Space that a table uses isn't completely released after you use a DELETE statement to delete data from the table in SQL Server
This article helps you work around the problem that a table uses can't be released after you use a DELETE statement to delete all data from the table.
Original product version: SQL Server
Original KB number: 913399
Symptoms
After you use a DELETE statement in Microsoft SQL Server to delete data from a table, you may notice that the space that the table uses isn't completely released. When you then try to insert data in the database, you may receive the following error message:
Could not allocate space for object 'TableName' in database 'DatabaseName' because the 'PRIMARY' filegroup is full.
Note
TableName represents the name of the table. DatabaseName represents the name of the database that contains the table.
Cause
This problem occurs because SQL Server only releases all the pages that a heap table uses when the following conditions are true:
- A deletion on this table occurs.
- A table-level lock is being held.
Note
A heap table is any table that is not associated with a clustered index.
If pages aren't deallocated, other objects in the database can't reuse the pages.
However, when you enable a row versioning-based
isolation level in a SQL Server database, pages can't be released even if a table-level lock is being held. For more information about row versioning-based
isolation levels, see Isolation levels in the SQL Server Database Engine.
Workaround
To work around this problem, use one of the following methods:
Include a TABLOCK hint in the DELETE statement if a row versioning-based isolation level isn't enabled. For example, use a statement that is similar to the following:
DELETE FROM <TableName> WITH (TABLOCK)
Note
<TableName> represents the name of the table.
Use the TRUNCATE TABLE statement if you want to delete all the records in the table. For example, use a statement that is similar to the following:
TRUNCATE TABLE <TableName>
Create a clustered index on a column of the table. For more information about how to create a clustered index on a table, see Create Clustered Indexes.