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Is there a way to automatically refresh the result of a query in the SQL Server Management Studio (SQL Server 2008 R2)?

Currently I'm debugging an application which automatically inserts and updates data in a database and I'd like to track the progress without having to deposit a heavy object on the F5 key.

2 Answers 2

54

Try this:

SELECT GETDATE()              --your query to run
raiserror('',0,1) with nowait --to flush the buffer
waitfor delay '00:00:10'      --pause for 10 seconds
GO 5                          --loop 5 times

It will run the query 5 times, pausing for 10 seconds between each run

Output:

Beginning execution loop

-----------------------
2011-03-25 11:03:57.640
(1 row(s) affected)

-----------------------
2011-03-25 11:04:07.640
(1 row(s) affected)

-----------------------
2011-03-25 11:04:17.640
(1 row(s) affected)

-----------------------
2011-03-25 11:04:27.640
(1 row(s) affected)

-----------------------
2011-03-25 11:04:37.640
(1 row(s) affected)

Batch execution completed 5 times.
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  • 1
    @RacerX - What if you want it run it every 10 seconds, without upper limit of 5? Mar 25, 2011 at 15:09
  • 1
    @Sachin Shanbhag, you need a count so it loops, see GO (Transact-SQL). The count is an int, so it can be quite large: 2,147,483,647. So just use GO 2147483647
    – RacerX
    Mar 25, 2011 at 15:12
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    But you need to flush the buffer. Add raiserror('',0,1) with nowait before the waitfor. Mar 25, 2011 at 15:15
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    @Martin, that works like a charm, I've edited my answer to include that
    – RacerX
    Mar 25, 2011 at 15:22
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    Is there a way to get it to refresh the one result set instead having it create one result set for each iteration?
    – wergeld
    Mar 25, 2011 at 18:23
8

The only thing I can think of that would do that enitrely from SSMS would be a loop with a WAITFOR option. The problem is your output query window will simply have multiple result sets, each one later in your process than the one before it.

In this situation I usually suggest building a simple web page that runs from locally on your machine. Build it to take a query, and set it to auto-refresh every interval (30-60-90 seconds).

But that would be outside SSMS.

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    +1 That is a good point actually. I seem to remember there might be a 100 resultset limit or something like that. (Edit: Maybe that was 2005 I saw that in.) Mar 25, 2011 at 15:30
  • I've run the same setup as in my answer for many many result sets without problem. I do run in text mode, and the only problem is copy/paste memory limits. If I expect large result sets, I run the output to a file, you can edit it as it grows to get see what is going on in it.
    – RacerX
    Mar 25, 2011 at 15:40
  • WAITFOR in a loop is a nice suggestion, but using "GO 1000" requries less lines cluttering my SQL query. (also making a webpage would be overkill for this case)
    – grimmig
    Mar 28, 2011 at 6:21

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