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Home/ Questions/Q 115819
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T03:04:48+00:00 2026-05-11T03:04:48+00:00

I have been wondering how to put all the stored procedures on a SQL

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I have been wondering how to put all the stored procedures on a SQL 2000 under source control.
We are using Subversion for all our normal source code, so it would be great if there were a solution to the problem using Subversion.

Do you have any ideas?

Update 16-02-2009: This is the vbs script i used to export all the stored procedures:

Set con = CreateObject('ADODB.Connection') con.ConnectionString = '*** Database connection string here ***' con.Open  Set rs = CreateObject('ADODB.RecordSet') rs.ActiveConnection = con  strSQL = 'SELECT ROUTINE_NAME, ROUTINE_DEFINITION ' & _ 'FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.routines ' & _ 'WHERE ROUTINE_NAME NOT LIKE 'dt_%' ' & _ 'ORDER BY 1'  Set fso = CreateObject('Scripting.FileSystemObject') rs.Open strSQL  While Not rs.Eof      filename = rs('ROUTINE_NAME') & '.sql'     routineSQL = rs('ROUTINE_DEFINITION')     Set tf = fso.CreateTextFile(filename, True)     tf.Write routineSQL     tf.Close     set tf = Nothing      rs.MoveNext Wend Set fso = Nothing  rs.Close  Set rs = Nothing  
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  1. 2026-05-11T03:04:49+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 3:04 am

    As other people have said, start off with each stored proc in a separated text file that is under source control. Write a script that deletes all you stored procedures then re-creates them from the text files (while logging/reporting any errors) – this script should be easy to run. Then every time you update from source control rerun the script. All edits to stored procedures should be done to the text file, not the “live” copy on your local database otherwise you will loose changes when you do a update.

    You will soon want someway of auditing your database schema and creating upgrade scripts etc.

    If you are only using SQL server then consider SQL Compare from Reg-Gate. I think it will compare stored procs (and other sql) in a text file with what is in your database and sync the two. So letting you use the editing tools in SqlServer to edit the live stored procedures.

    (As of the end of 2009, Red-Gate is just about to ship Sql Compare for Oracle)

    I have been told that ApexSQL’s Diff tool is another option instead of Sql Compare, ApexSQL’s Edit claims to provide source control integration.

    At the high-end consider Visual Studio Team System Database Edition, however it costs a lot, then you may have to pay even more for Oracle support from a 3rd party. But if you are a Microsoft partner (or can become one) you may get some copes very cheaply.

    See also Do you source control your databases? on StackOverflow for a good set of answers on the bigger problem.

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