0

Hi there I have the following python code to connect to my SQL-Server DB

class CDBTools:
    details = {
        'server' : 'localhost',
        'database' : 'MyDB',
        'username' : 'me',
        'password' : 'myPass'
    }

    conn = None
    def __init__(self, server, database, username, password): 
        
        self.details["server"] = server
        self.details["database"] = database
        self.details["username"] = username
        self.details["password"] = password
           

    def connect_to_db(self):
        connect_string = 'DRIVER={{FreeTDS}};SERVER={server}; DATABASE={database};UID={username};PWD={password}'.format(**self.details)
        try:
            self.conn = pyodbc.connect(connect_string, autocommit=True)
            #print(connect_string)
            #Logger.Log(self.conn, "info")
        except pyodbc.Error as e:
            print(e, "error")
            
    def execute_select_query(self, query):
        try:
            curr = self.conn.cursor()
            out = curr.execute(query).fetchall()
        except pyodbc.IntegrityError as e:
            out = []
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e)) 
        except pyodbc.OperationalError as err: #Something happend with db, so try again
            out = []
            print('ms-sql Operation Error: {0}'.format(err))

        except AttributeError as err:
            out = []
            print('Connection to DB failed')
            pass
        try:
            curr.close()
        except:
            print('Connection to DB failed')
        return out

    def execute_inset_query(self, query):
        try:
            database_cursor = self.conn.cursor()
            database_cursor.execute(query)
        except pyodbc.DataError as e:
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e))
        except pyodbc.IntegrityError as e:
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e))
        except pyodbc.OperationalError as err: #Something happend with db, so try again
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e))

then in my main program I am trying this and it works just fine, until I disconnect the network

DBT = CDBTools("192.168.1.2\instance4", "my_db", "my_username", "my_passowrd")
DBT.connect_to_db()
while(True):
    print("[{0}]: {1}".format(time.strftime("%H:%M:%S"), DBT.execute_select_query("SELECT Name FROM Persons WHERE ID='1'")))

When I disconnect the network I get no error, just time doesn't count anymore (of course because query is failing) but when I reconnect the network query never sucseeds anymore

so does anyone maybe know how I can modify execute_select_query and execute_inset_query so when connection to the db is restored it will start to work again :)

Thanks for Anwsering and Best Regards

1 Answer 1

0

Try this, it'll connect each time you use the with clause, and automatically disconnect when you leave it.

class CDBTools:
    details = {
        'server' : 'localhost',
        'database' : 'MyDB',
        'username' : 'me',
        'password' : 'myPass'
    }

    conn = None
    def __init__(self, server, database, username, password): 
        
        self.details["server"] = server
        self.details["database"] = database
        self.details["username"] = username
        self.details["password"] = password
           

    def connect_to_db(self):
        connect_string = 'DRIVER={{FreeTDS}};SERVER={server}; DATABASE={database};UID={username};PWD={password}'.format(**self.details)
        try:
            conn = pyodbc.connect(connect_string, autocommit=True)
            #print(connect_string)
            #Logger.Log(self.conn, "info")
        except pyodbc.Error as e:
            print(e, "error")

        return conn
            
    def execute_select_query(self, conn, query):
        try:
            curr = conn.cursor()
            out = curr.execute(query).fetchall()
        except pyodbc.IntegrityError as e:
            out = []
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e)) 
        except pyodbc.OperationalError as err: #Something happend with db, so try again
            out = []
            print('ms-sql Operation Error: {0}'.format(err))

        except AttributeError as err:
            out = []
            print('Connection to DB failed')
            pass

    def execute_inset_query(self, conn, query):
        try:
            database_cursor = conn.cursor()
            database_cursor.execute(query)
        except pyodbc.DataError as e:
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e))
        except pyodbc.IntegrityError as e:
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e))
        except pyodbc.OperationalError as err: #Something happend with db, so try again
            print('ms-sql error: {0}'.format(e))

then:

DBT = CDBTools("192.168.1.2\instance4", "my_db", "my_username", "my_passowrd")

while True:
    with DBT.connect_to_db() as conn:
        print("[{0}]: {1}".format(time.strftime("%H:%M:%S"), DBT.execute_select_query(conn, "SELECT Name FROM Persons WHERE ID='1'")))

I'd probably make a method to return the cursor rather than the connection. For example:

class CDBTools:
    details = {
        'server' : 'localhost',
        'database' : 'MyDB',
        'username' : 'me',
        'password' : 'myPass'
    }

    conn = None
    def __init__(self, server, database, username, password): 

        self.details["server"] = server
        self.details["database"] = database
        self.details["username"] = username
        self.details["password"] = password


    def get_cursor(self):
        connect_string = 'DRIVER={{FreeTDS}};SERVER={server}; DATABASE={database};UID={username};PWD={password}'.format(**self.details)
        try:
            conn = pyodbc.connect(connect_string, autocommit=True)
            #print(connect_string)
            #Logger.Log(self.conn, "info")
        except pyodbc.Error as e:
            print(e, "error")

        return conn.cursor()

DBT = CDBTools("192.168.1.2\instance4", "my_db", "my_username", "my_passowrd")

with DBT.get_cursor() as cursor:
    cursor.execute("SELECT Name FROM Persons WHERE ID='1'")
    for row in cursor.fetchall():
        print(row)

Good luck!

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.