This seems to be a very common error that most people get when working with SQL merge statements. I too have faced this many times, and usually I do find duplicate records in my source. After rectifying the issue I am good to go again.
However, it is a little different for me this time. I am sure (and have checked many times) that I do not have any duplicate rows in my source. What I do have is duplicate ID's which make up a unique rows (but no row is the same).
For example, see attached:
RecID is Unique ID for that particular row. Circuit and service Item are 2 different tables that have been combined into one table dbo.Table1.
RecID 309 in Circuit , and RecID 309 in service are both unique within each of their source.
When I try to merge this existing table into another table I get the typical error of
Msg 8672, Level 16, State 1, Procedure Staging.uspExample, Line 4 [Batch Start Line 0]
The MERGE statement attempted to UPDATE or DELETE the same row more than once. This happens when a target row matches more than one source row. A MERGE statement cannot UPDATE/DELETE the same row of the target table multiple times. Refine the ON clause to ensure a target row matches at most one source row, or use the GROUP BY clause to group the source rows.
Can someone please help me. How do I merge dbo.Table1 into Target table without getting the error
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROC [Staging].[uspMergeCherwellComConfigurationItem]
AS
BEGIN
MERGE [Cherwell].[ConfigurationItem] AS [Target]
USING [Staging].[ConfigurationItem] AS [Source]
ON [Source].[RecID] = [Target].[RecID]
WHEN MATCHED AND CONVERT(DATETIME, [Source].[LastModifiedDateTime]) <> [Target].[LastModifiedDateTime]
THEN
UPDATE SET [Target].[PartitionKey] = [Source].[PartitionKey],
[Target].[RecID] = [Source].[RecID],
[Target].[ConfigurationItemTypeName] = [Source].[ConfigurationItemTypeName],
[Target].[CreatedDateTime] = [Source].[CreatedDateTime],
[Target].[Status] = [Source].[Status],
[Target].[CIType] = [Source].[CIType],
[Target].[FriendlyName] = [Source].[FriendlyName],
[Target].[FinancialReference] = [Source].[FinancialReference],
[Target].[OrganisationGroup] = [Source].[OrganisationGroup],
[Target].[Further_Detail] = [Source].[Further_Detail],
[Target].[CICount] = [Source].[CICount],
[Target].[unit] = [Source].[unit],
[Target].[LastModifiedDateTime] = CONVERT(DATETIME, [Source].[LastModifiedDateTime])
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
INSERT
([PartitionKey],
[RecID],
[ConfigurationItemTypeName],
[CreatedDateTime],
[LastModifiedDateTime],
[Status],
[CIType],
[FriendlyName],
[FinancialReference],
[OrganisationGroup],
[Further_Detail],
[CICount],
[unit]
)
VALUES
([Source].[PartitionKey], [Source].[RecID], [Source].[ConfigurationItemTypeName], [Source].[CreatedDateTime],
CONVERT(DATETIME, [Source].[LastModifiedDateTime]), [Source].[Status], [Source].[CIType], [Source].[FriendlyName],
[Source].[FinancialReference], [Source].[OrganisationGroup],[Source].[Further_Detail], [Source].[CICount], [Source].[unit]);
END;
MERGE
, making it hard for us to figure out what's going on. Would I be correct in assuming you only check forRecID
, but somehow do not include theunit
as part of theMERGE
or theJOIN
?unit
indicates the system, that should become part of the composite key that guarantees uniqueness. If you're doing data warehousing, our typical approach is to add a SourceSystem dimension, and add a reference to that in this dataset. That way you can distinguish between the overlapping rows, and easily trace the row back to its' source system.ON [Source].[RecID] = [Target].[RecID]
to this:ON [Source].[RecID] = [Target].[RecID] AND [Source].[unit] = [Target].[unit]
. You should then remove the unit from theUPDATE SET
part below.