Updates on a table must be inserted into another table - sql

Is there a way to insert records into TABLE B if there is an update in TABLE A?
I don't want to use triggers.
The answer is we can use the OUTPUT clause of instead of triggers:
USE AdventureWorks2012;
GO
IF OBJECT_ID('dbo.vw_ScrapReason','V') IS NOT NULL
DROP VIEW dbo.vw_ScrapReason;
GO
CREATE VIEW dbo.vw_ScrapReason
AS (SELECT ScrapReasonID, Name, ModifiedDate
FROM Production.ScrapReason);
GO
CREATE TRIGGER dbo.io_ScrapReason
ON dbo.vw_ScrapReason
INSTEAD OF INSERT
AS
BEGIN
--ScrapReasonID is not specified in the list of columns to be inserted
--because it is an IDENTITY column.
INSERT INTO Production.ScrapReason (Name, ModifiedDate)
OUTPUT INSERTED.ScrapReasonID, INSERTED.Name,
INSERTED.ModifiedDate
SELECT Name, getdate()
FROM inserted;
END
GO
INSERT vw_ScrapReason (ScrapReasonID, Name, ModifiedDate)
VALUES (99, N'My scrap reason','20030404');
GO

The mechanism for doing this is called triggers.
Saying that you want to do this but don't want to use triggers is like saying you want to see the Eiffel Tower, but you don't want to go to France.
You could, I suppose, write a stored procedure that does all the logic that would have been in the trigger, if you can ensure that all data updates will be via that stored procedure.

If you don't want to use triggers, then you would have three options.
The first would be to wrap all inserts/updates/deletes in stored procedures. Then use only these stored procedures for data modification. This is actually the approach that I generally take.
Another would be to have a process that runs periodically looking for changes to the data. This is actually hard to do for updates. It is pretty easy to do for inserts because you can add an column with a default creation date, so you can readily find what has recently been added.
The third way is to use SQL Server Change Tracking (see here).

You could make a stored procedure that performs both the update in table A and the insert in table B
CREATE PROCEDURE proc_name
#id
#param1
AS
BEGIN
update tableA
set field1 = #param1
where ID = #id
insert into tableB(field1)
values(#param1)
END

Related

Make sure only one record inserted in table with thousands of concurrent users

Recently, I needed to write a stored procedure to insert only one record when the first user come and ignore for others. I think the IF NOT EXISTS INSERT will not work for me. Also, some people saying online that MERGE adds race condition. Any quick way to achieve this? This is my code for now.
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT ......)
INSERT
You might add another table to use as the lock mechanism.
Let's say your table's name is a, and the name of the table which has the locked value is check_a :
create table a (name varchar(10))
create table check_a (name varchar(10))
Insert only one record to the lock table:
insert into check_a values ('lock')
go
Then create a stored procedure which checks if there is a value in the main table. If there is no record, we might lock the only value in the table check_a and insert our value into the table a.
create proc insert_if_first
as
begin
set nocount on
if not exists (select name from a)
begin
declare #name varchar(10)
begin tran
select #name = name from check_a with (updlock)
if not exists (select name from a)
begin
insert into a values ('some value')
end
commit
end
end
go
First selection from the table a to check there is no record is for using system resources as low as we can. If there is a record in the table a, we can skip opening transaction and skip locking the row.
Second check is to make sure that while we are waiting to obtain the lock, no one inserted a row to the table a.
This way, only the first user which can lock check_a will be able to insert a value to the table a.
I'm guessing that you mean you want users to make a stored procedure that makes sure only one user can run the procedure. Then you need to use isolation levels. There are different Isolation levels, so you need to decide which one you need.
READ UNCOMMITTED
READ COMMITTED
REPEATABLE READ
SERIALIZABLE
You can read what they do here:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms173763.aspx

How to update and insert in T-SQL in one query

I have a database that needs from time to time an update.
It may also happens that there are new data while the update runs.
In MySQL there is a option
INSERT INTO IGNORE
I can't find something like this in T-SQL.
No Problem to update ID 1-4 but then there is a new record for ID 5.
The UPDATE query don't work here.
And when I try to INSERT all data again I get a DUPLICATE KEY error.
Additional Infos:
I've forgotten to say that my data come from external sources. I call an API to get data from it. From there I have to insert these data into my database.
I have to admit that I don't understand MERGE. So my solution for now is to use TRUNCATE first and then insert all data again.
Not the best solution but MERGE works, so far I understand it, with two tables. But I have only one table. And to create a table temporarly to use MERGE and later drop that table is in my eyes a bit to much for my little table with 200 records in it.
You can use MERGE keyword. Basically, you need to specify the column(s) on which to join the source of data with target table, and depending on whether it is matching (existing record) or not matching (new record), you run an UPDATE or INSERT.
Reference: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb510625.aspx
Is a stored procedure an option?
CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.Testing (#ID int, #Field1 varchar(20))
AS
BEGIN
UPDATE tblTesting
SET Field1 = #Field1
WHERE ID = #ID
IF ##ROWCOUNT = 0
INSERT INTO tblTesting (ID, Field1) SELECT #ID, #Field1
END

SQL Server 2012 trigger: Auditing. How to see previous value of a row without shadow table

I am trying to create an auditing table. I have a table called person.address in the AdventureWorks 2012 database.
I am using a trigger to capture changes to the table, the only problem is I do not know if it is possible to use a trigger to capture a row BEFORE it is edited. I am trying to save resources and overheads so trying to not use a shadow table. I know there is no "Before Insert" trigger. But is there any way to capture the information contained in a row, and when someone does an insert or update, this row can be written to my audit.table before the insert is completed?
Thank you.
Given a simplistic table with two rows:
CREATE TABLE dbo.foo(a INT PRIMARY KEY);
INSERT dbo.foo(a) VALUES(1),(2);
Then an update trigger simply to demonstrate:
CREATE TRIGGER dbo.trfoo ON dbo.foo FOR UPDATE
AS
BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON;
SELECT a FROM inserted;
SELECT a FROM deleted;
END
GO
The result of an action, such as:
UPDATE dbo.foo SET a += 1;
Results in:
a -- this is the *new* version of these rows
----
3
2
a -- this is the *old* version of these rows
----
2
1
Also, there is an INSTEAD OF INSERT trigger, which allows you to perform actions before the insert (they're not called BEFORE triggers because you still have to perform the insert yourself). More info here.

Forbid insert into table on certain conditions

I have a SQL Server 2008 database. There are three terminals connected to it (A, B, C). There is a table SampleTable in the database, which reacts to any terminal activity. Every time there is some activity on any terminal, logged on to this DB, the new row is inserted into SampleTable.
I want to redirect traffic from one (C) of the three terminals to write to table RealTable and not SampleTable, but I have to do this on DB layer since services that write terminal activity to DB are in Black Box.
I already have some triggers working on SampleTable with the redirecting logic, but the problem is that rows are still being inserted into SampleTable.
What is the cleanest solution for this. I am certain that deleting rows in an inserting trigger is bad, bad, bad.
Please help.
Edit:
Our current logic is something like this (this is pseudo code):
ALTER TRIGGER DiffByTerminal
ON SampleTable
AFTER INSERT
AS
DECLARE #ActionCode VARCHAR(3),
#ActionTime DATETIME,
#TerminalId INT
SELECT #ActionCode = ins.ActionCode,
#ActionTime = ins.ActionTime,
#TerminalId = ins.TerminalId
FROM inserted ins
IF(#TerminalId = 'C')
BEGIN
INSERT INTO RealTable
(
...
)
VALUES
(
#ActionCode,
#ActionTime,
#TerminalId
)
END
In order to "intercept" something before a row gets inserted into a table, you need an INSTEAD OF trigger, not an AFTER trigger. So you can drop your existing trigger (which also included flawed logic that assumed all inserts would be single-row) and create this INSTEAD OF trigger instead:
DROP TRIGGER DiffByTerminal;
GO
CREATE TRIGGER dbo.DiffByTerminal
ON dbo.SampleTable
INSTEAD OF INSERT
AS
BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON;
INSERT dbo.RealTable(...) SELECT ActionCode, ActionTime, TerminalID
FROM inserted
WHERE TerminalID = 'C';
INSERT dbo.SampleTable(...) SELECT ActionCode, ActionTime, TerminalID
FROM inserted
WHERE TerminalID <> 'C';
END
GO
This will handle single-row inserts and multi-row inserts consisting of (a) only C (b) only non-C and (c) a mix.
One of the easiest solution for you is INSTEAD OF trigger. Simply stating, it's trigger that "fires" on very action you decide and lets you "override" the default behavior of the action.
You can override the INSERT, DELETE and UPDATE statements for specific table/view (you use it a lot with views that combine data from different tables and you want make the view insert-able) using INSTEAD OF trigger, where you can put your logic. inside the trigger you can then call again to INSERT when it's appropriate, and you don't have to worry about recursion - INSTEAD OF triggers won't apply on statements from inside the trigger code itself.
Enjoy.

two triggers on insert of same table

Here is one very interesting problem. I am using SQL Server 2008.
I have two triggers on one common table say 'CommonTable'. one trigger is on update and other one is on insert/update/delete.
In first trigger "Trigger1", I do the checks/rollback sometime change the new inserted value based on business logic.
here is sample code
-
CREATE TRIGGER [dbo].[Trigger1] ON [dbo].[CommonTable]
FOR UPDATE
UPDATE [CommonTable]
SET
[StatusCode] = 'New Value'
WHERE
[RecId] = 'rec id value'
In second trigger "Trigger2", I store the new inserted/deleted/updated value from 'CommonTable' table to another table 'CommonTable_History' for history tracking purpose.
here is sample code
-
CREATE TRIGGER [dbo].[Trigger2] ON [dbo].[CommonTable]
FOR INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE
--based on logic read the value from DELETED or INSERTED table and store in other table.
SELECT #RowData = (SELECT * FROM DELETED AS [CommonTable] WHERE [RecId] = #RowRecId FOR XML AUTO, BINARY BASE64 , ELEMENTS)
--and then insert #RowData in 'CommonTable_History' table.
With the help of 'sp_settriggerorder', I have set the order of execution of these triggers, so first "Trigger1" get executed and then "Trigger2".
Second trigger "Trigger2" works well for insert/delete values. It works fine for new inserted value if new inserted values has not been changed by first trigger "Trigger1".
But if in some cases, inserted values has been changed in "Trigger1". say [StatusCode] = 'New Value' and old values was 'Old Value' then "Trigger2" still store the 'Old Value' instead of 'New Value'.
Why because "Trigger1" change the value but that value still has not been store in database and before that "Trigger2" get executed on Insert.
Now my requirement is, here I want to store "New Value".
So I thought, lets make "Trigger2" to use "AFTER" keywords. But "FOR" and "AFTER" behave same could not solve the problem.
Then I thought, lets make "Trigger2" to use "INSTEAD OF" keyword. But "INSTEAD OF" gives following error
"Cannot CREATE INSTEAD OF DELETE or INSTEAD OF UPDATE TRIGGER. This is because the table has a FOREIGN KEY with cascading DELETE or UPDATE."
I can not remove FOREIGN KEY with cascading DELETE or UPDATE for table 'CommonTable'.
Please let me know if you people have any other alternate solution.
-Vikram Gehlot
I think your second trigger needs to use the values from the actual table, not the inserted/deleted tables to populate the log table - inserted/deleted will always have the unaltered, original values, while your altered values will appear in the table. Make the second trigger an "After" trigger, so you will not have to use the sp_settriggerorder. Like this, for example:
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
CREATE TRIGGER [dbo].[trg_Trig1]
ON [dbo].[TestTable]
FOR INSERT
AS
BEGIN
-- SET NOCOUNT ON added to prevent extra result sets from
-- interfering with SELECT statements.
SET NOCOUNT ON;
update TestTable
set [value] = 10
where [value] = 25
END
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
CREATE TRIGGER [dbo].[trg_Trig2]
ON [dbo].[TestTable]
AFTER INSERT
AS
BEGIN
-- SET NOCOUNT ON added to prevent extra result sets from
-- interfering with SELECT statements.
SET NOCOUNT ON;
-- Insert statements for trigger here
insert into log_TestTable
(id, description, [value])
select tt.id, tt.description, tt.[value]
from inserted i
LEFT JOIN TestTable tt
ON tt.id = i.id
END
It may not be the cleanest solution but can you simply combine the two triggers into one? That way both pieces of SQL would know about each other's changes.
Your second trigger appears to me as if it would not work properly is mulitple records are inserted in a set-based operations unloess you use a loop which is poor choice in a trigger. Fix that first!
Instead of select * from deleted, why not join the deleted or inserted table to the original table and take the values from there (except for the id value which you get from deleted or inserted, that should give you the most current values of all fileds and if you add other trigger logic later wil not break.