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I've written a powershell script to call sqlcmd.exe to execute a sql script against a remote sql server. The powershell script checks $LASTEXITCODE. If $LASTEXITCODE is non zero, I throw "Script failed. Return code is $LASTEXITCODE."

The script is used multiple times to execute different sql scripts and is part of a chain of powershell scripts that run during deployment.

The script runs fine most of the time but randomly fails with a return code of -1073741502.

This has only started happening after upgrading to SQL2008 and I cannot reproduce it by running either the single powershell script manually or the sql cmd script manually.

This is the powershell command:

& 'sqlcmd.exe' -S $databaseServer -r -b -E -i '$scriptFullPath'

if($LASTEXITCODE -ne 0) { throw "Script failed. Return code is $LASTEXITCODE." }

The seemingly random nature of the failure is causing a lot of pain. I can't determine if the error is SQL2008, SQLCMD (Although I get the same behaviour with osql.exe) or somehow coupled to powershell.

The actual sql that sqlcmd is executing appears to be unrelated to the problem since a sql script will execute ok for a while and then fail.

The same failure has been seen on many different Workstations and Servers (Win7, Win2003 and Win2008)

Any guidance on how to track this down would be much appreciated.

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  • 1
    Might be a known problem: see: connect.microsoft.com
    – jon Z
    Jan 4, 2012 at 14:08
  • @user978511 - it's not application specific. Note jon's link.
    – JNK
    Jan 4, 2012 at 14:21
  • @jon Z. Thanks for the link. Well found. Glad I'm not alone in this madness. Jan 4, 2012 at 14:52

2 Answers 2

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Don't use sqlcmd and command lines if you are using Powershell!

There are very good built-in tools in V2 that give you a lot more robust interaction with SQL Server, and don't require you to parse the text of return codes to check for errors - they actually return proper error codes.

Here's a technet article on Invoke-SQLCmd

Bear in mind you need to load the snapins first:

Add-PSSnapin SqlServerProviderSnapin100
Add-PSSnapin SqlServerCmdletSnapin100
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  • It will only work if you have SQL server installed on the same box that is most of the time not the case Jan 4, 2012 at 14:09
  • Not true. You need SSMS installed but not a full server. I use this every day on development machines that connect to remote servers.
    – JNK
    Jan 4, 2012 at 14:10
  • For a solution that doesn't require SSMS or SQL, checkout the invoke-sqlcmd2 function: poshcode.org/2950 Jan 5, 2012 at 3:07
  • Still limited functionality. "Much of what you can do with sqlcmd can also be done using Invoke-Sqlcmd."
    – Monso
    Feb 15, 2014 at 0:26
  • @Monso - try it. If you want to run SQL in PS, it can do whatever you need.
    – JNK
    Feb 15, 2014 at 19:11
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The root-cause is actually explained elsewhere on here

Exit Code -1073741502 is 0xC0000142 in hex (status_dll_init_failed). Microsoft's KB2701373 addresses the leaky handles made by Console.Write in Microsoft.powershell.consolehost.dll.

Side-Note: Some "Fixes" on the Internet involve doing something differently, then restarting PowerShell. Yet the actual restart of PowerShell is what addresses the problem (temporarily)

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