Stored Procedures And Visual SourceSafe
Jul 23, 2005Hi
Is it possible to use Visual Source Safe with SQL Server in
order to keep track of all modifications done to stored procedures?
What are the pros and cons ?
Thanks, Eugene
Hi
Is it possible to use Visual Source Safe with SQL Server in
order to keep track of all modifications done to stored procedures?
What are the pros and cons ?
Thanks, Eugene
Hi All... Well, another old c++ programmer has found the Lord - I've just written my first stored procedure. And yes, as I've always heard, it's quite cool...
The thing I've never really cared for though is that they sit way out there in the database, far away from all the "other" code. I'm presently involved in an asp.net project and we use SourceSafe. I've seen some mention of VSS with SQL Server on this site and am quite pleased to see it! But for the sake of an old c++ programmer, what are the basics about getting things like stored procedures (and even the database schema for that matter) into sourcesafe? That is what's the easiest way to do it? ; )
For what it's worth, we're using .Net 2.0, Visual Studio 2005, SQL 2005 and VSS 6.0. Thanks for the tips! -- Curt
Hi,
How is it possible to link the stored procedures in sql server to Source Safe?
The idea is that if anyone goes to sql server and wants to change a stored procedure, he has to check out/in, etc... Just like the way it is done is Visual studio with Source safe.
Thanks
I've ready many of the posts on this and other newsgroups in whichpeople describe working practices for source control of databasescripts. We are looking to implement something similar in my currentworkplace.We have agreed that developers should not modify objects such as viewsor stored procedures directly, they should check the script out of VSSfirst, modify it, run it, and then check it back in.The problem we are having is finding a quick, easy way to run all thescripts in VSS in the right order, to create a new database. If wedon't run them in the right order the sysdepends table will beincorrect.If anyone has any suggestions please let me know.Regards,Ross NeilsonSoftware DeveloperInteractive Products Ltd.
View 5 Replies View RelatedThe develpment team where I work is using Visual Studio 2005, SQL Server 2005 and Team Fundation Server. We want to somehow track changes of the stored procedures. We could create a Solution/Project in the SQL Server Management Studio, add all stored procedures to it and add that Solution/Project to the SourceSafe but nothing will stop developers from directly altering stored procedures.
Any ideas on how to prevent developers from making changes to the stored procedures directly?
Thanks.
Can I create stored procedures from within Visual Studio 2005, or do I have to do it in SQL Server itself? If it can be done within Visual Studio, can someone offer a simple example or point me to a tutorial? Thanks for your help!
View 2 Replies View RelatedHi everyone,
I dont know if I am posting this to the right area but here goes: I know there is a way you can step into a stored procedure from VS.net, but I dind't know how. I searched google and found this MS KB Article: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316549
However, on step two, "Under the Servers node in Server Explorer, expand the SQL Server Machine name, expand the SQL Servers Node, ..."
The first and only item I have in the tree is my local machine name. If I expand that I do not have a SQL Servers node, all I have are: Crystal Reports Services, Event Logs Management Classes, Management Events, Message Queues, Performance Counters and Services.
The instance of SQL Server I am using is on my local machine and I am able to communicate with it. I am using TCP/IP
I figured to check the SQL Server Config Manager and see what protocols the db was using. The client protocols are Shared Memory, TCP/IP and Named Pipes (these are enabled)
I then looked at the SQL Server 2005 Services. The following are running: SQL Server Integration Services, SQL Server FullText, SQL Server, SQL Server Analysis Services, SQL Server Reporting and SQL Server Agent (This was stopped but I started it) SQL Server Browser is NOT running and I can't start it. I dont know if that has anything to do with it.
Am I missing somethign?
Thanks,
John
I've set my breakpoints - project property page is set to debug sql
What else do I have to do again?
I have about 40 stored procedures in a Visual Source Safe stored procedures which we are using for change control.
All stored procedures require to be moved into production across at least 13 different databases each on a dedicated server.
The only way I know at the minute is to do this manually. Does anyone out there have any ideas of how this task can be automated?
You know this sample ODS dll project:
$80oolsdevtoolssamplesodsxp_hello
I need to find a template like this in Visual Basic.
On this site I read through the xp_Encrypt project which was developed in VB. I did not see source code or a downloadable project file.
My searching on the internet hasn't yielded any practicle results, all examples are either how to use an extended stored procedure or are a MSVC++ project.
Anyone find VB related resources, anywhere? Books, TV, magazines????
Hi.I am under the understanding that having the sql server 2005 db is notenough (like 2000 was) to debug stored procedures.. that I need topurchase (costly) visual studio 2005.Can someone suggest a free or lower cost alternative?sorry to be so cheap.. its the times I think.
View 4 Replies View RelatedI've followed the steps in http://www.sqlteam.com/article/debugging-stored-procedures-in-visual-studio-2005 & in the MSDN for configuring and setting up debugging SQL 2005 stored procedures in VS 2008 (seems to be the same as in VS 2005). Everything works fine until I Step Into the Stored Procedure. Everything says that a yellow arrow will appear on the left and I can start going line by line. I never get the yellow arrow.
If I set a breakpoint, it is automatically disabled. The pop-up warning says, "The breakpoint will not currently be hit. Unable to bind SQL breakpoint at this time. Object containing the breakpoint not loaded." I can't find anything about this message or problem on Microsoft's site or on the web. Any assistance is appreciated.
P.S.
I'm running VS 2008 Professional Edition Version 9.0.2.1022.8 RTM
I have a stored procedure which simply does a SELECT on a table. This table has as a column a uniqueidentifier, which is not part of the PK. If I execute this procedure with the SQL Server tools, it works fine and returns the expected results. If I execute this SP with Visual Studio, or ASP.NET, no results are returned and the following comes back:Running [dbo].[spServiceDetail_Get] ( @ServiceDetailID = <DEFAULT>, @VictimWitnessID = <DEFAULT>).ServiceDetailID VictimWitnessID --------------- -------------------------------------- No rows affected.(1 row(s) returned)@RETURN_VALUE = 0Finished running [dbo].[spServiceDetail_Get]. Any ideas what is going wrong? This seems to be a common problem for many of our tables with a uniqueidentifier in them, and is specifically with VS 2005 and ASP.NET ObjectDataSources.
View 2 Replies View RelatedHi, I used to be able to debug stored procedures via Visual Studio.net 2003. However, this has stopped working. It does not produce an error just simply doesn't work anymore i.e. the breakpoints are by-passed.
I have the correct settings in the Debug configuration section. If any-one knows how to rectify this your help would be appreciated.
I have thought about re-installing the remote debugging functionality on the server. However, our Visual Studio.net discs are with a developer who is away at present.
Thanks in advance
Lee
Hello,
What permissions do I need to set on our new SQL Server 2005 test server so that I can see the stored procedures, views and tables from Visual Studio development environment.
Example, I can see my older SQL Server 7 tables, edit them, write stored procedures, and so on. But while I can see the SQL Server 2005 and its databases, the folder underneath are empty and I cannot right-click to create New stored procedure or table.
My guess is that there is security involved, if so, what do I set on the new server?
If I'm wrong, and it's something else entirely, please advise.
Thanks!
I'm having some problems debugging SQL Server stored procedures on a SQL Server 2005 server. I have installed Visual Studio 2005 on a workstation running Windows XP, now I'm trying to debug a ASP.Net web application that has some code that executes the stored procedures on a Windows 2003 Server running SQL Server 2005.
I opened VS2005 ... created a connection to the SQL Server 2005 instance ... open the Stored procedure ... right click the stored procedure name and selected Step into Stored Procedure and the following message is displayed:
Unable to start T-SQL debugging.Could not attach to SQL Server process on 'ServerName'.
Any ideas.
Thanks,
I want to know the differences between SQL Server 2000 storedprocedures and oracle stored procedures? Do they have differentsyntax? The concept should be the same that the stored proceduresexecute in the database server with better performance?Please advise good references for Oracle stored procedures also.thanks!!
View 11 Replies View RelatedHi,
This Might be a really simple thing, however we have just installed SQL server 2005 on a new server, and are having difficulties with the set up of the Store Procedures. Every time we try to modify an existing stored procedure it attempts to save it as an SQL file, unlike in 2000 where it saved it as part of the database itself.
Thank you in advance for any help on this matter
Using SQL 2005, SP2. All of a sudden, whenever I create any stored procedures in the master database, they get created as system stored procedures. Doesn't matter what I name them, and what they do.
For example, even this simple little guy:
CREATE PROCEDURE BOB
AS
PRINT 'BOB'
GO
Gets created as a system stored procedure.
Any ideas what would cause that and/or how to fix it?
Thanks,
Jason
Recently, my company's deveolpment machine crashed. We had to format the harddrive which meant we lost some of our databases.
We managed to restore the databases, but we do not know in what state, i.e. which stored procedures were written between the restore point and the point the machine crashed.
Tow questions related to this:
1. I was wondering if there is any product that is similar to soursesafe but appied to databases, so that this problem will not happen again. Does Enterprise manager do something like this?
2. I was also wondering if there was anyway to undo an sql command. e.g. my colleague recently ran a command to update a database, but forgot to write the where clause!! That data was recovered aswell, but it would be nice to have some sort of undo button.
Thanks in advance.
Jagdip
When adding a SSIS DTSX package solution to Sourcesafe the SSIS Package Configuration file (.DTSConfig) is not included. We are using sourcesafe version 6.0d and Visual Studio 2005 Team Edition for Developers.
View 4 Replies View RelatedWhere can I find information about how to integrate a SQL 2005 database with either SourceSafe or Team Foundation Server Version Control?
I would like to have database changes for tables, views, stored procs, etc. under source control. Is this even possible?
I've figured out how to store new SSIS projects in SourceSafe, but is there a way to configure an agent job to execute a package from SourceSafe, or do I have to maintain a copy outside? (Which doesn't seem to make sense...)
TIA
Hi,
In SQL Express SP2, when I select Tools > Options, there is a place where I am supposed to be able to specify the source control plug-in. I have SourceSafe 2005 installed on this machine, so I see these choices in the drop-down:
None
Microsoft Visual SourceSafe
Microsoft Visual SourceSafe (Internet)
The problem is that whenever I select one of the SourceSafe options, it goes back to "None".
I'm not even sure how the source control intergration works, but I figured I have to select the plug-in before doing anything else.
How can I select the SourceSafe plug-in under SQL Express SP2?
Thanks,
Mark
Imagine opening SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS), drilling into adatabase, and seeing all objects with little lock symbols in front ofthem. That would be true SS integration.Maybe next version?I know about creating a project in SSMS and managing connections,queries, and misc there, but come on, that seems a far cry from what Ilong for.I searched for 3rd party tools and found SQLSourceSafe and Apex SQLTools. Does anyone have experience with those?-Tom.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI get errors when I check out an SSIS package from source control (both Source Safe and TFS) relating to the connection objects where I was not the original developer who checked it in. Is there a solution to this other than altering the connection loginpassword for every connection object in the package before deploying?
View 4 Replies View Related
Hi,
I've added an XML package configuration file to my SSIS package and it appears to be working fine.
The XML file is located in the same folder as the solution file.
I've recently added the entire solution to Visual Sourcesafe 2005, and I achieved this by doing the following:
1. Right-clicked on the Project name in the solution explorer and selected "Add to source Control".
2. When prompted, provided my Sourcesafe login credentials and clicked "OK"
3. Accepted the default VSS project name and clicked "OK"
4. Clicked "Yes" to allow VSS to create a new project
Problem: The XML configuration file hasn't be added to sourcesafe along with rest of the solution.
I'm able to add the file manually myself, but this doesn't seem right to me. Am I missing something? Should the config file show as part of the Solution in Visual Studio 2005?
Any answers/help would be appreciated greatly.
Thanks
Jon Derbyshire
How do I search for and print all stored procedure names in a particular database? I can use the following query to search and print out all table names in a database. I just need to figure out how to modify the code below to search for stored procedure names. Can anyone help me out?
SELECT TABLE_SCHEMA + '.' + TABLE_NAME
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_TYPE = 'BASE TABLE'
Seems like I'm stealing all the threads here, : But I need to learn :) I have a StoredProcedure that needs to return values that other StoredProcedures return.Rather than have my DataAccess layer access the DB multiple times, I would like to call One stored Procedure, and have that stored procedure call the others to get the information I need. I think this way would be more efficient than accessing the DB multiple times. One of my SP is:SELECT I.ItemDetailID, I.ItemDetailStatusID, I.ItemDetailTypeID, I.Archived, I.Expired, I.ExpireDate, I.Deleted, S.Name AS 'StatusName', S.ItemDetailStatusID, S.InProgress as 'StatusInProgress', S.Color AS 'StatusColor',T.[Name] AS 'TypeName', T.Prefix, T.Name AS 'ItemDetailTypeName', T.ItemDetailTypeID FROM [Item].ItemDetails I INNER JOIN Item.ItemDetailStatus S ON I.ItemDetailStatusID = S.ItemDetailStatusID INNER JOIN [Item].ItemDetailTypes T ON I.ItemDetailTypeID = T.ItemDetailTypeID However, I already have StoredProcedures that return the exact same data from the ItemDetailStatus table and ItemDetailTypes table.Would it be better to do it above, and have more code to change when a new column/field is added, or more checks, or do something like:(This is not propper SQL) SELECT I.ItemDetailID, I.ItemDetailStatusID, I.ItemDetailTypeID, I.Archived, I.Expired, I.ExpireDate, I.Deleted, EXEC [Item].ItemDetailStatusInfo I.ItemDetailStatusID, EXEC [Item].ItemDetailTypeInfo I.ItemDetailTypeID FROM [Item].ItemDetails IOr something like that... Any thoughts?
View 3 Replies View RelatedGreetings:
I have MSSQL 2005. On earlier versions of MSSQL saving a stored procedure wasn't a confusing action. However, every time I try to save my completed stored procedure (parsed successfully ) I'm prompted to save it as a query on the hard drive.
How do I cause the 'Save' action to add the new stored procedure to my database's list of stored procedures?
Thanks!
We recently upgraded to SQL Server 2005. We had several stored procedures in the master database and, rather than completely rewriting a lot of code, we just recreated these stored procedures in the new master database.
For some reason, some of these stored procedures are getting stored as "System Stored Procedures" rather than just as "Stored Procedures". Queries to sys.Objects and sys.Procedures shows that these procs are being saved with the is_ms_shipped field set to 1, even though they obviously were not shipped with the product.
I can't update the sys.Objects or sys.Procedures views in 2005.
What effect will this flag (is_ms_shipped = 1) have on my stored procedures?
Can I move these out of "System Stored Procedures" and into "Stored Procedures"?
Thanks!
Hello friends......How are you ? I want to ask you all that how can I do the following ?
I want to now that how many ways are there to do this ?
How can I call one or more stored procedures into perticular one Stored Proc ? in MS SQL Server 2000/05.
Hello
I'm start to work with SSIS.
We have a lot (many hundreds) of old (SQL Server2000) procedures on SQL 2005.
Most of the Stored Procedures ends with the following commands:
SET @SQLSTRING = 'SELECT * INTO ' + @OutputTableName + ' FROM #RESULTTABLE'
EXEC @RETVAL = sp_executeSQL @SQLSTRING
How can I use SSIS to move the complete #RESULTTABLE to Excel or to a Flat File? (e.g. as a *.csv -File)
I found a way but I think i'ts only a workaround:
1. Write the #Resulttable to DB (changed Prozedure)
2. create data flow task (ole DB Source - Data Conversion - Excel Destination)
Does anyone know a better way to transfer the #RESULTTABLE to Excel or Flat file?
Thanks for an early Answer
Chaepp