Identity increment is jumping in SQL Server database - sql

In one of my tables Fee in column "ReceiptNo" in SQL Server 2012 database identity increment suddenly started jumping to 100s instead of 1 depending on the following two things.
if it is 1205446 it is jumps to 1206306, if it is 1206321, it jumps to 1207306 and if it is 1207314, it jumps to 1208306. What I want to make you note is that the last three digits remain constant i.e 306 whenever the jumping occurs as shown in the following picture.
this problem occurs when I restart my computer

You are encountering this behaviour due to a performance improvement since SQL Server 2012.
It now by default uses a cache size of 1,000 when allocating IDENTITY values for an int column and restarting the service can "lose" unused values (The cache size is 10,000 for bigint/numeric).
This is mentioned in the documentation
SQL Server might cache identity values for performance reasons and
some of the assigned values can be lost during a database failure or
server restart. This can result in gaps in the identity value upon
insert. If gaps are not acceptable then the application should use its
own mechanism to generate key values. Using a sequence generator with
the NOCACHE option can limit the gaps to transactions that are never
committed.
From the data you have shown it looks like this happened after the data entry for 22 December then when it restarted SQL Server reserved the values 1206306 - 1207305. After data entry for 24 - 25 December was done another restart and SQL Server reserved the next range 1207306 - 1208305 visible in the entries for the 28th.
Unless you are restarting the service with unusual frequency any "lost" values are unlikely to make any significant dent in the range of values allowed by the datatype so the best policy is not to worry about it.
If this is for some reason a real issue for you some possible workarounds are...
You can use a SEQUENCE instead of an identity column and define a smaller cache size for example and use NEXT VALUE FOR in a column default.
Or apply trace flag 272 which makes the IDENTITY allocation logged as in versions up to 2008 R2. This applies globally to all databases.
Or, for recent versions, execute ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE = OFF to disable the identity caching for a specific database.
You should be aware none of these workarounds assure no gaps. This has never been guaranteed by IDENTITY as it would only be possible by serializing inserts to the table. If you need a gapless column you will need to use a different solution than either IDENTITY or SEQUENCE

This problems occurs after restarting the SQL Server.
The solution is:
Run SQL Server Configuration Manager.
Select SQL Server Services.
Right-click SQL Server and select Properties.
In the opening window under Startup Parameters, type -T272 and click Add, then press Apply button and restart.

From SQL Server 2017+ you could use ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION:
IDENTITY_CACHE = { ON | OFF }
Enables or disables identity cache at the database level. The default
is ON. Identity caching is used to improve INSERT performance on
tables with Identity columns. To avoid gaps in the values of the
Identity column in cases where the server restarts unexpectedly or
fails over to a secondary server, disable the IDENTITY_CACHE option.
This option is similar to the existing SQL Server Trace Flag 272,
except that it can be set at the database level rather than only at
the server level.
(...)
G. Set IDENTITY_CACHE
This example disables the identity cache.
ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE=OFF ;

I know my answer might be late to the party. But i have solved in another way by adding a start up stored procedure in SQL Server 2012.
Create a following stored procedure in master DB.
USE [master]
GO
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[ResetTableNameIdentityAfterRestart]
AS
BEGIN
begin TRAN
declare #id int = 0
SELECT #id = MAX(id) FROM [DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]
--print #id
DBCC CHECKIDENT ('[DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]', reseed, #id)
Commit
END
Then add it in to Start up by using following syntax.
EXEC sp_procoption 'ResetOrderIdentityAfterRestart', 'startup', 'on';
This is a good idea if you have few tables. but if you have to do for many tables, this method still works but not a good idea.

This is still a very common issue among many developers and applications regardless of size.
Unfortunately the suggestions above do not fix all scenarios, i.e. Shared hosting, you cannot rely on your host to set the -t272 startup parameter.
Also, if you have existing tables that use these identity columns for primary keys, it is a HUGE effort to drop those columns and recreate new ones to use the BS sequence workaround. The Sequence workaround is only good if you are designing the tables new from scratch in SQL 2012+
Bottom line is, if you are on Sql Server 2008R2, then STAY ON IT. Seriously, stay on it. Until Microsoft admits that they introduced a HUGE bug, which is still there even in Sql Server 2016, then we should not upgrade until they own it and FIX IT.
Microsoft straight up introduced a breaking change, i.e. they broke a working API that no longer works as designed, due to the fact that their system forgets their current identity on a restart. Cache or no cache, this is unacceptable, and the Microsoft developer by the name of Bryan needs to own it, instead of tell the world that it is "by design" and a "feature". Sure, the caching is a feature, but losing track of what the next identity should be, IS NOT A FEATURE. It's a fricken BUG!!!
I will share the workaround that I used, because My DB's are on Shared Hosting servers, also, I am not dropping and recreating my Primary Key columns, that would be a huge PITA.
Instead, this is my shameful hack (but not as shameful as this POS bug that microsoft has introduced).
Hack/Fix:
Before your insert commands, just reseed your identity before each insert. This fix is only recommended if you don't have admin control over your Sql Server instance, otherwise I suggest reseeding on restart of server.
declare #newId int -- where int is the datatype of your PKey or Id column
select #newId = max(YourBuggedIdColumn) from YOUR_TABLE_NAME
DBCC CheckIdent('YOUR_TABLE_NAME', RESEED, #newId)
Just those 3 lines immediately before your insert, and you should be good to go. It really won't affect performance that much, i.e. it will be unnoticeable.
Goodluck.

There are many possible reasons for jumping identity values. They range from rolled back inserts to identity management for replication. What is causing this in your case I can't tell without spending some time in your system.
You should know however, that in no case you can assume an identity column to be contiguos. There are just too many things that can cause gaps.
You can find a little more information about this here: http://sqlity.net/en/792/the-gap-in-the-identity-value-sequence/

Related

Auto-increment value does NOT gradually increasing [duplicate]

In one of my tables Fee in column "ReceiptNo" in SQL Server 2012 database identity increment suddenly started jumping to 100s instead of 1 depending on the following two things.
if it is 1205446 it is jumps to 1206306, if it is 1206321, it jumps to 1207306 and if it is 1207314, it jumps to 1208306. What I want to make you note is that the last three digits remain constant i.e 306 whenever the jumping occurs as shown in the following picture.
this problem occurs when I restart my computer
You are encountering this behaviour due to a performance improvement since SQL Server 2012.
It now by default uses a cache size of 1,000 when allocating IDENTITY values for an int column and restarting the service can "lose" unused values (The cache size is 10,000 for bigint/numeric).
This is mentioned in the documentation
SQL Server might cache identity values for performance reasons and
some of the assigned values can be lost during a database failure or
server restart. This can result in gaps in the identity value upon
insert. If gaps are not acceptable then the application should use its
own mechanism to generate key values. Using a sequence generator with
the NOCACHE option can limit the gaps to transactions that are never
committed.
From the data you have shown it looks like this happened after the data entry for 22 December then when it restarted SQL Server reserved the values 1206306 - 1207305. After data entry for 24 - 25 December was done another restart and SQL Server reserved the next range 1207306 - 1208305 visible in the entries for the 28th.
Unless you are restarting the service with unusual frequency any "lost" values are unlikely to make any significant dent in the range of values allowed by the datatype so the best policy is not to worry about it.
If this is for some reason a real issue for you some possible workarounds are...
You can use a SEQUENCE instead of an identity column and define a smaller cache size for example and use NEXT VALUE FOR in a column default.
Or apply trace flag 272 which makes the IDENTITY allocation logged as in versions up to 2008 R2. This applies globally to all databases.
Or, for recent versions, execute ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE = OFF to disable the identity caching for a specific database.
You should be aware none of these workarounds assure no gaps. This has never been guaranteed by IDENTITY as it would only be possible by serializing inserts to the table. If you need a gapless column you will need to use a different solution than either IDENTITY or SEQUENCE
This problems occurs after restarting the SQL Server.
The solution is:
Run SQL Server Configuration Manager.
Select SQL Server Services.
Right-click SQL Server and select Properties.
In the opening window under Startup Parameters, type -T272 and click Add, then press Apply button and restart.
From SQL Server 2017+ you could use ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION:
IDENTITY_CACHE = { ON | OFF }
Enables or disables identity cache at the database level. The default
is ON. Identity caching is used to improve INSERT performance on
tables with Identity columns. To avoid gaps in the values of the
Identity column in cases where the server restarts unexpectedly or
fails over to a secondary server, disable the IDENTITY_CACHE option.
This option is similar to the existing SQL Server Trace Flag 272,
except that it can be set at the database level rather than only at
the server level.
(...)
G. Set IDENTITY_CACHE
This example disables the identity cache.
ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE=OFF ;
I know my answer might be late to the party. But i have solved in another way by adding a start up stored procedure in SQL Server 2012.
Create a following stored procedure in master DB.
USE [master]
GO
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[ResetTableNameIdentityAfterRestart]
AS
BEGIN
begin TRAN
declare #id int = 0
SELECT #id = MAX(id) FROM [DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]
--print #id
DBCC CHECKIDENT ('[DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]', reseed, #id)
Commit
END
Then add it in to Start up by using following syntax.
EXEC sp_procoption 'ResetOrderIdentityAfterRestart', 'startup', 'on';
This is a good idea if you have few tables. but if you have to do for many tables, this method still works but not a good idea.
This is still a very common issue among many developers and applications regardless of size.
Unfortunately the suggestions above do not fix all scenarios, i.e. Shared hosting, you cannot rely on your host to set the -t272 startup parameter.
Also, if you have existing tables that use these identity columns for primary keys, it is a HUGE effort to drop those columns and recreate new ones to use the BS sequence workaround. The Sequence workaround is only good if you are designing the tables new from scratch in SQL 2012+
Bottom line is, if you are on Sql Server 2008R2, then STAY ON IT. Seriously, stay on it. Until Microsoft admits that they introduced a HUGE bug, which is still there even in Sql Server 2016, then we should not upgrade until they own it and FIX IT.
Microsoft straight up introduced a breaking change, i.e. they broke a working API that no longer works as designed, due to the fact that their system forgets their current identity on a restart. Cache or no cache, this is unacceptable, and the Microsoft developer by the name of Bryan needs to own it, instead of tell the world that it is "by design" and a "feature". Sure, the caching is a feature, but losing track of what the next identity should be, IS NOT A FEATURE. It's a fricken BUG!!!
I will share the workaround that I used, because My DB's are on Shared Hosting servers, also, I am not dropping and recreating my Primary Key columns, that would be a huge PITA.
Instead, this is my shameful hack (but not as shameful as this POS bug that microsoft has introduced).
Hack/Fix:
Before your insert commands, just reseed your identity before each insert. This fix is only recommended if you don't have admin control over your Sql Server instance, otherwise I suggest reseeding on restart of server.
declare #newId int -- where int is the datatype of your PKey or Id column
select #newId = max(YourBuggedIdColumn) from YOUR_TABLE_NAME
DBCC CheckIdent('YOUR_TABLE_NAME', RESEED, #newId)
Just those 3 lines immediately before your insert, and you should be good to go. It really won't affect performance that much, i.e. it will be unnoticeable.
Goodluck.
There are many possible reasons for jumping identity values. They range from rolled back inserts to identity management for replication. What is causing this in your case I can't tell without spending some time in your system.
You should know however, that in no case you can assume an identity column to be contiguos. There are just too many things that can cause gaps.
You can find a little more information about this here: http://sqlity.net/en/792/the-gap-in-the-identity-value-sequence/

Identity SQL Server [duplicate]

In one of my tables Fee in column "ReceiptNo" in SQL Server 2012 database identity increment suddenly started jumping to 100s instead of 1 depending on the following two things.
if it is 1205446 it is jumps to 1206306, if it is 1206321, it jumps to 1207306 and if it is 1207314, it jumps to 1208306. What I want to make you note is that the last three digits remain constant i.e 306 whenever the jumping occurs as shown in the following picture.
this problem occurs when I restart my computer
You are encountering this behaviour due to a performance improvement since SQL Server 2012.
It now by default uses a cache size of 1,000 when allocating IDENTITY values for an int column and restarting the service can "lose" unused values (The cache size is 10,000 for bigint/numeric).
This is mentioned in the documentation
SQL Server might cache identity values for performance reasons and
some of the assigned values can be lost during a database failure or
server restart. This can result in gaps in the identity value upon
insert. If gaps are not acceptable then the application should use its
own mechanism to generate key values. Using a sequence generator with
the NOCACHE option can limit the gaps to transactions that are never
committed.
From the data you have shown it looks like this happened after the data entry for 22 December then when it restarted SQL Server reserved the values 1206306 - 1207305. After data entry for 24 - 25 December was done another restart and SQL Server reserved the next range 1207306 - 1208305 visible in the entries for the 28th.
Unless you are restarting the service with unusual frequency any "lost" values are unlikely to make any significant dent in the range of values allowed by the datatype so the best policy is not to worry about it.
If this is for some reason a real issue for you some possible workarounds are...
You can use a SEQUENCE instead of an identity column and define a smaller cache size for example and use NEXT VALUE FOR in a column default.
Or apply trace flag 272 which makes the IDENTITY allocation logged as in versions up to 2008 R2. This applies globally to all databases.
Or, for recent versions, execute ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE = OFF to disable the identity caching for a specific database.
You should be aware none of these workarounds assure no gaps. This has never been guaranteed by IDENTITY as it would only be possible by serializing inserts to the table. If you need a gapless column you will need to use a different solution than either IDENTITY or SEQUENCE
This problems occurs after restarting the SQL Server.
The solution is:
Run SQL Server Configuration Manager.
Select SQL Server Services.
Right-click SQL Server and select Properties.
In the opening window under Startup Parameters, type -T272 and click Add, then press Apply button and restart.
From SQL Server 2017+ you could use ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION:
IDENTITY_CACHE = { ON | OFF }
Enables or disables identity cache at the database level. The default
is ON. Identity caching is used to improve INSERT performance on
tables with Identity columns. To avoid gaps in the values of the
Identity column in cases where the server restarts unexpectedly or
fails over to a secondary server, disable the IDENTITY_CACHE option.
This option is similar to the existing SQL Server Trace Flag 272,
except that it can be set at the database level rather than only at
the server level.
(...)
G. Set IDENTITY_CACHE
This example disables the identity cache.
ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE=OFF ;
I know my answer might be late to the party. But i have solved in another way by adding a start up stored procedure in SQL Server 2012.
Create a following stored procedure in master DB.
USE [master]
GO
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[ResetTableNameIdentityAfterRestart]
AS
BEGIN
begin TRAN
declare #id int = 0
SELECT #id = MAX(id) FROM [DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]
--print #id
DBCC CHECKIDENT ('[DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]', reseed, #id)
Commit
END
Then add it in to Start up by using following syntax.
EXEC sp_procoption 'ResetOrderIdentityAfterRestart', 'startup', 'on';
This is a good idea if you have few tables. but if you have to do for many tables, this method still works but not a good idea.
This is still a very common issue among many developers and applications regardless of size.
Unfortunately the suggestions above do not fix all scenarios, i.e. Shared hosting, you cannot rely on your host to set the -t272 startup parameter.
Also, if you have existing tables that use these identity columns for primary keys, it is a HUGE effort to drop those columns and recreate new ones to use the BS sequence workaround. The Sequence workaround is only good if you are designing the tables new from scratch in SQL 2012+
Bottom line is, if you are on Sql Server 2008R2, then STAY ON IT. Seriously, stay on it. Until Microsoft admits that they introduced a HUGE bug, which is still there even in Sql Server 2016, then we should not upgrade until they own it and FIX IT.
Microsoft straight up introduced a breaking change, i.e. they broke a working API that no longer works as designed, due to the fact that their system forgets their current identity on a restart. Cache or no cache, this is unacceptable, and the Microsoft developer by the name of Bryan needs to own it, instead of tell the world that it is "by design" and a "feature". Sure, the caching is a feature, but losing track of what the next identity should be, IS NOT A FEATURE. It's a fricken BUG!!!
I will share the workaround that I used, because My DB's are on Shared Hosting servers, also, I am not dropping and recreating my Primary Key columns, that would be a huge PITA.
Instead, this is my shameful hack (but not as shameful as this POS bug that microsoft has introduced).
Hack/Fix:
Before your insert commands, just reseed your identity before each insert. This fix is only recommended if you don't have admin control over your Sql Server instance, otherwise I suggest reseeding on restart of server.
declare #newId int -- where int is the datatype of your PKey or Id column
select #newId = max(YourBuggedIdColumn) from YOUR_TABLE_NAME
DBCC CheckIdent('YOUR_TABLE_NAME', RESEED, #newId)
Just those 3 lines immediately before your insert, and you should be good to go. It really won't affect performance that much, i.e. it will be unnoticeable.
Goodluck.
There are many possible reasons for jumping identity values. They range from rolled back inserts to identity management for replication. What is causing this in your case I can't tell without spending some time in your system.
You should know however, that in no case you can assume an identity column to be contiguos. There are just too many things that can cause gaps.
You can find a little more information about this here: http://sqlity.net/en/792/the-gap-in-the-identity-value-sequence/

SQL server auto increment field [duplicate]

In one of my tables Fee in column "ReceiptNo" in SQL Server 2012 database identity increment suddenly started jumping to 100s instead of 1 depending on the following two things.
if it is 1205446 it is jumps to 1206306, if it is 1206321, it jumps to 1207306 and if it is 1207314, it jumps to 1208306. What I want to make you note is that the last three digits remain constant i.e 306 whenever the jumping occurs as shown in the following picture.
this problem occurs when I restart my computer
You are encountering this behaviour due to a performance improvement since SQL Server 2012.
It now by default uses a cache size of 1,000 when allocating IDENTITY values for an int column and restarting the service can "lose" unused values (The cache size is 10,000 for bigint/numeric).
This is mentioned in the documentation
SQL Server might cache identity values for performance reasons and
some of the assigned values can be lost during a database failure or
server restart. This can result in gaps in the identity value upon
insert. If gaps are not acceptable then the application should use its
own mechanism to generate key values. Using a sequence generator with
the NOCACHE option can limit the gaps to transactions that are never
committed.
From the data you have shown it looks like this happened after the data entry for 22 December then when it restarted SQL Server reserved the values 1206306 - 1207305. After data entry for 24 - 25 December was done another restart and SQL Server reserved the next range 1207306 - 1208305 visible in the entries for the 28th.
Unless you are restarting the service with unusual frequency any "lost" values are unlikely to make any significant dent in the range of values allowed by the datatype so the best policy is not to worry about it.
If this is for some reason a real issue for you some possible workarounds are...
You can use a SEQUENCE instead of an identity column and define a smaller cache size for example and use NEXT VALUE FOR in a column default.
Or apply trace flag 272 which makes the IDENTITY allocation logged as in versions up to 2008 R2. This applies globally to all databases.
Or, for recent versions, execute ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE = OFF to disable the identity caching for a specific database.
You should be aware none of these workarounds assure no gaps. This has never been guaranteed by IDENTITY as it would only be possible by serializing inserts to the table. If you need a gapless column you will need to use a different solution than either IDENTITY or SEQUENCE
This problems occurs after restarting the SQL Server.
The solution is:
Run SQL Server Configuration Manager.
Select SQL Server Services.
Right-click SQL Server and select Properties.
In the opening window under Startup Parameters, type -T272 and click Add, then press Apply button and restart.
From SQL Server 2017+ you could use ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION:
IDENTITY_CACHE = { ON | OFF }
Enables or disables identity cache at the database level. The default
is ON. Identity caching is used to improve INSERT performance on
tables with Identity columns. To avoid gaps in the values of the
Identity column in cases where the server restarts unexpectedly or
fails over to a secondary server, disable the IDENTITY_CACHE option.
This option is similar to the existing SQL Server Trace Flag 272,
except that it can be set at the database level rather than only at
the server level.
(...)
G. Set IDENTITY_CACHE
This example disables the identity cache.
ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE=OFF ;
I know my answer might be late to the party. But i have solved in another way by adding a start up stored procedure in SQL Server 2012.
Create a following stored procedure in master DB.
USE [master]
GO
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[ResetTableNameIdentityAfterRestart]
AS
BEGIN
begin TRAN
declare #id int = 0
SELECT #id = MAX(id) FROM [DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]
--print #id
DBCC CHECKIDENT ('[DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]', reseed, #id)
Commit
END
Then add it in to Start up by using following syntax.
EXEC sp_procoption 'ResetOrderIdentityAfterRestart', 'startup', 'on';
This is a good idea if you have few tables. but if you have to do for many tables, this method still works but not a good idea.
This is still a very common issue among many developers and applications regardless of size.
Unfortunately the suggestions above do not fix all scenarios, i.e. Shared hosting, you cannot rely on your host to set the -t272 startup parameter.
Also, if you have existing tables that use these identity columns for primary keys, it is a HUGE effort to drop those columns and recreate new ones to use the BS sequence workaround. The Sequence workaround is only good if you are designing the tables new from scratch in SQL 2012+
Bottom line is, if you are on Sql Server 2008R2, then STAY ON IT. Seriously, stay on it. Until Microsoft admits that they introduced a HUGE bug, which is still there even in Sql Server 2016, then we should not upgrade until they own it and FIX IT.
Microsoft straight up introduced a breaking change, i.e. they broke a working API that no longer works as designed, due to the fact that their system forgets their current identity on a restart. Cache or no cache, this is unacceptable, and the Microsoft developer by the name of Bryan needs to own it, instead of tell the world that it is "by design" and a "feature". Sure, the caching is a feature, but losing track of what the next identity should be, IS NOT A FEATURE. It's a fricken BUG!!!
I will share the workaround that I used, because My DB's are on Shared Hosting servers, also, I am not dropping and recreating my Primary Key columns, that would be a huge PITA.
Instead, this is my shameful hack (but not as shameful as this POS bug that microsoft has introduced).
Hack/Fix:
Before your insert commands, just reseed your identity before each insert. This fix is only recommended if you don't have admin control over your Sql Server instance, otherwise I suggest reseeding on restart of server.
declare #newId int -- where int is the datatype of your PKey or Id column
select #newId = max(YourBuggedIdColumn) from YOUR_TABLE_NAME
DBCC CheckIdent('YOUR_TABLE_NAME', RESEED, #newId)
Just those 3 lines immediately before your insert, and you should be good to go. It really won't affect performance that much, i.e. it will be unnoticeable.
Goodluck.
There are many possible reasons for jumping identity values. They range from rolled back inserts to identity management for replication. What is causing this in your case I can't tell without spending some time in your system.
You should know however, that in no case you can assume an identity column to be contiguos. There are just too many things that can cause gaps.
You can find a little more information about this here: http://sqlity.net/en/792/the-gap-in-the-identity-value-sequence/

Identity jump issue in sql server 2012 [duplicate]

In one of my tables Fee in column "ReceiptNo" in SQL Server 2012 database identity increment suddenly started jumping to 100s instead of 1 depending on the following two things.
if it is 1205446 it is jumps to 1206306, if it is 1206321, it jumps to 1207306 and if it is 1207314, it jumps to 1208306. What I want to make you note is that the last three digits remain constant i.e 306 whenever the jumping occurs as shown in the following picture.
this problem occurs when I restart my computer
You are encountering this behaviour due to a performance improvement since SQL Server 2012.
It now by default uses a cache size of 1,000 when allocating IDENTITY values for an int column and restarting the service can "lose" unused values (The cache size is 10,000 for bigint/numeric).
This is mentioned in the documentation
SQL Server might cache identity values for performance reasons and
some of the assigned values can be lost during a database failure or
server restart. This can result in gaps in the identity value upon
insert. If gaps are not acceptable then the application should use its
own mechanism to generate key values. Using a sequence generator with
the NOCACHE option can limit the gaps to transactions that are never
committed.
From the data you have shown it looks like this happened after the data entry for 22 December then when it restarted SQL Server reserved the values 1206306 - 1207305. After data entry for 24 - 25 December was done another restart and SQL Server reserved the next range 1207306 - 1208305 visible in the entries for the 28th.
Unless you are restarting the service with unusual frequency any "lost" values are unlikely to make any significant dent in the range of values allowed by the datatype so the best policy is not to worry about it.
If this is for some reason a real issue for you some possible workarounds are...
You can use a SEQUENCE instead of an identity column and define a smaller cache size for example and use NEXT VALUE FOR in a column default.
Or apply trace flag 272 which makes the IDENTITY allocation logged as in versions up to 2008 R2. This applies globally to all databases.
Or, for recent versions, execute ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE = OFF to disable the identity caching for a specific database.
You should be aware none of these workarounds assure no gaps. This has never been guaranteed by IDENTITY as it would only be possible by serializing inserts to the table. If you need a gapless column you will need to use a different solution than either IDENTITY or SEQUENCE
This problems occurs after restarting the SQL Server.
The solution is:
Run SQL Server Configuration Manager.
Select SQL Server Services.
Right-click SQL Server and select Properties.
In the opening window under Startup Parameters, type -T272 and click Add, then press Apply button and restart.
From SQL Server 2017+ you could use ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION:
IDENTITY_CACHE = { ON | OFF }
Enables or disables identity cache at the database level. The default
is ON. Identity caching is used to improve INSERT performance on
tables with Identity columns. To avoid gaps in the values of the
Identity column in cases where the server restarts unexpectedly or
fails over to a secondary server, disable the IDENTITY_CACHE option.
This option is similar to the existing SQL Server Trace Flag 272,
except that it can be set at the database level rather than only at
the server level.
(...)
G. Set IDENTITY_CACHE
This example disables the identity cache.
ALTER DATABASE SCOPED CONFIGURATION SET IDENTITY_CACHE=OFF ;
I know my answer might be late to the party. But i have solved in another way by adding a start up stored procedure in SQL Server 2012.
Create a following stored procedure in master DB.
USE [master]
GO
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[ResetTableNameIdentityAfterRestart]
AS
BEGIN
begin TRAN
declare #id int = 0
SELECT #id = MAX(id) FROM [DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]
--print #id
DBCC CHECKIDENT ('[DatabaseName].dbo.[TableName]', reseed, #id)
Commit
END
Then add it in to Start up by using following syntax.
EXEC sp_procoption 'ResetOrderIdentityAfterRestart', 'startup', 'on';
This is a good idea if you have few tables. but if you have to do for many tables, this method still works but not a good idea.
This is still a very common issue among many developers and applications regardless of size.
Unfortunately the suggestions above do not fix all scenarios, i.e. Shared hosting, you cannot rely on your host to set the -t272 startup parameter.
Also, if you have existing tables that use these identity columns for primary keys, it is a HUGE effort to drop those columns and recreate new ones to use the BS sequence workaround. The Sequence workaround is only good if you are designing the tables new from scratch in SQL 2012+
Bottom line is, if you are on Sql Server 2008R2, then STAY ON IT. Seriously, stay on it. Until Microsoft admits that they introduced a HUGE bug, which is still there even in Sql Server 2016, then we should not upgrade until they own it and FIX IT.
Microsoft straight up introduced a breaking change, i.e. they broke a working API that no longer works as designed, due to the fact that their system forgets their current identity on a restart. Cache or no cache, this is unacceptable, and the Microsoft developer by the name of Bryan needs to own it, instead of tell the world that it is "by design" and a "feature". Sure, the caching is a feature, but losing track of what the next identity should be, IS NOT A FEATURE. It's a fricken BUG!!!
I will share the workaround that I used, because My DB's are on Shared Hosting servers, also, I am not dropping and recreating my Primary Key columns, that would be a huge PITA.
Instead, this is my shameful hack (but not as shameful as this POS bug that microsoft has introduced).
Hack/Fix:
Before your insert commands, just reseed your identity before each insert. This fix is only recommended if you don't have admin control over your Sql Server instance, otherwise I suggest reseeding on restart of server.
declare #newId int -- where int is the datatype of your PKey or Id column
select #newId = max(YourBuggedIdColumn) from YOUR_TABLE_NAME
DBCC CheckIdent('YOUR_TABLE_NAME', RESEED, #newId)
Just those 3 lines immediately before your insert, and you should be good to go. It really won't affect performance that much, i.e. it will be unnoticeable.
Goodluck.
There are many possible reasons for jumping identity values. They range from rolled back inserts to identity management for replication. What is causing this in your case I can't tell without spending some time in your system.
You should know however, that in no case you can assume an identity column to be contiguos. There are just too many things that can cause gaps.
You can find a little more information about this here: http://sqlity.net/en/792/the-gap-in-the-identity-value-sequence/

What could cause an IDENTITY column to become corrupted?

I had an unusual problem yesterday where I was suddenly unable to insert records into a table with an identity column.
A simple insert like this: INSERT INTO MyTable (Column1, Column2) VALUES ('text', 236764)
Started throwing a primary key constraint violation.
I ran DBCC CHECKIDENT on the table, and realized that SQL Server had stopped updating the last used value, so that when it was inserting it was incrementing using the old value and the new identity value usually already existed in the table, hence the violation errors.
Resolving the problem wasn't an issue, I just reseeded the table for the next highest sequence number, but I've never seen this happen before!
Does anyone have any idea what might cause SQL Server to stop updating identity properties, and where I might look for evidence? There is no replication or any triggers involved, it's just a plain old table.
EDIT: SQL Log Rescue would have been ideal, but it only works on SQL Server 2000. Is there a similar tool out there for SQL 2005 logs?
If someone has inserted to the table using SET IDENTITY_INSERT ON, someone could absolutely have entered in an invalid value for the table. That would be my first guess. You could use a log analyzer like SQL Log Rescue to go back in time through the transaction logs and see if you could find who the bad person was who messed up your data...
I think SET IDENTITY_INSERT ON reseeds the Identity.
From BOL
If the value inserted is larger than
the current identity value for the
table, SQL Server automatically uses
the new inserted value as the current
identity value.
The only way I could reproduce this issue was to manually set the seed too low with DBCC CHECKIDENT.