ALTER TABLE [ database_name . [ schema_name ] . | schema_name . ] table_name { ALTER COLUMN column_name { [ type_schema_name. ] type_name [ ( { precision [ , scale ] | max | xml_schema_collection } ) ] [ COLLATE collation_name ] [ NULL | NOT NULL ] [ SPARSE ] | {ADD | DROP } { ROWGUIDCOL | PERSISTED | NOT FOR REPLICATION | SPARSE } } | [ WITH { CHECK | NOCHECK } ] | ADD { <column_definition> | <computed_column_definition> | <table_constraint> | <column_set_definition> } [ ,...n ] | DROP { [ CONSTRAINT ] { constraint_name [ WITH ( <drop_clustered_constraint_option> [ ,...n ] ) ] } [ ,...n ] | COLUMN { column_name } [ ,...n ] } [ ,...n ] | [ WITH { CHECK | NOCHECK } ] { CHECK | NOCHECK } CONSTRAINT { ALL | constraint_name [ ,...n ] } | { ENABLE | DISABLE } TRIGGER { ALL | trigger_name [ ,...n ] } | { ENABLE | DISABLE } CHANGE_TRACKING [ WITH ( TRACK_COLUMNS_UPDATED = { ON | OFF } ) ] | SWITCH [ PARTITION source_partition_number_expression ] TO target_table [ PARTITION target_partition_number_expression ] | SET ( FILESTREAM_ON = { partition_scheme_name | filegroup | "default" | "NULL" } ) | REBUILD [ [PARTITION = ALL] [ WITH ( <rebuild_option> [ ,...n ] ) ] | [ PARTITION = partition_number [ WITH ( <single_partition_rebuild_option> [ ,...n ] ) ] ] ] | <table_option> | <filetable_option> } [ ; ]
-- ALTER TABLE options <column_set_definition> ::= column_set_name XML COLUMN_SET FOR ALL_SPARSE_COLUMNS <drop_clustered_constraint_option> ::= { MAXDOP = max_degree_of_parallelism | ONLINE = {ON | OFF } | MOVE TO { partition_scheme_name ( column_name ) | filegroup | "default" } } <table_option> ::= { SET ( LOCK_ESCALATION = { AUTO | TABLE | DISABLE } ) } <filetable_option> ::= { [ { ENABLE | DISABLE } FILETABLE_NAMESPACE ] [ SET ( FILETABLE_DIRECTORY = directory_name ) ] } <single_partition_rebuild__option> ::= { SORT_IN_TEMPDB = { ON | OFF } | MAXDOP = max_degree_of_parallelism | DATA_COMPRESSION = { NONE | ROW | PAGE} } }
To add new rows of data, use INSERT. To remove rows of data, use DELETE or TRUNCATE TABLE. To change the values in existing rows, use UPDATE.
If there are any execution plans in the procedure cache that reference the table, ALTER TABLE marks them to be recompiled on their next execution.
Changing the Size of a Column
You can change the length, precision, or scale of a column by specifying a new size for the column data type in the ALTER COLUMN clause. If data exists in the column, the new size cannot be smaller than the maximum size of the data. Also, the column cannot be defined in an index, unless the column is a varchar, nvarchar, orvarbinary data type and the index is not the result of a PRIMARY KEY constraint. See example P.
Locks and ALTER TABLE
The changes specified in ALTER TABLE are implemented immediately. If the changes require modifications of the rows in the table, ALTER TABLE updates the rows. ALTER TABLE acquires a schema modify (SCH-M) lock on the table to make sure that no other connections reference even the metadata for the table during the change, except online index operations that require a very short SCH-M lock at the end. In an ALTER TABLE…SWITCH operation, the lock is acquired on both the source and target tables. The modifications made to the table are logged and fully recoverable. Changes that affect all the rows in very large tables, such as dropping a column or, on some editions of SQL Server, adding a NOT NULL column with a default value, can take a long time to complete and generate many log records. These ALTER TABLE statements should be executed with the same care as any INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement that affects many rows.
Adding NOT NULL Columns as an Online Operation
In SQL Server 2012 Enterprise Edition, adding a NOT NULL column with a default value is an online operation when the default value is a runtime constant. This means that the operation is completed almost instantaneously regardless of the number of rows in the table. This is because the existing rows in the table are not updated during the operation; instead, the default value is stored only in the metadata of the table and the value is looked up as needed in queries that access these rows. This behavior is automatic; no additional syntax is required to implement the online operation beyond the ADD COLUMN syntax. A runtime constant is an expression that produces the same value at runtime for each row in the table regardless of its determinism. For example, the constant expression "My temporary data", or the system function GETUTCDATETIME() are runtime constants. In contrast, the functions NEWID() or NEWSEQUENTIALID() are not runtime constants because a unique value is produced for each row in the table. Adding a NOT NULL column with a default value that is not a runtime constant is always performed offline and an exclusive (SCH-M) lock is acquired for the duration of the operation.
While the existing rows reference the value stored in metadata, the default value is stored on the row for any new rows that are inserted and do not specify another value for the column. The default value stored in metadata is moved to an existing row when the row is updated (even if the actual column is not specified in the UPDATE statement), or if the table or clustered index is rebuilt.
Columns of type varchar(max), nvarchar(max), varbinary(max), xml, text, ntext, image, hierarchyid,geometry, geography, or CLR UDTS, cannot be added in an online operation. A column cannot be added online if doing so causes the maximum possible row size to exceed the 8,060 byte limit. The column is added as an offline operation in this case.
Parallel Plan Execution
In Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Enterprise, the number of processors employed to run a single ALTER TABLE ADD (index based) CONSTRAINT or DROP (clustered index) CONSTRAINT statement is determined by themax degree of parallelism configuration option and the current workload. If the Database Engine detects that the system is busy, the degree of parallelism of the operation is automatically reduced before statement execution starts. You can manually configure the number of processors that are used to run the statement by specifying the MAXDOP option. For more information, see Configure the max degree of parallelism Server Configuration Option.
Partitioned Tables
In addition to performing SWITCH operations that involve partitioned tables, ALTER TABLE can be used to change the state of the columns, constraints, and triggers of a partitioned table just like it is used for nonpartitioned tables. However, this statement cannot be used to change the way the table itself is partitioned. To repartition a partitioned table, use ALTER PARTITION SCHEME and ALTER PARTITION FUNCTION. Additionally, you cannot change the data type of a column of a partitioned table.
Restrictions on Tables with Schema-Bound Views
The restrictions that apply to ALTER TABLE statements on tables with schema-bound views are the same as the restrictions currently applied when modifying tables with a simple index. Adding a column is allowed. However, removing or changing a column that participates in any schema-bound view is not allowed. If the ALTER TABLE statement requires changing a column used in a schema-bound view, ALTER TABLE fails and the Database Engine raises an error message. For more information about schema binding and indexed views, see CREATE VIEW (Transact-SQL).
Adding or removing triggers on base tables is not affected by creating a schema-bound view that references the tables.
Indexes and ALTER TABLE
Indexes created as part of a constraint are dropped when the constraint is dropped. Indexes that were created with CREATE INDEX must be dropped with DROP INDEX. The ALTER INDEX statement can be used to rebuild an index part of a constraint definition; the constraint does not have to be dropped and added again with ALTER TABLE.
All indexes and constraints based on a column must be removed before the column can be removed.
When a constraint that created a clustered index is deleted, the data rows that were stored in the leaf level of the clustered index are stored in a nonclustered table. You can drop the clustered index and move the resulting table to another filegroup or partition scheme in a single transaction by specifying the MOVE TO option. The MOVE TO option has the following restrictions:
- MOVE TO is not valid for indexed views or nonclustered indexes.
- The partition scheme or filegroup must already exist.
- If MOVE TO is not specified, the table will be located in the same partition scheme or filegroup as was defined for the clustered index.
When you drop a clustered index, you can specify ONLINE = ON option so the DROP INDEX transaction does not block queries and modifications to the underlying data and associated nonclustered indexes.
ONLINE = ON has the following restrictions:
- ONLINE = ON is not valid for clustered indexes that are also disabled. Disabled indexes must be dropped by using ONLINE = OFF.
- Only one index at a time can be dropped.
- ONLINE = ON is not valid for indexed views, nonclustered indexes or indexes on local temp tables.
Temporary disk space equal to the size of the existing clustered index is required to drop a clustered index. This additional space is released as soon as the operation is completed.
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The options listed under <drop_clustered_constraint_option> apply to clustered indexes on tables and cannot be applied to clustered indexes on views or nonclustered indexes.
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Replicating Schema Changes
By default, when you run ALTER TABLE on a published table at a SQL Server Publisher, that change is propagated to all SQL Server Subscribers. This functionality has some restrictions and can be disabled. For more information, see Make Schema Changes on Publication Databases.
Data Compression
System tables cannot be enabled for compression. . If the table is a heap, the rebuild operation for ONLINE mode will be single threaded. Use OFFLINE mode for a multi-threaded heap rebuild operation. For a more information about data compression, see Data Compression.
To evaluate how changing the compression state will affect a table, an index, or a partition, use thesp_estimate_data_compression_savings stored procedure.
The following restrictions apply to partitioned tables:
- You cannot change the compression setting of a single partition if the table has nonaligned indexes.
- The ALTER TABLE <table> REBUILD PARTITION ... syntax rebuilds the specified partition.
- The ALTER TABLE <table> REBUILD WITH ... syntax rebuilds all partitions.
The ALTER TABLE statement allows only two-part (schema.object) table names. In SQL Server 2012, specifying a table name using the following formats fails at compile time with error 117.
- server.database.schema.table
- .database.schema.table
- ..schema.table
In earlier versions specifying the format server.database.schema.table returned error 4902. Specifying the format .database.schema.table or the format ..schema.table succeeded.
To resolve the problem, remove the use of a 4-part prefix.
Requires ALTER permission on the table.
ALTER TABLE permissions apply to both tables involved in an ALTER TABLE SWITCH statement. Any data that is switched inherits the security of the target table.
If any columns in the ALTER TABLE statement are defined to be of a common language runtime (CLR) user-defined type or alias data type, REFERENCES permission on the type is required.
Adding a column that updates the rows of the table requires UPDATE permission on the table. For example, adding a NOT NULL column with a default value or adding an identity column when the table is not empty.
Category
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Featured syntax elements
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ADD • PRIMARY KEY with index options • sparse columns and column sets •
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DROP
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change data type • change column size • collation
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DATA_COMPRESSION • SWITCH PARTITION • LOCK ESCALATION • change tracking
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CHECK • NO CHECK • ENABLE TRIGGER • DISABLE TRIGGER
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Adding Columns and Constraints
Examples in this section demonstrate adding columns and constraints to a table.
A. Adding a new column
The following example adds a column that allows null values and has no values provided through a DEFAULT definition. In the new column, each row will have NULL.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exa (column_a INT) ; GO ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exa ADD column_b VARCHAR(20) NULL ; GO
B. Adding a column with a constraint
The following example adds a new column with a UNIQUE constraint.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exc (column_a INT) ; GO ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exc ADD column_b VARCHAR(20) NULL CONSTRAINT exb_unique UNIQUE ; GO EXEC sp_help doc_exc ; GO DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exc ; GO
C. Adding an unverified CHECK constraint to an existing column
The following example adds a constraint to an existing column in the table. The column has a value that violates the constraint. Therefore, WITH NOCHECK is used to prevent the constraint from being validated against existing rows, and to allow for the constraint to be added.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exd ( column_a INT) ; GO INSERT INTO dbo.doc_exd VALUES (-1) ; GO ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exd WITH NOCHECK ADD CONSTRAINT exd_check CHECK (column_a > 1) ; GO EXEC sp_help doc_exd ; GO DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exd ; GO
D. Adding a DEFAULT constraint to an existing column
The following example creates a table with two columns and inserts a value into the first column, and the other column remains NULL. A DEFAULT constraint is then added to the second column. To verify that the default is applied, another value is inserted into the first column, and the table is queried.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exz ( column_a INT, column_b INT) ; GO INSERT INTO dbo.doc_exz (column_a)VALUES ( 7 ) ; GO ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exz ADD CONSTRAINT col_b_def DEFAULT 50 FOR column_b ; GO INSERT INTO dbo.doc_exz (column_a) VALUES ( 10 ) ; GO SELECT * FROM dbo.doc_exz ; GO DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exz ; GO
E. Adding several columns with constraints
The following example adds several columns with constraints defined with the new column. The first new column has an IDENTITY property. Each row in the table has new incremental values in the identity column.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exe ( column_a INT CONSTRAINT column_a_un UNIQUE) ; GO ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exe ADD -- Add a PRIMARY KEY identity column. column_b INT IDENTITY CONSTRAINT column_b_pk PRIMARY KEY, -- Add a column that references another column in the same table. column_c INT NULL CONSTRAINT column_c_fk REFERENCES doc_exe(column_a), -- Add a column with a constraint to enforce that -- nonnull data is in a valid telephone number format. column_d VARCHAR(16) NULL CONSTRAINT column_d_chk CHECK (column_d LIKE '[0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]' OR column_d LIKE '([0-9][0-9][0-9]) [0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]'), -- Add a nonnull column with a default. column_e DECIMAL(3,3) CONSTRAINT column_e_default DEFAULT .081 ; GO EXEC sp_help doc_exe ; GO DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exe ; GO
F. Adding a nullable column with default values
The following example adds a nullable column with a DEFAULT definition, and uses WITH VALUES to provide values for each existing row in the table. If WITH VALUES is not used, each row has the value NULL in the new column.
USE AdventureWorks2012 ; GO CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exf ( column_a INT) ; GO INSERT INTO dbo.doc_exf VALUES (1) ; GO ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exf ADD AddDate smalldatetime NULL CONSTRAINT AddDateDflt DEFAULT GETDATE() WITH VALUES ; GO DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exf ; GO
G. Creating a PRIMARY KEY constraint with index options
The following example creates the PRIMARY KEY constraintPK_TransactionHistoryArchive_TransactionID and sets the options FILLFACTOR, ONLINE, andPAD_INDEX. The resulting clustered index will have the same name as the constraint.
USE AdventureWorks2012; GO ALTER TABLE Production.TransactionHistoryArchive WITH NOCHECK ADD CONSTRAINT PK_TransactionHistoryArchive_TransactionID PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED (TransactionID) WITH (FILLFACTOR = 75, ONLINE = ON, PAD_INDEX = ON); GO
H. Adding a sparse column
The following examples show adding and modifying sparse columns in table T1. The code to create table T1is as follows.
CREATE TABLE T1 (C1 int PRIMARY KEY, C2 varchar(50) SPARSE NULL, C3 int SPARSE NULL, C4 int ) ; GO
To add an additional sparse column C5, execute the following statement.
ALTER TABLE T1 ADD C5 char(100) SPARSE NULL ; GO
To convert the C4 non-sparse column to a sparse column, execute the following statement.
ALTER TABLE T1 ALTER COLUMN C4 ADD SPARSE ; GO
To convert the C4 sparse column to a nonsparse column, execute the following statement.
ALTER TABLE T1 ALTER COLUMN C4 DROP SPARSE; GO
I. Adding a column set
The following examples show adding a column to table T2. A column set cannot be added to a table that already contains sparse columns. The code to create table T2 is as follows.
CREATE TABLE T2 (C1 int PRIMARY KEY, C2 varchar(50) NULL, C3 int NULL, C4 int ) ; GO
The following three statements add a column set named CS, and then modify columns C2 and C3 to SPARSE.
ALTER TABLE T2 ADD CS XML COLUMN_SET FOR ALL_SPARSE_COLUMNS ; GO ALTER TABLE T2 ALTER COLUMN C2 ADD SPARSE ; GO ALTER TABLE T2 ALTER COLUMN C3 ADD SPARSE ; GO
Dropping Columns and Constraints
The examples in this section demonstrate dropping columns and constraints.
A. Dropping a column or columns
The first example modifies a table to remove a column. The second example removes multiple columns.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exb (column_a INT ,column_b VARCHAR(20) NULL ,column_c datetime ,column_d int) ; GO -- Remove a single column. ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exb DROP COLUMN column_b ; GO -- Remove multiple columns. ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exb DROP COLUMN column_c, column_d;
B. Dropping constraints and columns
The first example removes a UNIQUE constraint from a table. The second example removes two constraints and a single column.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exc ( column_a int NOT NULL CONSTRAINT my_constraint UNIQUE) ; GO -- Example 1. Remove a single constraint. ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exc DROP my_constraint ; GO DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exc; GO CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exc ( column_a int NOT NULL CONSTRAINT my_constraint UNIQUE ,column_b int NOT NULL CONSTRAINT my_pk_constraint PRIMARY KEY) ; GO -- Example 2. Remove two constraints and one column -- The keyword CONSTRAINT is optional. The keyword COLUMN is required. ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exc DROP CONSTRAINT CONSTRAINT my_constraint, my_pk_constraint, COLUMN column_b ; GO
C. Dropping a PRIMARY KEY constraint in the ONLINE mode
The following example deletes a PRIMARY KEY constraint with the ONLINE option set to ON.
USE AdventureWorks2012; GO ALTER TABLE Production.TransactionHistoryArchive DROP CONSTRAINT PK_TransactionHistoryArchive_TransactionID WITH (ONLINE = ON); GO
D. Adding and dropping a FOREIGN KEY constraint
The following example creates the table ContactBackup, and then alters the table, first by adding a FOREIGN KEY constraint that references the table Person.Person, then by dropping the FOREIGN KEY constraint.
USE AdventureWorks2012 ; GO CREATE TABLE Person.ContactBackup (ContactID int) ; GO ALTER TABLE Person.ContactBackup ADD CONSTRAINT FK_ContactBacup_Contact FOREIGN KEY (ContactID) REFERENCES Person.Person (BusinessEntityID) ; GO ALTER TABLE Person.ContactBackup DROP CONSTRAINT FK_ContactBacup_Contact ; GO DROP TABLE Person.ContactBackup ;
Altering a Column Definition
A. Changing the data type of a column
The following example changes a column of a table from INT to DECIMAL.
CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exy (column_a INT ) ; GO INSERT INTO dbo.doc_exy (column_a) VALUES (10) ; GO ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exy ALTER COLUMN column_a DECIMAL (5, 2) ; GO DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exy ; GO
B. Changing the size of a column
The following example increases the size of a varchar column and the precision and scale of a decimalcolumn. Because the columns contain data, the column size can only be increased. Also notice that col_a is defined in a unique index. The size of col_a can still be increased because the data type is a varchar and the index is not the result of a PRIMARY KEY constraint.
IF OBJECT_ID ( 'dbo.doc_exy', 'U' ) IS NOT NULL DROP TABLE dbo.doc_exy; GO -- Create a two-column table with a unique index on the varchar column. CREATE TABLE dbo.doc_exy ( col_a varchar(5) UNIQUE NOT NULL, col_b decimal (4,2)); GO INSERT INTO dbo.doc_exy VALUES ('Test', 99.99); GO -- Verify the current column size. SELECT name, TYPE_NAME(system_type_id), max_length, precision, scale FROM sys.columns WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'dbo.doc_exy'); GO -- Increase the size of the varchar column. ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exy ALTER COLUMN col_a varchar(25); GO -- Increase the scale and precision of the decimal column. ALTER TABLE dbo.doc_exy ALTER COLUMN col_b decimal (10,4); GO -- Insert a new row. INSERT INTO dbo.doc_exy VALUES ('MyNewColumnSize', 99999.9999) ; GO -- Verify the current column size. SELECT name, TYPE_NAME(system_type_id), max_length, precision, scale FROM sys.columns WHERE object_id = OBJECT_ID(N'dbo.doc_exy');
C. Changing column collation
The following example shows how to change the collation of a column. Frist, a table is created table with the default user collation.
CREATE TABLE T3 (C1 int PRIMARY KEY, C2 varchar(50) NULL, C3 int NULL, C4 int ) ; GO
Next, column C2 collation is changed to Latin1_General_BIN. Note that the data type is required, even though it is not changed.
ALTER TABLE T3 ALTER COLUMN C2 varchar(50) COLLATE Latin1_General_BIN; GO
Altering a Table Definition
The examples in this section demonstrate how to alter the definition of a table.
A. Modifying a table to change the compression
The following example changes the compression of a nonpartitioned table. The heap or clustered index will be rebuilt. If the table is a heap, all nonclustered indexes will be rebuilt.
ALTER TABLE T1 REBUILD WITH (DATA_COMPRESSION = PAGE);
The following example changes the compression of a partitioned table. The REBUILD PARTITION = 1 syntax causes only partition number 1 to be rebuilt.
ALTER TABLE PartitionTable1 REBUILD PARTITION = 1 WITH (DATA_COMPRESSION = NONE) ; GO
The same operation using the following alternate syntax causes all partitions in the table to be rebuilt.
ALTER TABLE PartitionTable1 REBUILD PARTITION = ALL WITH (DATA_COMPRESSION = PAGE ON PARTITIONS(1) ) ;
For additional data compression examples, see Data Compression.
B. Switching partitions between tables
The following example creates a partitioned table, assuming that partition scheme myRangePS1 is already created in the database. Next, a non-partitioned table is created with the same structure as the partitioned table and on the same filegroup as PARTITION 2 of table PartitionTable. The data of PARTITION 2 of table PartitionTable is then switched into table NonPartitionTable.
CREATE TABLE PartitionTable (col1 int, col2 char(10)) ON myRangePS1 (col1) ; GO CREATE TABLE NonPartitionTable (col1 int, col2 char(10)) ON test2fg ; GO ALTER TABLE PartitionTable SWITCH PARTITION 2 TO NonPartitionTable ; GO
C. Allowing lock escalation on partitioned tables
The following example enables lock escalation to the partition level on a partitioned table. If the table is not partitioned, lock escalation is set at the TABLE level.
ALTER TABLE dbo.T1 SET (LOCK_ESCALATION = AUTO); GO
D. Configuring change tracking on a table
The following example enables change tracking on the Person.Person table.
USE AdventureWorks2012; ALTER TABLE Person.Person ENABLE CHANGE_TRACKING;
The following example enables change tracking and enables the tracking of the columns that are updated during a change.
USE AdventureWorks2012; GO ALTER TABLE Person.Person ENABLE CHANGE_TRACKING WITH (TRACK_COLUMNS_UPDATED = ON)
The following example disables change tracking on the Person.Person table.
USE AdventureWorks2012; Go ALTER TABLE Person.Person DISABLE CHANGE_TRACKING;
Disabling and Enabling Constraints and Triggers
A. Disabling and re-enabling a constraint
The following example disables a constraint that limits the salaries accepted in the data. NOCHECK CONSTRAINT is used with ALTER TABLE to disable the constraint and allow for an insert that would typically violate the constraint. CHECK CONSTRAINT re-enables the constraint.
CREATE TABLE dbo.cnst_example (id INT NOT NULL, name VARCHAR(10) NOT NULL, salary MONEY NOT NULL CONSTRAINT salary_cap CHECK (salary < 100000) ); -- Valid inserts INSERT INTO dbo.cnst_example VALUES (1,'Joe Brown',65000); INSERT INTO dbo.cnst_example VALUES (2,'Mary Smith',75000); -- This insert violates the constraint. INSERT INTO dbo.cnst_example VALUES (3,'Pat Jones',105000); -- Disable the constraint and try again. ALTER TABLE dbo.cnst_example NOCHECK CONSTRAINT salary_cap; INSERT INTO dbo.cnst_example VALUES (3,'Pat Jones',105000); -- Re-enable the constraint and try another insert; this will fail. ALTER TABLE dbo.cnst_example CHECK CONSTRAINT salary_cap; INSERT INTO dbo.cnst_example VALUES (4,'Eric James',110000) ;
B. Disabling and re-enabling a trigger
The following example uses the DISABLE TRIGGER option of ALTER TABLE to disable the trigger and allow for an insert that would typically violate the trigger. ENABLE TRIGGER is then used to re-enable the trigger.
CREATE TABLE dbo.trig_example (id INT, name VARCHAR(12), salary MONEY) ; GO -- Create the trigger. CREATE TRIGGER dbo.trig1 ON dbo.trig_example FOR INSERT AS IF (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM INSERTED WHERE salary > 100000) > 0 BEGIN print 'TRIG1 Error: you attempted to insert a salary > $100,000' ROLLBACK TRANSACTION END ; GO -- Try an insert that violates the trigger. INSERT INTO dbo.trig_example VALUES (1,'Pat Smith',100001) ; GO -- Disable the trigger. ALTER TABLE dbo.trig_example DISABLE TRIGGER trig1 ; GO -- Try an insert that would typically violate the trigger. INSERT INTO dbo.trig_example VALUES (2,'Chuck Jones',100001) ; GO -- Re-enable the trigger. ALTER TABLE dbo.trig_example ENABLE TRIGGER trig1 ; GO -- Try an insert that violates the trigger. INSERT INTO dbo.trig_example VALUES (3,'Mary Booth',100001) ; GO
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