25

Could someone tell me what the units the SetTimeout(int) method in the ICriteria interface uses?
Is it milliseconds, seconds, minutes or other?

2 Answers 2

28

A little bit of poking around suggests that it could be seconds:

Assuming that ICriteria is the same as the Criteria interface in Hibernate core, then the JavaDoc for org.hibernate.Criteria provides a hint - the "see also" link to java.sql.Statement.setQueryTimeout(). The latter refers to its timeout parameter as seconds.

Assuming that the NHibernate implementation follows the implied contract of that method, then that should be fine. However, for peace of mind's sake, I went and looked for some NHibernate specific stuff. There are various references to CommandTimeout; for example, here, related to NHibernate. Sure enough, the documentation for CommandTimeout states that it's seconds.

I almost didn't post the above, because I don't know the answer outright, and can't find any concrete documentation - but since there is so little on the issue, I figured it couldn't hurt to present these findings.

8

I think it's seconds. The NHibernate API closely mirrors Hibernate Core for Java, where the Criteria.setTimeout(int) method uses seconds as the units (see also Statement.setQueryTimeout(int)).

Also, after looking at some NHibernate source, it appears that it's using that value to set the timeout for the underlying ADO.NET query, which uses seconds.

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.