2

I have a SqlCommand object on my c# based asp.net page. The SQL and the passed parameters are working the majority of the time. I have one case that is not working, I get the following error:

String or binary data would be truncated. The statement has been terminated.

I understand the error and but all the columns in the database should be long enough to hold everything being sent.

My questions,

Is there a way to see what the actual SQL being sent to the database is from SqlCommand object? I would like to be able to email the SQL when an error occurs.

Thanks, Justin

4 Answers 4

8

While you will not be able to plug is into something like Enterprise Manager to run it works for logging.

public static string ToReadableString(this IDbCommand command)
{
    StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
    if (command.CommandType == CommandType.StoredProcedure)
        builder.AppendLine("Stored procedure: " + command.CommandText);
    else
        builder.AppendLine("Sql command: " + command.CommandText);
    if (command.Parameters.Count > 0)
        builder.AppendLine("With the following parameters.");
    foreach (IDataParameter param in command.Parameters)
    {
        builder.AppendFormat(
            "     Paramater {0}: {1}",
            param.ParameterName,
            (param.Value == null ? 
            "NULL" : param.Value.ToString())).AppendLine();
    }
    return builder.ToString();
}
1
  • You saved my day! Not being allowed to use the profiler, this is a great way to get the actual SQL, then run it from SSMS or the Enterprise Manager. Jan 16, 2013 at 18:09
7

You need to use the SQL Server Profiler to watch what comes from the application. I believe it can show you the SQL and the parameters, which you will need to see.

3
  • 3
    This tool should be your new best friend.
    – Bryan
    Apr 10, 2010 at 2:36
  • this is the best there is, Microsoft uses some fool stored procedure rather than generating actual SQL statements. This makes things insane for developers (me). Why must they do everything so backwards!
    – Justin808
    May 5, 2010 at 2:58
  • Which stored procedure are you referring to? May 5, 2010 at 4:50
4

Whilst not perfect, here's something I knocked up something for TSQL - could be easily tweaked for other flavours... If nothing else it will give you a start point for your own improvements :)

This does an OK job on data types and output parameters etc similar to using "execute stored procedure" in SSMS. We mostly used SPs so the "text" command doesn't account for parameters etc

public static String ParameterValueForSQL(this SqlParameter sp)
  {
   String retval = "";

   switch (sp.SqlDbType)
   {
    case SqlDbType.Char:
    case SqlDbType.NChar:
    case SqlDbType.NText:
    case SqlDbType.NVarChar:
    case SqlDbType.Text:
    case SqlDbType.Time:
    case SqlDbType.VarChar:
    case SqlDbType.Xml:
    case SqlDbType.Date:
    case SqlDbType.DateTime:
    case SqlDbType.DateTime2:
    case SqlDbType.DateTimeOffset:
     retval = "'" + sp.Value.ToString().Replace("'", "''") + "'";
     break;

    case SqlDbType.Bit:
     retval = (sp.Value.ToBooleanOrDefault(false)) ? "1" : "0";
     break;

    default:
     retval = sp.Value.ToString().Replace("'", "''");
     break;
   }

   return retval;
  }

  public static String CommandAsSql(this SqlCommand sc)
  {
   StringBuilder sql = new StringBuilder();
   Boolean FirstParam = true;

   sql.AppendLine("use " + sc.Connection.Database + ";");
   switch (sc.CommandType)
   {
    case CommandType.StoredProcedure:
     sql.AppendLine("declare @return_value int;");

     foreach (SqlParameter sp in sc.Parameters)
     {
      if ((sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.InputOutput) || (sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Output))
      {
       sql.Append("declare " + sp.ParameterName + "\t" + sp.SqlDbType.ToString() + "\t= ");

       sql.AppendLine(((sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Output) ? "null" : sp.ParameterValueForSQL()) + ";");

      }
     }

     sql.AppendLine("exec [" + sc.CommandText + "]");

     foreach (SqlParameter sp in sc.Parameters)
     {
      if (sp.Direction != ParameterDirection.ReturnValue)
      {
       sql.Append((FirstParam) ? "\t" : "\t, ");

       if (FirstParam) FirstParam = false;

       if (sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Input)
        sql.AppendLine(sp.ParameterName + " = " + sp.ParameterValueForSQL());
       else

        sql.AppendLine(sp.ParameterName + " = " + sp.ParameterName + " output");
      }
     }
     sql.AppendLine(";");

     sql.AppendLine("select 'Return Value' = convert(varchar, @return_value);");

     foreach (SqlParameter sp in sc.Parameters)
     {
      if ((sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.InputOutput) || (sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Output))
      {
       sql.AppendLine("select '" + sp.ParameterName + "' = convert(varchar, " + sp.ParameterName + ");");
      }
     }
     break;
    case CommandType.Text:
     sql.AppendLine(sc.CommandText);
     break;
   }

   return sql.ToString();
  }

this generates output along these lines...

use dbMyDatabase;
declare @return_value int;
declare @OutTotalRows BigInt = null;
exec [spMyStoredProc]
 @InEmployeeID = 1000686
 , @InPageSize = 20
 , @InPage = 1
 , @OutTotalRows = @OutTotalRows output
;
select 'Return Value' = convert(varchar, @return_value);
select '@OutTotalRows' = convert(varchar, @OutTotalRows);
2
  • Note that this requires StringExtensions.cs and ObjectExtensions.cs but gives SQL better taylored towards SQL Server. Jan 17, 2013 at 10:01
  • 1
    I hadn't spotted I'd left my own extension methods in the code (they're not the ones you mentioned but do the same thing) but hopefully the method names imply their context!
    – Flapper
    Jan 30, 2013 at 13:55
3

Check out this question it should provide what you are looking for.

Get the generated SQL statement from a SqlCommand object?

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