I pulled an example from this MSDN page and have used it pretty much verbatim. When run the code compiles properly but changeCount
increments endlessly whether or not there has actually been a change to the data returned. When a change actually has occurred dataGridView1
reflects the change correctly. Why does my SqlDependency
seem like it's firing in a loop even though there apparently have been no changes?
Here's the source:
#region Using directives
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Data;
using System.Data.SqlClient;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Linq;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.Security.Permissions;
using System.Text;
using System.Windows.Forms;
#endregion
namespace PreAllocation_Check
{
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
int changeCount = 0;
const string tableName = "MoxyPosition";
const string statusMessage = "Last: {0} - {1} changes.";
DataSet dataToWatch = null;
SqlConnection MoxyConn = null;
SqlCommand SQLComm = null;
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
if (CanRequestNotifications())
{
SqlDependency.Start(GetConnectionString());
if (MoxyConn == null)
MoxyConn = new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString());
if (SQLComm == null)
{
SQLComm = new SqlCommand(GetSQL(), MoxyConn);
SqlParameter prm = new SqlParameter("@Quantity", SqlDbType.Int);
prm.Direction = ParameterDirection.Input;
prm.DbType = DbType.Int32;
prm.Value = 100;
SQLComm.Parameters.Add(prm);
}
if (dataToWatch == null)
dataToWatch = new DataSet();
GetData();
}
}
private void Form1_FormClosed(object sender, FormClosedEventArgs e)
{
SqlDependency.Stop(GetConnectionString());
if (MoxyConn != null)
MoxyConn.Close();
}
private bool CanRequestNotifications()
{
try
{
SqlClientPermission SQLPerm = new SqlClientPermission(PermissionState.Unrestricted);
SQLPerm.Demand();
return true;
}
catch
{
return false;
}
}
private string GetConnectionString()
{
return "server=***;database=***;user id=***;password=***";
}
private void GetData()
{
dataToWatch.Clear();
SQLComm.Notification = null;
SqlDependency SQLDep = new SqlDependency(SQLComm);
SQLDep.OnChange += new OnChangeEventHandler(SQLDep_OnChange);
using (SqlDataAdapter adapter = new SqlDataAdapter(SQLComm))
{
adapter.Fill(dataToWatch, tableName);
dataGridView1.DataSource = dataToWatch;
dataGridView1.DataMember = tableName;
}
}
private string GetSQL()
{
return "SELECT PortID, CONVERT(money, SUM(PreAllocPos), 1) AS PreAllocation, CONVERT(money, SUM(AllocPos), 1) AS Allocation, CONVERT(money, SUM(PreAllocPos) - SUM(AllocPos), 1) AS PreLessAlloc " +
"FROM MoxyPosition " +
"WHERE CONVERT(money, PreAllocPos, 1) <> CONVERT(money, AllocPos, 1) " +
"GROUP BY PortID " +
"ORDER BY PortID ASC;";
}
void SQLDep_OnChange(object sender, SqlNotificationEventArgs e)
{
ISynchronizeInvoke i = (ISynchronizeInvoke)this;
if (i.InvokeRequired)
{
OnChangeEventHandler tempDelegate = new OnChangeEventHandler(SQLDep_OnChange);
object[] args = { sender, e };
i.BeginInvoke(tempDelegate, args);
return;
}
SqlDependency SQLDep = (SqlDependency)sender;
SQLDep.OnChange -= SQLDep_OnChange;
changeCount++;
DateTime LastRefresh = System.DateTime.Now;
label1.Text = String.Format(statusMessage, LastRefresh.TimeOfDay, changeCount);
GetData();
}
}
}
Edit: It's worth noting that the database I want to run this against does not currently have the Broker Service enabled, and so to test my code I backed up my target database and restored it with a new name, then ran ALTER DATABASE my_db_name SET ENABLE_BROKER
against it. All of my testing has been on this alternate database, which means I'm the only user on it.