34

The query below is working:

update  top(1) ShipBillInfo 
set     shipfirstname='kkk' 
where   CustomerId='134';

but it is showing error if i try to order by some Id: for example:

update  top(1) ShipBillInfo 
set     shipfirstname='kkk' 
where   CustomerId='134' 
order by 
        OredrGUID desc;
2

4 Answers 4

35
With cte as (
select  top(1) shipfirtsname  
From ShipBillInfo 
where   CustomerId='134' 
order by  OredrGUID desc)
Update cte set shipfirstname='abc';
7
  • @ErikE Did you mean multiplicity (1:many table relationships) or did you really mean concurrency (more than one user/connection changing the same row at the same time)?
    – yzorg
    Mar 14, 2013 at 17:30
  • @yzorg I meant concurrency. Looking more carefully at what's actually being done, there probably isn't a big problem. It was more of a general note about this query pattern: where one wishes to update a row that is the "most recent" or "top/first". Without proper lock hints, depending on the usage scenario one can unexpectedly end up with two clients updating the same row, since the TOP part of the query can run concurrently from multiple clients (and thus they both acquire the same row) before the additional/escalated locks are acquired for the UPDATE part of the query.
    – ErikE
    Mar 14, 2013 at 20:51
  • 2
    @RemusRusanu I'm not sure that changes anything. Queries execute over time and have a lock acquisition life-cycle that can present concurrency problems when the rows selected are dependent on other rows' data (as is true with ORDER BY). This reading of other rows occurs BEFORE the update lock, so concurrency is an issue. If this particular query is executed by two clients at the same time there will be no harmful side-effects, so I probably was warning needlessly--I simply saw the potential for this query pattern's reuse causing problems, and noted it.
    – ErikE
    Mar 14, 2013 at 22:26
  • 3
    @ErikE: This reading of other rows occurs BEFORE the update lock: no. Is the reading itself that take the U lock. That's what I mean by 'the CTE is target of an UPDATE'. The scan (or seek) will acquire U locks. Mar 15, 2013 at 7:22
  • 3
    @ErikE: I probably was warning needlessly if the case you believe to happen (scan with S lock or even nolock, then update) would happen then the warning would be very much warranted. The problem you mention would happen if the rows of interested would be acquired in a join or in a subquery, and lock hints would be necessary. But since the update is targeting directly the CTE, the engine knows what it has to do. Mar 15, 2013 at 7:26
22

why dont you do :

update ShipBillInfo 
set shipfirstname='kkk' 
where OrderGUID = (select top (1) OrderGUID  
                   from ShipBillInfo 
                   where CustomerId = 134 
                   order by OredrGUID desc )
1
  • Be aware that this doesn't handles the concurrency, so in simmultaneous calls it can update the same row twice Jun 13, 2016 at 19:00
10

Thread Safe

For a thread safe solution none of the proposed solutions worked for me (some rows got updated more than once when executed it at the same time).

This worked:

UPDATE Account 
SET    sg_status = 'A'
WHERE  AccountId = 
(
    SELECT TOP 1 AccountId 
    FROM Account WITH (UPDLOCK) --this makes it thread safe
    ORDER  BY CreationDate 
)

If you want to return some column of the updated item you can put this in your update statement: OUTPUT INSERTED.AccountId (between the SET and WHERE)

5
  • Did you experience deadlocks after adding the UPDLOCK? Sep 20, 2018 at 14:13
  • In this case I'dont, Stephan. But I imagine that it can easily happen in cenaries where locks like this are used a lot. In my case I used this query to simulate a "queue" in the database, what is clearly an anti pattern... Sep 20, 2018 at 15:11
  • Well im designing the same thing :) Sep 21, 2018 at 16:05
  • 2
    @StephanRyer since deadlocks are caused by 2 or more processes locking the same resources in a different order - to avoid deadlocks you can follow the advice from DDD grouping resources into aggregates and locking (for update) the same resource (a "root" resource) of the aggregate first in all transaction involving that group - in this way a lock on a row can actually improve the concurrency of a situation Jul 6, 2020 at 22:47
  • Yes good idea. You mean by using sp_getapplock for instance? Jul 8, 2020 at 4:02
0

Update one record of a duplicate entry in VB.NET and SQL:

update top(1) display set actual = actual+1 where sku='" & TextBox1.Text & "' and actual <= plan_-1
  • display - table name
  • column name - sku , actual, plan_
  • TextBox1.Text - Component of VB to get input
1
  • This is confusing because column name isn't in your code. Can you clarify? Jul 6, 2023 at 1:29

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