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I need to change the primary key of a table to an identity column, and there's already a number of rows in table.

I've got a script to clean up the IDs to ensure they're sequential starting at 1, works fine on my test database.

What's the SQL command to alter the column to have an identity property?

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9 Answers

up vote 74 down vote accepted

You can't alter the existing columns for identity.

You have 2 options,

  1. Create a new table with identity & drop the existing table

  2. Create a new column with identity & drop the existing column

Approach 1. (New table) Here you can retain the existing data values on the newly created identity column.

CREATE TABLE dbo.Tmp_Names
    (
      Id int NOT NULL
             IDENTITY(1, 1),
      Name varchar(50) NULL
    )
ON  [PRIMARY]
go

SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.Tmp_Names ON
go

IF EXISTS ( SELECT  *
            FROM    dbo.Names ) 
    INSERT  INTO dbo.Tmp_Names ( Id, Name )
            SELECT  Id,
                    Name
            FROM    dbo.Names TABLOCKX
go

SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.Tmp_Names OFF
go

DROP TABLE dbo.Names
go

Exec sp_rename 'Tmp_Names', 'Names'

Approach 2 (New column) You can’t retain the existing data values on the newly created identity column, The identity column will hold the sequence of number.

Alter Table Names
Add Id_new Int Identity(1, 1)
Go

Alter Table Names Drop Column ID
Go

Exec sp_rename 'Names.Id_new', 'ID', 'Column'

See the following Microsoft SQL Server Forum post for more details:

http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/forums/en-US/transactsql/thread/04d69ee6-d4f5-4f8f-a115-d89f7bcbc032

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3  
If table data is small, this option works gret. If table is large, there's another option I prefer: use ALTER TABLE ... SWITCH to replace the table schema with another version with an IDENTITY column but otherwise identical schema. The advantage of the ALTER TABLE.... SWITCH approach is that it completes quickly (under 5 seconds for a billion-row table) since no table data needs to be copied or changed. There are caveats and limitations though. See my answer below for details. – Justin Grant Nov 13 '09 at 17:56
@Justin Grat: A very interesting alternative and one that I had not considered! The reason this works is because IDENTITY is a column property and not a data type, so the SWITCH method validates the schemas between the two tables (old and new) as being identifiable irrespective of the IDENTITY difference. Thanks for sharing! – John Sansom Nov 15 '09 at 12:09

In SQL 2005 and above, there's a trick to solve this problem without changing the table's data pages. This is important for large tables where touching every data page can take minutes or hours. The trick also works even if the identity column is a primary key, is part of a clustered or non-clustered index, or other gotchas which can trip up the the simpler "add/remove/rename column" solution.

Here's the trick: you can use SQL Server's ALTER TABLE...SWITCH statement to change the schema of a table without changing the data, meaning you can replace a table with an IDENTITY with an identical table schema, but without an IDENTITY column. The same trick works to add IDENTITY to an existing column.

Normally, ALTER TABLE...SWITCH is used to efficiently replace a full partition in a partitioned table with a new, empty partition. But it can also be used in non-partitioned tables too.

I've used this trick to convert, in under 5 seconds, a column of a of a 2.5 billion row table from IDENTITY to a non-IDENTITY (in order to run a multi-hour query whose query plan worked better for non-IDENTITY columns), and then restored the IDENTITY setting, again in less than 5 seconds.

Here's a code sample of how it works.

 CREATE TABLE Test
 (
   id int identity(1,1),
   somecolumn varchar(10)
 );

 INSERT INTO Test VALUES ('Hello');
 INSERT INTO Test VALUES ('World');

 -- copy the table. use same schema, but no identity
 CREATE TABLE Test2
 (
   id int NOT NULL,
   somecolumn varchar(10)
 );

 ALTER TABLE Test SWITCH TO Test2;

 -- drop the original (now empty) table
 DROP TABLE Test;

 -- rename new table to old table's name
 EXEC sp_rename 'Test2','Test';

 -- see same records
 SELECT * FROM Test; 

This is obviosuly more involved than the solutions in other answers, but if your table is large this can be a real life-saver. There are some caveats:

  • you'll need to drop foriegn keys before you do the switch and restore them after.
  • same for WITH SCHEMABINDING functions, views, etc.
  • new table's indexes need to match exactly (same columns, same order, etc.)
  • old and new tables need to be on the same filegroup.
  • only works on SQL Server 2005 or later
  • I previously believed that this trick only works on the Enterprise or Developer editions of SQL Server (because partitions are only supported in Enterprise and Developer versions), but Mason G. Zhwiti in his comment below says that it also works in SQL Standard Edition too. I assume this means that the restriction to Enterprise or Developer doesn't apply to ALTER TABLE...SWITCH.

There's a good article on TechNet detailing the requirements above.

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+1 Do you know the origin of this "trick"? I first came across it in the workarounds to a connect item but I see your answer predates this. – Martin Smith Aug 24 '11 at 11:12
If my memory is correct, I got the idea from this article: sqlservercentral.com/articles/T-SQL/61979 – Justin Grant Aug 29 '11 at 6:05
FYI, this appears to also work on the Standard version of SQL 2008 R2. Perhaps they enabled this feature just like they've now enabled the ability to turn on backup compression. – Mason G. Zhwiti Oct 13 '11 at 16:04
Mason - great observation! I updated my answer accordingly. I'd assumed that, because partitions aren't supported in SQL Standard that ALTER TABLE...SWITCH wouldn't be supported either. But given that you can use this command on non-partitioned tables, it makes sense that you can also run it on Standard Edition. Thanks for the correction. – Justin Grant Oct 20 '11 at 1:08

You cannot alter a column to be an IDENTITY column. What you'll need to do is create a new column which is defined as an IDENTITY from the get-go, then drop the old column, and rename the new one to the old name.

ALTER TABLE (yourTable) ADD NewColumn INT IDENTITY(1,1)

ALTER TABLE (yourTable) DROP COLUMN OldColumnName

sp_rename 'yourTable.NewColumn', 'OldColumnName', 'COLUMN'

Marc

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Thanks, this worked perfectly. – Skrealin Mar 31 '11 at 7:31

you can't do it like that, you need to add another column, drop the original column and rename the new column or or create a new table, copy the data in and drop the old table followed by renaming the new table to the old table

if you use SSMS and set the identity property to ON in the designer here is what SQL Server does behind the scenes. So if you have a table named [user] this is what happens if you make UserID and identity

BEGIN TRANSACTION
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE
SET ARITHABORT ON
SET NUMERIC_ROUNDABORT OFF
SET CONCAT_NULL_YIELDS_NULL ON
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
SET ANSI_WARNINGS ON
COMMIT
BEGIN TRANSACTION

GO

GO
CREATE TABLE dbo.Tmp_User
    (
    UserID int NOT NULL IDENTITY (1, 1),
    LastName varchar(50) NOT NULL,
    FirstName varchar(50) NOT NULL,
    MiddleInitial char(1) NULL

    )  ON [PRIMARY]
GO

SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.Tmp_User ON
GO
IF EXISTS(SELECT * FROM dbo.[User])
 EXEC('INSERT INTO dbo.Tmp_User (UserID, LastName, FirstName, MiddleInitial)
    SELECT UserID, LastName, FirstName, MiddleInitialFROM dbo.[User] TABLOCKX')
GO
SET IDENTITY_INSERT dbo.Tmp_User OFF
GO

GO
DROP TABLE dbo.[User]
GO
EXECUTE sp_rename N'dbo.Tmp_User', N'User', 'OBJECT'
GO
ALTER TABLE dbo.[User] ADD CONSTRAINT
    PK_User PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED 
    (
    UserID
    ) ON [PRIMARY]

GO
COMMIT

Having said that there is a way to hack the system table to accomplish it by setting the bitwise value but that is not supported and I wouldn't do it

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There is cool solution described here: http://blog.sqlauthority.com/2009/05/03/sql-server-add-or-remove-identity-property-on-column/

In short edit manually your table in SQL Manager, switch the identity, DO NOT SAVE changes, just show the script which will be created for the changes, copy it and use it later.

It is huge time saver, because it (the script) contains all the foreign keys, indices, etc. related to the table you change. Writting this manually... God forbid.

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There isn't one, sadly; the IDENTITY property belongs to the table rather than the column.

The easier way is to do it in the GUI, but if this isn't an option, you can go the long way around of copying the data, dropping the column, re-adding it with identity, and putting the data back.

See here for a blow-by-blow account.

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By design there is no simple way to turn on or turn off the identity feature for an existing column. The only clean way to do this is to create a new column and make it an identity column or create a new table and migrate your data.

If we use SQL Server Management Studio to get rid of the identity value on column "id", a new temporary table is created, the data is moved to the temporary table, the old table is dropped and the new table is renamed.

Use Management Studio to make the change and then right click in the designer and select "Generate Change Script".

You will see that this is what SQL server in doing in the background.

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I don't believe you can alter an existing column to be an identity column using tsql. However, you can do it through the Enterprise Manager design view.

Alternatively you could create a new row as the identity column, drop the old column, then rename your new column.

ALTER TABLE FooTable
ADD BarColumn INT IDENTITY(1, 1)
               NOT NULL
               PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
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1  
keep in mind that if you do it thru SSMS/Enterprise Manager - you'll be creating a new table, copying data, dropping the old table, and renaming the new one. That can be quite expensive when you have large tables... – Scott Ivey Jun 26 '09 at 14:00

If the original poster was actually wanting to set an existing column to be a PRIMARY KEY for the table and actually did not need the column to be an IDENTITY column (two different things) then this can be done via t-SQL with:

ALTER TABLE [YourTableName]
ADD CONSTRAINT [ColumnToSetAsPrimaryKey] PRIMARY KEY ([ColumnToSetAsPrimaryKey])

Note the parenthesis around the column name after the PRIMARY KEY option.

Although this post is old and I am making an assumption about the requestors need, I felt this additional information could be helpful to users encountering this thread as I believe the conversation could lead one to believe that an existing column can not be set to be a primary key without adding it as a new column first which would be incorrect.

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