I use begin transaction in my stored procedure. I have code that updates data:
UPDATE
employee
SET
name = @name,
surname = @surname
WHERE
empId = @empid;
Does SQL Server do any locking on the row or coloumn that is being updated? If this is not the case, how would I prevent other users from doing another update while there is a current update in progress? It doeesn't have to be in the stored procedure, C# is also an option.
UPDATE
statement will try to acquire update locks (U) on the row (or rows) being updated, and hold on to those locks until the transaction completes (with aCOMMIT
or aROLLBACK
).U
lock is taken when the row is read. Then, whenSQL Server
decides to update the it takes aX
lock by converting theU
lock toX
lock on row. (2) But, in some cases,SQL Server
decides to take directly anX
lock (so, noU
lock and thenU -> X
conversion).BEGIN TRANSACTION
on its own doesn't do anything - that's really what the OP was asking. RIght??BEGIN TRAN ...
) + another transaction isolation level (ex.SERIALIZABLE
) can change the duration of life forU
locks till the end of transaction (COMMIT
orROLLBACK
). Maybe this aspect is important for OP (it's just a supposition).