Is it possible for SQL statements to execute concurrently within a single session in SQL Server? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)how to make a table unlocked within transaction blockAssociate a piece of data with a sessionSPIDs stuck indefinitely in suspended stateUnable to start a nested transaction for OLE DB provider “SQLNCLI11” for linked serverHow to avoid a “duplicate key” error?Executing SSIS Package from a stored procedure with different user privilegesRead/Write Deadlock in SQL ServerWhen exactly are multiple users unable to simultaneously run a stored procedure with a temp table?Is it possible to limit the scope of a SYNONYM in SQL Server?How to Set the Transaction Isolation level in a Table Value Multi Function

Is CEO the "profession" with the most psychopaths?

Is grep documentation about ignoring case wrong, since it doesn't ignore case in filenames?

Should I follow up with an employee I believe overracted to a mistake I made?

Why doesn't SQL Optimizer use my constraint?

How were pictures turned from film to a big picture in a picture frame before digital scanning?

What is the difference between globalisation and imperialism?

Selecting user stories during sprint planning

Sum letters are not two different

How could we fake a moon landing now?

Why is my ESD wriststrap failing with nitrile gloves on?

What do you call the main part of a joke?

Performance gap between vector<bool> and array

Effects on objects due to a brief relocation of massive amounts of mass

Dating a Former Employee

How come Sam didn't become Lord of Horn Hill?

What does it mean that physics no longer uses mechanical models to describe phenomena?

Why is Nikon 1.4g better when Nikon 1.8g is sharper?

Does the Weapon Master feat grant you a fighting style?

Why does the remaining Rebel fleet at the end of Rogue One seem dramatically larger than the one in A New Hope?

SF book about people trapped in a series of worlds they imagine

Crossing US/Canada Border for less than 24 hours

Question about debouncing - delay of state change

Did Krishna say in Bhagavad Gita "I am in every living being"

Trademark violation for app?



Is it possible for SQL statements to execute concurrently within a single session in SQL Server?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)how to make a table unlocked within transaction blockAssociate a piece of data with a sessionSPIDs stuck indefinitely in suspended stateUnable to start a nested transaction for OLE DB provider “SQLNCLI11” for linked serverHow to avoid a “duplicate key” error?Executing SSIS Package from a stored procedure with different user privilegesRead/Write Deadlock in SQL ServerWhen exactly are multiple users unable to simultaneously run a stored procedure with a temp table?Is it possible to limit the scope of a SYNONYM in SQL Server?How to Set the Transaction Isolation level in a Table Value Multi Function



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








5















I have written a stored procedure which makes use of a temporary table. I know that in SQL Server, temporary tables are session-scoped. However, I have not been able to find definitive information on exactly what a session is capable of. In particular, if it is possible for this stored procedure to execute twice concurrently in a single session, a significantly higher isolation level is required for a transaction within that procedure due to the two executions now sharing a temporary table.










share|improve this question




























    5















    I have written a stored procedure which makes use of a temporary table. I know that in SQL Server, temporary tables are session-scoped. However, I have not been able to find definitive information on exactly what a session is capable of. In particular, if it is possible for this stored procedure to execute twice concurrently in a single session, a significantly higher isolation level is required for a transaction within that procedure due to the two executions now sharing a temporary table.










    share|improve this question
























      5












      5








      5








      I have written a stored procedure which makes use of a temporary table. I know that in SQL Server, temporary tables are session-scoped. However, I have not been able to find definitive information on exactly what a session is capable of. In particular, if it is possible for this stored procedure to execute twice concurrently in a single session, a significantly higher isolation level is required for a transaction within that procedure due to the two executions now sharing a temporary table.










      share|improve this question














      I have written a stored procedure which makes use of a temporary table. I know that in SQL Server, temporary tables are session-scoped. However, I have not been able to find definitive information on exactly what a session is capable of. In particular, if it is possible for this stored procedure to execute twice concurrently in a single session, a significantly higher isolation level is required for a transaction within that procedure due to the two executions now sharing a temporary table.







      sql-server sql-server-2012






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 5 hours ago









      Trevor GiddingsTrevor Giddings

      354




      354




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          Not concurrently. Your options include:



          • Run the queries one after another in the same session

          • Switch from a temp table to a global temp table (use ##TableName instead of #TableName), but be aware that the global temp table is automatically dropped when the session that created the temp table closes, and there are no other active sessions with a reference to it

          • Switch to a real user table in TempDB - you can create tables there, but be aware that they'll disappear on server restart

          • Switch to a real user table in a user database





          share|improve this answer






























            7














            While Brent's answer is correct for for all practical purposes, and this is not something I've ever seen someone worry about, it is possible for multiple invocations of a stored procedure in a session to affect each other through a session-scoped #temp table.



            The good news is it's extremely unlikely to happen in the wild because



            1) #Temp tables declared inside a stored procedures or nested batches don't actually have session visibility (or lifetime). And these are by far the most common case.



            2) It requires MultipleActiveResultsets and either some very strange async client programming, or for the stored procedure to return a resultset in the middle, and the client to call another instance of the stored procedure while processing the results from the first.



            Here's a cooked-up example:



            using System;
            using System.Data.SqlClient;

            namespace ado.nettest

            class Program

            static void Main(string[] args)

            using (var con = new SqlConnection("Server=localhost;database=tempdb;integrated security=true;MultipleActiveResultSets = True"))

            con.Open();

            var procDdl = @"
            create table #t(id int)
            exec ('
            create procedure #foo
            as
            begin
            insert into #t(id) values (1);
            select top 10000 * from sys.messages m, sys.messages m2;
            select count(*) rc from #t;
            delete from #t;
            end
            ');
            ";
            var cmdDDL = con.CreateCommand();
            cmdDDL.CommandText = procDdl;
            cmdDDL.ExecuteNonQuery();

            var cmd = con.CreateCommand();
            cmd.CommandText = "exec #foo";
            using (var rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())

            rdr.Read();

            var cmd2 = con.CreateCommand();
            cmd2.CommandText = "exec #foo";
            using (var rdr2 = cmd2.ExecuteReader())




            while (rdr.Read())



            rdr.NextResult();
            rdr.Read();
            var rc = rdr.GetInt32(0);
            Console.WriteLine($"Numer of rows in temp table rc");






            Console.WriteLine("Hit any key to exit");
            Console.ReadKey();





            which outputs



            Numer of rows in temp table 0
            Hit any key to exit


            because the second invocation of the stored procedure inserted a row, and then deleted all the rows from #t while the first invocation was waiting for the client to fetch the rows from its first resultset. Note that if the first resultset was small, the rows might get buffered and could continue without sending anything to the client.



            If you move the



            create table #t(id int)


            into the stored procedure it outputs:



            Numer of rows in temp table 1
            Hit any key to exit


            And with the temp table declared inside the procedure, if you change the second query to



            cmd2.CommandText = "select * from #t";


            It fails with:




            'Invalid object name '#t'.'







            share|improve this answer




















            • 1





              As soon as I saw the question title I knew the answer was MARS.

              – Joshua
              40 mins ago











            Your Answer








            StackExchange.ready(function()
            var channelOptions =
            tags: "".split(" "),
            id: "182"
            ;
            initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

            StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
            // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
            if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
            StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
            createEditor();
            );

            else
            createEditor();

            );

            function createEditor()
            StackExchange.prepareEditor(
            heartbeatType: 'answer',
            autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
            convertImagesToLinks: false,
            noModals: true,
            showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
            reputationToPostImages: null,
            bindNavPrevention: true,
            postfix: "",
            imageUploader:
            brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
            contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
            allowUrls: true
            ,
            onDemand: true,
            discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
            ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
            );



            );













            draft saved

            draft discarded


















            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdba.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f235197%2fis-it-possible-for-sql-statements-to-execute-concurrently-within-a-single-sessio%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown

























            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            4














            Not concurrently. Your options include:



            • Run the queries one after another in the same session

            • Switch from a temp table to a global temp table (use ##TableName instead of #TableName), but be aware that the global temp table is automatically dropped when the session that created the temp table closes, and there are no other active sessions with a reference to it

            • Switch to a real user table in TempDB - you can create tables there, but be aware that they'll disappear on server restart

            • Switch to a real user table in a user database





            share|improve this answer



























              4














              Not concurrently. Your options include:



              • Run the queries one after another in the same session

              • Switch from a temp table to a global temp table (use ##TableName instead of #TableName), but be aware that the global temp table is automatically dropped when the session that created the temp table closes, and there are no other active sessions with a reference to it

              • Switch to a real user table in TempDB - you can create tables there, but be aware that they'll disappear on server restart

              • Switch to a real user table in a user database





              share|improve this answer

























                4












                4








                4







                Not concurrently. Your options include:



                • Run the queries one after another in the same session

                • Switch from a temp table to a global temp table (use ##TableName instead of #TableName), but be aware that the global temp table is automatically dropped when the session that created the temp table closes, and there are no other active sessions with a reference to it

                • Switch to a real user table in TempDB - you can create tables there, but be aware that they'll disappear on server restart

                • Switch to a real user table in a user database





                share|improve this answer













                Not concurrently. Your options include:



                • Run the queries one after another in the same session

                • Switch from a temp table to a global temp table (use ##TableName instead of #TableName), but be aware that the global temp table is automatically dropped when the session that created the temp table closes, and there are no other active sessions with a reference to it

                • Switch to a real user table in TempDB - you can create tables there, but be aware that they'll disappear on server restart

                • Switch to a real user table in a user database






                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered 5 hours ago









                Brent OzarBrent Ozar

                35.9k19112247




                35.9k19112247























                    7














                    While Brent's answer is correct for for all practical purposes, and this is not something I've ever seen someone worry about, it is possible for multiple invocations of a stored procedure in a session to affect each other through a session-scoped #temp table.



                    The good news is it's extremely unlikely to happen in the wild because



                    1) #Temp tables declared inside a stored procedures or nested batches don't actually have session visibility (or lifetime). And these are by far the most common case.



                    2) It requires MultipleActiveResultsets and either some very strange async client programming, or for the stored procedure to return a resultset in the middle, and the client to call another instance of the stored procedure while processing the results from the first.



                    Here's a cooked-up example:



                    using System;
                    using System.Data.SqlClient;

                    namespace ado.nettest

                    class Program

                    static void Main(string[] args)

                    using (var con = new SqlConnection("Server=localhost;database=tempdb;integrated security=true;MultipleActiveResultSets = True"))

                    con.Open();

                    var procDdl = @"
                    create table #t(id int)
                    exec ('
                    create procedure #foo
                    as
                    begin
                    insert into #t(id) values (1);
                    select top 10000 * from sys.messages m, sys.messages m2;
                    select count(*) rc from #t;
                    delete from #t;
                    end
                    ');
                    ";
                    var cmdDDL = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmdDDL.CommandText = procDdl;
                    cmdDDL.ExecuteNonQuery();

                    var cmd = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())

                    rdr.Read();

                    var cmd2 = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd2.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr2 = cmd2.ExecuteReader())




                    while (rdr.Read())



                    rdr.NextResult();
                    rdr.Read();
                    var rc = rdr.GetInt32(0);
                    Console.WriteLine($"Numer of rows in temp table rc");






                    Console.WriteLine("Hit any key to exit");
                    Console.ReadKey();





                    which outputs



                    Numer of rows in temp table 0
                    Hit any key to exit


                    because the second invocation of the stored procedure inserted a row, and then deleted all the rows from #t while the first invocation was waiting for the client to fetch the rows from its first resultset. Note that if the first resultset was small, the rows might get buffered and could continue without sending anything to the client.



                    If you move the



                    create table #t(id int)


                    into the stored procedure it outputs:



                    Numer of rows in temp table 1
                    Hit any key to exit


                    And with the temp table declared inside the procedure, if you change the second query to



                    cmd2.CommandText = "select * from #t";


                    It fails with:




                    'Invalid object name '#t'.'







                    share|improve this answer




















                    • 1





                      As soon as I saw the question title I knew the answer was MARS.

                      – Joshua
                      40 mins ago















                    7














                    While Brent's answer is correct for for all practical purposes, and this is not something I've ever seen someone worry about, it is possible for multiple invocations of a stored procedure in a session to affect each other through a session-scoped #temp table.



                    The good news is it's extremely unlikely to happen in the wild because



                    1) #Temp tables declared inside a stored procedures or nested batches don't actually have session visibility (or lifetime). And these are by far the most common case.



                    2) It requires MultipleActiveResultsets and either some very strange async client programming, or for the stored procedure to return a resultset in the middle, and the client to call another instance of the stored procedure while processing the results from the first.



                    Here's a cooked-up example:



                    using System;
                    using System.Data.SqlClient;

                    namespace ado.nettest

                    class Program

                    static void Main(string[] args)

                    using (var con = new SqlConnection("Server=localhost;database=tempdb;integrated security=true;MultipleActiveResultSets = True"))

                    con.Open();

                    var procDdl = @"
                    create table #t(id int)
                    exec ('
                    create procedure #foo
                    as
                    begin
                    insert into #t(id) values (1);
                    select top 10000 * from sys.messages m, sys.messages m2;
                    select count(*) rc from #t;
                    delete from #t;
                    end
                    ');
                    ";
                    var cmdDDL = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmdDDL.CommandText = procDdl;
                    cmdDDL.ExecuteNonQuery();

                    var cmd = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())

                    rdr.Read();

                    var cmd2 = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd2.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr2 = cmd2.ExecuteReader())




                    while (rdr.Read())



                    rdr.NextResult();
                    rdr.Read();
                    var rc = rdr.GetInt32(0);
                    Console.WriteLine($"Numer of rows in temp table rc");






                    Console.WriteLine("Hit any key to exit");
                    Console.ReadKey();





                    which outputs



                    Numer of rows in temp table 0
                    Hit any key to exit


                    because the second invocation of the stored procedure inserted a row, and then deleted all the rows from #t while the first invocation was waiting for the client to fetch the rows from its first resultset. Note that if the first resultset was small, the rows might get buffered and could continue without sending anything to the client.



                    If you move the



                    create table #t(id int)


                    into the stored procedure it outputs:



                    Numer of rows in temp table 1
                    Hit any key to exit


                    And with the temp table declared inside the procedure, if you change the second query to



                    cmd2.CommandText = "select * from #t";


                    It fails with:




                    'Invalid object name '#t'.'







                    share|improve this answer




















                    • 1





                      As soon as I saw the question title I knew the answer was MARS.

                      – Joshua
                      40 mins ago













                    7












                    7








                    7







                    While Brent's answer is correct for for all practical purposes, and this is not something I've ever seen someone worry about, it is possible for multiple invocations of a stored procedure in a session to affect each other through a session-scoped #temp table.



                    The good news is it's extremely unlikely to happen in the wild because



                    1) #Temp tables declared inside a stored procedures or nested batches don't actually have session visibility (or lifetime). And these are by far the most common case.



                    2) It requires MultipleActiveResultsets and either some very strange async client programming, or for the stored procedure to return a resultset in the middle, and the client to call another instance of the stored procedure while processing the results from the first.



                    Here's a cooked-up example:



                    using System;
                    using System.Data.SqlClient;

                    namespace ado.nettest

                    class Program

                    static void Main(string[] args)

                    using (var con = new SqlConnection("Server=localhost;database=tempdb;integrated security=true;MultipleActiveResultSets = True"))

                    con.Open();

                    var procDdl = @"
                    create table #t(id int)
                    exec ('
                    create procedure #foo
                    as
                    begin
                    insert into #t(id) values (1);
                    select top 10000 * from sys.messages m, sys.messages m2;
                    select count(*) rc from #t;
                    delete from #t;
                    end
                    ');
                    ";
                    var cmdDDL = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmdDDL.CommandText = procDdl;
                    cmdDDL.ExecuteNonQuery();

                    var cmd = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())

                    rdr.Read();

                    var cmd2 = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd2.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr2 = cmd2.ExecuteReader())




                    while (rdr.Read())



                    rdr.NextResult();
                    rdr.Read();
                    var rc = rdr.GetInt32(0);
                    Console.WriteLine($"Numer of rows in temp table rc");






                    Console.WriteLine("Hit any key to exit");
                    Console.ReadKey();





                    which outputs



                    Numer of rows in temp table 0
                    Hit any key to exit


                    because the second invocation of the stored procedure inserted a row, and then deleted all the rows from #t while the first invocation was waiting for the client to fetch the rows from its first resultset. Note that if the first resultset was small, the rows might get buffered and could continue without sending anything to the client.



                    If you move the



                    create table #t(id int)


                    into the stored procedure it outputs:



                    Numer of rows in temp table 1
                    Hit any key to exit


                    And with the temp table declared inside the procedure, if you change the second query to



                    cmd2.CommandText = "select * from #t";


                    It fails with:




                    'Invalid object name '#t'.'







                    share|improve this answer















                    While Brent's answer is correct for for all practical purposes, and this is not something I've ever seen someone worry about, it is possible for multiple invocations of a stored procedure in a session to affect each other through a session-scoped #temp table.



                    The good news is it's extremely unlikely to happen in the wild because



                    1) #Temp tables declared inside a stored procedures or nested batches don't actually have session visibility (or lifetime). And these are by far the most common case.



                    2) It requires MultipleActiveResultsets and either some very strange async client programming, or for the stored procedure to return a resultset in the middle, and the client to call another instance of the stored procedure while processing the results from the first.



                    Here's a cooked-up example:



                    using System;
                    using System.Data.SqlClient;

                    namespace ado.nettest

                    class Program

                    static void Main(string[] args)

                    using (var con = new SqlConnection("Server=localhost;database=tempdb;integrated security=true;MultipleActiveResultSets = True"))

                    con.Open();

                    var procDdl = @"
                    create table #t(id int)
                    exec ('
                    create procedure #foo
                    as
                    begin
                    insert into #t(id) values (1);
                    select top 10000 * from sys.messages m, sys.messages m2;
                    select count(*) rc from #t;
                    delete from #t;
                    end
                    ');
                    ";
                    var cmdDDL = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmdDDL.CommandText = procDdl;
                    cmdDDL.ExecuteNonQuery();

                    var cmd = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())

                    rdr.Read();

                    var cmd2 = con.CreateCommand();
                    cmd2.CommandText = "exec #foo";
                    using (var rdr2 = cmd2.ExecuteReader())




                    while (rdr.Read())



                    rdr.NextResult();
                    rdr.Read();
                    var rc = rdr.GetInt32(0);
                    Console.WriteLine($"Numer of rows in temp table rc");






                    Console.WriteLine("Hit any key to exit");
                    Console.ReadKey();





                    which outputs



                    Numer of rows in temp table 0
                    Hit any key to exit


                    because the second invocation of the stored procedure inserted a row, and then deleted all the rows from #t while the first invocation was waiting for the client to fetch the rows from its first resultset. Note that if the first resultset was small, the rows might get buffered and could continue without sending anything to the client.



                    If you move the



                    create table #t(id int)


                    into the stored procedure it outputs:



                    Numer of rows in temp table 1
                    Hit any key to exit


                    And with the temp table declared inside the procedure, if you change the second query to



                    cmd2.CommandText = "select * from #t";


                    It fails with:




                    'Invalid object name '#t'.'








                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 39 mins ago

























                    answered 59 mins ago









                    David Browne - MicrosoftDavid Browne - Microsoft

                    12.5k729




                    12.5k729







                    • 1





                      As soon as I saw the question title I knew the answer was MARS.

                      – Joshua
                      40 mins ago












                    • 1





                      As soon as I saw the question title I knew the answer was MARS.

                      – Joshua
                      40 mins ago







                    1




                    1





                    As soon as I saw the question title I knew the answer was MARS.

                    – Joshua
                    40 mins ago





                    As soon as I saw the question title I knew the answer was MARS.

                    – Joshua
                    40 mins ago

















                    draft saved

                    draft discarded
















































                    Thanks for contributing an answer to Database Administrators Stack Exchange!


                    • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                    But avoid


                    • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                    • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                    To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                    draft saved


                    draft discarded














                    StackExchange.ready(
                    function ()
                    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdba.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f235197%2fis-it-possible-for-sql-statements-to-execute-concurrently-within-a-single-sessio%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                    );

                    Post as a guest















                    Required, but never shown





















































                    Required, but never shown














                    Required, but never shown












                    Required, but never shown







                    Required, but never shown

































                    Required, but never shown














                    Required, but never shown












                    Required, but never shown







                    Required, but never shown







                    Popular posts from this blog

                    Are there any comparative studies done between Ashtavakra Gita and Buddhim?How is it wrong to believe that a self exists, or that it doesn't?Can you criticise or improve Ven. Bodhi's description of MahayanaWas the doctrine of 'Anatta', accepted as doctrine by modern Buddhism, actually taught by the Buddha?Relationship between Buddhism, Hinduism and Yoga?Comparison of Nirvana, Tao and Brahman/AtmaIs there a distinction between “ego identity” and “craving/hating”?Are there many differences between Taoism and Buddhism?Loss of “faith” in buddhismSimilarity between creation in Abrahamic religions and beginning of life in Earth mentioned Agganna Sutta?Are there studies about the difference between meditating in the morning versus in the evening?Can one follow Hinduism and Buddhism at the same time?Are there any prohibitions on participating in other religion's practices?Psychology of 'flow'

                    fallocate: fallocate failed: Text file busy in Ubuntu 17.04? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)defragmenting and increasing performance of old lubuntu system with swap partitionIssue with increasing the root partition from the swapthis /usr/bin/dpkg returned error || ubuntu-16.04, 64bitDefault 17.04 swap file locationHow to Resize Ubuntu 17.04 Zesty Swap file size?Ubuntu freezes from online formsMy Laptop is not starting after upgrade ubuntu 16.04 (Kernel 4.8.0-38 to 04.10.0-36)hcp: ERROR: FALLOCATE FAILED!Not sure my swap is being usedWine 3.0 asking for more virtual free swap

                    Where else does the Shulchan Aruch quote an authority by name?Parashat Metzora+HagadolPesach/PassoverShulchan Aruch UTF-8Anonymous glosses in the Shulchan AruchWhy is the Shulchan Aruch definitive?Siman 32, Kitzur Shulchan Aruch: UntranslatedLitvaks/Yeshivish and Shulchan AruchBuying a Shulchan AruchEnglish version of SHULCHAN ARUCHIs there any place where Shulchan Aruch rules with the Rosh against the Rif and Rambam?Are there practices where Sepharadim do not hold by Shulchan Aruch?5th part of the shulchan aruch