I don't want to type all tables' name to drop all of them. Is it possible with one query?
-
3Some quick googling revealed this: stackoverflow.com/questions/11053116/…– JSK NSDec 22, 2014 at 16:28
-
-although (for SQLServer) this might be more useful: stackoverflow.com/questions/536350/…– user359040Dec 22, 2014 at 16:30
-
1With the right usernames, this could happen automatically (obligatory xkcd link).– MinnowDec 22, 2014 at 16:33
-
12Do you have any foreign keys on tables in the database? If so, you'd need to take that into consideration, and drop those before trying to drop tables.– Anthony GristDec 22, 2014 at 16:35
-
Keep in mind that if you have schemabound objects you can't drop the table.– Sean LangeDec 22, 2014 at 17:10
14 Answers
Use the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES view to get the list of tables. Generate Drop scripts in the select statement and drop it using Dynamic SQL:
DECLARE @sql NVARCHAR(max)=''
SELECT @sql += ' Drop table ' + QUOTENAME(TABLE_SCHEMA) + '.'+ QUOTENAME(TABLE_NAME) + '; '
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_TYPE = 'BASE TABLE'
Exec Sp_executesql @sql
Sys.Tables Version
DECLARE @sql NVARCHAR(max)=''
SELECT @sql += ' Drop table ' + QUOTENAME(s.NAME) + '.' + QUOTENAME(t.NAME) + '; '
FROM sys.tables t
JOIN sys.schemas s
ON t.[schema_id] = s.[schema_id]
WHERE t.type = 'U'
Exec sp_executesql @sql
Note: If you have any foreign Keys
defined between tables then first run the below query to disable all foreign keys
present in your database.
EXEC sp_msforeachtable "ALTER TABLE ? NOCHECK CONSTRAINT all"
For more information, check here.
-
3(not my downvote) ... i'd generally stick with the
[sys]
schema views if portability across rdbms' is not required. stackoverflow.com/a/3654313/251174– swasheckDec 22, 2014 at 16:49 -
1Also see sqlblog.com/blogs/aaron_bertrand/archive/2011/11/03/… Dec 22, 2014 at 17:08
-
2@DoubleA - It is very simple. First am building Drop statements for all the tables in my database and storing it into a variable. To check this you can use
Print @sql
beforeexec
. Then am executing the dynamically built drop statements throughsp_executesql
– Pரதீப்Jan 30, 2016 at 15:15 -
4If you are using Azure, sp_msforeachtable is not available. I found this sweet nugget from @Aaron Bertrand to delete all FK constraints. Works really good with this answer. dba.stackexchange.com/questions/90033/…– trevorcMay 6, 2016 at 18:15
-
4If the sp_msforeachtable is not available, you can also run the delete query multiple times, since the tables which depend on others are then deleted :) May 2, 2019 at 10:45
If you want to use only one SQL query to delete all tables you can use this:
EXEC sp_MSforeachtable @command1 = "DROP TABLE ?"
This is a hidden Stored Procedure in sql server, and will be executed for each table in the database you're connected.
Note: You may need to execute the query a few times to delete all tables due to dependencies.
Note2: To avoid the first note, before running the query, first check if there foreign keys relations to any table. If there are then just disable foreign key constraint by running the query bellow:
EXEC sp_msforeachtable "ALTER TABLE ? NOCHECK CONSTRAINT all"
-
1I tried it on my Azure SQL database, and it didn't work. However the above answer (by Prdp) worked. Mar 8, 2017 at 22:41
-
5For the side note, i need to run first command multiple times before dropped all tables but it works fine.– AlperJan 23, 2019 at 13:40
-
1@Thatshowweroll that's probably because of the tables' dependencies. If one table has others that depend on it it can't be deleted. Jan 28, 2019 at 16:02
-
1@RageAgainstTheMachine yes it is definitely from tables with multiple cross dependencies. I want to inform users to run it multiple times, errors are not problems. Run first command 3-4 times then second command 1 time and BOM. It works like charm!– AlperJan 30, 2019 at 5:26
-
2@KyleVassella yes, this will execute only on the database in which you have your console open Jun 17, 2020 at 11:44
If you don't want to type, you can create the statements with this:
USE Databasename
SELECT 'DROP TABLE [' + name + '];'
FROM sys.tables
Then copy and paste into a new SSMS window to run it.
The simplest way is to drop the whole database and create it once again:
drop database db_name
create database db_name
That's all.
-
3:) at least for me the purpose of droping all tables is because database can not be deleted Mar 3, 2019 at 1:52
-
34don't run this command on company's database. Or be ready to find another job.– FarazApr 22, 2019 at 5:51
-
6@FarazDurrani easy man, dropping all tables doesn't seem like a deal for PROD db either. Apr 23, 2019 at 15:47
-
5Be careful. This will wipe off all the other system objects like Procedures, views etc., associated the table.– itsraghzMay 18, 2021 at 6:26
-
You could also use the following script to drop everything, including the following:
- non-system stored procedures
- views
- functions
- foreign key constraints
- primary key constraints
- system_versioning
- tables
https://michaelreichenbach.de/how-to-drop-everything-in-a-mssql-database/
/* Drop all non-system stored procs */
DECLARE @name VARCHAR(128)
DECLARE @SQL VARCHAR(254)
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'P' AND category = 0 ORDER BY [name])
WHILE @name is not null
BEGIN
SELECT @SQL = 'DROP PROCEDURE [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) +']'
EXEC (@SQL)
PRINT 'Dropped Procedure: ' + @name
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'P' AND category = 0 AND [name] > @name ORDER BY [name])
END
GO
/* Drop all views */
DECLARE @name VARCHAR(128)
DECLARE @SQL VARCHAR(254)
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'V' AND category = 0 ORDER BY [name])
WHILE @name IS NOT NULL
BEGIN
SELECT @SQL = 'DROP VIEW [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) +']'
EXEC (@SQL)
PRINT 'Dropped View: ' + @name
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'V' AND category = 0 AND [name] > @name ORDER BY [name])
END
GO
/* Drop all functions */
DECLARE @name VARCHAR(128)
DECLARE @SQL VARCHAR(254)
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] IN (N'FN', N'IF', N'TF', N'FS', N'FT') AND category = 0 ORDER BY [name])
WHILE @name IS NOT NULL
BEGIN
SELECT @SQL = 'DROP FUNCTION [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) +']'
EXEC (@SQL)
PRINT 'Dropped Function: ' + @name
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] IN (N'FN', N'IF', N'TF', N'FS', N'FT') AND category = 0 AND [name] > @name ORDER BY [name])
END
GO
/* Drop all Foreign Key constraints */
DECLARE @name VARCHAR(128)
DECLARE @constraint VARCHAR(254)
DECLARE @SQL VARCHAR(254)
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY' ORDER BY TABLE_NAME)
WHILE @name is not null
BEGIN
SELECT @constraint = (SELECT TOP 1 CONSTRAINT_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY' AND TABLE_NAME = @name ORDER BY CONSTRAINT_NAME)
WHILE @constraint IS NOT NULL
BEGIN
SELECT @SQL = 'ALTER TABLE [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) +'] DROP CONSTRAINT [' + RTRIM(@constraint) +']'
EXEC (@SQL)
PRINT 'Dropped FK Constraint: ' + @constraint + ' on ' + @name
SELECT @constraint = (SELECT TOP 1 CONSTRAINT_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY' AND CONSTRAINT_NAME <> @constraint AND TABLE_NAME = @name ORDER BY CONSTRAINT_NAME)
END
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'FOREIGN KEY' ORDER BY TABLE_NAME)
END
GO
/* Drop all Primary Key constraints */
DECLARE @name VARCHAR(128)
DECLARE @constraint VARCHAR(254)
DECLARE @SQL VARCHAR(254)
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'PRIMARY KEY' ORDER BY TABLE_NAME)
WHILE @name IS NOT NULL
BEGIN
SELECT @constraint = (SELECT TOP 1 CONSTRAINT_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'PRIMARY KEY' AND TABLE_NAME = @name ORDER BY CONSTRAINT_NAME)
WHILE @constraint is not null
BEGIN
SELECT @SQL = 'ALTER TABLE [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) +'] DROP CONSTRAINT [' + RTRIM(@constraint)+']'
EXEC (@SQL)
PRINT 'Dropped PK Constraint: ' + @constraint + ' on ' + @name
SELECT @constraint = (SELECT TOP 1 CONSTRAINT_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'PRIMARY KEY' AND CONSTRAINT_NAME <> @constraint AND TABLE_NAME = @name ORDER BY CONSTRAINT_NAME)
END
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS WHERE constraint_catalog=DB_NAME() AND CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'PRIMARY KEY' ORDER BY TABLE_NAME)
END
GO
/* Remove system versioning */
DECLARE @name VARCHAR(128)
DECLARE @SQL VARCHAR(254)
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'U' AND category = 0 ORDER BY [name])
WHILE @name IS NOT NULL
BEGIN
IF OBJECTPROPERTY(OBJECT_ID(' + @name + '), 'TableTemporalType') = 2
SELECT @SQL = 'ALTER TABLE [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) +'] SET (SYSTEM_VERSIONING = OFF); ALTER TABLE [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) + '] DROP PERIOD FOR SYSTEM_TIME;'
EXEC (@SQL)
PRINT 'System Versioning Disabled for Table: ' + @name
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'U' AND category = 0 AND [name] > @name ORDER BY [name])
END
GO
/* Drop all tables */
DECLARE @name VARCHAR(128)
DECLARE @SQL VARCHAR(254)
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'U' AND category = 0 ORDER BY [name])
WHILE @name IS NOT NULL
BEGIN
SELECT @SQL = 'DROP TABLE [dbo].[' + RTRIM(@name) +']'
EXEC (@SQL)
PRINT 'Dropped Table: ' + @name
SELECT @name = (SELECT TOP 1 [name] FROM sysobjects WHERE [type] = 'U' AND category = 0 AND [name] > @name ORDER BY [name])
END
GO
-
Sorry but this script doesn't work with multiple schema. You have hard-coded "[dbo]." in multiple rows of your script. Jun 22, 2021 at 16:53
-
2
As a follow-up to Dave.Gugg's answer, this would be the code someone would need to get all the DROP TABLE lines in MySQL:
SELECT CONCAT('DROP TABLE ', TABLE_NAME, ';')
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.tables
WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'your_database_name'
-
6I know the original poster labeled the question with "sql-server", but this might be useful to someone looking to do this in MySQL. In fact I found this question when googling for a MySQL solution to this question, so I'm now sharing the solution I came up with after reading one of the answers here.– OMANov 12, 2015 at 22:11
-
This worked like a magic which I totally needed. Thanks a lot Sep 15, 2022 at 11:19
I'd just make a small change to @NoDisplayName's answer and use QUOTENAME()
on the TABLE_NAME
column and also include the TABLE_SCHEMA
column encase the tables aren't in the dbo
schema.
DECLARE @sql nvarchar(max) = '';
SELECT @sql += 'DROP TABLE ' + QUOTENAME([TABLE_SCHEMA]) + '.' + QUOTENAME([TABLE_NAME]) + ';'
FROM [INFORMATION_SCHEMA].[TABLES]
WHERE [TABLE_TYPE] = 'BASE TABLE';
EXEC SP_EXECUTESQL @sql;
Or using sys
schema views (as per @swasheck's comment):
DECLARE @sql nvarchar(max) = '';
SELECT @sql += 'DROP TABLE ' + QUOTENAME([S].[name]) + '.' + QUOTENAME([T].[name]) + ';'
FROM [sys].[tables] AS [T]
INNER JOIN [sys].[schemas] AS [S] ON ([T].[schema_id] = [S].[schema_id])
WHERE [T].[type] = 'U' AND [T].[is_ms_shipped] = 0;
EXEC SP_EXECUTESQL @sql;
-
4i'd generally stick with the
[sys]
schema views if portability across rdbms' is not required. stackoverflow.com/a/3654313/251174– swasheckDec 22, 2014 at 16:51 -
1@swasheck Thanks for the link that was quite interesting. I've updated the answer with a solution using sys schema views.– AeroXDec 22, 2014 at 16:59
-
You can use Schema_name() function to get the schema name instead of joining msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms175068.aspx– Pரதீப்Dec 22, 2014 at 17:00
-
@NoDisplayName Just because you can, doesn't mean that you should... blogs.sqlsentry.com/aaronbertrand/… Dec 22, 2014 at 17:02
-
@AaronBertrand - My bad thought it could be a better way. thanks for pointing it out.– Pரதீப்Dec 22, 2014 at 17:09
If anybody else had a problem with best answer's solution (including disabling foreign keys), here is another solution from me:
-- CLEAN DB
USE [DB_NAME]
EXEC sp_MSForEachTable 'ALTER TABLE ? NOCHECK CONSTRAINT ALL'
EXEC sp_MSForEachTable 'DELETE FROM ?'
DECLARE @Sql NVARCHAR(500) DECLARE @Cursor CURSOR
SET @Cursor = CURSOR FAST_FORWARD FOR
SELECT DISTINCT sql = 'ALTER TABLE [' + tc2.TABLE_NAME + '] DROP [' + rc1.CONSTRAINT_NAME + ']'
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS rc1
LEFT JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS tc2 ON tc2.CONSTRAINT_NAME =rc1.CONSTRAINT_NAME
OPEN @Cursor FETCH NEXT FROM @Cursor INTO @Sql
WHILE (@@FETCH_STATUS = 0)
BEGIN
Exec SP_EXECUTESQL @Sql
FETCH NEXT
FROM @Cursor INTO @Sql
END
CLOSE @Cursor DEALLOCATE @Cursor
GO
EXEC sp_MSForEachTable 'DROP TABLE ?'
GO
EXEC sp_MSForEachTable 'ALTER TABLE ? WITH CHECK CHECK CONSTRAINT ALL'
Not quite 1 query, still quite short and sweet:
-- Disable all referential integrity constraints
EXEC sp_msforeachtable 'ALTER TABLE ? NOCHECK CONSTRAINT ALL'
GO
-- Drop all PKs and FKs
declare @sql nvarchar(max)
SELECT @sql = STUFF((SELECT '; ' + 'ALTER TABLE ' + Table_Name +' drop constraint ' + Constraint_Name from Information_Schema.CONSTRAINT_TABLE_USAGE ORDER BY Constraint_Name FOR XML PATH('')),1,1,'')
EXECUTE (@sql)
GO
-- Drop all tables
EXEC sp_msforeachtable 'DROP TABLE ?'
GO
Use the following script to drop
all constraints
:
DECLARE @sql NVARCHAR(max)=''
SELECT @sql += ' ALTER TABLE ' + QUOTENAME(TABLE_SCHEMA) + '.'+ QUOTENAME(TABLE_NAME) + ' NOCHECK CONSTRAINT all; '
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_TYPE = 'BASE TABLE'
Exec Sp_executesql @sql
Then run the following to drop all tables:
select @sql='';
SELECT @sql += ' Drop table ' + QUOTENAME(TABLE_SCHEMA) + '.'+ QUOTENAME(TABLE_NAME) + '; '
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_TYPE = 'BASE TABLE'
Exec Sp_executesql @sql
This worked for me in Azure SQL Database where 'sp_msforeachtable'
was not available!
I Know this question is very old but every Time i need this code .. by the way if you have tables and views and Functions and PROCEDURES you can delete it all by this Script ..
so why i post this Script ?? because if u delete all tables you will need to delete all views and if you have Functions and PROCEDURES you need to delete it too
i Hope it will help someone
DECLARE @sql NVARCHAR(max)=''
SELECT @sql += ' Drop table ' + QUOTENAME(TABLE_SCHEMA) + '.'+ QUOTENAME(TABLE_NAME)
+ '; '
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_TYPE = 'BASE TABLE'
Exec Sp_executesql @sql
DECLARE @sql VARCHAR(MAX) = ''
, @crlf VARCHAR(2) = CHAR(13) + CHAR(10) ;
SELECT @sql = @sql + 'DROP VIEW ' + QUOTENAME(SCHEMA_NAME(schema_id)) + '.' +
QUOTENAME(v.name) +';' + @crlf
FROM sys.views v
PRINT @sql;
EXEC(@sql);
declare @procName varchar(500)
declare cur cursor
for select [name] from sys.objects where type = 'p'
open cur
fetch next from cur into @procName
while @@fetch_status = 0
begin
exec('drop procedure [' + @procName + ']')
fetch next from cur into @procName
end
close cur
deallocate cur
Declare @sql NVARCHAR(MAX) = N'';
SELECT @sql = @sql + N' DROP FUNCTION '
+ QUOTENAME(SCHEMA_NAME(schema_id))
+ N'.' + QUOTENAME(name)
FROM sys.objects
WHERE type_desc LIKE '%FUNCTION%';
Exec sp_executesql @sql
GO
Try this
DROP DATABASE database_name;
CREATE DATABASE database_name;
This will delete the database and create a new database with the same name
I‘d do it with a loop for all tables if you’re using like oracle or sqlite:
FOR i IN (SELECT ut.table_name
FROM USER_TABLES ut) LOOP
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'drop table '|| i.table_name ||' CASCADE CONSTRAINTS ';
END LOOP;
For me I just do
DECLARE @cnt INT = 0;
WHILE @cnt < 10 --Change this if all tables are not dropped with one run
BEGIN
SET @cnt = @cnt + 1;
EXEC sp_MSforeachtable @command1 = "DROP TABLE ?"
END