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I currently am working on a legacy application and have inherited some shady SQL with it. The project has never been put into production, but now is on it's way. During intial testing I found a bug. The application calls a stored procedure that calls many other stored procedures, creates cursors, loops through cursors, and many other things. FML.

Currently the way the app is designed, it calls the stored procedure, then reloads the UI with a fresh set of data. Of course, the data we want to display is still being processed on the SQL server side, so the UI results are not complete when displayed. To fix this, I just made a thread sleep for 30 seconds, before loading the UI. This is a terrible hack and I would like to fix this properly on the SQL side of things.

My question is...is it worthwhile to convert the branching stored procedures to functions? Would this make the main-line stored procedure wait for a return value, before processing on?

Here is the stored procedure:

    ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[ALLOCATE_BUDGET] 
    @budget_scenario_id uniqueidentifier
AS
BEGIN
    -- SET NOCOUNT ON added to prevent extra result sets from
    -- interfering with SELECT statements.
    SET NOCOUNT ON;

    DECLARE @constraint_type varchar(25)

    -- get project cache id and constraint type
    SELECT @constraint_type = CONSTRAINT_TYPE
    FROM BUDGET_SCENARIO WHERE BUDGET_SCENARIO_ID = @budget_scenario_id

    -- constraint type is Region by Region
    IF (@constraint_type = 'Region by Region')
      EXEC BUDGET_ALLOCATE_SCENARIO_REGIONBYREGION @budget_scenario_id

    -- constraint type is City Wide
    IF (@constraint_type = 'City Wide')
      EXEC BUDGET_ALLOCATE_SCENARIO_CITYWIDE @budget_scenario_id

    -- constraint type is Do Nothing
    IF (@constraint_type = 'Do Nothing')
      EXEC BUDGET_ALLOCATE_SCENARIO_DONOTHING @budget_scenario_id

    -- constraint type is Unconstrained
    IF (@constraint_type = 'Unconstrained')
      EXEC BUDGET_ALLOCATE_SCENARIO_UNCONSTRAINED @budget_scenario_id

    --set budget scenario status to "Allocated", so reporting tabs in the application are populated
    EXEC BUDGET_UPDATE_SCENARIO_STATUS @budget_scenario_id, 'Allocated'
END

To avoid displaying an incomplete resultset in the calling .NET application UI, before the cursors in the branching calls are completed, is it worthwile to convert these stored procedures into functions, with return values? Would this force SQL to wait before completing the main call to the [ALLOCATED_BUDGET] stored procedure?

  • The last SQL statement call in the stored procedure sets a status to "Allocated". This is happening before the cursors in the previous calls are finished processing. Does making these calls into function calls affect how the stored procedure returns focus to the application?

Any feedback is greatly appreciated. I have a feeling I am correct in going towards SQL functions but not 100% sure.

** additional information:

  1. Executing code uses [async=true] in the connection string
  2. Executing code uses the [SqlCommand].[ExecuteNonQuery] method

6 Answers 6

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How are you calling the procedure? I'm going to guess that you are using ExecuteNonQuery() to call the procedure. Try calling the procedure using ExecuteScalar() and modify the procedure like the following:

ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[ALLOCATE_BUDGET] 
    @budget_scenario_id uniqueidentifier
AS
BEGIN
   ...

    RETURN True
END

This should cause your data execution code in .NET to wait for the procedure to complete before continuing. If you don't want your UI to "hang" during the procedure execution, use a BackgroundWorkerProcess or something similar to run the query on a separate thread and look for the completed callback to update the UI with the results.

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  • The executing code uses the [SqlCommand].[ExecuteNonQuery] method
    – D3vtr0n
    Jul 20, 2009 at 19:48
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You could also try using the RETURN statement in your child stored procedures, which can be used to return a result code back to the parent procedure. You can call the child procedure by something along the lines of "exec @myresultcode = BUDGET_ALLOCATE_SCENARIO_REGIONBYREGION()". I think this should force the parent procedure to wait for the child procedure to finish.

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  • so it does not make a difference if it is stored procedure, rather than a function? function by definition RETURNS A VALUE. is it not safer to make them functions? I want to check the return value to make sure it was successful, and then update my scenario_status. thank you for your help.
    – D3vtr0n
    Jul 20, 2009 at 19:56
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    It's up to you whether you make them functions or stored procedures. Just be aware that functions have a lot more restrictions on what they can do compared to stored procedures, for example you can't have update statements in them. See this article: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms187650.aspx for more details. It might be easier for you to just keep them as stored procedures.
    – tbreffni
    Jul 20, 2009 at 20:25
  • I prefer stored procedures over user-defined functions, but UDFs have a very powerful advantage and that is the ability to easily work with them inside of SQL Studio as if they were tables. If for instance you have a stored procedure that returns a huge set of records and you need to get your hands on a single record. You will need to either dump that recordset to a temp table and mangle it or put it into Excel and filter there. With a table function you can run a SELECT * FROM UDF_Table1. Its possible to use both by putting logic in a UDF and wrapping it in a SP. Jul 21, 2009 at 3:42
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I have never heard that it's possible for a stored procedure to return to the caller while still executing in the background.

In fact, I'll go as far as to say I don't believe that's happening. If you're seeing a difference between the UI and what you believe the SP should have done, then I believe it has a different cause.

Does the connection string have async=true in it? Is the SP being executed by using BeginExecuteReader or Begin-anything else?

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  • I added [async=true] to the connection string but still get the same problematic results. It is executed with a SQL Command object and the ExecuteNonQuery method.
    – D3vtr0n
    Jul 20, 2009 at 19:41
  • 1
    I didn't mention async=true because I thought it would help. If you're not calling the Begin* methods, then it has no effect. I still don't believe your problem is that the SP continues to execute after a return. Something else is happening. Jul 20, 2009 at 20:07
  • Well its obviously the cursors in the child procedures. They are running, like a background process, while the UI refreshes. What I need is better control over the flow of my SQL returns. This thing is a mess but am up for the challenge. Thank you for your input.
    – D3vtr0n
    Jul 20, 2009 at 22:36
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    There is no background processing. If cursors did background processing, I'd have heard about it in all this time, and been much more frightened of cursors than I actually am. Go ahead and get rid of the cursors, but there's no way there's any background processing going on after you return. OTOH, request A could start the SP, then request B could start it, and request B could still be running when request A finishses. Jul 20, 2009 at 23:39
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At the risk of sounding to simple, I suggest you could create a table which can store the status of the stored proc. Somehow, a flag that can indicate that the entire process & sub-process has finished executing.

You could query this from UI to see if things are done by polling this status code.

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  • that sounds like waaaay too much data access going on, for my tastes.
    – D3vtr0n
    Jul 20, 2009 at 19:06
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Does making these calls into function calls affect how the stored procedure returns focus to the application?

No.

The stored procedure has no idea that its caller is a UI application. There is nothing in the stored procedure that can influence the behavior of the UI application.

Most likely the UI application is calling the stored procedure on one connection, and then refreshing its data on another connection. There's a plethora of ways of getting the UI to delay refreshing, but the one I'll push is that there should be a single database connection.

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  • I agree, I prefer writing applications with a single database connection (singleton). the problem is, I did not write any of this code. this code was built over 4 years then shelved. now it has returned like a bad horror movie. My idea of using functions would be that functions return a value, by definition. The stored procedure above would not allow branching or further processing (such as that last EXEC staetment in stored procedure above) until that function value is returned. or am i wrong?
    – D3vtr0n
    Jul 20, 2009 at 19:53
0

Personally, I would be far more concerned about replacing those cursors than converting this to functions.

And I would not run the last proc until checking for a valid return code from the previous procs (this thing is in real trouble if one of the preceding procs dies!)

Also consider if this should all be in a transaction (are these procs changing data in a table?)

(Am I the only one who finds it funny you have a proc to run the process for Do Nothing?)

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  • what do you recommend instead of cursors? i agree, i will move that last EXEC statement outta there, into its own call from the application. I like the idea of having a transaction wrapped around this too.
    – D3vtr0n
    Jul 20, 2009 at 19:47
  • I can't recommend anything in place of the cursors until I know what they do The way to replace a cursor with a set-based statement is very much dependent on the task the cursor is doing. And not all cursors can be replaced but probably over 90% of them can be.
    – HLGEM
    Jul 20, 2009 at 20:21

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