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Hey, I am trying to create a login page that checks the username and password with the database on the server. The server is located in a different country.

This is the code I have so far:

    #region Building the connection string

            string Server = "XX.XXX.XX.XX, XXXX";
            string Username = "_Username_";
            string Password = "_Password_";
            string Database = "_Database_";

            string ConnectionString = "Data Source=" + Server + ";";
            ConnectionString += "User ID=" + Username + ";";
            ConnectionString += "Password=" + Password + ";";
            ConnectionString += "Initial Catalog=" + Database;

            #endregion

            SqlConnection SQLConnection = new SqlConnection();

            try
            {
            SQLConnection.ConnectionString = ConnectionString;
            SQLConnection.Open();
 
            // You can get the server version 
            // SQLConnection.ServerVersion
            }

            catch (Exception Ex)
            {
            // Try to close the connection
            if (SQLConnection != null)
                SQLConnection.Dispose();
 
            // Create a (useful) error message
            string ErrorMessage = "A error occurred while trying to connect to the server.";
            ErrorMessage += Environment.NewLine;
            ErrorMessage += Environment.NewLine;
            ErrorMessage += Ex.Message;
 
            // Show error message (this = the parent Form object)
            MessageBox.Show(this, ErrorMessage, "Connection error", MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Error);
 
            // Stop here
            return;
}

I am getting the error message:

Non-negative number required. Parameter name: count

I have accepted wildcards on my server and I have no idea what that error means? Any help would be appreciated,

Thanks.

4
  • When you step through, which line is throwing the exception?
    – Robaticus
    Jun 10, 2010 at 17:08
  • You should use a SqlConnectionStringBuilder.
    – SLaks
    Jun 10, 2010 at 17:09
  • What's the exception's stack trace?
    – SLaks
    Jun 10, 2010 at 17:10
  • It gets thrown at SQLConnection.Open();
    – Crazyd22
    Jun 10, 2010 at 17:13

5 Answers 5

1

You need to put quotes around the server name in the connection string.

However, you should use a SqlConnectionStringBuilder instead, like this:

SqlConnectionStringBuilder builder = new SqlConnectionStringBuilder();

builder.DataSource = Server;
builder.UserID = Username;
builder.Password = Password;
builder.InitialCatalog = Database;


SqlConnection SQLConnection = new SqlConnection(builder.ToString());
try {
    SQLConnection.Open();
    ...
} finally {
    SQLConnection.Close();        
}

Also, you should close the connection in a finally block.

8
  • I tried this but still get the same message, it gets thrown at 'SQLConnection.Open();'
    – Crazyd22
    Jun 10, 2010 at 18:51
  • Please show us the full stack trace of the exception. Can you connect to the server using Visual Studio's UI or SSMS?
    – SLaks
    Jun 10, 2010 at 18:52
  • When I try to add a Data Source, I get the same error message when I try to test the connection, if that's what you mean? Whats SSMS?
    – Crazyd22
    Jun 10, 2010 at 18:56
  • For the DataSource I am using "my server ip, server port", is the correct?
    – Crazyd22
    Jun 10, 2010 at 19:11
  • SSMS is SQL Server Management Studio. Your DataSource is wrong.
    – SLaks
    Jun 10, 2010 at 19:15
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try to use a real connection string at first - that is tested against the DB with SSMS, then create your own. once the first one works, the 2nd one should work (make sure they are identical)

never concatenated input from client into an SQL statement (I know this is a connection string... but it's a bad idea to use input without checking it for illegal chars / injection, so further down the code - make sure you don't do this).

0

why do you have a messagebox.show in your data access code?

Its really bad practise dude.

umm valid connection strings can be found here

http://www.connectionstrings.com/

also use a connectionstring builder http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.data.sqlclient.sqlconnectionstringbuilder.aspx

im guessing that your connection string is invalid and so it is failing on counting its params ... but am really guessing there.

Your connection string will not be changing so id put it in the app.config ro web.config

also if you adda datasource then it will construct the connection string and add the item into your web.config.

2
  • I am trying to add a Data Source, but when I have filled out all the information in Add Connection, when I click Test Connection it comes up with the same error?
    – Crazyd22
    Jun 10, 2010 at 17:20
  • if you have the correct ip and port along with the correct user name and password ... then the problem is in the database config i think. are you sure its a sql server database? My point being that i no longer think its a programming problem. Jun 11, 2010 at 15:09
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best option user SqlConnectionStringBuilder as suggested by SLaks

or

put connection string in app.config file

or

try terminating connection string with semicolon (;) --this is just a wild guess

  string ConnectionString = "Data Source=" + Server + ";";
  ConnectionString += "User ID=" + Username + ";";
  ConnectionString += "Password=" + Password + ";";
  ConnectionString += "Initial Catalog=" + Database + ";";

PS:- Do pay attention to what John Nicholas is saying about MessageBox in data access code. If you are a beginner then try to develop good coding practices early on. It will help you tremendously as you graduate to write more complicated applications.

1
  • I tried SqlConnectionStringBuilder but still doesnt work, gives the same message
    – Crazyd22
    Jun 10, 2010 at 18:54
0

I am having the same problem, none of the suggestions I could find on the web seem to work.

On my laptop (Win7) I could install the MySQL Connector allright, just add a reference in Visual Studio and add "using MySql.Data.Client;" or something on top of the code. Now I tried to do the same on my desktop (WinXP), and nothing shows up in the references list. After googling for a while I find an obscure link to a new bèta version of the MySQL connector, which installs itself into C# it seems. You don't have to add a reference anymore, you can just use "using System.Data.SqlClient;".

When I use that and set everything up properly, it still gives me this error. Looking in Wireshark, all packets are unreadable except for one string in the second-to-last one: "packets out of order". I suspect the MySQL client is incompatible with my version of the MySQL server. The installed version of the client was a bèta after all, and my MySQL server is not the latest one. I'm not going to try this theory though, after trying for hours I'm rather like - darn it, I'll just use my laptop.

Sorry that this reply won't fix it, but I'm posting it in the hope that I can point someone in the right direction.

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