I want to implement the following interface on a 2-Tier application with an MS SQL-Server 2008R2 (i.e. no app server in between)
interface ILicense {
void Acquire(string license);
void Release(string license);
}
However, I want to release the license even if the application is killed or bombs out without calling the Release
method. I also want to avoid using a timer which refreshes the license every minute or so.
So I thought: Use a dedicated SqlConnection
together with the sp_getapplock
and sp_releaseapplock
SP because that's what they are seemed to be made for. Now I found out that the SP only work from within a transaction, so I would need to keep the transaction open all the time (i.e. while the application is running). Anyway, it works that way. The application starts, opens the connection, starts the transaction, and locks the license.
When the application terminates, the connection is closed, everything is rolled back and the license is released. Super.
Whenever the running app needs to switch licenses (e.g. for another module), it calls Release
on the old license and then Acquire
on the new one. Cool.
Now to my question(s):
- Is it acceptable to have an open (uncommitted) transaction open on a separate connection for a long time?
- Are there any better possibilities to implement such a 'lock' mechanism? The problem is that the license shall be released even if the application terminates unexpectedly. I thought of some sort of 'logout' trigger, but that does not exist in SQL-Server 2008R2