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14:06
0
A: Parameter Sniffing and Nested Stored Procedure

gbnYes to the first one. Each stored procedure is separate and you need to apply anti-sniffing techniques (parameter masking, or the newer OPTIMISE FOR UNKNOWN) in each stored procedure Yes to the second, but not why you think. A variable has scope only in that stored procedure. So any @PersonID in...

Thanks. Therefore if I declared PersonID=1 in stored procedure 1 and PersonID = 2 in stored procedure 2, can you confirm that PersonID will equal 1 after control is passed back from stored procedure 2 to stored procedure 1. Are there any risks using the same variable name?
gbn
gbn
yes, PersonID=1 will stay in proc 1. The internals of proc 2 have no effect. Think of your .net or java methods and "encapsualtion". No risks if it makes sense. Your nested proc is a method in it's own right and may be called separately
Thanks. I am almost ready to mark this question answered. I am using 'XACT_ABORT ON' with explicit transactions to ensure that transactions are rolled back when there is an error in the stored procedure. Therefore if there is a timeout on the VB6 command object (this calls the stored procedure) or the stored procedure throws an exception; the program will deal with it. I have only recently discovered: 'XACT_ABORT ON'. Is there anything else I should think about when calling stored procedures from VB6 programs?
gbn
gbn
The fact of VB6 doesn't matter. The stored proc is opaque to the calling code, no matter what language. The ideal stored proc template is here (my answer, I'm biased): stackoverflow.com/questions/2073737/…
The article you provided is good. I had not thought about setting NOCOUNT and I believe I will be in for a performance gain. You say: "the fact of VB6 doesn't matter". However, before I used XACT_ABORT ON, I was having problems were the stored procedure was returning an output parameter indicating success even though it was not successful.
gbn
gbn
14:06
@w0051977: you can use the CATCH block to set output params NULL or such too (It's my article I linked too)
this is exactly what I do. However, can I assume that the stored procedure transaction will always either committ or roll back e.g. what happens if the client connection times out or there is a power cut on the client side. I am still relatively new to stored procedures.
gbn
gbn
client timeout: you need SET XACT_ABORT ON. Client dies, the SQL connection is physically broken so it all rolls back. See this on dba.se (me again) dba.stackexchange.com/a/10929/630
The DB types hang around there (including me)
Thank you for your help so far. I am neally there. I use to have SET XACT_ABORT OFF (default) with explicit transactions in the stored procedure. I discovered that once the stored procedure fails, subsequent calls indicate success even though this is not the case. Is this because there is one transaction which encompasses all calls to the stored procedure when SET XACT_ABORT = NO. The stored procedure is called about 20 times per minute for about fifteen minutes; once per day.
JNK
JNK
Do you mean SET XACT_ABORT = ON instead of = NO?
No, I didn't realise what this meant until a few days ago. When it was set to default (off), I was experiencing the behaviour I explained in my last post.
@JNK, I missunderstood your last post. I meant 'SET XACT_ABORT = OFF' and not SET XACT_ABORT = NO (this was a typo).
JNK
JNK
14:21
i knew it was a typo but wanted to know if you meant NO as in OFF or NO as in "I mystyped ON"
I see. Am I correct in assuming that there is only one transaction when SET XACT_ABORT = OFF?
gbn
gbn
14:37
hello
sory about that. You can assoicate your accounts for 100 rep
@w0051977 There is only ever one transaction, no matter what the setting is
SET XACT_ABORT ON changes the behaviour after an error
hence I added the links
I see. What happens if SET XACT_ABORT = OFF and the stored procedure is already executing a previous call? Are the statements cached somewhere? Also what do you mean by: "You can assoicate your accounts for 100 rep"? I am still relatively new to the website but want to start using it more. Thanks again.
gbn
gbn
@w0051977 There is one gbn across all sites. So if you register on dba.se, it will detect you. YOu get 100 rep for this linkage, which gives you ability to vote etc immediately
Stored procs can be concurrently called.
SET XACT_ABORT ON doesnt affect this
client 1 runs, client 2 runs at same time. They each have a different connection (aka SPID) in SQL Server. Each client is unaware of each other. If client 1 dies, client 2 won't be aware of it.
The "execution plan" for the stored procedure is cached, but never results
so each clients always gets latest data at the time of calling
It is the same client running the stored procedure many times (the stored procedure is in a loop). The command object (VB6) times out and the stored procedure is called again with different values and suceeds. However the program then ends; the connection closes and everything rolls back?. This post helped me to understand what was happening: weblogs.sqlteam.com/dang/archive/2007/10/20/…. Thanks again.
The behaviour I explained above only happens when SET XACT_ABORT OFF.
gbn
gbn
14:53
This is correct
The command timeout leaves a transaction open. Subsequent calls are nested within this one. The final close will cause a rollback.
SET XACT_ABORT ON will force a rollback on command timeout
4
A: SQL Server Transaction Timeout

gbnExtending Mark's answer... When a client timeout event occurs (.net CommandTimeout for example), the client sends an "ABORT" to SQL Server. SQL Server then simply abandons the query processing. No transaction is rolled back, no locks are released. Now, the connection is returned to the connecti...

You have to read the link I've posted for background
I see your comment above now, and this is why
The alternative is to force a rollback in the client code after the stored proc call in case of client timeout
Which is ugly
Brilliant. That is what I wanted to know. I am about to accept your answer (and always use SET XACT_ABORT ON and NOCOUNT ON in future). Is it a bad design pattern to have a stored procedure in a loop? If an error occurs, the program says RESUME NEXT. No other error handling on the client side. I am relatively new to stored procedures.
gbn
gbn
@w0051977 yes and no. If each loop is an unrelated bit of processing, then no
This behaviour applies to any SQL call. It's just more controllable with stored procs
15:08
What do you mean "an unrelated bit of processing" and "yes and no". The stored procedure contains deletion statements only (within SQL cursors). Thanks again for answering my questions.
gbn
gbn
if the loop is designed to be one unit of work, then a loop could be bad. Better to call once. if you can tolerate a fail on some iterations, then each call is unrelated
I can't say good or bad becuase I don't know what you're doing.
Look at this
In computer science, ACID (atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability) is a set of properties that guarantee database transactions are processed reliably. In the context of databases, a single logical operation on the data is called a transaction. For example, a transfer of funds from one bank account to another, even though that might involve multiple changes (such as debiting one account and crediting another), is a single transaction. Jim Gray defined these properties of a reliable transaction system in the late 1970s and developed technologies to automatically achieve them. In 1...
This really is the last question. Is there any best practices for error handling in the client side code?
By the way your answer here is very good and clears up a lot of my concerns: dba.stackexchange.com/questions/10912/…. I will be upvoting.
gbn
gbn
@w0051977 I haven't posted any I think...
I do not understand what you mean by: I haven't posted any I think...
gbn
gbn
I don't write client code that much
I really concentrate on databases and such
And especially not VB6
15:20
ok thanks again for your time. I will now answer the question.
gbn
gbn
cheers
The things I've linked to, and we0ve discussed, summarise several aspects of how SQL Server handles things: transactions, errors, atomicity, client timeouts, concurrency
Interesting areas.

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