I'm using SQL Server 2008, and I have a trigger which I want to copy any rows in the My_Table into a archive History_Table table.
How to copy the entire old content of the table into the archive each time someone inserts a new row?
My table structure is
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Stu_Table]
(
[Stu_Id] [int] NOT NULL,
[Stu_Name] [varchar] (15) COLLATE SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS NULL,
[Stu_Class] [int] NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Stu_Table] ADD CONSTRAINT [PK_Stu_Table] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([Stu_Id]) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
My archive table structure is
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Stu_TableHistory]
(
[Stu_Id] [int] NOT NULL,
[Stu_Name] [varchar] (15) COLLATE SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS NULL,
[Stu_Class] [int] NULL
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[Stu_TableHistory] ADD CONSTRAINT [PK_Stu_TableHistory] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([Stu_Id]) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
My trigger syntax is
Create TRIGGER [dbo].[HistoryKeep]
ON [dbo].[Stu_Table]
INSTEAD OF INSERT
AS
BEGIN
IF((SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Stu_Table WHERE Stu_Id = (SELECT Stu_Id FROM INSERTED)) >= 1)
BEGIN
INSERT INTO dbo.Stu_TableHistory( Stu_Id, Stu_Name, Stu_Class )
SELECT Stu_Id, Stu_Name, Stu_Class FROM Stu_Table WHERE Stu_Id = (SELECT Stu_Id FROM INSERTED)
UPDATE x
SET x.Stu_Name = i.Stu_Name
FROM dbo.Stu_Table AS x
INNER JOIN inserted AS i ON i.Stu_Id = x.Stu_Id
END
ELSE
BEGIN
INSERT INTO dbo.Stu_Table( Stu_Id, Stu_Name, Stu_Class )
SELECT Stu_Id, Stu_Name, Stu_Class FROM INSERTED
END
END
In a word need help to transfer the old data from student table to archive table. My above trigger syntax can not satisfy me.
If have any query plz ask thanks in advance.
Instead of your current trigger, you should have something like:
Create TRIGGER [dbo].[HistoryKeep]
ON [dbo].[Stu_Table]
INSTEAD OF INSERT
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE #History table (
Action sysname not null,
STU_ID [int] NULL,
[Stu_Name] [varchar] (15) COLLATE SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS NULL,
[Stu_Class] [int] NULL
)
;MERGE INTO Stu_Table t
USING INSERTED i ON t.STU_ID = i.STU_ID
WHEN MATCHED THEN UPDATE SET STU_Name = i.STU_Name
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN INSERT (STU_ID,STU_NAME,STU_CLASS) VALUES (i.STU_ID,i.STU_NAME,i.STU_CLASS)
OUTPUT $Action,deleted.stu_id,deleted.stu_name,deleted.stu_class INTO #History;
INSERT INTO stu_TableHistory (stu_id,stu_name,stu_class)
select stu_id,stu_name,stu_class from #History where Action='UPDATE'
END
Note, also, that you'll need to drop your current PK constraint on STU_TableHistory, since as soon as a row is updated more than once, there'll be two entries containing the same STU_ID.
As per my comment, this treats INSERTED as a table containing multiple rows throughout. So if Stu_Table contains a row for STU_ID 1, the following insert:
INSERT INTO STU_Table (STU_ID,STU_Name,STU_Class) VALUES
(1,'abc',null),
(2,'def',null)
will update the row for STU_ID 1, insert a row for STU_ID 2, and insert one row into stu_tableHistory (for STU_ID 1)
Related
I'm trying to insert data into multiple tables if it doesn't already exist. I can't seem to figure this out at all.
Table 1:
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[search_results]
(
[company_id] [int] NULL,
[title] [text] NULL,
[link] [text] NULL,
[domain] [text] NULL,
[index] [int] NULL,
[id] [int] PRIMARY KEY IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL
)
Table 2:
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[statements]
(
[statement_link_id] [int] NULL,
[statement_page] [text] NULL,
[statement_text_location] [text] NULL,
[statement_description] [text] NULL,
[statement_description_html] [text] NULL,
[statement] [int] NULL,
[id] [int] PRIMARY KEY IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL
)
This is what I want to do:
check to see if the company_id and the link already exist in the table or not.
SELECT *
FROM search_results
WHERE company_id = 4 AND link = 'https://test.com';
If the data does not exist, insert it into two tables
INSERT INTO search_results (company_id, link, title, domain)
VALUES (4, 'https://test.com', 'title', 'test.com');
and also insert the search_result last inserted id to the following table. corporate_statement value is always 1
INSERT INTO corporate_statements (statement_link_id, corporate_statement)
VALUES (743, 1);
I'm trying this based on what I found on SO
DECLARE #result AS TABLE (id int, company_id int, link text, title text, domain text);
WITH cte AS
(
SELECT *
FROM (VALUES (4, 'https://test.com', null, null)) AS t(company_id, link, title, domain)
)
INSERT INTO #result
SELECT *
FROM
(INSERT INTO dbo.search_results (company_id, link, title, domain)
OUTPUT inserted.*
SELECT * FROM cte
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM dbo.[search_results]
WHERE company_id = cte.company_id
AND CAST(link AS varchar(250)) = CAST(cte.link AS varchar(50))
)) r
SELECT * FROM #result;
Even trying with a single insert statement, I get the following error:
Msg 213, Level 16, State 1, Line 8
Column name or number of supplied values does not match table definition.
As you can see, I also tried to cast it to varchar since it was throwing error when I hadn't. How can update this?
To me - this seems a lot cleaner, and it also will be a lot simpler to understand (and maintain!) in the future:
-- check to see if your data already exists
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT *
FROM search_results
WHERE company_id = 4 AND link = 'https://test.com')
BEGIN TRY
BEGIN TRANSACTION
-- if not -> insert into the first table
INSERT INTO search_results (company_id, link, title, domain)
VALUES (4, 'https://test.com', 'title', 'test.com');
-- grab the last identity value from that previous INSERT
DECLARE #LastId INT;
SELECT #LastId = SCOPE_IDENTITY();
-- insert into the second table
INSERT INTO corporate_statements (statement_link_id, corporate_statement)
VALUES (#LastId, 1);
COMMIT;
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
-- in case of an error rollback the full transaction
ROLLBACK;
END CATCH;
and you're done. Or am I missing something? I think this would be doing what you're described in the intro of your post - not necessarily what you're showing in your code...
Following is the table structure:
CREATE TABLE [User] (
[Id] bigint identity(1,1) not null,
[FirstName] nvarchar(100) not null,
[LastName] nvarchar(100) not null,
[Title] nvarchar(5) null,
[UserName] nvarchar(100) not null,
[Password] nvarchar(100) not null,
[Inactive] bit null,
[Created] Datetime not null,
[Creator] bigint not null,
[Modified] DateTime null,
[Modifier] bigint null
CONSTRAINT [PK_User] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[Id] Asc
)
);
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.foreign_keys WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[FK_User_Creator]') AND parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[User]'))
ALTER TABLE [User] ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_User_Creator] FOREIGN KEY([Creator]) REFERENCES [User]([Id])
GO
INSERT INTO [User] (Creator) Values ([Id] ?)
This is a case when table is empty and first user is going to add in table. Otherwise I don't have issue.
How can I insert Id in creator column with insert statement at the same time?
One way could be using Sequence instead of identity column. The below script might serve the same purpose:
CREATE SEQUENCE dbo.useridsequence
AS int
START WITH 1
INCREMENT BY 1 ;
GO
CREATE TABLE [User] (
[Id] bigint DEFAULT (NEXT VALUE FOR dbo.useridsequence) ,
[FirstName] nvarchar(100) not null,
[LastName] nvarchar(100) not null,
[Title] nvarchar(5) null,
[UserName] nvarchar(100) not null,
[Password] nvarchar(100) not null,
[Inactive] bit null,
[Created] Datetime not null,
[Creator] bigint DEFAULT NEXT VALUE FOR dbo.useridsequence ,
[Modified] DateTime null,
[Modifier] bigint null
CONSTRAINT [PK_User] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[Id] Asc
)
);
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.foreign_keys WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[FK_User_Creator]') AND parent_object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'[User]'))
ALTER TABLE [User] ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_User_Creator] FOREIGN KEY([Creator]) REFERENCES [User]([Id])
GO
INSERT INTO [User]
(
-- Id -- this column value is auto-generated
FirstName,
LastName,
Title,
UserName,
[Password],
Inactive,
Created,
Creator,
Modified,
Modifier
)
VALUES
(
'Foo',
'Bar',
'Title',
'UserName ',
'Password',
0,
GETDATE(),
DEFAULT,
GETDATE(),
1
)
SELECT * FROM [User] AS u
Result :
The short answer is that you can't do this. And I suggest your model is logically flawed in the first place. Do you intend to define all actual database users (e.g., create user ... for login ...) as rows in [Users]? You need to think about that - but the typical answer is no. If the answer is yes, then you don't need the creator column at all because it is redundant. All you need is the created date - for which you probably should have defined a default.
But if you want to do this, you will need to do it in two steps (and you will need to make the column nullable). You insert a row (or rows) with values for the "real" data columns. Then update those same rows with the identity values generated for id. An example showing different ways to do this
use tempdb;
set nocount on;
CREATE TABLE dbo.[user] (
[user_id] smallint identity(3,10) not null primary key,
[name] nvarchar(20) not null,
[active] bit not null default (1),
[created] Datetime not null default (current_timestamp),
[creator] smallint null
);
ALTER TABLE dbo.[user] ADD CONSTRAINT [fk_user] FOREIGN KEY(creator) REFERENCES dbo.[user](user_id);
GO
-- add first row
insert dbo.[user] (name) values ('test');
update dbo.[user] set creator = SCOPE_IDENTITY() where user_id = SCOPE_IDENTITY()
-- add two more rows
declare #ids table (user_id smallint not null);
insert dbo.[user] (name) output inserted.user_id into #ids
values ('nerk'), ('pom');
update t1 set creator = t1.user_id
from #ids as newrows inner join dbo.[user] as t1 on newrows.user_id = t1.user_id;
select * from dbo.[user] order by user_id;
-- mess things up a bit
delete dbo.[user] where name = 'pom';
-- create an error, consume an identity value
insert dbo.[user](name) values (null);
-- add 2 morerows
delete #ids;
insert dbo.[user] (name) output inserted.user_id into #ids
values ('nerk'), ('pom');
update t1 set creator = t1.user_id
from #ids as newrows inner join dbo.[user] as t1 on newrows.user_id = t1.user_id;
select * from dbo.[user] order by user_id;
drop table dbo.[user];
And I changed the identity specification to demonstrate something few developers realize. It isn't always defined as (1,1) and the next inserted value can jump for many reasons - errors and caching/restarts for example. Lastly, I think you will regret naming a table with a reserved word since references to it will require the use of delimiters. Reduce the pain.
I'm trying to get the last inserted rows Id from an inserts statement on the following table using SQL server 2012
[dbo].[Table](
[TableId] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[Name] [nvarchar](50) NULL,
[CreatedBy] [nvarchar](50) NULL,
[CreatedDate] [datetime2](7) NOT NULL,
[ModifiedBy] [nvarchar](50) NULL,
[ModifiedDate] [datetime2](7) NULL,
CONSTRAINT [pk_Table] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[TableId] ASC
)
I'm also using an audit triggers on that table that are as follows:
trigger [dbo].[trigger_Table_auditColumnAutoInsert]
on [dbo].[Table]
instead of insert
/**************************************************************
* INSTEAD OF trigger on table [dbo].[Table] responsible
for automatically inserting audit column data
**************************************************************/
as
begin
set nocount on
declare #currentTime datetime2
set #currentTime = GETUTCDATE()
insert into [dbo].[Table]
(
Name,
CreatedBy,
CreatedDate,
ModifiedBy,
ModifiedDate
)
select
Name,
ISNULL(CreatedBy, system_user),
#currentTime,
NULL,
NULL
from inserted
select SCOPE_IDENTITY() as [TableId]
goto EOP -- end of procedure
ErrorHandler:
if (##trancount <> 0) rollback tran
EOP:
end
I used different approaches, but nothing 'SAFE' seems to work.
Using scope identity returns null
insert into dbo.[Table](Name) Values('foo')
select SCOPE_IDENTITY()
Using OUTPUT INSERTED always returns 0 for the identity coloumns; although it returns the other inserted values:
declare #tmpTable table
(
TableId int,
Name nvarchar (50)
)
INSERT INTO [dbo].[Table]([Name])
output inserted.TableId, inserted.Name into #tmpTable
VALUES('foo')
select * from #tmpTable
TableId Name
0 foo
I know of another solution to get the inserted Id from the triggers itself, by executing a dynamic sql command as follows:
declare #tmpTable table (id int)
insert #tmpTable (id )
exec sp_executesql N'insert into dbo.[Table](Name) Values(''foo'')'
select id from #tmpTable
I couldn't figure out why in the first 2 cases it is not working; why the SCOPE_IDENTITY() does not work although the triggers execute in the same transaction? And also why the INSERTED clause returns 0 for the identity column.
It appears that the following requirements apply to your audit column data:
Use the insert value supplied for CreatedBy, or use SYSTEM_USER by default.
Always use GETUTCDATE() for CreatedDate.
If the INSTEAD OF trigger (rather than an AFTER trigger) is not essential to your requirements, then you can use DEFAULT constraints on your audit columns and an AFTER INSERT trigger to enforce requirement #2.
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Table]
(
[TableId] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[Name] [nvarchar](50) NULL,
[CreatedBy] [nvarchar](50) NOT NULL CONSTRAINT [DF_Table_CreatedBy] DEFAULT SYSTEM_USER,
[CreatedDate] [datetime2](7) NOT NULL CONSTRAINT [DF_Table_CreatedDate] DEFAULT GETUTCDATE(),
[ModifiedBy] [nvarchar](50) NULL,
[ModifiedDate] [datetime2](7) NULL,
CONSTRAINT [pk_Table] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([TableId] ASC)
)
GO
CREATE TRIGGER Trigger_Table_AfterInsert ON [dbo].[Table]
AFTER INSERT
AS
BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON
UPDATE [dbo].[Table] SET [CreatedDate]=GETUTCDATE()
FROM [dbo].[Table] AS T
INNER JOIN INSERTED AS I ON I.[TableId]=T.[TableId]
END
GO
Then, both SCOPE_IDENTITY() and OUTPUT INSERTED techniques to get the new TableId value work as expected.
If the INSTEAD OF trigger is essential to your implementation, then SELECT ##IDENTITY is an alternative to SCOPE_IDENTITY.
I need to write an insert statement into a table the columns looks like this
demandtypeid (PK, FK, int, not null)
characvalueid (PK, FK, int, not null)
percentage (int null)
lastuser (varchar(100), null)
lastedited (datetime, null)
Here is the INSERT statement. Notice the there is not values at the
value( , , 'Bob')
as I think that's where the auto-increment command should go
insert into tr_demandtypecharac(demandtypeID, characvalueid, lastuser)
values( , , 'Bob')
Please help with a simple little statement
I just want to know how to manually insert into this table
Here's my table structure:
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[tr_demandtypecharac](
[demandtypeid] [int] NOT NULL,
[characvalueid] [int] NOT NULL,
[percentage] [int] NULL,
[lastuser] [varchar](100) COLLATE SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS NULL,
[lastedited] [datetime] NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_tr_dtc_pkey] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[demandtypeid] ASC,
[characvalueid] ASC
)WITH (IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF) ON [PRIMARY]
) ON [PRIMARY]
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[tr_demandtypecharac] WITH CHECK
ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_tr_dtc_cvid]
FOREIGN KEY([characvalueid]) REFERENCES [dbo].[tr_characvalue] ([characvalueid])
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[tr_demandtypecharac] WITH CHECK
ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_tr_dtc_dtid]
FOREIGN KEY([demandtypeid]) REFERENCES [dbo].[tr_demandtype] ([demandtypeid])
If you want an int column that is unique and autoincrementing, use the IDENTITY keyword:
CREATE TABLE new_employees
(
id_num int IDENTITY(1,1),
fname varchar (20),
minit char(1),
lname varchar(30)
)
Then when you insert into the table, do not insert anything for that column -- it will autoincrement itself.
Given the CREATE TABLE statement you posted, without auto-increment (aka identity) columns, you would insert providing all columns and values, like this:
insert into tr_demandtypecharac(
demandtypeid, characvalueid,
percentage, lastuser, lastedited)
values(2, 3, 80, 'Bob', '01/01/2012')
If, however, you do make them auto-increment by changing the CREATE TABLE to:
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[tr_demandtypecharac](
[demandtypeid] [int] NOT NULL IDENTITY(1,1),
[characvalueid] [int] NOT NULL IDENTITY(1,1),
[percentage] [int] NULL,
[lastuser] [varchar](100) COLLATE SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS NULL,
[lastedited] [datetime] NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_tr_dtc_pkey] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[demandtypeid] ASC,
[characvalueid] ASC
)WITH (IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF) ON [PRIMARY]
)
Then you would insert providing all non-identity (non-autoincrement) columns like this:
insert into tr_demandtypecharac(
percentage, lastuser,
lastedited)
values(80, 'Bob', '01/01/2012')
However, it is not common to have more than one column as an identity (autoincrement) column, and generally, this column is the only PRIMARY KEY column.
If a column is an autoincement column (which is different than a primary key column) then you omit the column in your insert statement and it will be filled in.
INSERT INTO tr_demandtypecharac (lastuser) VALUES ('Bob')
I had a similar issue and needed to update a purchased database with a set of records. My solution was to find the highest key used so far, then use that as the base of my insert. The core of it was ROWNUMBER() OVER(ORDER BY PART_CODE).
The key is the "recnum" field in the inadjinf table. I determined that the highest current key was 675400 and updated my query to be:
insert into inadjinf (recnum, user_id, adj_type, adj_status, trans_date, part_code, lotqty, uom, cost_ctr, lot, location, to_cost_ctr, to_location, rec_status, to_part_grade, to_rec_status, remarks1, uom_conv)
select ROW_NUMBER() OVER(ORDER BY INVDET.PART_CODE) + 675400 as recnum, 'CHRSTR' as user_id, 'M' as adj_type, 'O' as adj_status, '2020-10-23' as trans_date, invdet.part_code, sum(lotqty) as lotqty, uom,
cost_ctr, lot, location, 'NS' as to_cost_ctr, '500A' as to_location, rec_status, 'Q' as to_part_grade, 'H' as to_rec_status, 'NS Scrap Request from MSobers 10/21/2020' as remarks1, '1' as uom_conv
from invdet
inner join partmstr on invdet.part_code = partmstr.part_code
where
invdet.part_code In
(
'86038',
'1271',
'VM-0021',
'CO-0107',
...
'FO-0391',
'FO-0376'
)
and lot not in (select lot from inadjinf where trans_date = '2020-10-23' and user_id = 'CHRSTR')
group by invdet.part_code, uom, cost_ctr, lot, location, rec_status
My output started with 675401 and went up from there. In the end, I updated the system's internal "next id field" table record.
You should not use int as primary keys... heres a article about it: http://techtrainedmonkey.com/2012/07/30/why-integers-are-lousy-primary-keys/
but if you do... set the field as identity and Sql Server will do it for you... check it out: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms186775.aspx
Let's say my table structure looks something like this:
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[table1] (
[id] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[data] [varchar](255) NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_table1] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([id] ASC)
)
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[table2] (
[id] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[table1_id] [int] NOT NULL,
[data] [varchar](255) NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_table2] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([id] ASC)
)
The [id] field of the first table corresponds to the [table1_id] field of the second. What I would like to do is insert data into both tables in a single transaction. Now I already know how to do this by doing INSERT-SELECT-INSERT, like this:
BEGIN TRANSACTION;
DECLARE #id [int];
INSERT INTO [table1] ([data]) VALUES ('row 1');
SELECT #id = SCOPE_IDENTITY();
INSERT INTO [table2] ([table1_id], [data]) VALUES (#id, 'more of row 1');
COMMIT TRANSACTION;
That's all good and fine for small cases like that where you're only inserting maybe a handful of rows. But what I need to do is insert a couple hundred thousand rows, or possibly even a million rows, all at once. The data is coming from another table, so if I was only inserting it into a single table, it would be easy, I'd just have to do this:
INSERT INTO [table] ([data])
SELECT [data] FROM [external_table];
But how would I do this and split the data into [table1] and [table2], and still update [table2] with the appropriate [table1_id] as I'm doing it? Is that even possible?
Try this:
insert into [table] ([data])
output inserted.id, inserted.data into table2
select [data] from [external_table]
UPDATE: Re:
Denis - this seems very close to what I want to do, but perhaps you could fix the following SQL statement for me? Basically the [data] in [table1] and the [data] in [table2] represent two different/distinct columns from [external_table]. The statement you posted above only works when you want the [data] columns to be the same.
INSERT INTO [table1] ([data])
OUTPUT [inserted].[id], [external_table].[col2]
INTO [table2] SELECT [col1]
FROM [external_table]
It's impossible to output external columns in an insert statement, so I think you could do something like this
merge into [table1] as t
using [external_table] as s
on 1=0 --modify this predicate as necessary
when not matched then insert (data)
values (s.[col1])
output inserted.id, s.[col2] into [table2]
;
I was also struggling with this problem, and find that the best way is to use a CURSOR.
I have tried Denis solution with OUTPUT, but as he mentiond, it's impossible to output external columns in an insert statement, and the MERGE can't work when insert multiple rows by select.
So, i've used a CURSOR, for each row in the outer table, i've done a INSERT, then use the ##IDENTITY for another INSERT.
DECLARE #OuterID int
DECLARE MY_CURSOR CURSOR
LOCAL STATIC READ_ONLY FORWARD_ONLY
FOR
SELECT ID FROM [external_Table]
OPEN MY_CURSOR
FETCH NEXT FROM MY_CURSOR INTO #OuterID
WHILE ##FETCH_STATUS = 0
BEGIN
INSERT INTO [Table] (data)
SELECT data
FROM [external_Table] where ID = #OuterID
INSERT INTO [second_table] (FK,OuterID)
VALUES(#OuterID,##identity)
FETCH NEXT FROM MY_CURSOR INTO #OuterID
END
CLOSE MY_CURSOR
DEALLOCATE MY_CURSOR
Keep a look out for SQL Server to support the 'INSERT ALL' Statement. Oracle has it already, it looks like this (SQL Cookbook):
insert all
when loc in ('NEW YORK', 'BOSTON') THEN
into dept_east(deptno, dname, loc) values(deptno, dname, loc)
when loc in ('CHICAGO') THEN
into dept_mid(deptno, dname, loc) values(deptno, dname, loc)
else
into dept_west(deptno, dname, loc) values(deptno, dname, loc)
select deptno, dname, loc
from dept
BEGIN TRANSACTION;
DECLARE #tblMapping table(sourceid int, destid int)
INSERT INTO [table1] ([data])
OUTPUT source.id, new.id
Select [data] from [external_table] source;
INSERT INTO [table2] ([table1_id], [data])
Select map.destid, source.[more data]
from [external_table] source
inner join #tblMapping map on source.id=map.sourceid;
COMMIT TRANSACTION;
Create table #temp1
(
id int identity(1,1),
name varchar(50),
profession varchar(50)
)
Create table #temp2
(
id int identity(1,1),
name varchar(50),
profession varchar(50)
)
-----main query ------
insert into #temp1(name,profession)
output inserted.name,inserted.profession into #temp2
select 'Shekhar','IT'
You could write a stored procedure that iterates over the transaction that you have proposed. The iterator would be the cursor for the table that contains the source data.
Another option is to run the two inserts separately, leaving the FK column null, then running an update to poulate it correctly.
If there is nothing natural stored within the two tables that match from one record to another (likely) then create a temporary GUID column and populate this in your data and insert to both fields. Then you can update with the proper FK and null out the GUIDs.
E.g.:
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[table1] (
[id] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[data] [varchar](255) NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_table1] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([id] ASC),
JoinGuid UniqueIdentifier NULL
)
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[table2] (
[id] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[table1_id] [int] NULL,
[data] [varchar](255) NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_table2] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([id] ASC),
JoinGuid UniqueIdentifier NULL
)
INSERT INTO Table1....
INSERT INTO Table2....
UPDATE b
SET table1_id = a.id
FROM Table1 a
JOIN Table2 b on a.JoinGuid = b.JoinGuid
WHERE b.table1_id IS NULL
UPDATE Table1 SET JoinGuid = NULL
UPDATE Table2 SET JoinGuid = NULL