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The title really is the question for this one: Is there an equivalent in T-SQL to C#'s "throw;" to re-throw exceptions?

In C# one can do this:

try
{
    DoSomethingThatMightThrowAnException();
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
    // Do something with the exception
    throw; // Re-throw it as-is.
}

Is there something in T-SQL's BEGIN CATCH functionality that does the same?

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4 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

You can use RAISERROR. From the MSDN documentation on RAISERROR:

BEGIN TRY
    -- RAISERROR with severity 11-19 will cause execution to 
    -- jump to the CATCH block
    RAISERROR ('Error raised in TRY block.', -- Message text.
               16, -- Severity.
               1 -- State.
               );
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
    DECLARE @ErrorMessage NVARCHAR(4000);
    DECLARE @ErrorSeverity INT;
    DECLARE @ErrorState INT;

    SELECT @ErrorMessage = ERROR_MESSAGE(),
           @ErrorSeverity = ERROR_SEVERITY(),
           @ErrorState = ERROR_STATE();

    -- Use RAISERROR inside the CATCH block to return 
    -- error information about the original error that 
    -- caused execution to jump to the CATCH block.
    RAISERROR (@ErrorMessage, -- Message text.
               @ErrorSeverity, -- Severity.
               @ErrorState -- State.
               );
END CATCH;

EDIT:

This is not really the same thing as c#'s throw or throw ex. As @henrikstaunpoulsen points out you don't get the original error number in the new error (RAISERROR is restricted in which numbers it can use). You would have to use some sort of convention and parse the information (if available) out of the message.

MSDN has an article Using TRY...CATCH in Transact-SQL and I used some of the code to create the test below:

use test;
GO

IF OBJECT_ID (N'usp_RethrowError',N'P') IS NOT NULL
	DROP PROCEDURE usp_RethrowError;
GO

CREATE PROCEDURE usp_RethrowError AS
	IF ERROR_NUMBER() IS NULL
		RETURN;

	DECLARE 
		@ErrorMessage    NVARCHAR(4000),
		@ErrorNumber     INT,
		@ErrorSeverity   INT,
		@ErrorState      INT,
		@ErrorLine       INT,
		@ErrorProcedure  NVARCHAR(200);

	SELECT 
		@ErrorNumber = ERROR_NUMBER(),
		@ErrorSeverity = ERROR_SEVERITY(),
		@ErrorState = ERROR_STATE(),
		@ErrorLine = ERROR_LINE(),
		@ErrorProcedure = ISNULL(ERROR_PROCEDURE(), '-');

	SELECT @ErrorMessage = 
		N'Error %d, Level %d, State %d, Procedure %s, Line %d, ' + 
			'Message: '+ ERROR_MESSAGE();

	RAISERROR 
		(
		@ErrorMessage, 
		@ErrorSeverity, 
		@ErrorState,               
		@ErrorNumber,    -- parameter: original error number.
		@ErrorSeverity,  -- parameter: original error severity.
		@ErrorState,     -- parameter: original error state.
		@ErrorProcedure, -- parameter: original error procedure name.
		@ErrorLine       -- parameter: original error line number.
		);
GO

PRINT 'No Catch'
DROP TABLE XXXX

PRINT 'Single Catch'
BEGIN TRY
	DROP TABLE XXXX
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
	EXEC usp_RethrowError;
END CATCH;

PRINT 'Double Catch'
BEGIN TRY
	BEGIN TRY
		DROP TABLE XXXX
	END TRY
	BEGIN CATCH
		EXEC usp_RethrowError;
	END CATCH;
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
	EXEC usp_RethrowError;
END CATCH;

Which produces the following output:

No Catch
Msg 3701, Level 11, State 5, Line 3
Cannot drop the table 'XXXX', because it does not exist or you do not have permission.
Single Catch
Msg 50000, Level 11, State 5, Procedure usp_RethrowError, Line 25
Error 3701, Level 11, State 5, Procedure -, Line 7, Message: Cannot drop the table 'XXXX', because it does not exist or you do not have permission.
Double Catch
Msg 50000, Level 11, State 5, Procedure usp_RethrowError, Line 25
Error 50000, Level 11, State 5, Procedure usp_RethrowError, Line 25, Message: Error 3701, Level 11, State 5, Procedure -, Line 16, Message: Cannot drop the table 'XXXX', because it does not exist or you do not have permission.
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Is there not a problem with this, in that the error number is different from the original exception? – henrikstaunpoulsen Nov 6 at 12:26
@henrikstaunpoulsen Yes you are correct. I don't think that is possible in T-SQL or any other way. I updated the post with more information on this point. – ongle Nov 6 at 16:43
vote up 0 vote down

you can raise exceptions using RAISEERROR

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms178592.aspx

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vote up 0 vote down

I generally use the following:

DECLARE @Outcome as bit
DECLARE @Error as int

BEGIN TRANSACTION 

-- *** YOUR TSQL TRY CODE HERE **** 


-- Capture the TSQL outcome. 
SET @Error = @@ERROR 

-- Set the Outcome to be returned to the .NET code to successful
SET @Outcome = 1


IF @Error <> 0
	BEGIN	
		-- An Error was generate so we invoke ROLLBACK
		ROLLBACK
		-- We set the Outcome to be returned to .Net to unsuccessful
		SET @Outcome = 0
	end

ELSE
	BEGIN
		-- The transaction was successful, invoke COMMIT
		COMMIT
	END



-- Returning a boolean value to the .NET code
Select @Outcome as Outcome
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vote up 0 vote down

Here is what I have used to rethrow an exception after rolling back the transaction. This gives the line number information of the error too.

BEGIN TRY
	BEGIN TRANSACTION    -- Start the transaction

	-- Do your work here

	-- Commit the transaction
	COMMIT TRANSACTION

END TRY

BEGIN CATCH
	-- There was an error, rollback the transaction
	IF @@TRANCOUNT > 0
		ROLLBACK TRANSACTION

	-- Raise an error with the details of the exception
	DECLARE @ErrorMessage nvarchar(2048)
	DECLARE @ErrorProcedure nvarchar(128)
	DECLARE @ErrorState int
	DECLARE @ErrorLine int
	DECLARE @ErrorSeverity int

	SET @ErrorProcedure = ERROR_PROCEDURE()
	SET @ErrorLine = ERROR_LINE()
	SET @ErrorSeverity = ERROR_SEVERITY()
	SET @ErrorState = ERROR_STATE()
	SET @ErrorMessage = ''

	IF @ErrorProcedure IS NOT NULL
		SET @ErrorMessage = @ErrorMessage + @ErrorProcedure + ' ';

	IF @ErrorLine IS NOT NULL
		SET @ErrorMessage = @ErrorMessage + '[Line ' + CAST(@ErrorLine as nvarchar) + '] ';

	SET @ErrorMessage = @ErrorMessage + ERROR_MESSAGE()

	RAISERROR(@ErrorMessage, @ErrorSeverity, @ErrorState)
END CATCH
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