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I have just had a scheduled SQL Server job run for longer than normal, and I could really have done with having set a timeout to stop it after a certain length of time.

I might be being a bit blind on this, but I can't seem to find a way of setting a timeout for a job. Does anyone know the way to do it?

Thanks

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+1 There is no apparent "timeout" property in the job editor. I am interested in what people come up with. – Tomalak Oct 19 at 13:18
I think you'd have to add in a WAITFOR-type setting in the SQL. – Randolph Potter Oct 19 at 13:25

2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

We do something like the code below as part of a nightly job processing subsystem - it is more complicated than this actually in reality; for example we are processing multiple interdependent sets of jobs, and read in job names and timeout values from configuration tables - but this captures the idea:

    DECLARE @JobToRun NVARCHAR(128) = 'My Agent Job'
DECLARE @dtStart DATETIME = GETDATE(), @dtCurr DATETIME
DECLARE @ExecutionStatus INT, @LastRunOutcome INT, @MaxTimeExceeded BIT = 0
DECLARE @TimeoutMinutes INT = 180 

EXEC msdb.dbo.sp_start_job @JobToRun
SET @dtCurr = GETDATE()
WHILE 1=1
BEGIN
	WAITFOR DELAY '00:00:10'
	SELECT @ExecutionStatus=current_execution_status, @LastRunOutcome=last_run_outcome 
	FROM OPENQUERY(LocalServer, 'set fmtonly off; exec msdb.dbo.sp_help_job') where [name] = @JobToRun
	IF @ExecutionStatus <> 4
	BEGIN -- job is running or finishing (not idle)
		SET @dtCurr=GETDATE()
		IF DATEDIFF(mi, @dtStart, @dtCurr) > @TimeoutMinutes
		BEGIN	
			EXEC msdb.dbo.sp_stop_job @job_name=@JobToRun					
			-- could log info, raise error, send email etc here
		END
		ELSE
		BEGIN
			CONTINUE
		END
	END
	IF @LastRunOutcome = 1  -- the job just finished with success flag
	BEGIN
		-- job succeeded, do whatever is needed here
		print 'job succeeded'									
	END

END
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vote up 1 vote down

What kind of a job is this? You may want to consider putting the whole job in a TSQL script within a While loop. The condition to check would obviously be the time difference between current time and job start time.

Raj

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With this specific job, I could split it up... I was just hoping there might be a "proper" solution. Thanks – Iain Hoult Oct 19 at 13:42

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