6

If I try to delete a brunch of data from a table. say

DELETE FROM myTable Where CreationDate < GetDate()

that takes hours to be deleted, will this table be locked and no new insert can happened?

This table doesn't self reference itself. I would assume I can still insert new data while it is deleting. Will the delete sql uses an exclusive lock that prevents all access to the table?

Thanks

1
  • Removed my answer - I read too quickly and assumed we were talking about SELECT during a DELETE.
    – JNK
    May 26, 2011 at 18:00

2 Answers 2

9

You can batch them to prevent it from locking the whole table:

WHILE 1 = 1
  BEGIN
        DELETE  TOP 10000 FROM  myTable WHERE CreationDate < GetDate()

        IF @@ROWCOUNT = 0
            BREAK
  END
3
  • 2
    10K rows will escalate to table lock. Keep it under 5K to prevent this. May 26, 2011 at 17:53
  • 5
    The number of locks required for an escalation is not strictly 5K. There are several other factors around it. The following does a decent job of explaining it for SQL 2005: blogs.msdn.com/b/sqlserverstorageengine/archive/2006/05/17/…
    – Tom H
    May 26, 2011 at 18:00
  • 4
    The critical thing is though to have an index on CreationDate. W/o it a table scan is required for each batch. May 26, 2011 at 18:03
0

There are a lot of things that could change this behavior. However, if by a lot you mean over 5K records than it will probably lock. You can avoid this by using smaller batches or specifying an isolation level that will not lock.

1
  • 2
    You can't "specify an isolation level that will not lock." as the OP is asking about deletes and inserts. These will always take locks. May 26, 2011 at 17:49

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