271

I need to write a T-SQL stored procedure that updates a row in a table. If the row doesn't exist, insert it. All this steps wrapped by a transaction.

This is for a booking system, so it must be atomic and reliable. It must return true if the transaction was committed and the flight booked.

I'm sure on how to use @@rowcount. This is what I've written until now. Am I on the right road?

-- BEGIN TRANSACTION (HOW TO DO?)
    
UPDATE Bookings
 SET TicketsBooked = TicketsBooked + @TicketsToBook
 WHERE FlightId = @Id AND TicketsMax < (TicketsBooked + @TicketsToBook)

-- Here I need to insert only if the row doesn't exists.
-- If the row exists but the condition TicketsMax is violated, I must not insert 
-- the row and return FALSE

IF @@ROWCOUNT = 0 
BEGIN

 INSERT INTO Bookings ... (omitted)
               
END

-- END TRANSACTION (HOW TO DO?)

-- Return TRUE (How to do?)
2

12 Answers 12

200

I assume a single row for each flight? If so:

IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Bookings WHERE FLightID = @Id)
BEGIN
    --UPDATE HERE
END
ELSE
BEGIN
   -- INSERT HERE
END

I assume what I said, as your way of doing things can overbook a flight, as it will insert a new row when there are 10 tickets max and you are booking 20.

7
  • Yes. There is 1 row per flight. But your code do the SELECT but doesn't check if the flight is full before to UPDATE. How to do this?
    – Robert
    Mar 12, 2009 at 18:31
  • 4
    Due to race conditions it's only correct if current transaction isolation level is Serializable. Sep 27, 2011 at 11:53
  • 1
    @Martin: The answer was focused on the question at hand. From the OP's own statement "All this steps wrapped by a transaction". If the transaction is implemented correctly, the thread safe issue should not be an issue. Sep 27, 2011 at 14:37
  • 15
    @GregoryABeamer - Simply sticking it in a BEGIN TRAN ... COMMIT under default isolation level won't resolve the issue. The OP specified that atomic and reliable were requirements. Your answer fails to address this in any shape or form. Sep 27, 2011 at 14:49
  • 2
    Would this be thread-safe if (UPDLOCK, HOLDLOCK) was added to the SELECT: IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Bookings (UPDLOCK, HOLDLOCK) WHERE FLightID = @Id)?
    – Jim
    Nov 25, 2016 at 11:08
173

Take a look at MERGE command. You can do UPDATE, INSERT & DELETE in one statement.

Here is a working implementation on using MERGE
- It checks whether flight is full before doing an update, else does an insert.

if exists(select 1 from INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES T 
              where T.TABLE_NAME = 'Bookings') 
begin
    drop table Bookings
end
GO

create table Bookings(
  FlightID    int identity(1, 1) primary key,
  TicketsMax    int not null,
  TicketsBooked int not null
)
GO

insert  Bookings(TicketsMax, TicketsBooked) select 1, 0
insert  Bookings(TicketsMax, TicketsBooked) select 2, 2
insert  Bookings(TicketsMax, TicketsBooked) select 3, 1
GO

select * from Bookings

And then ...

declare @FlightID int = 1
declare @TicketsToBook int = 2

--; This should add a new record
merge Bookings as T
using (select @FlightID as FlightID, @TicketsToBook as TicketsToBook) as S
    on  T.FlightID = S.FlightID
      and T.TicketsMax > (T.TicketsBooked + S.TicketsToBook)
  when matched then
    update set T.TicketsBooked = T.TicketsBooked + S.TicketsToBook
  when not matched then
    insert (TicketsMax, TicketsBooked) 
    values(S.TicketsToBook, S.TicketsToBook);

select * from Bookings
3
  • 7
    Also, see why you might like WITH (HOLDLOCK) for that MERGE. Jun 27, 2013 at 4:34
  • 4
    I think MERGE is supported after 2005 (so 2008+).
    – samus
    Dec 4, 2013 at 15:04
  • 4
    MERGE without WITH(UPDLOCK) can have primary key violations, which would be bad in this case. See [Is MERGE an atomic statement in SQL2008?] (stackoverflow.com/questions/9871644/…)
    – James
    Feb 3, 2015 at 22:41
74

Pass updlock, rowlock, holdlock hints when testing for existence of the row.

begin tran /* default read committed isolation level is fine */

if not exists (select * from Table with (updlock, rowlock, holdlock) where ...)
    /* insert */
else
    /* update */

commit /* locks are released here */

The updlock hint forces the query to take an update lock on the row if it already exists, preventing other transactions from modifying it until you commit or roll back.

The holdlock hint forces the query to take a range lock, preventing other transactions from adding a row matching your filter criteria until you commit or roll back.

The rowlock hint forces lock granularity to row level instead of the default page level, so your transaction won't block other transactions trying to update unrelated rows in the same page (but be aware of the trade-off between reduced contention and the increase in locking overhead - you should avoid taking large numbers of row-level locks in a single transaction).

See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms187373.aspx for more information.

Note that locks are taken as the statements which take them are executed - invoking begin tran doesn't give you immunity against another transaction pinching locks on something before you get to it. You should try and factor your SQL to hold locks for the shortest possible time by committing the transaction as soon as possible (acquire late, release early).

Note that row-level locks may be less effective if your PK is a bigint, as the internal hashing on SQL Server is degenerate for 64-bit values (different key values may hash to the same lock id).

4
  • 4
    Locking is VERY important to avoid overbooking. Is it correct to assume that a lock declared in the IF statement is held until the end of the IF statement, i.e. for one update statement? Then it might be wise to show the code above using begin end block markers to prevent newbies from copy&pasting your code and still getting it wrong.
    – Simon B.
    Oct 7, 2010 at 17:14
  • Is there a problem if my PK is a varchar (NOT max though) or a combination of three VARCHAR columns ?
    – Steam
    Feb 21, 2014 at 21:30
  • I made a question related to this answer at - stackoverflow.com/questions/21945850/… Question is can this code be used for inserting millions of rows.
    – Steam
    Feb 21, 2014 at 22:00
  • 1
    This solution would impose too much locking overhead in cases when many threads often test already existing rows. I guess this can be worked around with a kind of double checked locking via preventive extra exists check without locking hints.
    – Vadzim
    May 14, 2018 at 19:36
50

i'm writing my solution. my method doesn't stand 'if' or 'merge'. my method is easy.

INSERT INTO TableName (col1,col2)
SELECT @par1, @par2
   WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT col1,col2 FROM TableName
                     WHERE col1=@par1 AND col2=@par2)

For Example:

INSERT INTO Members (username)
SELECT 'Cem'
   WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT username FROM Members
                     WHERE username='Cem')

Explanation:

(1) SELECT col1,col2 FROM TableName WHERE col1=@par1 AND col2=@par2 It selects from TableName searched values

(2) SELECT @par1, @par2 WHERE NOT EXISTS It takes if not exists from (1) subquery

(3) Inserts into TableName (2) step values

2
  • 2
    it is only for inserting, not updating.
    – Cem
    May 17, 2017 at 15:07
  • 2
    It's actually still possible for this method to fail cause check for existence is done before the insert - see stackoverflow.com/a/3790757/1744834 May 15, 2020 at 9:34
9

I finally was able to insert a row, on the condition that it didn't already exist, using the following model:

INSERT INTO table ( column1, column2, column3 )
(
    SELECT $column1, $column2, $column3
      WHERE NOT EXISTS (
        SELECT 1
          FROM table 
          WHERE column1 = $column1
          AND column2 = $column2
          AND column3 = $column3 
    )
)

which I found at:

http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/[email protected]

2
  • 1
    This is a copy-paste link only answer... better suited as comment.
    – Ian
    Mar 28, 2016 at 4:35
  • This worked for me too (for inserts), after adding SELECT 1 FROM table WITH (UPDLOCK, HOLDLOCK) to the subquery.
    – cs_pupil
    Feb 18 at 21:46
3

This is something I just recently had to do:

set ANSI_NULLS ON
set QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[cjso_UpdateCustomerLogin]
    (
      @CustomerID AS INT,
      @UserName AS VARCHAR(25),
      @Password AS BINARY(16)
    )
AS 
    BEGIN
        IF ISNULL((SELECT CustomerID FROM tblOnline_CustomerAccount WHERE CustomerID = @CustomerID), 0) = 0
        BEGIN
            INSERT INTO [tblOnline_CustomerAccount] (
                [CustomerID],
                [UserName],
                [Password],
                [LastLogin]
            ) VALUES ( 
                /* CustomerID - int */ @CustomerID,
                /* UserName - varchar(25) */ @UserName,
                /* Password - binary(16) */ @Password,
                /* LastLogin - datetime */ NULL ) 
        END
        ELSE
        BEGIN
            UPDATE  [tblOnline_CustomerAccount]
            SET     UserName = @UserName,
                    Password = @Password
            WHERE   CustomerID = @CustomerID    
        END

    END
0
1

You could use the Merge Functionality to achieve. Otherwise you can do:

declare @rowCount int

select @rowCount=@@RowCount

if @rowCount=0
begin
--insert....
0
1

Full solution is below (including cursor structure). Many thanks to Cassius Porcus for the begin trans ... commit code from posting above.

declare @mystat6 bigint
declare @mystat6p varchar(50)
declare @mystat6b bigint

DECLARE mycur1 CURSOR for

 select result1,picture,bittot from  all_Tempnogos2results11

 OPEN mycur1

 FETCH NEXT FROM mycur1 INTO @mystat6, @mystat6p , @mystat6b

 WHILE @@Fetch_Status = 0
 BEGIN

 begin tran /* default read committed isolation level is fine */

 if not exists (select * from all_Tempnogos2results11_uniq with (updlock, rowlock, holdlock)
                     where all_Tempnogos2results11_uniq.result1 = @mystat6 
                        and all_Tempnogos2results11_uniq.bittot = @mystat6b )
     insert all_Tempnogos2results11_uniq values (@mystat6 , @mystat6p , @mystat6b)

 --else
 --  /* update */

 commit /* locks are released here */

 FETCH NEXT FROM mycur1 INTO @mystat6 , @mystat6p , @mystat6b

 END

 CLOSE mycur1

 DEALLOCATE mycur1
 go
1
INSERT INTO [DatabaseName1].dbo.[TableName1] SELECT * FROM [DatabaseName2].dbo.[TableName2]
 WHERE [YourPK] not in (select [YourPK] from [DatabaseName1].dbo.[TableName1])
0

Simple way to copy data from T1 to T2 and avoid duplicate in T2

--Insert a new record
INSERT INTO dbo.Table2(NoEtu, FirstName, LastName)
SELECT t1.NoEtuDos, t1.FName, t1.LName 
FROM dbo.Table1 as t1
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT (1) FROM dbo.Table2  AS t2
                    WHERE t1.FName = t2.FirstName
                        AND t1.LName = t2.LastName
                        AND t1.NoEtuDos = t2.NoEtu)
-2
INSERT INTO table ( column1, column2, column3 )
SELECT $column1, $column2, $column3
EXCEPT SELECT column1, column2, column3
FROM table
2
  • INSERT INTO table ( column1, column2, column3 ) SELECT $column1, $column2, $column3 EXCEPT SELECT column1, column2, column3 from table
    – Aaron
    Mar 27, 2015 at 22:47
  • 1
    There are a lot of highly upvoted answers to this question. Could you elaborate to explain what this answer add to the existing answers ?
    – francis
    Mar 28, 2015 at 16:55
-2

The best approach to this problem is first making the database column UNIQUE

ALTER TABLE table_name ADD UNIQUE KEY

THEN INSERT IGNORE INTO table_name ,the value won't be inserted if it results in a duplicate key/already exists in the table.

1
  • I believe he is asking for SQL Server not MYSQL, INSERT IGNORE doesn't exists
    – AbbathCL
    Feb 25, 2021 at 17:59

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