until the next scheduled time is in the future.
For example, an event handler that takes sixty-five minutes to execute and is requested to run every hour between 9:00 and 5:00 will run every two hours, at 9:00, 11:00, 1:00, and so on.
To run a process such that it operates between 9:00 and 5:00 and delays for some period before the next execution, you could define a handler to loop until its completion time has passed, with a WAITFOR statement between each iteration.
If you are running a database server intermittently, and it is not running at a scheduled time, the event handler does not run at startup. Instead, the next scheduled time is computed at startup. If, for example, you schedule a backup to take place every night at one o'clock, but regularly shut down the database server at the end of each work day, the backup never takes place.
If the next scheduled execution of an event is more than one hour away, the database server will recalculate its next scheduled time on an hourly basis. This allows events to fire when expected when the system clock is adjusted because of a change to or from Daylight Savings Time.
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