If I have an AFTER INSERT, UPDATE
trigger on a table, and the trigger fails (causes an error), will that cause the original INSERT
or UPDATE
to fail? I know the trigger happens after (hence the AFTER
keyword), but does it abort the transaction (implicit or explicit), etc.?
Speci开发者_如何学JAVAfically regards SQL Server 2005, but I'm interested in info for 2000, 2005, and 2008. TIA.
Ah, found an article saying it does, at least in SQL Server 2000. Quoting:
You have trigger context when you are in a trigger, or you are in a stored procedure, user-defined function or block of dynamic SQL that has been called directly or indirectly from a trigger. That is, somewhere on the call stack, there is a trigger. If you are in trigger context, all errors terminate the batch and roll back the transaction on the spot.
精彩评论