Is there an easy way to copy the data of a table to the same database with different table name without logging.
CREATE TABLE SCHEMA.NEW_TB LIKE SCHEMA.OLD_TB;
INSERT INTO SCHEMA.NEW_TB (SELECT * FROM SCHEMA.OLD_TB);
The above 2 statements will work but the table contains huge amount of data. So is it possible to copy the data without logging?
Use the following with auto commit switched off in your session:
CREATE TABLE SCHEMA.NEW_TB LIKE SCHEMA.OLD_TB;
COMMIT;
ALTER TABLE SCHEMA.NEW_TB ACTIVATE NOT LOGGED INITIALLY;
INSERT INTO SCHEMA.NEW_TB
SELECT * FROM SCHEMA.OLD_TB;
COMMIT;
It’s important to use ALTER TABLE and INSERT in the same transaction.
Related
If I execute a procedure that drops a table and then recreate it using 'SELECT INTO'.
IF that procedure raises an exception after dropping the table, does table dropping take place or not?
Unless you wrap them in a transaction,table will be dropped since each statement will be considered as an implicit transaction..
below are some tests
create table t1
(
id int not null primary key
)
drop table t11
insert into t1
select 1 union all select 1
table t11 will be dropped,even though insert will raise an exception..
one more example..
drop table orderstest
print 'dropped table'
waitfor delay '00:00:05'
select * into orderstest
from Orders
now after 2 seconds,kill session and you can still see orderstest being dropped
I checked with some other statements other than select into ,i don't see a reason why select into will behave differently and this applies even if you wrap statements in a stored proc..
IF you want to rollback all,use a transaction or more better use set xact_Abort on
Yes, the dropped table will be gone. I have had this issue when I script a new primary key. Depending on the table, it saves all the data to a table variable in memory, drops the table, creates a new one with the new pk, then loads the data. If the data violates the new pk, the statement fails and the table variable is dropped leaving me with a new table and no data.
My practice is to create the new table with a slightly different name, load the data, change both table names in a statement, then once all the data is confirmed loaded, drop the original table.
I am not sure if this question is an obvious one. I need to delete a load of data. Delete is expensive. I need to truncate the table but not fully so that the memory is released and watermark is changed.
Is there any feature which would allow me to truncate a table based on a condition for select rows?
Depends on how your table is organised.
1) if your (large) table is partitioned based on similar condition ( eg. you want to delete previous month's data and your table is partitioned by month), you could truncate only that partition, instead of the entire table.
2) The other option, provided you have some downtime, would be to insert the data that you want to keep into a temporary table, truncate the original table and then load the data back.
insert into <table1>
select * from <my_table>
where <condition>;
commit;
truncate table my_table;
insert into my_table
select * from <table1>;
commit;
--since the amount of data might change considerably,
--you might want to collect statistics again
exec dbms_stats.gather_table_stats
(ownname=>'SCHEMA_NAME',
tabname => 'MY_TABLE');
I was reading the MSDN site here:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb510625.aspx
and I'm a little confused about one thing.
The example from the site (copied at the bottom) uses the line WHEN NOT MATCHED BY TARGET. My question is, can I use that to do inserts, updates, and deletes all in the same merge? For example:
--Lazy syntax, but I think you get the idea.
MERGE x AS TARGET USING (ID, [More Fields...]) AS SOURCE
WHEN MATCHED
update
WHEN NOT MATCHED IN TARGET
insert
WHEN NOT MATCHED IN SOURCE
delete
MSDN EXAMPLE:
USE AdventureWorks2012;
GO
-- Create a temporary table variable to hold the output actions.
DECLARE #SummaryOfChanges TABLE(Change VARCHAR(20));
MERGE INTO Sales.SalesReason AS Target
USING (VALUES ('Recommendation','Other'), ('Review', 'Marketing'),
('Internet', 'Promotion'))
AS Source (NewName, NewReasonType)
ON Target.Name = Source.NewName
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET ReasonType = Source.NewReasonType
WHEN NOT MATCHED BY TARGET THEN
INSERT (Name, ReasonType) VALUES (NewName, NewReasonType)
OUTPUT $action INTO #SummaryOfChanges;
-- Query the results of the table variable.
SELECT Change, COUNT(*) AS CountPerChange
FROM #SummaryOfChanges
GROUP BY Change;
If you're doing a wholesale swap of the table, then one way would be to create two additional schemas:
CREATE SCHEMA shadow AUTHORIZATION dbo;
CREATE SCHEMA cache AUTHORIZATION dbo;
Now create a copy of your table in the cache schema:
CREATE TABLE cache.SalesReason(Name ...);
Now when you are doing your switch operation:
TRUNCATE TABLE cache.SalesReason;
INSERT cache.SalesReason(Name ...) SELECT ... FROM source;
-- this is a metadata operation so extremely fast - it will wait
-- for existing locks to be released, but won't block new locks
-- for very long at all:
BEGIN TRANSACTION;
ALTER SCHEMA shadow TRANSFER Sales.SalesReason;
ALTER SCHEMA Sales TRANSFER cache.SalesReason;
COMMIT TRANSACTION;
ALTER SCHEMA cache TRANSFER shadow.SalesReason;
TRUNCATE TABLE cache.SalesReason;
-- truncate is optional - I usually kept the data around for debugging
This won't work if you have foreign keys and other dependencies, and of course it completely invalidates statistics etc. and this, in turn, can affect plans, but if the most important thing is getting accurate data in front of your users with minimal interruption, this can be an approach to consider.
In SQL Server (in my case, 2005) how can I add the identity property to an existing table column using T-SQL?
Something like:
alter table tblFoo
alter column bar identity(1,1)
I don't beleive you can do that. Your best bet is to create a new identity column and copy the data over using an identity insert command (if you indeed want to keep the old values).
Here is a decent article describing the process in detail:
http://www.mssqltips.com/tip.asp?tip=1397
The solution posted by Vikash doesn't work; it produces an "Incorrect syntax" error in SQL Management Studio (2005, as the OP specified). The fact that the "Compact Edition" of SQL Server supports this kind of operation is just a shortcut, because the real process is more like what Robert & JohnFX said--creating a duplicate table, populating the data, renaming the original & new tables appropriately.
If you want to keep the values that already exist in the field that needs to be an identity, you could do something like this:
CREATE TABLE tname2 (etc.)
INSERT INTO tname2 FROM tname1
DROP TABLE tname1
CREATE TABLE tname1 (with IDENTITY specified)
SET IDENTITY_INSERT tname1 ON
INSERT INTO tname1 FROM tname2
SET IDENTITY_INSERT tname1 OFF
DROP tname2
Of course, dropping and re-creating a table (tname1) that is used by live code is NOT recommended! :)
Is the table populated? If not drop and recreate the table.
If it is populated what values already exist in the column? If they are values you don't want to keep.
Create a new table as you desire it, load the records from your old table into your new talbe and let the database populate the identity column as normal. Rename your original table and rename the new one to the correct name :).
Finally if the column you wish to make identity currently contains primary key values and is being referenced already by other tables you will need to totally re think if you're sure this is what you want to do :)
There is no direct way of doing this except:
A) through SQL i.e.:
-- make sure you have the correct CREATE TABLE script ready with IDENTITY
SELECT * INTO abcTable_copy FROM abcTable
DROP TABLE abcTable
CREATE TABLE abcTable -- this time with the IDENTITY column
SET IDENTITY_INSERT abcTable ON
INSERT INTO abcTable (..specify all columns!) FROM (..specify all columns!) abcTable_copy
SET INDENTITY_INSERT abcTable OFF
DROP TABLE abcTable_copy
-- I would suggest to verify the contents of both tables
-- before dropping the copy table
B) Through MSSMS which will do exactly the same in the background but will less fat-fingering.
In the MSSMS Object Explorer right click the table you need to modify
Select "design" Select the column you'd like to add IDENTITY to
Change the identity setting from NO -> YES (possibly seed)
Ctr+S the table
This will drop and recreate the table with all original data in it.
If you get a warning:
Go to MSSMS Tools -> Options -> Designers -> Table and database Designers
and uncheck the option "Prevent saving changes that require table re-creation"
Things to be careful about:
your DB has enough disk space before you do this
the DB is not in use (especially the table you are changing)
make sure to backup your DB before doing it
if the table has a lot of data (over 1G) try it somewhere else first
before using in real DB
Create a New Table
SELECT * INTO Table_New FROM Table_Current WHERE 1 = 0;
Drop Column from New Table
Alter table Table_New drop column id;
Add column with identity
Alter table Table_New add id int primary key identity;
Get All Data in New Table
SET IDENTITY_INSERT Table_New ON;
INSERT INTO Table_New (id, Name,CreatedDate,Modified)
SELECT id, Name,CreatedDate,Modified FROM Table_Current;
SET IDENTITY_INSERT Table_New OFF;
Drop old Table
drop table Table_Current;
Rename New Table as old One
EXEC sp_rename 'Table_New', 'Table_Current';
alter table tablename
alter column columnname
add Identity(100,1)
Is there an easy way to remove an identity from a table in SQL Server 2005?
When I use Management Studio, it generates a script that creates a mirror table without the identity, copies the data, drops the table, then renames the mirror table, etc. This script has 5231 lines in it because this table/column have many FK relations.
I'd feel much more comfortable running a simple alter/drop. Any ideas?
EDIT
I think I'm just going to go with the 5,231 line script from Enterprise Manager. However, I'm going to break it up into smaller parts which I can run and control better. This table "behaves" strange, if you try to delete 1 row (even one you just inserted, which is not in any other FK table), you get this error:
delete MyTable where MyPrimaryKey=1234
Msg 8621, Level 17, State 2, Line 1
The query processor ran out of stack space during query optimization. Please simplify the query.
No doubt, all the FKs. We will halt all access to our application and run in single user mode when we make these schema and related application changes. However, we need this to run fast, and I need an idea of how long it will take. I guess that I'll just have to test, test, test.
If you are on SQL Server 2005 or later, you can do this as a simple metadata change (NB: doesn't require an edition supporting partitioning as I originally stated).
Example code pilfered shamelessly from the workaround by Paul White on this Microsoft Connect Item.
USE tempdb;
GO
-- A table with an identity column
CREATE TABLE dbo.Source
(row_id INTEGER IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL, data SQL_VARIANT NULL);
GO
-- Some sample data
INSERT dbo.Source (data)
VALUES (CONVERT(SQL_VARIANT, 4)),
(CONVERT(SQL_VARIANT, 'X')),
(CONVERT(SQL_VARIANT, {d '2009-11-07'})),
(CONVERT(SQL_VARIANT, N'áéíóú'));
GO
-- Remove the identity property
BEGIN TRY;
-- All or nothing
BEGIN TRANSACTION;
-- A table with the same structure as the one with the identity column,
-- but without the identity property
CREATE TABLE dbo.Destination
(row_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL, data SQL_VARIANT NULL);
-- Metadata switch
ALTER TABLE dbo.Source SWITCH TO dbo.Destination;
-- Drop the old object, which now contains no data
DROP TABLE dbo.Source;
-- Rename the new object to make it look like the old one
EXECUTE sp_rename N'dbo.Destination', N'Source', 'OBJECT';
-- Success
COMMIT TRANSACTION;
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
-- Bugger!
IF XACT_STATE() <> 0 ROLLBACK TRANSACTION;
PRINT ERROR_MESSAGE();
END CATCH;
GO
-- Test the the identity property has indeed gone
INSERT dbo.Source (row_id, data)
VALUES (5, CONVERT(SQL_VARIANT, N'This works!'))
SELECT row_id,
data
FROM dbo.Source;
GO
-- Tidy up
DROP TABLE dbo.Source;
I don't believe you can directly drop the IDENTITY part of the column. Your best bet is probably to:
add another non-identity column to the table
copy the identity values to that column
drop the original identity column
rename the new column to replace the original column
If the identity column is part of a key or other constraint, you will need to drop those constraints and re-create them after the above operations are complete.
You could add a column to the table that is not an identity column, copy the data, drop the original column, and rename the new column to the old column and recreate the indexes.
Here is a link that shows an example. Still not a simple alter, but it is certainly better than 5231 lines.