I\'m using SQL Server 2000, and many of the stored procedures it use temp tables extensively. The database has a lot of traffic, and I\'m concerned about the thread-safety of cr
First let's make sure you are using real temp tables, do they start with # or ##? If you are creating actual tables on the fly and then dropping and recreating them repeatedly, you will indeed have problems with concurrent users. If you are createing global temp tables (ones that start with ##) you can also have issues. If you do not want concurrency issues use local temp tables (They start with #). It is also a good practice to explicitly close them at the end of the proc (or when they are no longer needed by the proc if you are talking long multi-step procs) and to check for existence (and drop if so) before creating.
The short answer is:
Isolation of temporary tables is guaranteed per query, and there's nothing to worry about either in regard to threading, locks, or concurrent access.
I'm not sure why answers here talk about a significance of 'connections' and threads as these are programming concepts, whereas query isolation is handled at the database level.
Local temporary objects are separated by Session in SQL server. If you have two queries running concurrently, then they are two completely separate sessions and won't intefere with one another. The Login doesn't matter, so for example if you are using a single connection string using ADO.NET (meaning that multiple concurrent queries will use the same SQL server 'login'), your queries will all still run in separate sessions. Connection Pooling also doesn't matter. Local temporary objects (Tables and Stored Procedures) are completely safe from being seen by other sessions.
To clarify how this works; while your code has a single, common name for the local temporary objects, SQL Server appends a unique string to each object per each session to keep them separate. You can see this by running the following in SSMS:
CREATE TABLE #T (Col1 INT)
SELECT * FROM tempdb.sys.tables WHERE [name] LIKE N'#T%';
You will see something like the following for the name:
Then, without closing that query tab, open up a new query tab and paste in that same query and run it again. You should now see something like the following:
So, each time your code references #T, SQL Server will translate it to the proper name based on the session. The separation is all handled auto-magically.
Local temp tables are thread-safe, because they only exist within the current context. Please don't confuse context with current connection (from MSDN: "A local temporary table created in a stored procedure is dropped automatically when the stored procedure is finished"), the same connection can safely call two or more times a stored procedure that creates a local temp table (like #TMP
).
You can test this behavior by executing the following stored procedure from two connections. This SP will wait 30 seconds so we can be sure the two threads will be running their over their own versions of the #TMP table at the same time:
CREATE PROCEDURE myProc(@n INT)
AS BEGIN
RAISERROR('running with (%d)', 0, 1, @n);
CREATE TABLE #TMP(n INT);
INSERT #TMP VALUES(@n);
INSERT #TMP VALUES(@n * 10);
INSERT #TMP VALUES(@n * 100);
WAITFOR DELAY '00:00:30';
SELECT * FROM #TMP;
END;
Temp tables are tied to the session, so if different users run your procedure simultaneously there's no conflict...
If you look in the temps database you can see the temporary tables there, and they have system generated names. So other than regular deadlocks you should be OK.
Temp tables are created only in the context of the query or proc that creates them. Each new query gets a context on the database that is free of other queries' temp tables. As such, name collision is not a problem.