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How to catch properly an SqlException: A transport-level error has occurred

I am getting an SqlException in the logs of .NET 3.5 app, I am looking for the corresponding number (value of the property SqlException.Number).

System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException: A transport-level error has occurred 
when receiving results from the server. (provider: TCP Provider, error: 0 
- The specified network name is no longer available.) at
System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection.OnError

I am also getting error such as:

System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException: A network-related or instance-specific error 
occurred while establishing a connection to SQL Server. The server was not found 
or was not accessible. Verify that the instance name is correct and that SQL Server
is configured to allow remote connections.

Does anyone know how to properly catch those exceptions? (you can also post your answer here)

like image 787
Joannes Vermorel Avatar asked Feb 15 '10 13:02

Joannes Vermorel


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What is a transport level error?

A transport-level error has occurred when receiving results from the server. (provider: TCP Provider, error: 0 - An existing connection was forcibly closed by the remote host.) Also, find attached screenshot. Thank you in advance.


3 Answers

That particular error does not come from sys.messages in SQL Server - as it's a problem with the connection. So I don't have the number to hand.

TBH, the best thing you should do is to ensure the Number is written out to the log with the exception - that way, you'll always have the number and message side by side in the logs. May not answer your current question, but it will be the best going forwards IMHO. Not only SqlException.Number but SqlException.ErrorCode too - in instances like this I think .ErrorCode may be the one you actually need (not sure without checking).

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AdaTheDev Avatar answered Sep 19 '22 00:09

AdaTheDev


You will not find an associated SQL Error number for this one - simply put, the error occurs because there was a problem with connecting to the server.

As the code cannot connect to SQL Server, it will not have a SQL error to report.

From the MSDN article about SQLException.Number:

This number corresponds to an entry in the master.dbo.sysmessages table.

For exceptions that do not have an associated SQL Error number, you may be able to use the windows HRESULT error code that will be in the ErrorCode property of the exception object.

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Oded Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 00:09

Oded


Folks, please examine actual exception stack before blindly claiming that SqlException doesn't have .Number just besaus some MSDN page has a boilerplate text. .ErrorCode usually gets one single generic value (set by private CTOR). For this patricular error you can see exception stack here:

http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/sqldatabaseengine/thread/cb61ec85-c0d4-4a26-90e0-8c98cd28332f

and if you follow it you'll see that the code that's preparing is fills in everything but it's a bit convoluted to trace actuall error number in reflector.

So, whoever sees things next pleace post actual error number (or numbers). These errors tend to be quite rare and transient and it would be good to have numbers since at the time a server sees connection hiccup it's too late to go chasing their numbers.

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ZXX Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 00:09

ZXX