Okay, I always like to keep track of not only when something happened but who did it!
Lets create a test table in [tempdb] named [dwarfs]. At a prior job, a financial institution, we keep track of inserted (create) date and updated (modify) date.
-- just playing
use tempdb;
go
-- drop table
if object_id('dwarfs') > 0
drop table dwarfs
go
-- create table
create table dwarfs
(
asigned_id int identity(1,1),
full_name varchar(16),
ins_date datetime,
ins_name sysname,
upd_date datetime,
upd_name sysname,
);
go
-- insert/update dates
alter table dwarfs
add constraint [df_ins_date] default (getdate()) for ins_date;
alter table dwarfs
add constraint [df_upd_date] default (getdate()) for upd_date;
-- insert/update names
alter table dwarfs
add constraint [df_ins_name] default (coalesce(suser_sname(),'?')) for ins_name;
alter table dwarfs
add constraint [df_upd_name] default (coalesce(suser_sname(),'?')) for upd_name;
go
For updates, but the inserted and deleted tables exist. I choose to join on the inserted for the update.
-- create the update trigger
create trigger trg_changed_info on dbo.dwarfs
for update
as
begin
-- nothing to do?
if (@@rowcount = 0)
return;
update d
set
upd_date = getdate(),
upd_name = (coalesce(suser_sname(),'?'))
from
dwarfs d join inserted i
on
d.asigned_id = i.asigned_id;
end
go
Last but not least, lets test the code. Anyone can type a untested TSQL statement in. However, I always stress testing to my team!
-- remove data
truncate table dwarfs;
go
-- add data
insert into dwarfs (full_name) values
('bilbo baggins'),
('gandalf the grey');
go
-- show the data
select * from dwarfs;
-- update data
update dwarfs
set full_name = 'gandalf'
where asigned_id = 2;
-- show the data
select * from dwarfs;
The output. I only waited 10 seconds between the insert and the delete. Nice thing is that who and when are both captured.