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Posted by sloan on 08/16/07 17:54
ODBC? What year is it?
If you have Access and/or Sql Server, there's not really a good reason to
use ODBC.
...
Change to the other providers, and heck, it'll start working faster, and
you'll be a hero.
<teddysnips@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1187268689.901968.272820@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
> One of our clients has reported a problem. Everything was working
> fine on Monday, but since Tuesday all is going wrong. The sysadmin
> assures me that there have been no changes to the network, or the
> servers.
>
> Three applications, one back-end database server (SQL Server 2000 with
> all service packs etc.).
>
> APP 1: Access 2000 database
> APP 2: ASP.NET (VS 2003)
> APP 3: ASP.NET (VS 2003)
>
> All connect to the same database server - different databases, natch.
>
> 1 & 2 have reported ODBC timeout issues. 3 had other problems. This
> is how they present themselves. I ran SQL Profiler to capture the
> trace
>
> APP 1 - ACCESS APPLICATION
>
> 1. Login works fine. You have to supply credentials which are
> validated by SQL Server. Open a Search form and the default recordset
> is displayed correctly.
> NOTE: This SQL captured on trace.
>
> 2. Enter a criterion into one of the controls on the search form and
> press "Filter". Wait a minute and watch the hourglass. Eventually
> ODBC Timeout error displayed.
> NOTE: This SQL captured on trace.
>
> 3. Right-click on the appropriate column on the sub-form and enter
> the same criterion as for step 2 above. NO ODBC TIMEOUT - CORRECT
> RECORDSET RETURNED WITHIN TWO SECONDS
> NOTE: This SQL captured on trace.
>
> NOTE: If I open the (linked) tables in the Microsoft Access database
> pane I can manipulate the data at will. However, if I try to open any
> stored queries in Access they time out.
>
> APP 2 - ASP.NET APPLICATION
>
> 1. Login works fine. You have to supply credentials which are
> validated by SQL Server. As it happens, the default display for the
> logged-on user contains no records.
> 2. Change the parameters to allow some records to be displayed.
> Watch the progress bar do nothing and then the system displays the
> "Object reference not set to an instance of an object" exception.
> NOTE: This SQL captured on trace.
>
> APP 3 - ASP.NET APPLICATION
>
> 1. Login works fine. You have to supply credentials which are
> validated by SQL Server. As it happens, the default display contains
> no records.
> 2. Attempt to add a new record. System pretty slow.
> 3. New record form displayed. All drop-downs contain incorrect data
> - for example, in the Supply Priority list, there should be 14 items -
> there are, in fact, 56 - each item duplicated four times. This has
> happened in all the tables that I can see. I've taken a dump of the
> live data and compared it with our archived version - for lookup
> tables, there is no duplication in our copy, but in their copy every
> item appears four times.
>
> If the above wasn't weird enough for you, get this.
>
> If I cut and paste the SQL that's being captured by the Profiler at
> each point and paste it into Query Analyser, it totally barfs. I
> waited 11 minutes for one query but it just kept running, never
> returning. EVEN THE QUERY AT APP 1 POINT 3.
>
> Needless to say, if I run these queries back at the office it all goes
> according to plan.
>
> I think they've got a problem.....
>
> Edward
>
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