sys.triggers (Transact-SQL)
Contains a row for each object that is a trigger, with a type of TR or TA. DML trigger names are schema-scoped and, therefore, are visible in sys.objects. DDL trigger names are scoped by the parent entity and are only visible in this view.
The parent_class and name columns uniquely identify the trigger in the database.
Column name | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
sysname |
Trigger name. DML trigger names are schema-scoped. DDL trigger names are scoped with respect to the parent entity. |
object_id |
int |
Object identification number. Is unique within a database. |
parent_class |
tinyint |
Class of the parent of the trigger. 0 = Database, for the DDL triggers. 1 = Object or column for the DML triggers. |
parent_class_desc |
nvarchar(60) |
Description of the parent class of the trigger. DATABASE OBJECT_OR_COLUMN |
parent_id |
int |
ID of the parent of the trigger, as follows: 0 = Triggers that are database-parented triggers. For DML triggers, this is the object_id of the table or view on which the DML trigger is defined. |
type |
char(2) |
Object type: TA = Assembly (CLR) trigger TR = SQL trigger |
type_desc |
nvarchar(60) |
Description of object type. CLR_TRIGGER SQL_TRIGGER |
create_date |
datetime |
Date the trigger was created. |
modify_date |
datetime |
Date the object was last modified by using an ALTER statement. |
is_ms_shipped |
bit |
Trigger created on behalf of the user by an internal SQL Server 2005 component. |
is_disabled |
bit |
Trigger is disabled. |
is_not_for_replication |
bit |
Trigger was created as NOT FOR REPLICATION. |
is_instead_of_trigger |
bit |
1 = INSTEAD OF triggers 0 = AFTER triggers. |
See Also
Reference
Security Catalog Views (Transact-SQL)
Catalog Views (Transact-SQL)