8

I am using nHibernate ICriteria to execute a query, and I would like to be able to get the SQL that was executed after the statement runs. So for example I have something like this.

ISession session = NHibernateSessionManager.Instance.GetSession();
DetachedCriteria query = BuildCriteria(); // Goes away and constructs the ICriteria
var result = query.GetExecutableCriteria(session).List<object>()

// somehow here get the sql that was just run
string sql = query.GetSqlSomehow();

I know I can log it and see the sql in the log, but I want to get it immediately after executing the statement so I can display the SQL to the user (even if it doesn't look nice).

1

3 Answers 3

11

You can attach an IInterceptor to your NH ISession, then use the OnPrepareStatement() method to trap (even modify) the SQL.

1
  • I like this method, and iv implemented the Interception logic and currently intercept the SaveOrUpdate method, but where do i go from there to catch the sql statement? Invocation.Request...?
    – furier
    Sep 28, 2012 at 13:36
3

You can use Log4Net configuration to capture the SQL being used. To start you'd need to create a custom appender such as this:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using log4net.Appender;
using log4net.Core;

public class NHibernateQueryAppender : AppenderSkeleton
{
        private static List<string> s_queries = new List<string>();
    private static int s_queryCount = 0;

    public static IList<string> CurrentQueries
    {
           get { return s_queries.AsReadOnly(); }
    }

    public static int CurrentQueryCount
    {
        get { return s_queryCount; }
    }

    public static void Reset()
    {
        s_queryCount = 0;
        s_queries.Clear();
    }

    protected override void Append(LoggingEvent loggingEvent)
    {
        s_queries.Add(loggingEvent.RenderedMessage);
        s_queryCount++;
    }
}

Then configure log4net like so:

<log4net>
    <...other config...>

    <appender name="nhquerycheck" type="NHibernateExecutor.Loggers.NHibernateQueryAppender, NHibernateExecutor" />

    <logger name="NHibernate.SQL">
        <level value="DEBUG"/>
        <appender-ref ref="nhquerycheck" />
    </logger>
</log4net>

The above class can then be queried at runtime such as to display the sql output to screen


Edit: for some reason post didn't come out correctly, so found example on web http://nhforge.org/blogs/nhibernate/archive/2008/09/06/how-to-configure-log4net-for-use-with-nhibernate.aspx

0

Personally I use the "NHibernate Profiler" tool for this. It's well worth the price since it also does a good job analyzing your usage of NHibernate and noticing potential problems.

2
  • I realise NHibernate Profiler is good at what it does, but if you read the question again I am not after a profiler or looking for potential problems.
    – Craig
    Aug 12, 2009 at 21:55
  • Ahhh so you need to see the SQL at runtime? I was thinking you just wanted to see the actual SQL which is what I use NHProf for most of the time. Aug 14, 2009 at 14:00

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.