sql scripting variable default value
I have a script file e.g. test.sql. I want to call this from another script, say caller.sql, in sqlcmd mode using :r test.sql. This works fine, but I want to use a scripting variable in test.sql. When I call test.sql from caller.sql I can set the scripting variable and all is well. However, I want to use a default value for the scripting value so that if the caller does not set the variable, or if I run test.sql directly (not from caller.sql) then the scripting variable defaults to a set value.
I have tried things such as
begin try
select '$(grip)'
select 'grip value was found开发者_JAVA技巧'
end try
begin catch
select 'grip value was missing'
end catch
but I just get the following message: A fatal scripting error occurred. Variable grip is not defined.
What do I need in test.sql so that it can cope with 'grip' either being passed by the caller or not? I am using MS SQL 2005
There is a LIMITED workaround (I've only tested it on SS2008R2):
SIMPLE version - if you're willing to live without :on error exit
/ sqlcmd.exe -b
:
:on error ignore -- Ensures that sqlcmd.exe will not fail when referencing an undefined scripting variable. Remove this if you want your script to work in SSMS in regular mode, too.
Declare @valueOrDefault as nvarchar(max)= N'$(value)';
if @valueOrDefault = N'$' + N'(value)' set @valueOrDefault = N'default value'; -- Test if there is a value and, if not, assign a default; note the splitting of the reference string to avoid expansion.
-- use @valueOrDefault from now on
Note:
- Since T-SQL variables don't work across batches, you cannot start another batch (with GO) and so cannot switch to robust error handling with
:on error exit
. Therefore, you have to do your own error handling in the remainder of the script - which is non-trivial; see SQL Server - stop or break execution of a SQL script - If you remove the
:on error ignore
in order to make the script work in SSMS in regular mode, be sure that when you invoke that script with sqlcmd.exe that you do NOT specify the -b option, as that will prevent the entire script from running if the referenced scripting variable does not exist. - By effectively turning the scripting variable into a regular T-SQL variable, you cannot use the value in places where T-SQL expects literals, such as the name of a database in a CREATE DATABASE statement.
- If the scripting variable is not defined, the following warning is printed to stderr: 'variableName' scripting variable not defined.
ROBUST version - much more cumbersome, but supports :on error exit
, which is advisable:
-- Store the default value in the context info (session-level storage accessible across batches that holds up to 128 bytes).
declare @binDefaultValue varbinary(128)= CAST(N'default value' AS varbinary(128));
set CONTEXT_INFO @binDefaultValue;
go -- Make the set CONTEXT_INFO statement take effect.
-- If the scripting variable has a value, store ITS value in the context info instead.
:on error ignore -- Temporarily ignore errors so that accessing a non-existent scripting variable doesn't abort the entire script.
declare @value as nvarchar(max) = N'$(value)'; -- Try to access the scripting variable; thanks to :on error ignore this will only give a warning.
if @value <> N'$' + N'(value)' -- Test if there is a value; note the splitting of the reference string to avoid expansion.
begin
-- We have a scripting-variable value: Store it in the context info (replacing the default value).
declare @binValue as varbinary(128) = cast(@value as varbinary(128));
set CONTEXT_INFO @binValue;
end
go -- End batch here, so we can switch back to :on error exit (requires a new batch).
:on error exit -- New batch: switch back to robust error handling.
-- End the batch here, so that SSMS in *regular* mode - which will fail on the line above - continues processing below.
-- Note that when run by sqlcmd.exe the subsequent batches will inherit :on error exit.
go
-- Retrieve the value or default value from the context info...
declare @valueOrDefault as nvarchar(max) = convert(nvarchar(max), CONTEXT_INFO(), 0);
-- ... and remove trailing null characters. ?? Is there an easier way to do this?
declare @pos as int = 0;
while @pos < LEN(@valueOrDefault)
begin
set @pos=@pos+1
if UNICODE(substring(@valueOrDefault, @pos, 1)) = 0 break;
end
if @pos > 0 set @valueOrDefault = left(@valueOrDefault, @pos - 1);
-- @valueOrDefault now contains the scripting-variable value or default value.
print 'Value or default value: [' + @valueOrDefault + ']';
Note:
- The above works both when invoked from sqlcmd.exe and in SSMS in regular mode - assuming you use no other SQLCMD commands in the script. Sadly, SSMS in SQLCMD mode always refuses to run a script that references a non-existent scripting variable.
- The use of
SET CONTEXT_INFO
is required, because values need to be passed across batch boundaries, which can't be done with T-SQL variables. Multiple batches are needed to switch back to robust error handling. - The code above only supports a single scripting variable, and, due to use of
SET CONTEXT_INFO
, its length is limited to 128 bytes = 64 Unicode characters; it's conceivable to use other workarounds, though, such as temporary tables. - By effectively turning the scripting variable into a regular T-SQL variable, you cannot use the value in places where T-SQL expects literals, such as the name of a database in a
CREATE DATABASE
statement. - If the scripting variable is not defined, the following warning is printed to stderr: 'variableName' scripting variable not defined.
Perhaps one of these 3 options:
- via command line option
v
- through the
:SETVAR
command described later in this chapter - by defining an environment variable prior to running
SQLCMD
.
Using v
option
In your script: SELECT $(foo) FROM $(bar)
Usage: C:>SQLCMD i c:\someScript.sql -v foo="CustomerName" bar="Customer"
Using setvar
:setvar foo CustomerName
:setvar bar Customer
From
http://www.sqlcmd.org/sqlcmd-scripting-variables/
Retrieving the variable and assign to a variable, if it falls through the SET statement then it is assigned. The catch will handle the default values. This works for me on SQL Server 2005. I have noticed that this always says that it failed when I run it in SQL Management Studio even though I think it works. When I run this via command-line using sqlcmd it works without any error messages.
BEGIN TRY
DECLARE @bogusVar VARCHAR(64);
SET @bogusVar = '' + $(envVar);
PRINT 'Using values passed from sqlcmd';
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
PRINT 'Using default values for script'
:setvar envVar 'DefaultValue'
END CATCH;
What wound up being remotely practical for me is setting a system environment variable to the default and then overriding that value where desired with SQLCMD -v.
If you're running SQLCMD from a Windows Command promt, add "2> nul" at the end of your SQLCMD statement. That will eliminate the SQLCMD complaints at the beginning of the output.
Example: sqlcmd -S DatabaseServer -E -d MyDatabase -i MyScript -v Variable1=Value1 2> nul
Setting the Context is an original and interesting idea. When I read the issues you faced parsing the VarBinary I thought perhaps a temp table would answer the need. After working on it a bit (and then remembering your comment that SSMS ALWAYS errors :( when the scripting variable is undefined) I got this version working. I generally don't like Name-Value solutions but performance is not really and issue here and it provides a great deal of flexibility at the cost of the boiler plate required to define and test each optional parameter. I tested on SQL2008R2 using SSMS 17.
Set NoCount On;
If Object_Id('tempdb..#hold', 'U') Is Not Null Drop Table #hold;
Go
Create Table #hold(theKey NVARCHAR(128) Not Null, theValue NVARCHAR(128) Not Null);
Insert #hold(theKey, theValue) Values (N'Type', N'Full');
Select theValue From #hold Where theKey = N'Type'
:on error ignore
Declare @theValue NVARCHAR(128) = N'$(BType)';
If @theValue <> N'$' + N'(BType)' -- a value was passed in
Update #hold Set theValue = @theValue Where theKey = N'Type';
Go
:on error exit
Select theValue From #hold Where theKey = N'Type'
Return;
-- sqlcmd -S myServer -E -i thePath\theScript.sql -v BType = "diff"
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