I'm writing a small ASP.Net application, and one of the things that it needs to do is get data from a SQL Server database by calling a stored procedure. I've chosen to use Dapper as I've used it before (in non-ASP.NET code) with good results. Because I'm only ever calling stored procedures, I've written a small wrapper around the Dapper call:
public static async Task<IEnumerable<T>> QueryAsync<T>(this IDbConnection connection, string storedProcedureName,
object storedProcedureParameters = null, IDbTransaction transaction = null, int? commandTimeout = null)
{
var command = new CommandDefinition(storedProcedureName, storedProcedureParameters, transaction, commandTimeout, CommandType.StoredProcedure);
var result = await connection.QueryAsync<T>(command);
return result;
}
Problem is that when I start my site and the above code gets called, something is going wrong on the line where it actually makes the QueryAsync
call. When I debug, trying to run that line just causes the debugger to stop working and return to my browser, with the page not loaded.
If I wrap the QueryAsync
call in a try..catch block, and set a breakpoint in the catch block, the breakpoint is never hit. In Visual Studio I have unchecked the 'Just my code' debug option, but that didn't make a difference.
Why can I not see what's going wrong in the QueryAsync
call?