We have a user table, every user has an unique email and username. We try to do this within our code but we want to be sure users are never inserted (or updated) in the database with the same username of email.
I've added a BEFORE INSERT
Trigger which prevents the insertion of duplicate users.
CREATE TRIGGER [dbo].[BeforeUpdateUser]
ON [dbo].[Users]
INSTEAD OF INSERT
AS
BEGIN
-- SET NOCOUNT ON added to prevent extra result sets from
-- interfering with SELECT statements.
SET NOCOUNT ON;
DECLARE @Email nvarchar(MAX)
DECLARE @UserName nvarchar(MAX)
DECLARE @UserId int
DECLARE @DoInsert bit
SET @DoInsert = 1
SELECT @Email = Email, @UserName = UserName FROM INSERTED
SELECT @UserId = UserId FROM Users WHERE Email = @Email
IF (@UserId IS NOT NULL)
BEGIN
SET @DoInsert = 0
END
SELECT @UserId = UserId FROM Users WHERE UserName = @UserName
IF (@UserId IS NOT NULL)
BEGIN
SET @DoInsert = 0
END
IF (@DoInsert = 1)
BEGIN
INSERT INTO Users
SELECT
FirstName,
LastName,
Email,
Password,
UserName,
LanguageId,
Data,
IsDeleted
FROM INSERTED
END
ELSE
BEGIN
DECLARE @ErrorMessage nvarchar(MAX)
SET @ErrorMessage =
'The username and emailadress of a user must be unique!'
RAISERROR 50001 @ErrorMessage
END
END
But for the Update trigger I have no Idea how to do this. I've found this example with google: http://www.devarticles.com/c/a/SQL-Server/Using-Triggers-In-MS-SQL-Server/2/ But I don't know if it applies when you update multiple columns at once.
EDIT:
I've tried to add a unique constraint on these columns but it doesn't work:
Msg 1919, Level 16, State 1, Line 1
Column 'Email' in table 'Users' is of a type
that is invalid for use as a key column in an index.
You should use a SQL
UNIQUE
constraint on each of these columns for that.Sounds like a lot of work instead of just using one or more unique indexes. Is there a reason you haven't gone the index route?
You can add a unique contraint on the table, this will raise an error if you try and insert or update and create duplicates
EDIT: Ok, i've just read your comments to another post and seen that you're using NVARCHAR(MAX) as your data type. Is there a reason why you might want more than 4000 characters for an email address or username? This is where your problem lies. If you reduce this to NVARCHAR(250) or thereabouts then you can use a unique index.
Be aware that if you use the UNIQUE constraint/index solution with SQL Server, only one null value will be permitted in that column. So, for example, if you wanted the email address to be optional, it wouldn't work, because only one user could have a null email address. In that case, you would have to resort to another approach like a trigger or a filtered index.
In general, I would avoid Triggers wherever possible as they can make the behaviour very hard to understand unless you know that the trigger exists. As other commentatators have said, a unique constraint is the way to go (once you have amended your column definitions to allow it).
If you ever find yourself needing to use a trigger, it may be a sign that your design is flawed. Think hard about why you need it and whether it is performing logic that belongs elsewhere.
Why not just use the UNIQUE attribute on the column in your database? Setting that will make the SQL server enforce that and throw an error if you try to insert a dupe.