I have 10 transact SQL scripts that each create a table and fill it with data.
I am attempting to create 1 master sql script that will run each of the 10 other scripts.
Is there a way with TSQL / TRANSACTSQL for Microsoft SQL Server 2008 to execute another tsql script from within the current tsql script?
This is intended to be run through the SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS).
Thanks!
Try this if you are trying to execute a .sql file in SSMS:
note: for this to run turn on sql command mode (Query > SQLCMD Mode)
If these are scripts you run fairly often you might consider dropping them in a stored proc and running them that way...
You can also do it through sqlcmd (which I believe is more common):
Assuming you want to keep the 10 scripts in their own individual files, I would say the easiest way to do what you want would be to create a batch file that executes osql.exe to execute the 10 scripts in the order you want.
Or just use openrowset to read your script into a variable and execute it:
The simplest way would be to make your scripts stored procedures, and to call (via the
EXECUTE
command) each procedure in turn from a central procedure. This is ideal if you're going to run the exact same script(s) over and over again (or the same script with different parameters passed in).If your scripts are .sql (or any kind of text) file, as @Abe Miesller says (upvoted) you can run them from within SSMS via the :r command, when SQLCMD mode is enabled. You would have to know and script the exact file path and name. This cannot be done from within a stored procedure.
A last alternative, usable with "known" file names and necessary for arbitrary file names (say, all files currently loaded in a subfolder) is to leverage the power of extended procedure
XP_CMDSHELL
. Such solutions can get compelx pretty fast (use it to retrieve list of files, build and execute via xp_cmdshell a string calling SQLCMD for each file in turn, manage results and errors via output files, it goes on and on) so I'd only do this as a last resort.You can use osql or better yet the newer sqlcmd almost interchangeably. I am using osql in this example only because I happened to have a code sample sitting around but in production I am using sqlcmd. Here is a snipped of code out of a larger procedure I use to run update scripts against databases. They are ordered by major, minor, release, build as I name my scripts using that convention to track releases. You are obviously missing all of my error handing, the parts where I pull available scripts from the database, setup variables, etc but you may still find this snippet useful.
The main part I like about using osql or sqlcmd is that you can run this code in ssms, or in a stored procedure (called on a scheduled basis maybe) or from a batch file. Very flexible.