Answer simple quiz at the end of the blog post and –
Every day one winner from India will get Joes 2 Pros Volume 4.
Every day one winner from United States will get Joes 2 Pros Volume 4.
Using Check Option
CHECK OPTION is a very handy tool we can use with our views. If I give you the definition right away and you don’t already know what it does then is just confusing. However the examples make perfect sense. So let’s save the definition for the end of this post. First let’s look at the creation of the vHighValueGrants view.
CREATE VIEW vHighValueGrants AS SELECT GrantName, EmpID, Amount FROM [Grant] WHERE Amount > 20000
JProCo already offered to do a $1,000 match for each grant larger than $20,000. The $1,000 match is currently included in our vHighValueGrants amounts as seen in the figure below.
We have just been informed that the campaign didn’t receive the necessary approval from the stakeholders. Therefore, we must remove all of the $1,000 matching amounts. After we run this UPDATE statement, the grants will all be returned to their baseline values.
UPDATE vHighValueGrants SET Amount = Amount - 1000
The large grants are decremented by $1,000 and thus returned to their baseline values. The $1000 increase has been removed as seen in this figure below.
Suppose you accidentally ran the decrement step twice. Before we “accidentally” run the UPDATE statement again in order to create this scenario, let’s consider the amounts currently shown by the view. The smallest grant in the vHighValueGrants view is $21,000. If we rerun the UPDATE statement, this grant will become $20,000. Recall that each grant must be greater than $20,000 in order to appear in the view.
Run the UPDATE statement again and then run a SELECT statement to see all of the records in the vHighValueGrants view. The $21,000 grant (contributed by Big 6’s Foundation %) was reduced to $20,000 and thus has fallen out of the view. Now that this grant has fallen outside the criteria of vHighValueGrants, the view no longer has the ability to “see” or manipulate this record using DML statements. For the five remaining grants, you can correct their amounts and reverse the “accidental” run of the UPDATE statement by incrementing each grant by $1000. However, the only way to correct the amount of the missing grant is by running an UPDATE statement directly against the Grant table. There are only 5 large grants remaining in the view after the second $1000 decrement.
This action was clearly a mistake. We didn’t intend to remove a record from the view, but as it is currently configured, vHighValueGrants isn’t protected against these kinds of mistakes. In order to prevent data updates which would cause records to disappear from our view, we can either place a trigger on the Grant table, or we can use CHECK OPTION.
CREATE TRIGGER trg_UpdateGrant ON dbo.[Grant] AFTER UPDATE AS BEGIN IF EXISTS( SELECT * FROM Inserted ins INNER JOIN Deleted del ON ins.GrantName = del.GrantName WHERE del.Amount > 20000 AND ins.Amount <= 20000) ROLLBACK TRAN END
If you create the trigger and then attempt to decrement the vHighValueGrants view, you’ll find that the trigger will not allow the transaction to fall to $20,000 and thus it won’t meet the criteria of the vHighValueGrants view.
The trigger has protected our view. The transaction which attempted to reduce a large grant from $21,000 to $20,000 was forbidden and ended in the trigger.
But let’s recognize that the trigger would also prevent any existing grant from ever being changed to an amount $20,000, or lower. In other words, the trigger is so restrictive that even a DBA would be disallowed from directly updating the Grant table if the change would reduce an existing grant amount to become $20,000 or lower. The trigger is more restrictive than we intended.
Our goal was simply to restrict users from making an accidental data change through the view which would result in a grant being removed from the view. Let’s reattempt our goal by using CHECK OPTION by rebuilding the vHighValueGrants view to include CHECK OPTION.
This tells the view to disallow data changes through the view which would cause any record to fall outside of the criteria of the view. Does it work? Now attempt to decrement though the view and the CHECK OPTION will block you. Using the code below you get the following error message.
UPDATE vHighValueGrants SET Amount = Amount – 1000
Msg 550, Level 16, State 1, Line 1
The attempted insert or update failed because the target view either specifies WITH CHECK OPTION or spans a view that specifies WITH CHECK OPTION and one or more rows resulting from the operation did not qualify under the CHECK OPTION constraint.
The statement has been terminated.
You will however be allowed to update to the table directly.
UPDATE [Grants] SET Amount = Amount – 1000
OK as promised here is the short definition or description of what CHECK OPTION does for views. Each time a DML statement is run against the view, CHECK OPTION validates that the resulting record set will be true to the SELECT statement which built the view. If a modification would remove a record defined by the view, then CHECK OPTION prevents the transaction from being committed.
Note: If you want to setup the sample JProCo database on your system you can watch this video. For this post you will want to run the SQLProgrammingChapter5.1Setup.sql script from Volume 4.
Question 23
You have a table named dbo.Sales. You need to create three views from the sales table.
vSalesSeattle
vSalesBoston
vSalesSpokane
Each view will be used by each region to make changes to their rows. One day a Seattle sales manager updated his sales data to have a new LocationID and the record showed up on the vSalesBoston view. Changes made to the vSalesSeattle view must not be made in a way that the record falls outside of the scope of the view. Which view should you create for Region1?
- CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH DIFFERENTIAL - CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION - CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
WITH SCHEMABINDING
AS
SELECT SalesID,OrderQty,SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1 - CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
WITH NOCHECK
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
Rules:
Please leave your answer in comment section below with correct option, explanation and your country of resident.
Every day one winner will be announced from United States.
Every day one winner will be announced from India.
A valid answer must contain country of residence of answerer.
Please check my facebook page for winners name and correct answer.
Every day one winner from India will get Joes 2 Pros Volume 4.
Every day one winner from United States will get Joes 2 Pros Volume 4.
The contest is open till next blog post shows up at which is next day GTM+2.5.
Reference: Pinal Dave (https://blog.sqlauthority.com)
77 Comments. Leave new
Answer: Option 2
To make modification for particular set of data we need to use where condition in view with “WITH CHECK OPTION”.
Kalpesh Patel(India)
DIFFERENTIAL : There is no such option. Hence, Eliminated.
SCHEMABINDING : Binds the view to the schema of the underlying table or tables. When SCHEMABINDING is specified, the base table or tables cannot be modified in a way that would affect the view definition. In our case, we are not changing the Schema of the table. Hence, Eliminated.
CHECK OPTION : Forces all data modification statements executed against the view to follow the criteria set within select_statement. When a row is modified through a view, the WITH CHECK OPTION makes sure the data remains visible through the view after the modification is committed. Which matches our requirement.
Hence Correct Answer is no 2.
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Ishan Shah,
Gandhinagar,
India
good n congrate… :)
good and congrate. :)
Hi,
2nd Option is correct option.
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Description,
With Check Option
I am from india.
Correct Answer option No. 2
shekhar gurav.
country : India
Correct answer is option 2
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Here we want that Seattle sales manager should only update record of Seattle Region so that we can use WITH CHECK OPTION here. Here we already have given RegionID = 1 which is of Seattle region so this will prevent to insert or update record on this view with RegionId other than 1.
Mahmad Khoja
INDIA
Thanks Pinal , you make me fearless learning of database,
correct answer: 2)CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
kkmishra
India
The correct option is :
2) CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Reason:
CHECK OPTION tells the view to disallow data changes through the view which would cause any record to fall outside of the criteria of the view. So, option 2 is the best one & option 4 is against this.
Creating a view with SCHEMABINDING option locks the underlying tables and prevents any changes that may change the table schema. So, option 3 is invalid.
Regards,
Geetika Bhambri
Ahmedabad(Gujarat)-INDIA
The Correct Answer is Option -2
Thanks,
Narendra(India).
Ans: 2
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
with check option ensure that no record falls outside of the scope of the view.
Partha
India
Correct Answer is Option 2
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Country:India
Thanks,
Fazal Vahora
Correct Answer is Option #2.
New Delhi
India
Correct Ans:Option 2
# CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Regards
Rajesh
From India
Correct Answer is:
2.CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Sudeepta,
India.
the answer is option 2)
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
the explanation for the option is, as per the definition, This tells the view to disallow data changes through the view which would cause any record to fall outside of the criteria of the view.
Explanation for all other options, that doesn’t qualify for this question is as follows:
option 1) WITH DIFFERENTIAL keyword doesn’t exist.
option 3) WITH SCHEMABINDING, Creating a view with SCHEMABINDING option locks the underlying tables and prevents any changes that may change the table schema.
option 4) WITH NOCHECK, Another way to bypass RI is using the WITH NOCHECK clause when adding a foreign key to a table that already has data in it.
Regards,
Ragini Gupta
India
The Correct Answer is
Option # 2
Country : India
Answer : Option 2.
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
ShaliniMeyyappan
India
ANS : 2
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Explanation
=========
As you have suggested in your article
Each time a DML statement is run against the view, CHECK OPTION validates that the resulting record set will be true to the SELECT statement which built the view. If a modification would remove a record defined by the view, then CHECK OPTION prevents the transaction from being committed.
Mitesh Modi
INDIA
Answer 2
2.CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Country : India
Correct Answer : Option 2
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Malay
Ahmedabad, India
Hi Sir,
The correct option is option no 2)
CREATE VIEW dbo.vSalesSeattle
AS
SELECT SalesID, OrderQty, SalespersonID, RegionID
FROM dbo.Sales
WHERE RegionID = 1
WITH CHECK OPTION
Since according to the question Seattle sales manager must not be able to make changes in such a way that the record falls out of the scope of the view belonging to his region.
We should place a CHECK OPTION to the view
vSalesSeattle so that he should not able to update the view so that it goes out of scope of the view.
Thanks for the knowledge.
I dint know about this.
P.Anish Shenoy,
INDIA