i have a series of T-SQL statements separated by the special Query Analyzer batch separator keyword:

GO

If one batch fails, i need Query Analyzer to not try subsequent batches - i want it to stop processing the series of batches.

For example:

PRINT 'This runs'
go

SELECT 0/0, 'This causes an error'
go

PRINT 'This should not run'
go

Output:

This runs
Server: Msg 8134, Level 16, State 1, Line 2
Divide by zero error encountered.
This should not run

Possible?


Update

An example of this in real use might be:

 sp_rename 'Shelby', 'Kirsten'
 go

 DROP VIEW PeekAView
 go

 CREATE VIEW PeekAViewAS 
 SELECT * FROM Kirsten
 go
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73% accept rate
did any of these answers work for you? – KM. May 29 '09 at 20:31
This is a very valid question, why are there so many downvotes? – Andomar May 29 '09 at 20:54
feedback

6 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Here is how I'd do it:

PRINT 'This runs'
go

SELECT 0/0, 'This causes an error'
go
if (@@error <> 0)
    Begin
    set nocount on
    set noexec on
    End
GO

PRINT 'This should not run'
go

set noexec off
set nocount off
GO

The "noexec" mode puts SSMS is a state where it just compiles the T-SQL and doesn't actually execute it. It is similar to accidentally pressing the Parse toolbar button (Ctrl+F5) instead of Execute (F5).

Don't forget to turn noexec back off at the end of your script. Otherwise users are going to get confused by permanent "Command(s) completed successfully." messages.

I use the check against @@error in the subsequent batch instead of using TRY CATCH blocks. Using @@error in the next batch will catch compile errors, like "table doesn't exist".

In addition to the noexec mode, I also toggle the nocount mode. With noexec mode on and nocount off, your queries will still report a message "(0 rows(s) affected)". The message always reports zero rows, because you're in noexec mode. However, turning nocount on suppresses these messages.

Also note that if running SQL Server 2005 the command you are skipping might still give error messages if it references a table that doesn't exist and the command if the first command in the batch. Forcing the command to be the second command in the batch with a bogus Print statement can suppress this. See MS Bug #569263 for more details.

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In the years since i asked this question i learned that an SQL diff tool (not SQL Compare) does this. After every statement check if there is still a transaction in progress, and if not SET NOEXEC ON – Ian Boyd May 23 at 13:26
feedback

When I need to do this, I issue a RAISERROR of severity 20. This, or higher, will kill the current connection, and prevent subsequent "GO batches" from executing. Yes, it can be awkward, but it does the job.

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According to stackoverflow.com/questions/659188/… it needs a 'with log' as well. Either the above suggestion or the 'set noexec on' method mentioned by the linked question are the most elegant ways of achieving this, IMO. – JT. Dec 14 '10 at 23:13
feedback

Create a temporary table; and update it after each step (if successful); and then check the success of the previous step by validating against the table.

create table #ScriptChecker (SuccessfullStep int)

-- Do Step One
Insert into #ScriptChecker
Select 1

-- Step 2
If exists (select * from #ScriptChecker where SuccessfullStep = 1)
-- Do Step 2 ...
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+1. Perhaps there's a better way but this simply is so easy I wonder why I never thought of that. – Lieven May 29 '09 at 17:22
Its more or less how MS do it themselves in the scripting wizard – u07ch May 29 '09 at 17:38
And Red Gate Compare – gbn May 29 '09 at 19:01
+1 This works for me, couldn't deploy without it! – Andomar May 29 '09 at 20:55
1  
This won't work when one of the statements is CREATE VIEW – Ian Boyd Sep 21 '09 at 17:40
show 2 more comments
feedback

You can activate the "Query, SQLCMD Mode" menu option and place the following at the beginning of the script:

:on error exit

This will stop execution when an error occurs, even if there are subsequent batches.

Just make sure that you don't accidentally run the script without SQLCMD mode on because you will get the typical behavior where errors are ignored.

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based on @u07ch idea, but only insert on failure...

create table #test (failure  int)

if not exists (select * from #test)
BEGIN
    print 'one' --sql here
END
go

if not exists (select * from #test)
BEGIN
    print 'two'--sql here
END
go

if not exists (select * from #test)
BEGIN
    print 'three' ---SQL SERVER 2000 version
    --error--
    SELECT 0/0, 'This causes an error'
    IF @@ERROR!=0
    BEGIN
        insert into #test values (1)
        PRINT 'ERROR'
    END
end 
go

if not exists (select * from #test)
BEGIN
    print 'three'  ---SQL SERVER 2005/2008 version
    BEGIN TRY
    --error--
        SELECT 0/0, 'This causes an error'
    END TRY
    BEGIN CATCH
        insert into #test values (1)
        PRINT 'ERROR'
    END CATCH
END
go

if not exists (select * from #test)
BEGIN
    --sql here
    print 'four'
END
go

output 2000:

one
two
three

----------- --------------------
Msg 8134, Level 16, State 1, Line 7
Divide by zero error encountered.

(1 row(s) affected)

ERROR

output 2005/2008:

one
two
three

----------- --------------------

(0 row(s) affected)

(1 row(s) affected)

ERROR
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? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? can someone tell me why there are so many down votes on this question? get a life, they are only "points" and life will go on with or without them ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? – KM. May 29 '09 at 19:40
Isn't it obvious? "This question is not useful or clear". /sarcasm – Ian Boyd May 29 '09 at 20:19
and I thought my answer was correct? – KM. May 29 '09 at 21:21
<sarcasm>Maybe your answer was too much detailed</sarcasm> Moreover it should also perform better (though slightly) than the original one since it inserts only when there is an error.... Did you flirt with someone's wife, recently? ;-) – Turro Jun 4 '09 at 6:57
feedback

Erland Sommarskog in the microsoft.public.sqlserver.programming group had a very good idea:

In a change script such as the one you posted, you need to be defensive, and start each batch with IF @@trancount > 0.

Using

IF @@trancount > 0

is much cleaner.

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This won't for for all batch contents. – Ian Boyd Sep 21 '09 at 17:41
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