I need to make the code below atomic/fail or succeed as a single unit. How could I go about achieving that?
void Processor(Input input)
{
var mapper = new Mapper(recordDetails);
int remainingRecords = GetCountForRemainingRecords(recordDetails);
try
{
while (remainingRecords > 0)
{
mapper.CreateRecords(dataset);
Validate(dataset);
//the Save(dataset) uses SqlBulkCopy maps tables, transaction, and saves it..
Save(dataset);
//I cannot perform the operation below on the dataset directly because dataset doesn't have the records that is in the database
//the method below eventually calls a stored proc that sends a list of users that was recently created
OutdateDuplicateUsers(dataset.userTable);
remainingRecords = MethodToGetUpdatedCount();
}
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
//exception handler..
}
}
Now if my OutdateDuplicateUsers throws an exception, I would still end up with the accounts that Save method persisted. I do not want that to happen. I want both Save and OutdateDuplicateUsers method to be atomic. I read about this great article about TransactionScope and seemed it is exactly what I want. However, I could not get it to work. The implementation seems straight forward reading from the article, but I couldn't get it working myself.
What I tried:
void Processor(Input input)
{
var mapper = new Mapper(recordDetails);
int remainingRecords = GetCountForRemainingRecords(recordDetails);
try
{
while (remainingRecords > 0)
{
using (var scope = new TransactionScope())
{
try
{
mapper.CreateRecords(dataset);
Validate(dataset);
//the method Save(dataset) is using SqlBulkCopy; maps tables, uses transaction, and saves it..
Save(dataset);
//I cannot perform this opertaion on the dataset directly because dataset doesn't have the records that is in the database
//the method below eventually calls a stored proc that sends a list of users that was recently created
OutdateDuplicateUsers(dataset.userTable);
remainingRecords = MethodToGetUpdatedCount();
scope.Complete();
}
catch (Exception)
{
//not both at the same time. I tried using both, one at a time though.
TransactionScope.Dispose();
TransactionScope.Current.Rollback();
//exception handler
}
}
}
}
}
update: The dataset is a strongly typed dataset and is schema only. The CreateRecords and Validate method populates the data based on the business logic. The 'mapper' takes in recordDetails which is, for instance, a list of Users (updated the snippet). What I mean by doesn't work is that if OutdateDuplicateUser() method throws an exception and cannot complete the outdating operation, I could still see that the records have been persisted in the database from Save(dataset) method, which I am trying to prevent.
TransactionScope.Dispose();
norTransactionScope.Current.Rollback();
to rollback the transaction. It's enough no to callscope.Complete()
and the transaction should be rolled back when application exists theusing
block.catch
section doesn't solve Your issue, Please also take note that it may depend on how the methods You call (for exampleOutdateDuplicateUsers
orSave
) are implementedand if they are compatible withTransactionScope
.dataSet
) uses the transaction that is provided with theTransactionScope
block. ThedataSet
is created outside the transaction scope'susing
block, which may cause them not to use the transaction automatically.