I have a source table that drives the content of a second table. I have two or more processes that will be running for this (with different additions to the where clause). All essentially use the statement below. Somehow I am getting duplicates in the destination table. I am not currently specifying an isolation level - or any locking hints. The SQL Server is running 2005 which is something I cannot change (I know 2008's MERGE
would probably be applicable).
INSERT INTO tableDst
(PK, ...)
SELECT src.PK, ...
FROM tableSrc src
LEFT JOIN tableDst dst ON src.PK = dst.PK
WHERE dst.PK IS NULL
The two tables are in different databases. Both databases are on the same instance on the same server, so cross-database statements such as this are possible.
What isolation level or locking hints do I need to make this work in an atomic fashion, so duplicates are prevented? Do I need to wrap it in a transaction?