Hmmm . . . Um método é obter o último valor. Em seguida, escolha todas as últimas linhas com esse valor e agregue:
select min(rownum), colA, colB
from (select t.*,
first_value(colA) over (partition by colB order by rownum desc) as last_colA
from t
) t
where rownum > all (select t2.rownum
from t t2
where t2.colB = t.colB and t2.colA <> t.last_colA
)
group by colA, colB;
Ou, sem a agregação:
select t.*
from (select t.*,
first_value(colA) over (partition by colB order by rownum desc) as last_colA,
lag(colA) over (partition by colB order by rownum) as prev_clA
from t
) t
where rownum > all (select t2.rownum
from t t2
where t2.colB = t.colB and t2.colA <> t.last_colA
) and
(prev_colA is null or prev_colA <> colA);
Mas no SQL Server 2008, vamos tratar isso como um problema de lacunas e ilhas:
select t.*
from (select t.*,
min(rownum) over (partition by colB, colA, (seqnum_b - seqnum_ab) ) as min_rownum_group,
max(rownum) over (partition by colB, colA, (seqnum_b - seqnum_ab) ) as max_rownum_group
from (select t.*,
row_number() over (partition by colB order by rownum) as seqnum_b,
row_number() over (partition by colB, colA order by rownum) as seqnum_ab,
max(rownum) over (partition by colB order by rownum) as max_rownum
from t
) t
) t
where rownum = min_rownum_group and -- first row in the group defined by adjacent colA, colB
max_rownum_group = max_rownum -- last group for each colB;
Isso identifica cada um dos grupos usando uma diferença de números de linha. Ele calcula o rownum máximo para o grupo e geral nos dados. Estes são os mesmos para o último grupo.