vote up 1 vote down star

This is not a connection timeout as a connection to the database is made fine. The problem is that the stored procedure that I'm calling takes longer than, say, 30 seconds and causes a timeout.

The code of the function looks something like this:

SqlDatabase db = new SqlDatabase(connectionManager.SqlConnection.ConnectionString);
return db.ExecuteScalar(Enum.GetName(typeof(StoredProcs), storedProc), parameterValues);

The ExecuteScalar call is timing out. How can I extend the timeout period of this function?

For quick stored procedures, it works fine. But, one of the functions takes a while and the call fails. I can't seem to find any way to extend the timeout period when the ExecuteScalar function is called this way.

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OK, downvoting my question is just rude. My question is clearly defined and (hopefully) has an answer. – BoltBait Jul 10 at 21:06

3 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

If you are using the EnterpriseLibrary (and it looks like you are) try this:

 Microsoft.Practices.EnterpriseLibrary.Data.Database db = Microsoft.Practices.EnterpriseLibrary.Data.DatabaseFactory.CreateDatabase("ConnectionString");
 System.Data.Common.DbCommand cmd = db.GetStoredProcCommand("StoredProcedureName");
 cmd.CommandTimeout = 600;
 db.AddInParameter(cmd, "ParameterName", DbType.String, "Value");

 // Added to handle paramValues array conversion
 foreach (System.Data.SqlClient.SqlParameter param in parameterValues) 
 {
     db.AddInParameter(cmd, param.ParameterName, param.SqlDbType, param.Value);
 }

 return cmd.ExecuteScalar();

Edited to handle the paramValues array directly based on the comments. I also included your ConnectionString value:

Microsoft.Practices.EnterpriseLibrary.Data.Database db = Microsoft.Practices.EnterpriseLibrary.Data.DatabaseFactory.CreateDatabase(connectionManager.SqlConnection.ConnectionString);
System.Data.Common.DbCommand cmd = db.GetStoredProcCommand("StoredProcedureName", parameterValues);
cmd.CommandTimeout = 600;
return cmd.ExecuteScalar();
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Trying this now... – BoltBait Jul 10 at 21:14
Hmmm... I don't have access to the ParameterNames. The parameterValues variable in my sample code is defined as "object[] parameterValues". Can I still add the parameters without knowing the names only the order? – BoltBait Jul 10 at 21:27
I added code that should convert your paramValues array into the parameters expected by the DbCommand. – Chris Porter Jul 10 at 21:44
No need. You just add it to the GetStoredProcCommand command. – BoltBait Jul 10 at 21:48
Nice find, edited to show "proper" solution. Did this solve your issue? – Chris Porter Jul 10 at 21:55
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

Mladen is right but if you have to do this you probably have a bigger problem with the proc itself. Under load it might take much longer than your new timeout. Might be worth spending some quality time with the proc to optimize.

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1  
Thanks for telling me to go optimize my application. Sigh. In the long run that may happen, but for TODAY I just need to get this thing running. – BoltBait Jul 10 at 20:39
I certainly meant no offense. It's just that if SQL is timing out, it is unlikely you'll be able to find a timeout # that will work in every situation. You WANT SQL to time out in many cases and the default is still pretty long. – n8wrl Jul 13 at 11:31
vote up 7 vote down

you do this by setting the SqlCommand.CommandTimeout property

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1  
Which would work great if I was using a SqlCommand... but, I'm not. – BoltBait Jul 10 at 20:36
3  
Yes, you are. SqlDatabase isn't part of the standard data provider; it's a wrapper class that someone has written, and it will use an SqlCommand object internally. – Joel Coehoorn Jul 10 at 20:43
3  
The "someone" may be Microsoft, though -- is this the SQLDatabase class from Microsoft.Practices.EnterpriseLibrary? – Richard Dunlap Jul 10 at 20:52
@Joel, that function is defined in a file called Microsoft.Practices.EnterpriseLibrary.Data.dll Hmmm... not sure if I have the source code for that. Searching... – BoltBait Jul 10 at 20:57
Rewrite it to use db.CreateConnection(); the you'll have 4-5 extra lines of code, but easy access to the SqlCommand object. – nos Jul 10 at 21:10

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