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I'm wondering if it is possible to run multiple DDL statements inside a transaction. I'm specially interested on SQL Server, even though answers with other databases (Oracle, PostgreSQL at least) could also be interesting.

I've been doing some "CREATE TABLE" and "CREATE VIEW" for the created table inside a transaction and there seems to be some inconsistencies and I'm wondering if the DDLs shouldn't be done inside the transaction...

I could probably move the DDL outside the transaction but I'd like to get some reference for this. What I have found this far:

  • MSDN page Isolation Levels in the Database Engine tells clearly that there are restrictions on what DDL operations can be performed in an explicit transaction that is running under snapshot isolation - but I'm not using snapshot isolation and this should result as an error.
    • This could be interpreted so that DDL operations can be performend in an explicit transaction under different isolation levels?
  • Oracle® Database Gateway for SQL Server User's Guide#DDL Statements states that only one DDL statement can be executed in a given transaction - is this valid also for SQL Server used straight?

For Oracle:

If it matters something, I'm doing this with Java through the JTDS JDBC driver.

b.r. Touko

4 Answers 4

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I know most databases have restrictions, but Postgres doesn't. You can run any number table creations, column changes and index changes in a transaction, and the changes aren't visible to other users unit COMMIT succeeds. That's how databases should be! :-)

As for SQL Server you can run DDL inside of a transaction, but SQL Server does not version metadata, and so changes would be visible to others before the transaction commits. But some DDL statements can be rolled back if you are in a transaction, but for which ones work and which ones don't you'll need to run some tests.

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  • 2
    Just to reply to my myself with some followup, two years later... Although SQL Server does not give isolated transactions for DDL, it can rollback multiple DDL statements that have been part of one transaction. My colleague just did a test on SQL Server 2008 R2: "I tried creating a table, adding a primary key column, inserting into another table, adding a column to another table, inserting into that and then forcing an error with some invalid SQL everything rolled back correctly!". Just make sure each DDL statement is in it's own batch (using GO separator). Jul 19, 2012 at 7:30
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    Should the take away be, "Don't run DDL in SQL server while the database is in use"? As in, it's usually okay to use a transaction for DDL as long as nothing else is reading the table (meaning your website should be down while you update the database, which it probably should, anyway).
    – jpmc26
    Mar 18, 2014 at 2:13
  • I can confirm Ingres allows (at least) column changes as part of a broader CRUD transaction. Probably not surprising given the Postgres / Ingres relationship.
    – Sepster
    Mar 12, 2015 at 15:40
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    Based on my experience it seems as if any applied DDL in a SQL Server transaction holds a lock on the table until the transaction is either committed or rolled back. I haven't seen documentation that specifies this behavior though.
    – jocull
    Nov 27, 2017 at 19:49
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If you are creating tables, views, etc on the fly (other than table variables or temp tables), you may truly need to rethink your design. This is not stuff that should normally happen from the user interface. Even if you must allow some customization, the DDL statements should not be happening at the same time as running transactional inserts/updates/deletes. It is far better to separate these functions.

This is also something that needs a healthy dose of consideration and testing as to what happens when two users try to change the structure of the same table at the same time and then run a transaction to insert data. There's some truly scary stuff that can happen when you allow users to make adjustments to your database structure.

Also some DDL statements must always be the first statement of a batch. Look out for that too when you are running them.

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  • You got good point, unfortunately with this project I'm forced to this legacy db design.. These batches seem to be a unit of SQL Server statements.. Probably I'm running all my statements in separate batches with JDBC until I explicitly want it.. at least I think..
    – Touko
    Jun 25, 2009 at 14:33
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    I would add that I would find DDL transactions very useful for a different set of circumstances - not updating on the fly, but ensuring that schema updates to a production database are never left in an inconsistent state.
    – Nathan
    Aug 7, 2009 at 14:47
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    Or for migrating schemas when the DB is managed fully by the application, and the user has upgraded from an earlier version of your app to a later one. Such migrations should never fail, but if they do it's better if the DB is left in the pre-migration state. Feb 1, 2010 at 13:09
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    Didn't answer the question, -1
    – Camron B
    May 16, 2013 at 21:20
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    @CamronBute It did answer the question, I said his proposed solution was a bad one and that he should rethink it. It is irresponsible to encourage people to bad solutions because that is what they want.
    – HLGEM
    May 16, 2013 at 21:52
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For the general case and IIRC, it's not safe to assume DDL statements are transactional.

That is to say, there is a great deal of leeway on how schema alterations interact within a transaction (assuming it does at all). This can be by vendor or even by the particular installation (i.e., up to the dba) I believe. So at the very least, don't use one DBMS to assume that others will treat DDL statements the say.

Edit: MySql is an example of a DBMS which doesn't support DDL transactions at all. Also, if you have database replication/mirroring you have to be very careful that the replication service (Sybase's replication is the norm, believe it or not) will actually replicate the DDL statement.

1

Could it be that in MS SQL, Implicit transactions are triggered when DDL and DML statements are run. If you toggle this off does this help, use SET IMPLICIT_TRANSACTIONS

EDIT: another possibility - You can't combine CREATE VIEW with other statements in the same batch. CREATE TABLE is ok. You separate batches with GO.

EDIT2: You CAN use multiple DDL in a transaction as long as separated with GO to create different batches.

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  • I'm using JDBC Connection#setAutoCommit(false) and the DML statements aren't done with implicit transactions. The results seem more be like that the table to create the view with wouldn't always be there or something.
    – Touko
    Jun 25, 2009 at 12:42
  • For EDIT: That might be but I'd like some reference to SQL Server documentation or something whether it is or isn't allowed..
    – Touko
    Jun 25, 2009 at 12:55
  • I used this book, see if you find online? Microsoft® SQL Server® 2008 T-SQL Fundamentals Print ISBN-10: 0-7356-2601-4 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-7356-2601-0
    – Stuart
    Jun 25, 2009 at 12:59
  • OK, thanks. Now it remains open for me how would this relate to JDBC (I could write this GO there as string but since my software should run on different DBMS's, that wouldn't be the first option) This GO is still different thing than transactions and BEGIN/COMMIT etc - has something to do with "batches" or something?
    – Touko
    Jun 25, 2009 at 13:08

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