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Understanding DDL Triggers

DDL triggers, like regular triggers, fire stored procedures in response to an event. However, unlike DML triggers, they do not fire in response to UPDATE, INSERT, or DELETE statements on a table or view. Instead, they fire in response to a variety of Data Definition Language (DDL) events. These events primarily correspond to Transact-SQL statements that start with the keywords CREATE, ALTER, and DROP. Certain system stored procedures that perform DDL-like operations can also fire DDL triggers.

Important

Test your DDL triggers to determine their responses to system stored procedures that are run. For example, the CREATE TYPE statement and the sp_addtype stored procedure will both fire a DDL trigger that is created on a CREATE_TYPE event. However, the sp_rename stored procedure does not fire any DDL triggers.

DDL triggers can be used for administrative tasks such as auditing and regulating database operations.

Use DDL triggers when you want to do the following:

  • You want to prevent certain changes to your database schema.
  • You want something to occur in the database in response to a change in your database schema.
  • You want to record changes or events in the database schema.

DDL triggers fire only after the DDL statements that trigger them are run. DDL triggers cannot be used as INSTEAD OF triggers.

The following example shows how a DDL trigger can be used to prevent any table in a database from being modified or dropped.

CREATE TRIGGER safety 
ON DATABASE 
FOR DROP_TABLE, ALTER_TABLE 
AS 
   PRINT 'You must disable Trigger "safety" to drop or alter tables!' 
   ROLLBACK ;

DDL triggers can fire in response to a Transact-SQL event that is processed in the current database or on the current server. The scope of the trigger depends on the event. For more information about the scope of a DDL trigger, see Designing DDL Triggers.

To obtain a DDL trigger example that is available in the AdventureWorks sample database, in Object Explorer in the SQL Server Management Studio, open the Database Triggers folder located in the Programmability folder of the AdventureWorks database. Right-click ddlDatabaseTriggerLog and select Script Database Trigger as. By default, the DDL trigger ddlDatabaseTriggerLog is disabled.

See Also

Concepts

Understanding DDL Triggers vs. DML Triggers
Implementing DDL Triggers

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance

Change History

Release History

14 April 2006

New content:
  • Added an important note that recommends testing DDL triggers for their responses to system stored procedures that are executed.