IDENTITY (Property) (Transact-SQL)
Creates an identity column in a table. This property is used with the CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE Transact-SQL statements.
Note
The IDENTITY property is different from the SQL-DMO Identity property that exposes the row identity property of a column.
Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions
Syntax
IDENTITY [ (seed , increment) ]
Arguments
seed
Is the value that is used for the very first row loaded into the table.increment
Is the incremental value that is added to the identity value of the previous row that was loaded.
You must specify both the seed and increment or neither. If neither is specified, the default is (1,1).
Remarks
Identity columns can be used for generating key values. The identity property on a column guarantees the following:
Each new value is generated based on the current seed & increment.
Each new value for a particular transaction is different from other concurrent transactions on the table.
The identity property on a column does not guarantee the following:
Uniqueness of the value – Uniqueness must be enforced by using a PRIMARY KEY or UNIQUE constraint or UNIQUE index.
Consecutive values within a transaction – A transaction inserting multiple rows is not guaranteed to get consecutive values for the rows because other concurrent inserts might occur on the table. If values must be consecutive then the transaction should use an exclusive lock on the table or use the SERIALIZABLE isolation level.
Consecutive values after server restart or other failures –SQL Server might cache identity values for performance reasons and some of the assigned values can be lost during a database failure or server restart. This can result in gaps in the identity value upon insert. If gaps are not acceptable then the application should use a sequence generator with the NOCACHE option or use their own mechanism to generate key values.
Reuse of values – For a given identity property with specific seed/increment, the identity values are not reused by the engine. If a particular insert statement fails or if the insert statement is rolled back then the consumed identity values are lost and will not be generated again. This can result in gaps when the subsequent identity values are generated.
These restrictions are part of the design in order to improve performance, and because they are acceptable in many common situations. If you cannot use identity values because of these restrictions, create a separate table holding a current value and manage access to the table and number assignment with your application.
If a table with an identity column is published for replication, the identity column must be managed in a way that is appropriate for the type of replication used. For more information, see Replicate Identity Columns.
Only one identity column can be created per table.
Examples
A. Using the IDENTITY property with CREATE TABLE
The following example creates a new table using the IDENTITY property for an automatically incrementing identification number.
USE AdventureWorks2012
IF OBJECT_ID ('dbo.new_employees', 'U') IS NOT NULL
DROP TABLE new_employees;
GO
CREATE TABLE new_employees
(
id_num int IDENTITY(1,1),
fname varchar (20),
minit char(1),
lname varchar(30)
);
INSERT new_employees
(fname, minit, lname)
VALUES
('Karin', 'F', 'Josephs');
INSERT new_employees
(fname, minit, lname)
VALUES
('Pirkko', 'O', 'Koskitalo');
B. Using generic syntax for finding gaps in identity values
The following example shows generic syntax for finding gaps in identity values when data is removed.
Note
The first part of the following Transact-SQL script is designed for illustration only. You can run the Transact-SQL script that starts with the comment: -- Create the img table.
-- Here is the generic syntax for finding identity value gaps in data.
-- The illustrative example starts here.
SET IDENTITY_INSERT tablename ON
DECLARE @minidentval column_type
DECLARE @maxidentval column_type
DECLARE @nextidentval column_type
SELECT @minidentval = MIN($IDENTITY), @maxidentval = MAX($IDENTITY)
FROM tablename
IF @minidentval = IDENT_SEED('tablename')
SELECT @nextidentval = MIN($IDENTITY) + IDENT_INCR('tablename')
FROM tablename t1
WHERE $IDENTITY BETWEEN IDENT_SEED('tablename') AND
@maxidentval AND
NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM tablename t2
WHERE t2.$IDENTITY = t1.$IDENTITY +
IDENT_INCR('tablename'))
ELSE
SELECT @nextidentval = IDENT_SEED('tablename')
SET IDENTITY_INSERT tablename OFF
-- Here is an example to find gaps in the actual data.
-- The table is called img and has two columns: the first column
-- called id_num, which is an increasing identification number, and the
-- second column called company_name.
-- This is the end of the illustration example.
-- Create the img table.
-- If the img table already exists, drop it.
-- Create the img table.
IF OBJECT_ID ('dbo.img', 'U') IS NOT NULL
DROP TABLE img
GO
CREATE TABLE img (id_num int IDENTITY(1,1), company_name sysname)
INSERT img(company_name) VALUES ('New Moon Books')
INSERT img(company_name) VALUES ('Lucerne Publishing')
-- SET IDENTITY_INSERT ON and use in img table.
SET IDENTITY_INSERT img ON
DECLARE @minidentval smallint
DECLARE @nextidentval smallint
SELECT @minidentval = MIN($IDENTITY) FROM img
IF @minidentval = IDENT_SEED('img')
SELECT @nextidentval = MIN($IDENTITY) + IDENT_INCR('img')
FROM img t1
WHERE $IDENTITY BETWEEN IDENT_SEED('img') AND 32766 AND
NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM img t2
WHERE t2.$IDENTITY = t1.$IDENTITY + IDENT_INCR('img'))
ELSE
SELECT @nextidentval = IDENT_SEED('img')
SET IDENTITY_INSERT img OFF
See Also
Reference
DBCC CHECKIDENT (Transact-SQL)
IDENTITY (Function) (Transact-SQL)
SET IDENTITY_INSERT (Transact-SQL)