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According to several resources, such as this,

A query that is executed within the context of a trigger is automatically wrapped in a transaction. If there are any distributed queries in the trigger code, the transaction is promoted to a distributed transaction automatically.

Simple question - is there a way to prevent this behavior? I'm looking for a way to explicitly prevent code in my trigger from running in the context of a transaction.

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If you are trying to do something asynchronous so that the calling transaction doesn't have to wait, you may consider Service Broker, which is designed to do exactly that - go fire off some asynchronous task, and return control to the caller, regardless of transaction scope.

Another idea is to not have your trigger perform the work, but instead pop a work item onto a queue table, and have a background process running continuously to process the queue. This isn't necessarily easy to do if your work item operates on the set of data in inserted/deleted but without more context it certainly seems like a viable option.

I don't know of a way to prevent a trigger from being a part of the calling transaction - in fact that's kind of the whole point.

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This is called "autonomous transaction", and the simplest way to implement is by creating a linked server to point to the original database.

See this MSDN blog for a possible solution.

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