35

Is there a way to md5sum a row in a SQL table to check whether any column has been modified?

I would like to check whether any particular column has been changed versus an old copy of the data which i hold in a text file (which I will md5sum in C#).

EDIT: Just md5sum-ing each row

4
  • 2
    Are you MD5ing the whole row, or just the text file?
    – MatBailie
    Jun 25, 2012 at 8:59
  • 2
    The best approach for this would be to use a ROWVERSION column in your table. SQL Server will automatically update this column if any changes happen to the row.
    – marc_s
    Jun 25, 2012 at 9:01
  • the table doesnt get modified, the text file does. I was hoping i could just md5sum the row and then compare it with the file row. Dont worry I will just extract each row and md5sum the database rows manually Jun 25, 2012 at 9:02
  • 2
    This is how it can be done via a select statement: SELECT Pk1 ,ROW_NUMBER() OVER ( ORDER BY Pk1 ) 'RowNum' ,(SELECT hashbytes('md5', ( SELECT Pk1, Col2, Col3 FOR XML raw ))) 'HashCkSum' FROM [MySchema].[MyTable]; where Pk1 is the Primary Key of the table and ColX are the columns you want to monitor for changes. This should be valid for MS SQL Svr 2008/2012.
    – Al Dass
    Aug 26, 2015 at 21:15

4 Answers 4

35

There are CHECKSUM(*), BINARY_CHECKSUM(*) and CHECKSUM_AGG. They do CRC32 like checkum, but for detecting changes to a row it should be more than enough (you are talking about 1 in 4 billion chances for a false negative collision).

Doing a cryptographic hash using HASHBYTES requires you to construct an expression representing the 'row'.

7
  • 6
    Depending on the environment, 1 in 4 billion can still be frequent enough to expect it is likely to eventually happen. Also, in some environments, such an event could be catastrophic. I don't know the OPs needs, but don't even MS recommend to not use CHECKSUM() to determine row changes?
    – MatBailie
    Jun 25, 2012 at 9:05
  • 2
    @Dems: W/o knowing the OP needs I can't say whether CHECKSUM is good enough. I wouldn't dismiss it simply because the convenience of * is hard to match doing HASHBYTES. Coming up with an expression that represents the row in order to be hashed is not trivial, and even more so when you consider schema changes. Jun 25, 2012 at 9:11
  • 6
    @Dems: but I agree that 1 in 4 billion in many cases is too high probability. Keep in mind though that since you're comparing a known row with another known row, base don PK, there is no meet-in-the-middle issue. If false negatives result in world-end disaster then the only solution is to do a full byte-by-byte comparison, all hashes are collision prone by definition. Jun 25, 2012 at 9:17
  • 2
    Those functions are not so good as it seems in MSDN. It is easy to get a CHECKSUM collision if the input is similar. Take a look here: link Also, if you are using CHECKSUM_AGG be carefull - it uses XOR under the hood, so it is pretty easy to get collisions too. You can read about it here: link I would not trust those functions alone Dec 28, 2013 at 12:33
  • 3
    Two caveats: HASHBYTES is limited to 8000 bytes of input and CHECKSUM() generates the same values for positive and negative decimals- i.e., if x is an int CHECKSUM([other columns], x) and CHECKSUM([other columns], -x) will be different, but if x is a decimal they will be the same.
    – utexaspunk
    Apr 25, 2019 at 13:33
20

If you have SQL Server 2008 or newer you could use:

SELECT HASHBYTES('SHA1', (SELECT TOP 1 * FROM dbo.Table FOR XML RAW))

or

SELECT  
    HASHBYTES('SHA1',(
        SELECT  * 
        FROM    dbo.myTable as  tableToHash 
        where   tableToHash.myUniqueKey=myTable.myUniqueKey 
        FOR XML RAW
    ))                                              as  rowSHA1
from    dbo.myTable;
3
  • that worked for me. i used a where clause to limit to the current row Sep 15, 2016 at 15:22
  • 1
    A bit late, but could you explain why the FOR XML XXX is required for such an operation ? Mar 24, 2020 at 9:36
  • 2
    @FlorianCastelain because you need to somehow get columns into one text line, you can also use SELECT cast(column1 as nvarchar(max)) + cast(column2 as nvarchar(max)) + ... FROM dbo.myTable as tableToHash instead
    – Muflix
    Mar 24, 2020 at 9:57
8

I had to develop a solution to compare table structures and run a procedure to import the difference between the tables.

I used below code to select the data

--> table structures

create table #table1 (
campo varchar(10)
,campo1 varchar(10)
)

create table #table2 (
campo varchar(10)
,campo1 varchar(10)
)

--> Insert values

insert into #table1 values ('bruno',1)
insert into #table1 values ('bruno',2)
insert into #table2 values ('bruno',1)
insert into #table2 values ('bruna',2)

--> Create a hash column to compare

select *,HASHBYTES('SHA1', (select z.* FOR XML RAW)) as hash
    into #compare1
 from #table1 z 

select *,HASHBYTES('SHA1', (select k.* FOR XML RAW)) as hash
    into #compare2
 from #table2 k 

--> check the lines that has any difference

select * from  #compare1 a
full outer join #compare2 b on a.hash = b.hash
where ( a.hash is null or b.hash is null )

Maybe this is useful for someone needing the same thing Find code explaned above here

1

Get all row, do the md5 of each column and compare it with the md5 of the correspondent column in the previous data.

0

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