January 3, 2005 at 1:21 am
Hi !
I am trying to make loggning in my DTS package that have some stored procedures. The package is also included in a transaction.
Everytime my package will fail, there will be a rollback in my logging table
The default SQL-Server package logging isen´t enought for my application.
Must i write a "dirty" VB-hack that makes this logs in a separate db connection (without transaction support, and called as a extended stored procedure) ?
If so, then the user would have to be a "admin-guy", only to make the logging feature to work
Is this why SQL-Server itself writes the logs into a plain text-file on the filesystem instead of the msdb db ? That would explain this issue.
But how do you guy´s handle this ? This (logging) must be the most basic need in a normal application.
Any help is needed !
Thanks.
Johan.
January 3, 2005 at 5:42 am
use a @TABLE variable to store the errors. These do not get rolled back the same as other items during a ROLLBACK TRANS. Why do I know this? I have a very similar situation and it works a treat
ON ROLLBACK condition I write to a @TABLE variable and AFTER the rollback I insert into my logging table the information from the @TABLE var.
Good Hunting!
AJ Ahrens
webmaster@kritter.net
January 4, 2005 at 3:55 am
Thanks for your answer AJ!
I am sorry to say that i can´t follow you all the way.
I use the DTS "automatic" transaction support and have no "BEGIN TRAN" ... in my stored procedures. So how could i "fetch" my @TABLE variable after the transaction throws the logic out from my stored procedure ?
When there is a failure there will be a rollback and i can make a "failure" flow in the DTS. But in that stage the @TABLE variable will be lost/empty.
Or am i missing something here ?
regards.
Johan.
January 4, 2005 at 4:30 pm
Adding the BEGIN TRAN..COMMIT isn't a big deal should be easy and BOL has decent examples.
What you could do is in the SP that is being called write the information out using the @TABLE to whatever logging table you want and RETURN(@@ERROR). This should throw you down the failure path where you can exit gracefully...
Good Hunting!
AJ Ahrens
webmaster@kritter.net
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