I have an existing application that checks a few things before it
launches another application. One thing that the application needs to
check is the subscription properties of both the local database and the
remote (LAN) server.
I've stumbled upon some properties but I am trying to fit in the last
ones and I can't seem to find the right code to accomplish this... Can
anyone shine a little light on this please ?
The following code queries the SQL Server (remote) to get (some of) the
properties of the replicated database. What I would like to fit in
after the 'state' are the properties that you can retrieve with the
EnumAllSubscriptions function. However, I can't seem to find the right
object (sample code) to retrieve those (or I'm just overlooking the
obvious)...
Here is (part of) the code I'm using to query the publication on the
remote server :
Dim oMergePublication As SQLDMO.MergePublication2
Dim oSubscription As SQLDMO.MergeSubscription2
Me.lstPublications.Clear
For Each oReplicationDatabase In
objSQLSERVER.Replication.ReplicationDatabases
If oReplicationDatabase.Name = Me.txtSQLServerDatabase.Text
Then
For Each oMergePublication In
oReplicationDatabase.MergePublications
bFoundReplicated = True
Me.lstPublications.AddItem "Database replicated as
'" & oMergePublication.Name & "'"
For Each oSubscription In
oMergePublication.MergeSubscriptions
Me.lstPublications.AddItem " - subscriber
:" & oSubscription.Subscriber
Me.lstPublications.AddItem " - local
DB :" & oSubscription.SubscriptionDB
Me.lstPublications.AddItem " -
state :" & GetReplStatus(oSubscription.Status)
Next
Next
'For Each osubscriber In oReplicationDatabase.
'Next
End If
Next
Set oReplicationDatabase = Nothing
Set oMergePublication = Nothing
After this, I also want to check the local DB (=pulled subscription)
and show some of the properties (from EnumAllSubscriptions). For
example to warn the user about the need to synchronise (last_updated
value)...
Any help appreciated,
Many thanks
GB
--
Your eyes are weary from staring at the CRT. You feel sleepy. Notice
how restful it is to watch the cursor blink. Close your eyes. The
opinions stated above are yours. When I snap my fingers, you cannot
imagine why you ever felt otherwise. <snapI'm not sure what you're asking - do you mean that you know that
EnumAllScubscriptions will return the information you need, but you
don't know how to manipulate a SQL-DMO QueryResults object? If so, then
you need to iterate over it, and use the GetColumn% methods to return
the data in the format you want - in this case, GetColumnString is
probably the best one to use.
This is a simple VBScript example of using a QueryResults object:
Option Explicit
Dim oSrv, res, c, r
Set oSrv = WScript.CreateObject("SQLDMO.SqlServer2")
oSrv.LoginSecure = True
oSrv.Name = "MyServer"
oSrv.Connect
Set res = oSrv.ExecuteWithResults("select * from sysobjects")
For r = 1 To res.Rows
For c = 1 To res.Columns
If res.ColumnName(c) = "name" Then
WScript.Echo res.GetColumnString(r, c)
End If
Next
Next
If this isn't helpful, you might get a better answer in
microsoft.public.sqlserver.replication.
Simon|||Sort of Simon,
I'm having difficulty to get the returnset from EnumAllSubscriptions in
a workable object. It just returns nothing or won't compile.
In the code I've added, I managed to get the right call for the
EnumAllSubscriptions but I'm not sure on the syntax it requires. Like :
Dim oSubscription as SQLDMO.Subscriber2
Dim oSubscriptionData as SQLDMO.<??>
For each oSubscriptiondata in
oSubscription.EnumAllSubscribers(SQLDMOSubscriptio n_All)
OR do I need to make something like
Dim Result
Dim oSubscription as SQLDMO.Subscriber2
Result = oSubscription.EnumAllSubscribers(SQLDMOSubscriptio n_All)
and then walk that Result for the correct data
Thanks anyway. I'll give this a try in the .repication group.
GB
Simon Hayes bracht volgend ide uit :
> I'm not sure what you're asking - do you mean that you know that
> EnumAllScubscriptions will return the information you need, but you
> don't know how to manipulate a SQL-DMO QueryResults object? If so, then
> you need to iterate over it, and use the GetColumn% methods to return
> the data in the format you want - in this case, GetColumnString is
> probably the best one to use.
> This is a simple VBScript example of using a QueryResults object:
> Option Explicit
> Dim oSrv, res, c, r
> Set oSrv = WScript.CreateObject("SQLDMO.SqlServer2")
> oSrv.LoginSecure = True
> oSrv.Name = "MyServer"
> oSrv.Connect
> Set res = oSrv.ExecuteWithResults("select * from sysobjects")
> For r = 1 To res.Rows
> For c = 1 To res.Columns
> If res.ColumnName(c) = "name" Then
> WScript.Echo res.GetColumnString(r, c)
> End If
> Next
> Next
>
> If this isn't helpful, you might get a better answer in
> microsoft.public.sqlserver.replication.
> Simon
--
Your eyes are weary from staring at the CRT. You feel sleepy. Notice
how restful it is to watch the cursor blink. Close your eyes. The
opinions stated above are yours. When I snap my fingers, you cannot
imagine why you ever felt otherwise. <snap
No comments:
Post a Comment