Recipe 9.8 Debugging a SQL Server Stored Procedure
Problem
Given an application that uses a SQL
Server stored procedure that is
causing errors, you need to debug the stored procedure.
Solution
Use Visual Studio .NET to debug SQL Server stored procedures (in both
standalone mode and from managed code).
Discussion
Debugging a stored procedure in standalone mode
You can debug a stored procedure in standalone mode
from Visual Studio .NET Server Explorer by following these steps:
Open the Server Explorer window in Visual Studio .NET by selecting it
from the View menu. Create a connection to the database or select an existing connection. Select and expand the node for the database that contains the stored
procedure. Expand the Stored Procedures node. Right-click on the stored procedure to be debugged and select Step
Into Stored Procedure from the popup menu. If requested, supply the parameter values on the Run Stored Procedure
dialog.
Alternatively, if the stored procedure is already open in a source
window in Visual Studio .NET:
Right-click on the stored procedure to be debugged and select Step
Into Stored Procedure from the popup menu. If requested, supply the parameter values on the Run Stored Procedure
dialog.
Debugging a stored procedure from managed code
To debug a stored procedure from managed code, SQL debugging must be
enabled for the project. Follow these steps:
Open the solution. In the Solution Explorer window, select the project and right-click.
Select Properties from the popup menu. In the Property Pages dialog, select Debug from the Configuration
drop-down list box. Select the Configuration Properties folder in the left pane and
choose Debugging. In the Debuggers section of the right pane, set Enable SQL Debugging
to true. Click OK to close the dialog.
Table 9-2 lists the components that must be
installed for SQL Server debugging.
Table 9-2. SQL Server debugging components|
SQLLE.DLL
|
Client
|
SQLDBG.DLL
|
Client and server
|
MSSDBI98.DLL
|
Server in the \binn directory of the SQL Server
instance
|
SQLDBREG2.EXE
|
Client
|
There are some other significant limitations to SQL Server Debugging:
It is not possible to debug SQL statements that are outside of a
stored procedure. It is not possible to step into a stored procedure from managed or
unmanaged code, or into managed or unmanaged code from a stored
procedure. Set a breakpoint at entry point in the stored procedure or
in the reentry point in the code as required. Alternatively, open the
code or stored procedure and right-click on the line to break on.
Select Run to Cursor from the shortcut menu to reach the desired line
without setting a breakpoint. The database connection from your application must be established
with the .NET data provider for SQL Server before debugging a
mixed-language application. After that, you can open stored
procedures and set breakpoints in the same way as for other
applications. When connection pooling is enabled, debugging a stored procedure
called from native or managed code might not work after the first
time. When a connection is obtained from the pool rather than
created, SQL debugging is not reestablished. Changes to locals or parameter variables that are cached by the SQL
interpreter are not automatically modified and there is no way to
force the cache to refresh. SQL Server caches variables when the
execution plan determines that they will not be dynamically loaded
for each statement execution or reference.
For more information about debugging SQL stored procedures, see the
topic "Debugging SQL" in the
MSDN
Library.
|