Is this the best way to - Get a List of all Primary Keys in a Database - or is there something better?
SELECT
KCU.TABLE_NAME AS Table_Name,
KCU.CONSTRAINT_NAME AS Constraint_Name,
KCU.COLUMN_NAME AS COLUMN_NAME
FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS TC
JOIN INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE KCU
ON KCU.CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = TC.CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
AND KCU.CONSTRAINT_NAME = TC.CONSTRAINT_NAME
AND KCU.TABLE_SCHEMA = TC.TABLE_SCHEMA
AND KCU.TABLE_NAME = TC.TABLE_NA开发者_Go百科ME
WHERE
TC.CONSTRAINT_TYPE = 'PRIMARY KEY'
ORDER BY
KCU.TABLE_SCHEMA, KCU.TABLE_NAME, KCU.CONSTRAINT_NAME
USE databasename;
GO
SELECT i.name AS IndexName, OBJECT_NAME(ic.OBJECT_ID) AS TableName,
COL_NAME(ic.OBJECT_ID,ic.column_id) AS ColumnName
FROM sys.indexes AS i
INNER JOIN sys.index_columns AS ic
ON i.OBJECT_ID = ic.OBJECT_ID
AND i.index_id = ic.index_id
WHERE i.is_primary_key = 1
This query will extract the all primary key constraints from the database... u just need to execute this query and type the database name in first line
The following syntax give you all constraints in database in use.
select * from sys.key_constraints;
If you want the data type information as well:
SELECT
so.name 'Table Name',
c.name 'Column Name',
t.Name 'Data type',
c.max_length 'Max Length',
c.precision ,
c.scale ,
c.is_nullable,
ISNULL(i.is_primary_key, 0) 'Primary Key'
FROM
sys.columns c
INNER JOIN
sys.types t ON c.user_type_id = t.user_type_id
LEFT OUTER JOIN
sys.index_columns ic ON ic.object_id = c.object_id AND ic.column_id = c.column_id
LEFT OUTER JOIN
sys.indexes i ON ic.object_id = i.object_id AND ic.index_id = i.index_id
INNER JOIN
sysobjects so ON c.object_id = so.id
WHERE
i.is_primary_key = 1 and
so.xtype = 'U'
Order By 'Table Name', 'Column Name'
look on link
EXEC sp_pkeys '<tablename>'
EXEC sp_helpconstraint '<tablename>'
sp_pkeys will return a row for each column that participates in the primary key for . The columns you are likely most interested in are COLUMN_NAME and PK_NAME.
sp_helpconstraint will list all constraints for , including foreign keys that reference the table. In the first recordset, there will only be a column called Object Name (kind of useless, since that's what you passed in). In the second resultset, there will be the following columns: constraint_type, constraint_name, and constraint_keys.
If you are doing this from java you can also use the getPrimaryKeys method in the databasemetadata object. Perhaps other languages have similar ways to do it.
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