We have a large application mainly written in SQL Server 7.0, where all database calls are to stored procedures. We are now running SQL Server 2005, which offers more T-SQL features.
After just about every SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE, the @@ROWCOUNT and @@ERROR get captured into local variables and evaluated for problems. If there is a problem the following is done:
- error message output parameter is set
- rollback (if necessary) is done
- info is written (INSERT) to log table
- return with a error number, unique to this procedure (positive if fatal, negative is warning)
They all don't check the rows (only when it is known) and some differ with more or less log/debug info. Also, the rows logic is somethimes split from the error logic (on updates where a concurrency field is checked in the WHERE clause, rows=0 means someone else has updated the data). However, here is a fairly generic example:
SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE
SELECT @Error=@@ERROR, @Rows=@@ROWCOUNT
IF @Rows!=1 OR @Error!=0
BEGIN
SET @ErrorMsg='ERROR 20, ' + ISNULL(OBJECT_NAME(@@PROCID), 'unknown')
+ ' - unable to ???????? the ????.'
IF @@TRANCOUNT >0
BEGIN
ROLLBACK
END
SET @LogInfo=ISNULL(@LogInfo,'')+'; '+ISNULL(@ErrorMsg,'')+
+ ' @YYYYY=' +dbo.FormatString(@YYYYY)
+', @XXXXX=' +dbo.FormatString(@XXXXX)
+', Error=' +dbo.FormatString(@Error)
+', Rows=' +dbo.FormatString(@Rows)
INSERT INTO MyLogTable (...,Message) VALUES (....,@LogInfo)
RETURN 20
END
I am looking into replacing how we do this with the TRY-CATCH T-SQL. I've read about the TRY...CATCH (Transact-SQL) syntax, so don't just post some summary of that. I'm looking for any good ideas and how best to do or improve our error handling methods. It doesn't have to be Try-Catch, just any good or best practice use of T-SQL error handling.
You should read this:
http://www.sommarskog.se/error-handling-I.html
I can't recommend that link highly enough. It's a bit long, but in a good way.
There's a disclaimer at the front that it was originally written for SQL Server 2000, but it covers the new try/catch error handling abilities in SQL Server 2005+ as well.
We currently use this template for any queries that we execute (you could leave out the Transaction stuff, if you don't need it in e.g. a DDL statement):
BEGIN TRANSACTION
BEGIN TRY
// do your SQL statements here
COMMIT TRANSACTION
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
SELECT
ERROR_NUMBER() AS ErrorNumber,
ERROR_SEVERITY() AS ErrorSeverity,
ERROR_STATE() AS ErrorState,
ERROR_PROCEDURE() AS ErrorProcedure,
ERROR_LINE() AS ErrorLine,
ERROR_MESSAGE() AS ErrorMessage
ROLLBACK TRANSACTION
END CATCH
Of course, you could easily insert the caught exception into your error log table.
It works really well for us. You could probably even automate some of the conversion from your old stored procs to a new format using Code Generation (e.g. CodeSmith) or some custom C# code.
There isn't a set in stone best practices for Error handling. It all comes down to what your needs are and being consistent.
Here is a sample of a table and stored procedure that stores phone numbers.
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING ON
GO
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Phone](
[ID] [int] IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
[Phone_Type_ID] [int] NOT NULL,
[Area_Code] [char](3) NOT NULL,
[Exchange] [char](3) NOT NULL,
[Number] [char](4) NOT NULL,
[Extension] [varchar](6) NULL,
CONSTRAINT [PK_Phone] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[ID] ASC
)WITH (PAD_INDEX = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF, ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = ON) ON [PRIMARY]
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
SET ANSI_PADDING OFF
GO
/**/
CREATE PROCEDURE [dbo].[usp_Phone_INS]
@Customer_ID INT
,@Phone_Type_ID INT
,@Area_Code CHAR(3)
,@Exchange CHAR(3)
,@Number CHAR(4)
,@Extension VARCHAR(6)
AS
BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON;
DECLARE @Err INT, @Phone_ID INT
BEGIN TRY
INSERT INTO Phone
(Phone_Type_ID, Area_Code, Exchange, Number, Extension)
VALUES
(@Phone_Type_ID, @Area_Code, @Exchange, @Number, @Extension)
SET @Err = @@ERROR
SET @Phone_ID = SCOPE_IDENTITY()
/*
Custom error handling expected by the application.
If Err = 0 then its good or no error, if its -1 or something else then something bad happened.
*/
SELECT ISNULL(@Err,-1) AS Err, @Phone_ID
END TRY
BEGIN CATCH
IF (XACT_STATE() <> 0)
BEGIN
ROLLBACK TRANSACTION
END
/*
Add your own custom error handling here to return the passed in paramters.
I have removed my custom error halding code that deals with returning the passed in parameter values.
*/
SELECT ERROR_NUMBER() AS Err, ISNULL(@Phone_ID,-1) AS ID
END CATCH
END
It looks like you have a very good handle on this already. I suspect you're doing more than 95% of the SQL programmers out there.
You should find some interesting information here:
- Detecting and Reporting Errors in Stored Procedures - Part 1: SQL Server 2000
- Detecting and Reporting Errors in Stored Procedures - Part 2: SQL Server 2005 TRY-CATCH Blocks*
One [unrelated] suggestion: start using '<>' instead of '!='.
[* SQL Junkies has gone away, so the second article is not available. I will try to get it republished somewhere and update the link.]