Sqlite3 - node js insert multiple rows in two tables, lastID not working - sql

I know there are many solutions provided regarding multiple insertion in sqlite3 but I am looking for efficient method in which data is getting inserted into two tables and data of second table is dependent on first table. This is a node js application.
I have two tables programs and tests in sqlite3. Table tests contains id of programs i.e. one program can contains multiple tests.
The suggested method on official page of sqlite3 module is as follows:
var sqlite3 = require('sqlite3').verbose();
var db = new sqlite3.Database(':memory:');
db.serialize(function() {
db.run("CREATE TABLE lorem (info TEXT)");
var stmt = db.prepare("INSERT INTO lorem VALUES (?)");
for (var i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
stmt.run("Ipsum " + i);
}
stmt.finalize();
db.each("SELECT rowid AS id, info FROM lorem", function(err, row) {
console.log(row.id + ": " + row.info);
});
});
db.close();
As In my requirement I have to insert data in tow tables so I am using the following code:
var programData = resp.program_info; // contains complete data of programs and tests
db1.run("INSERT INTO programs (`parent_prog_id`, `prog_name`, `prog_exercises`, `prog_orgid`, `prog_createdby`, `prog_created`, `prog_modified`, `prog_status`) VALUES (?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?)",prog.parent_program_id,prog.programName, JSON.stringify(prog), req.session.org_id, prog.created_by, prog.created_at, prog.updated_at, prog.program_status,function(err){
if(err){
throw err;
}else{
var count = 1;
var step2PostedData = prog;
for (i in step2PostedData.testsInfo) {
var c = 0;
for(j in step2PostedData.testsInfo[i]){
var obj = Object.keys(step2PostedData.testsInfo[i])[c];
db1.prepare("INSERT INTO `tests` ( `parent_name`,`test_name`, `test_alias`, `sequences`, `duration`, `prog_id`, `org_id`, `test_createdby`, `test_created`, `test_modified`, `test_status`) VALUES(?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?)")
.run(count, obj,
step2PostedData.testsInfo[i][j].alias,
step2PostedData.testsInfo[i][j].sequences,
step2PostedData.testsInfo[i][j].duration,
this.lastID, // using this I am getting program id
req.session.org_id,
prog.created_by,
prog.created_at,
prog.updated_at,
prog.program_status);
c++;
count++;
}
}
Now, my query is If I am using the suggested method then I am not getting last inserted program id from programs table. without callback.
e.g. If I use the following code;
var stmt = db1.prepare("INSERT INTO programs (`parent_prog_id`, `prog_name`, `prog_exercises`, `prog_orgid`, `prog_createdby`, `prog_created`, `prog_modified`, `prog_status`) VALUES (?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?)";
var stmt2 = db1.prepare("INSERT INTO `tests` ( `parent_name`,`test_name`, `test_alias`, `sequences`, `duration`, `prog_id`, `org_id`, `test_createdby`, `test_created`, `test_modified`, `test_status`) VALUES(?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?)")
programData.forEach(function(prog){
// Inserts data in programs table
stmt.run(prog.parent_program_id,prog.programName, JSON.stringify(prog), req.session.org_id, prog.created_by, prog.created_at, prog.updated_at, prog.program_status);
for (i in step2PostedData.testsInfo) {
var c = 0;
for(j in step2PostedData.testsInfo[i]){
var obj = Object.keys(step2PostedData.testsInfo[i])[c];
stmt2.run(
count,
obj,
step2PostedData.testsInfo[i][j].alias,
step2PostedData.testsInfo[i][j].sequences,
step2PostedData.testsInfo[i][j].duration,
'what should be there',// How to get last program inserted ID there
req.session.org_id,
prog.created_by,
prog.created_at,
prog.updated_at,
prog.program_status);
} // inner for loop ends
} // outer for loop ends
stmt.finalize();
stmt2.finalize();
});
If I use this.lastID that returns null, obviously as no callback is
now.
If I use sqlite3_last_insert_rowid() then
sqlite3_last_insert_rowid is not defined error.
If I use last_insert_rowid() then last_insert_rowid() is not
defined.
Query:
How can I insert last inserted program id there, Currently I am getting last program id as null?
Edit:
If and only if using callback is the way or method to get the last ID then I will keep my code running as it is currently. Can anyone please suggest how can I increase the speed of insertion.
Thank you!

sqlite3_last_insert_rowid() is a part of the C API.
last_insert_rowid() is an SQL function.
If the documentation tells you that lastID is valid inside the callback, then you must use the callback.
Just move all the child INSERTs into the completion callback of the parent INSERT.
(The suggested code is not intended to show how to get the last inserted ID; it just demonstrates that the values actually have been inserted.)

Related

How can I validate if a record can be added at the SQL level using Entity Framework Core

If I want to make some checks before inserting a row into the database, I know that I can run the following code:
public bool BookSeat(int userId, string seatNumber)
{
If (IsSeatStillAvailable(seatNumber))
{
var ticket = new Ticket(userId, seatNumber);
_dbContext.Tickets(ticket);
_dbContext.SaveChanges();
return true;
}
return false;
}
private bool IsSeatStillAvailable(seatNumber)
{
var seatTaken = _dbcontext.Tickets.Any(w => w.seatNumber == seatNumber);
return !seatTaken;
}
This will do a call to the database to see if the seat is taken and then do a second call to book the seat. BUT in that time it might have already been booked.
I know in simple examples, I can create an index, but my use case is much more complex.
Is there a way that I can generate the SQL statement on the insert so that it can produce an ATOMIC transaction?
To produce something like (excuse the clumsy SQL):
IF (SELECT TOP 1 Count(*) FROM Tickets = 0)
BEGIN
INSERT INTO Tickets (UserId, SeatNumber)
VALUES (#UserId, #SeatNumber);
RETURN true
END;
RETURN false
What you are looking for is concurrency handling and optimistic locking :
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/ef/core/saving/concurrency?tabs=data-annotations

How to ignore DUPLICATE ENTRY error when updating multiple records at once using TypeORM

I am trying to update hundreds of database records using the TypeORM library. Problem is that sometimes DUPLICATE ERR is returned from SQL when the bulk upload is performed and stops the whole operation. Is possible to set up TypeORM in a way so duplicate entries are ignored and the insert is performed?
The table is using two primary keys:
This is my insert command (TypeORM + Nestjs):
public async saveBulk(historicalPrices: IHistoricalPrice[]) {
if (!historicalPrices.length) {
return;
}
const repoPrices = historicalPrices.map((p) => this.historicalPricesRepository.create(p));
await this.historicalPricesRepository.save(repoPrices, { chunk: 200 });
}
Thanks in advance
You will have to use InsertQueryBuilder to save the entities instead of repository.save method. InsertQueryBuilder will allow you to call an additional method orIgnore() which will add IGNORE literal into your mysql INSERT statement. From mysql official doc:
When INSERT IGNORE is used, the insert operation fails silently for rows containing the unmatched value, but inserts rows that are matched.
One demerit is obviously that you'll have to now chunk the rows on your own. InsertQueryBuilder doesn't provide any options to chunk the entities. Your code should look like this:
for (let i = 0; i < historicalPrices.length; i += 200) {
const chunk = historicalPrices.slice(i, i + 200);
const targetEntity = this.historicalPricesRepository.target;
await this.historicalPricesRepository
.createQueryBuilder()
.insert()
.into(targetEntity)
.values(chunk)
.orIgnore()
.execute();
}

Dapper.Net and the DataReader

I have a very strange error with dapper:
there is already an open DataReader associated with this Command
which must be closed first
But I don't use DataReader! I just call select query on my server application and take first result:
//How I run query:
public static T SelectVersion(IDbTransaction transaction = null)
{
return DbHelper.DataBase.Connection.Query<T>("SELECT * FROM [VersionLog] WHERE [Version] = (SELECT MAX([Version]) FROM [VersionLog])", null, transaction, commandTimeout: DbHelper.CommandTimeout).FirstOrDefault();
}
//And how I call this method:
public Response Upload(CommitRequest message) //It is calling on server from client
{
//Prepearing data from CommitRequest
using (var tr = DbHelper.DataBase.Connection.BeginTransaction(IsolationLevel.Serializable))
{
int v = SelectQueries<VersionLog>.SelectVersion(tr) != null ? SelectQueries<VersionLog>.SelectVersion(tr).Version : 0; //Call my query here
int newVersion = v + 1; //update version
//Saving changes from CommitRequest to db
//Updated version saving to base too, maybe it is problem?
return new Response
{
Message = String.Empty,
ServerBaseVersion = versionLog.Version,
};
}
}
}
And most sadly that this exception appearing in random time, I think what problem in concurrent access to server from two clients.
Please help.
This some times happens if the model and database schema are not matching and an exception is being raised inside Dapper.
If you really want to get into this, best way is to include dapper source in your project and debug.

"update" query - error invalid input synatx for integer: "{39}" - postgresql

I'm using node js 0.10.12 to perform querys to postgreSQL 9.1.
I get the error error invalid input synatx for integer: "{39}" (39 is an example number) when I try to perform an update query
I cannot see what is going wrong. Any advise?
Here is my code (snippets) in the front-end
//this is global
var gid=0;
//set websockets to search - works fine
var sd = new WebSocket("ws://localhost:0000");
sd.onmessage = function (evt)
{
//get data, parse it, because there is more than one vars, pass id to gid
var received_msg = evt.data;
var packet = JSON.parse(received_msg);
var tid = packet['tid'];
gid=tid;
}
//when user clicks button, set websockets to send id and other data, to perform update query
var sa = new WebSocket("ws://localhost:0000");
sa.onopen = function(){
sa.send(JSON.stringify({
command:'typesave',
indi:gid,
name:document.getElementById("typename").value,
}));
sa.onmessage = function (evt) {
alert("Saved");
sa.close;
gid=0;//make gid 0 again, for re-use
}
And the back -end (query)
var query=client.query("UPDATE type SET t_name=$1,t_color=$2 WHERE t_id = $3 ",[name, color, indi])
query.on("row", function (row, result) {
result.addRow(row);
});
query.on("end", function (result) {
connection.send("o");
client.end();
});
Why this not work and the number does not get recognized?
Thanks in advance
As one would expect from the initial problem, your database driver is sending in an integer array of one member into a field for an integer. PostgreSQL rightly rejects the data and return an error. '{39}' in PostgreSQL terms is exactly equivalent to ARRAY[39] using an array constructor and [39] in JSON.
Now, obviously you can just change your query call to pull the first item out of the JSON array. and send that instead of the whole array, but I would be worried about what happens if things change and you get multiple values. You may want to look at separating that logic out for this data structure.

error, string or binary data would be truncated when trying to insert

I am running data.bat file with the following lines:
Rem Tis batch file will populate tables
cd\program files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL
osql -U sa -P Password -d MyBusiness -i c:\data.sql
The contents of the data.sql file is:
insert Customers
(CustomerID, CompanyName, Phone)
Values('101','Southwinds','19126602729')
There are 8 more similar lines for adding records.
When I run this with start > run > cmd > c:\data.bat, I get this error message:
1>2>3>4>5>....<1 row affected>
Msg 8152, Level 16, State 4, Server SP1001, Line 1
string or binary data would be truncated.
<1 row affected>
<1 row affected>
<1 row affected>
<1 row affected>
<1 row affected>
<1 row affected>
Also, I am a newbie obviously, but what do Level #, and state # mean, and how do I look up error messages such as the one above: 8152?
From #gmmastros's answer
Whenever you see the message....
string or binary data would be truncated
Think to yourself... The field is NOT big enough to hold my data.
Check the table structure for the customers table. I think you'll find that the length of one or more fields is NOT big enough to hold the data you are trying to insert. For example, if the Phone field is a varchar(8) field, and you try to put 11 characters in to it, you will get this error.
I had this issue although data length was shorter than the field length.
It turned out that the problem was having another log table (for audit trail), filled by a trigger on the main table, where the column size also had to be changed.
In one of the INSERT statements you are attempting to insert a too long string into a string (varchar or nvarchar) column.
If it's not obvious which INSERT is the offender by a mere look at the script, you could count the <1 row affected> lines that occur before the error message. The obtained number plus one gives you the statement number. In your case it seems to be the second INSERT that produces the error.
Just want to contribute with additional information: I had the same issue and it was because of the field wasn't big enough for the incoming data and this thread helped me to solve it (the top answer clarifies it all).
BUT it is very important to know what are the possible reasons that may cause it.
In my case i was creating the table with a field like this:
Select '' as Period, * From Transactions Into #NewTable
Therefore the field "Period" had a length of Zero and causing the Insert operations to fail. I changed it to "XXXXXX" that is the length of the incoming data and it now worked properly (because field now had a lentgh of 6).
I hope this help anyone with same issue :)
Some of your data cannot fit into your database column (small). It is not easy to find what is wrong. If you use C# and Linq2Sql, you can list the field which would be truncated:
First create helper class:
public class SqlTruncationExceptionWithDetails : ArgumentOutOfRangeException
{
public SqlTruncationExceptionWithDetails(System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException inner, DataContext context)
: base(inner.Message + " " + GetSqlTruncationExceptionWithDetailsString(context))
{
}
/// <summary>
/// PArt of code from following link
/// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3666954/string-or-binary-data-would-be-truncated-linq-exception-cant-find-which-fiel
/// </summary>
/// <param name="context"></param>
/// <returns></returns>
static string GetSqlTruncationExceptionWithDetailsString(DataContext context)
{
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
foreach (object update in context.GetChangeSet().Updates)
{
FindLongStrings(update, sb);
}
foreach (object insert in context.GetChangeSet().Inserts)
{
FindLongStrings(insert, sb);
}
return sb.ToString();
}
public static void FindLongStrings(object testObject, StringBuilder sb)
{
foreach (var propInfo in testObject.GetType().GetProperties())
{
foreach (System.Data.Linq.Mapping.ColumnAttribute attribute in propInfo.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(System.Data.Linq.Mapping.ColumnAttribute), true))
{
if (attribute.DbType.ToLower().Contains("varchar"))
{
string dbType = attribute.DbType.ToLower();
int numberStartIndex = dbType.IndexOf("varchar(") + 8;
int numberEndIndex = dbType.IndexOf(")", numberStartIndex);
string lengthString = dbType.Substring(numberStartIndex, (numberEndIndex - numberStartIndex));
int maxLength = 0;
int.TryParse(lengthString, out maxLength);
string currentValue = (string)propInfo.GetValue(testObject, null);
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(currentValue) && maxLength != 0 && currentValue.Length > maxLength)
{
//string is too long
sb.AppendLine(testObject.GetType().Name + "." + propInfo.Name + " " + currentValue + " Max: " + maxLength);
}
}
}
}
}
}
Then prepare the wrapper for SubmitChanges:
public static class DataContextExtensions
{
public static void SubmitChangesWithDetailException(this DataContext dataContext)
{
//http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3666954/string-or-binary-data-would-be-truncated-linq-exception-cant-find-which-fiel
try
{
//this can failed on data truncation
dataContext.SubmitChanges();
}
catch (SqlException sqlException) //when (sqlException.Message == "String or binary data would be truncated.")
{
if (sqlException.Message == "String or binary data would be truncated.") //only for EN windows - if you are running different window language, invoke the sqlException.getMessage on thread with EN culture
throw new SqlTruncationExceptionWithDetails(sqlException, dataContext);
else
throw;
}
}
}
Prepare global exception handler and log truncation details:
protected void Application_Error(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Exception ex = Server.GetLastError();
string message = ex.Message;
//TODO - log to file
}
Finally use the code:
Datamodel.SubmitChangesWithDetailException();
Another situation in which you can get this error is the following:
I had the same error and the reason was that in an INSERT statement that received data from an UNION, the order of the columns was different from the original table. If you change the order in #table3 to a, b, c, you will fix the error.
select a, b, c into #table1
from #table0
insert into #table1
select a, b, c from #table2
union
select a, c, b from #table3
on sql server you can use SET ANSI_WARNINGS OFF like this:
using (SqlConnection conn = new SqlConnection("Data Source=XRAYGOAT\\SQLEXPRESS;Initial Catalog='Healthy Care';Integrated Security=True"))
{
conn.Open();
using (var trans = conn.BeginTransaction())
{
try
{
using cmd = new SqlCommand("", conn, trans))
{
cmd.CommandText = "SET ANSI_WARNINGS OFF";
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
cmd.CommandText = "YOUR INSERT HERE";
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
cmd.Parameters.Clear();
cmd.CommandText = "SET ANSI_WARNINGS ON";
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
trans.Commit();
}
}
catch (Exception)
{
trans.Rollback();
}
}
conn.Close();
}
I had the same issue. The length of my column was too short.
What you can do is either increase the length or shorten the text you want to put in the database.
Also had this problem occurring on the web application surface.
Eventually found out that the same error message comes from the SQL update statement in the specific table.
Finally then figured out that the column definition in the relating history table(s) did not map the original table column length of nvarchar types in some specific cases.
I had the same problem, even after increasing the size of the problematic columns in the table.
tl;dr: The length of the matching columns in corresponding Table Types may also need to be increased.
In my case, the error was coming from the Data Export service in Microsoft Dynamics CRM, which allows CRM data to be synced to an SQL Server DB or Azure SQL DB.
After a lengthy investigation, I concluded that the Data Export service must be using Table-Valued Parameters:
You can use table-valued parameters to send multiple rows of data to a Transact-SQL statement or a routine, such as a stored procedure or function, without creating a temporary table or many parameters.
As you can see in the documentation above, Table Types are used to create the data ingestion procedure:
CREATE TYPE LocationTableType AS TABLE (...);
CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.usp_InsertProductionLocation
#TVP LocationTableType READONLY
Unfortunately, there is no way to alter a Table Type, so it has to be dropped & recreated entirely. Since my table has over 300 fields (😱), I created a query to facilitate the creation of the corresponding Table Type based on the table's columns definition (just replace [table_name] with your table's name):
SELECT 'CREATE TYPE [table_name]Type AS TABLE (' + STRING_AGG(CAST(field AS VARCHAR(max)), ',' + CHAR(10)) + ');' AS create_type
FROM (
SELECT TOP 5000 COLUMN_NAME + ' ' + DATA_TYPE
+ IIF(CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH IS NULL, '', CONCAT('(', IIF(CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH = -1, 'max', CONCAT(CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH,'')), ')'))
+ IIF(DATA_TYPE = 'decimal', CONCAT('(', NUMERIC_PRECISION, ',', NUMERIC_SCALE, ')'), '')
AS field
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_NAME = '[table_name]'
ORDER BY ORDINAL_POSITION) AS T;
After updating the Table Type, the Data Export service started functioning properly once again! :)
When I tried to execute my stored procedure I had the same problem because the size of the column that I need to add some data is shorter than the data I want to add.
You can increase the size of the column data type or reduce the length of your data.
A 2016/2017 update will show you the bad value and column.
A new trace flag will swap the old error for a new 2628 error and will print out the column and offending value. Traceflag 460 is available in the latest cumulative update for 2016 and 2017:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-sg/help/4468101/optional-replacement-for-string-or-binary-data-would-be-truncated
Just make sure that after you've installed the CU that you enable the trace flag, either globally/permanently on the server:
...or with DBCC TRACEON:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/database-console-commands/dbcc-traceon-trace-flags-transact-sql?view=sql-server-ver15
Another situation, in which this error may occur is in
SQL Server Management Studio. If you have "text" or "ntext" fields in your table,
no matter what kind of field you are updating (for example bit or integer).
Seems that the Studio does not load entire "ntext" fields and also updates ALL fields instead of the modified one.
To solve the problem, exclude "text" or "ntext" fields from the query in Management Studio
This Error Comes only When any of your field length is greater than the field length specified in sql server database table structure.
To overcome this issue you have to reduce the length of the field Value .
Or to increase the length of database table field .
If someone is encountering this error in a C# application, I have created a simple way of finding offending fields by:
Getting the column width of all the columns of a table where we're trying to make this insert/ update. (I'm getting this info directly from the database.)
Comparing the column widths to the width of the values we're trying to insert/ update.
Assumptions/ Limitations:
The column names of the table in the database match with the C# entity fields. For eg: If you have a column like this in database:
You need to have your Entity with the same column name:
public class SomeTable
{
// Other fields
public string SourceData { get; set; }
}
You're inserting/ updating 1 entity at a time. It'll be clearer in the demo code below. (If you're doing bulk inserts/ updates, you might want to either modify it or use some other solution.)
Step 1:
Get the column width of all the columns directly from the database:
// For this, I took help from Microsoft docs website:
// https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.data.sqlclient.sqlconnection.getschema?view=netframework-4.7.2#System_Data_SqlClient_SqlConnection_GetSchema_System_String_System_String___
private static Dictionary<string, int> GetColumnSizesOfTableFromDatabase(string tableName, string connectionString)
{
var columnSizes = new Dictionary<string, int>();
using (var connection = new SqlConnection(connectionString))
{
// Connect to the database then retrieve the schema information.
connection.Open();
// You can specify the Catalog, Schema, Table Name, Column Name to get the specified column(s).
// You can use four restrictions for Column, so you should create a 4 members array.
String[] columnRestrictions = new String[4];
// For the array, 0-member represents Catalog; 1-member represents Schema;
// 2-member represents Table Name; 3-member represents Column Name.
// Now we specify the Table_Name and Column_Name of the columns what we want to get schema information.
columnRestrictions[2] = tableName;
DataTable allColumnsSchemaTable = connection.GetSchema("Columns", columnRestrictions);
foreach (DataRow row in allColumnsSchemaTable.Rows)
{
var columnName = row.Field<string>("COLUMN_NAME");
//var dataType = row.Field<string>("DATA_TYPE");
var characterMaxLength = row.Field<int?>("CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH");
// I'm only capturing columns whose Datatype is "varchar" or "char", i.e. their CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH won't be null.
if(characterMaxLength != null)
{
columnSizes.Add(columnName, characterMaxLength.Value);
}
}
connection.Close();
}
return columnSizes;
}
Step 2:
Compare the column widths with the width of the values we're trying to insert/ update:
public static Dictionary<string, string> FindLongBinaryOrStringFields<T>(T entity, string connectionString)
{
var tableName = typeof(T).Name;
Dictionary<string, string> longFields = new Dictionary<string, string>();
var objectProperties = GetProperties(entity);
//var fieldNames = objectProperties.Select(p => p.Name).ToList();
var actualDatabaseColumnSizes = GetColumnSizesOfTableFromDatabase(tableName, connectionString);
foreach (var dbColumn in actualDatabaseColumnSizes)
{
var maxLengthOfThisColumn = dbColumn.Value;
var currentValueOfThisField = objectProperties.Where(f => f.Name == dbColumn.Key).First()?.GetValue(entity, null)?.ToString();
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(currentValueOfThisField) && currentValueOfThisField.Length > maxLengthOfThisColumn)
{
longFields.Add(dbColumn.Key, $"'{dbColumn.Key}' column cannot take the value of '{currentValueOfThisField}' because the max length it can take is {maxLengthOfThisColumn}.");
}
}
return longFields;
}
public static List<PropertyInfo> GetProperties<T>(T entity)
{
//The DeclaredOnly flag makes sure you only get properties of the object, not from the classes it derives from.
var properties = entity.GetType()
.GetProperties(System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Public
| System.Reflection.BindingFlags.Instance
| System.Reflection.BindingFlags.DeclaredOnly)
.ToList();
return properties;
}
Demo:
Let's say we're trying to insert someTableEntity of SomeTable class that is modeled in our app like so:
public class SomeTable
{
[Key]
public long TicketID { get; set; }
public string SourceData { get; set; }
}
And it's inside our SomeDbContext like so:
public class SomeDbContext : DbContext
{
public DbSet<SomeTable> SomeTables { get; set; }
}
This table in Db has SourceData field as varchar(16) like so:
Now we'll try to insert value that is longer than 16 characters into this field and capture this information:
public void SaveSomeTableEntity()
{
var connectionString = "server=SERVER_NAME;database=DB_NAME;User ID=SOME_ID;Password=SOME_PASSWORD;Connection Timeout=200";
using (var context = new SomeDbContext(connectionString))
{
var someTableEntity = new SomeTable()
{
SourceData = "Blah-Blah-Blah-Blah-Blah-Blah"
};
context.SomeTables.Add(someTableEntity);
try
{
context.SaveChanges();
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
if (ex.GetBaseException().Message == "String or binary data would be truncated.\r\nThe statement has been terminated.")
{
var badFieldsReport = "";
List<string> badFields = new List<string>();
// YOU GOT YOUR FIELDS RIGHT HERE:
var longFields = FindLongBinaryOrStringFields(someTableEntity, connectionString);
foreach (var longField in longFields)
{
badFields.Add(longField.Key);
badFieldsReport += longField.Value + "\n";
}
}
else
throw;
}
}
}
The badFieldsReport will have this value:
'SourceData' column cannot take the value of
'Blah-Blah-Blah-Blah-Blah-Blah' because the max length it can take is
16.
Kevin Pope's comment under the accepted answer was what I needed.
The problem, in my case, was that I had triggers defined on my table that would insert update/insert transactions into an audit table, but the audit table had a data type mismatch where a column with VARCHAR(MAX) in the original table was stored as VARCHAR(1) in the audit table, so my triggers were failing when I would insert anything greater than VARCHAR(1) in the original table column and I would get this error message.
I used a different tactic, fields that are allocated 8K in some places. Here only about 50/100 are used.
declare #NVPN_list as table
nvpn varchar(50)
,nvpn_revision varchar(5)
,nvpn_iteration INT
,mpn_lifecycle varchar(30)
,mfr varchar(100)
,mpn varchar(50)
,mpn_revision varchar(5)
,mpn_iteration INT
-- ...
) INSERT INTO #NVPN_LIST
SELECT left(nvpn ,50) as nvpn
,left(nvpn_revision ,10) as nvpn_revision
,nvpn_iteration
,left(mpn_lifecycle ,30)
,left(mfr ,100)
,left(mpn ,50)
,left(mpn_revision ,5)
,mpn_iteration
,left(mfr_order_num ,50)
FROM [DASHBOARD].[dbo].[mpnAttributes] (NOLOCK) mpna
I wanted speed, since I have 1M total records, and load 28K of them.
This error may be due to less field size than your entered data.
For e.g. if you have data type nvarchar(7) and if your value is 'aaaaddddf' then error is shown as:
string or binary data would be truncated
You simply can't beat SQL Server on this.
You can insert into a new table like this:
select foo, bar
into tmp_new_table_to_dispose_later
from my_table
and compare the table definition with the real table you want to insert the data into.
Sometime it's helpful sometimes it's not.
If you try inserting in the final/real table from that temporary table it may just work (due to data conversion working differently than SSMS for example).
Another alternative is to insert the data in chunks, instead of inserting everything immediately you insert with top 1000 and you repeat the process, till you find a chunk with an error. At least you have better visibility on what's not fitting into the table.