Comparing two bitmasks in SQL to see if any of the bits match

瘦欲@ 提交于 2019-11-27 17:36:05

The answer to your question is to use the Bitwise & like this:

SELECT * FROM UserTable WHERE Roles & 6 != 0

The 6 can be exchanged for any combination of your bitfield where you want to check that any user has one or more of those bits. When trying to validate this I usually find it helpful to write this out longhand in binary. Your user table looks like this:

        1   2   4
------------------
Dave    0   1   1
Charlie 0   1   0
Susan   0   0   1   
Nick    1   0   0

Your test (6) is this

        1   2   4
------------------
Test    0   1   1

If we go through each person doing the bitwaise And against the test we get these:

        1   2   4
------------------
Dave    0   1   1   
Test    0   1   1
Result  0   1   1 (6)

Charlie 0   1   0
Test    0   1   1
Result  0   1   0 (2)

Susan   0   0   1
Test    0   1   1
Result  0   0   1 (4)

Nick    1   0   0
Test    0   1   1
Result  0   0   0 (0) 

The above should demonstrate that any records where the result is not zero has one or more of the requested flags.

Edit: Here's the test case should you want to check this

with test (id, username, roles)
AS
(
    SELECT 1,'Dave',6
    UNION SELECT 2,'Charlie',2
    UNION SELECT 3,'Susan',4
    UNION SELECT 4,'Nick',1
)
select * from test where (roles & 6) != 0  // returns dave, charlie & susan

or

select * from test where (roles & 2) != 0 // returns Dave & Charlie

or

select * from test where (roles & 7) != 0 // returns dave, charlie, susan & nick

Use the Transact-SQL bitwise AND operator "&" and compare the result to zero. Even better, instead of coding the roles as bits of an integer column, use boolean columns, one for each role. Then your query would simply be designer AND programmer friendly. If you expect the roles to change a lot over the lifetime of your application, then use a many-to-many table to map the association between users and their roles. both alternatives are more portable than relying on the existence of the bitwise-AND operator.

Ben
SELECT * FROM UserTable WHERE Roles & 6 > 0

SELECT * FROM table WHERE mask1 & mask2 > 0

example:

DECLARE @Mask int
SET @Mask = 6

DECLARE @Users TABLE
(
ID int,
Username varchar(50),
Roles int
)

INSERT INTO @Users (ID, Username, Roles) 
SELECT 1, 'Dave', 6
UNION
SELECT 2, 'Charlie', 2
UNION
SELECT 3, 'Susan', 4
UNION
SELECT 4, 'Nick', 1

SELECT * FROM @Users WHERE Roles & @Mask > 0

To find all programmers use:

SELECT * FROM UserTable WHERE Roles & 2 = 2
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!