This is really a design issue - you can't really return a "live" data reader if you intend on destroying the connection, the SqlDataReader
is dependant on it i.e.
SqlDataReader dr;
using (SqlConnection con = ConnectionManager.GetDatabaseConnection())
{
SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("getInfo", con);
cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
cmd.Parameters.Add("@query", SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = sql;
cmd.Connection = con;
dr = cmd.ExecuteReader();
} // the SqlConnection is disposed here
return dr; // dr is now invalid
On top of that, you are leaking your implementation detail through to your BLL/UI layers by returning SqlDataReader
. You should read the data whilst the connection is active and return the actual data instead to keep things nice & clean e.g.
public class Download
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public byte[] Data { get; set; }
}
...
private Download getDownload(string sql)
{
using (SqlConnection con = ConnectionManager.GetDatabaseConnection())
using (SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("getInfo", con))
{
cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
cmd.Parameters.Add("@query", SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = sql;
con.Open();
Using (SqlDataReader dr = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
while (dr.Read())
{
return new Download
{
Name = (string)dr["mfile_name"],
Data = (byte[])dr["file_data"]
};
}
}
}
}