SQL

Got a SQL question? Any SQL flavor here, just ask. Indicate yo...
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 10:12
@Abaddon I'm guessing, but it seems like replication adds a lot of overhead for you. And you don't need real time.
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 10:08
@Abaddon this would be to replace replication
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 10:03
@Abaddon So once a day?
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 10:02
Are you replicating the whole database (or most of it)? Does it need to be realtime?
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 10:01
@Abaddon Sounds about right
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 09:53
/me lights cigar, walks casually away from the explosion
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 09:43
If you have Merge replication: good luck I'm sorry to say. You have 2-way inconsistent data
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 09:40
@AndyK Need to check, it's been a while.
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 09:40
But you'll need to re-enable replication. The publications are part of the database so will be restored. The subscriber will need a full re-synch (from snapshot) because it has "too much" data by definition. Source data has been removed as part of the restore
gbn
Oct 20, 2017 09:39
@Abaddon Yes.
gbn
May 31, 2012 11:05
@SPFiredrake why not?
 
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:25
Interesting areas.
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:24
The things I've linked to, and we0ve discussed, summarise several aspects of how SQL Server handles things: transactions, errors, atomicity, client timeouts, concurrency
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:23
cheers
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:19
And especially not VB6
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:18
I really concentrate on databases and such
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:18
I don't write client code that much
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:14
@w0051977 I haven't posted any I think...
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:10
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...
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:10
Look at this
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:10
I can't say good or bad becuase I don't know what you're doing.
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:09
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
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:05
This behaviour applies to any SQL call. It's just more controllable with stored procs
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 15:05
@w0051977 yes and no. If each loop is an unrelated bit of processing, then no
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:58
Which is ugly
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:58
The alternative is to force a rollback in the client code after the stored proc call in case of client timeout
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:58
I see your comment above now, and this is why
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:54
You have to read the link I've posted for background
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:54
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...

gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:54
SET XACT_ABORT ON will force a rollback on command timeout
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:53
The command timeout leaves a transaction open. Subsequent calls are nested within this one. The final close will cause a rollback.
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:53
This is correct
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:48
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:47
so each clients always gets latest data at the time of calling
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:47
The "execution plan" for the stored procedure is cached, but never results
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:46
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.
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:45
SET XACT_ABORT ON doesnt affect this
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:45
Stored procs can be concurrently called.
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:44
@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
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:40
hence I added the links
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:39
SET XACT_ABORT ON changes the behaviour after an error
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:39
@w0051977 There is only ever one transaction, no matter what the setting is
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:38
sory about that. You can assoicate your accounts for 100 rep
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:37
hello
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:07
The DB types hang around there (including me)
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:07
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:06
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
gbn
Feb 1, 2012 14:06
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/…