SQL Server 2005 recentment instaurat la manera de desfer les transaccions en SQL Server 2005
SET XACT_ABORT A
quan està en XACT_ABORT. Les instruccions T-SQL retrocedirà automàticament la transacció quan l'error es va produir en els estats.
SET XACT_ABORT A
USE Emp
Begin Tran
Inserir en Valors EmpInfo(1)
Inserir en Valors EmpInfo(1) — This statement will raise the primary key error
Inserir en Valors EmpInfo(2)
Commit Tran
The first line of statment will execute without any errors. The primary key error will raise in second line. But the entire block transaction will not be commited because the XACT_ABORT in on.
You should note that XACT_ABORT terminates the current *batch*, not the entire command. Batches are separated with the GO keyword. Execution will continue at the beginning of the next batch.
This feature is also in SQL Server 2000, though it behaves slightly differently for various errors.
In SQL 2000, there are cases where XACT_ABORT fails to rollback the transaction automatically.
For instance:
Inserting into an invalid column name.
Inserting into a primary key with IDENTITY_INSERT OFF.
Executing a SELECT that uses a non-existent UDF.
These types of errors are usually due to a poorly authored command, so they don’t occur in the day-to-day operation of your program unless someone alters the schema. But I account for their possibility when authoring database update scripts when deploying a new version of a project, just in case deployment doesn’t go as planned.
There are ways to handle these errors. Your COMMIT should be in the batch performing the DML statements. After the batch (after the GO keyword) you can check the @@TRANCOUNT to see if it’s greater than zero and act accordingly. Usually ROLLBACK the transaction.
Transactions can span batches, so you can execute a rollback in a subsequent batch.