For years, to debug stored procedures I use a very lame basic approach. I wonder if there is a more modern way or tool to make life easier.
Let's say we ran the stored procedure
EXECUTE MyCoolProcedure 'Parameter1', 2, 'Parameter3', '2019-11-25'
And it fails with the error
Msg 8134, Level 16, State 1, Procedure MyCoolProcedure, Line 11 [Batch Start Line 0]
Divide by zero error encountered.
This Line 11
part is not particularly helpful because it is not clear how those lines are numbered.
If I click Modify on the stored procedure, I see
USE [MyCoolDatabase]
GO
/****** Object: StoredProcedure [dbo].[MyCoolProcedure] Script Date: 11/26/2019 3:01:05 AM ******/
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[MyCoolProcedure]
(
@p1 varchar(20),
@p2 int,
@p3 varchar(30),
@p4 smalldatetime
)
AS
BEGIN
SELECT -- I bet it fails in here, Line #18
1 /
(@p2 - 2
);
END;
Here it is obvious it is failing in the line #18, so probably we just need to add 7 to whatever line number is shown. But you see it is like a rule of thumb.
But let's pretend it's not so obvious what is failing in here, so we need to put some debugging statements around to figure out what is wrong
Write now what I do is I copy the whole content of the procedure declaration and edit it in-place
ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[MyCoolProcedure] DECLARE
(
@p1 varchar(20) = 'Parameter1',
@p2 int = 2,
@p3 varchar(30) = 'Parameter3',
@p4 smalldatetime = '2019-11-25'
)
AS
BEGIN
SELECT -- I bet it fails in here, Line #18
1 /
(@p2 - 2
);
END;
This is a bit time consuming and annoying. Ideally as a Visual Studio user, I would prefer to have something like Attach to process and Break on error functionality.
Am I doing it wrong? Is there a more efficient way to do those repetitive tasks?
SSMS
ratherexecute
clickdebug
then step into rather oversql profiler
EXECUTE MyCoolProcedure 'Parameter1', 2, 'Parameter3', '2019-11-25'
part, which doesn't help with the internalssp_statement_starting
andsp_statement_completed
in both Profiler and Extended Events.