I would like to get the transaction begin timestamp with SQL Anywhere 17.
Below a sample script in Powershell:
Add-Type -AssemblyName ("Sap.Data.SQLAnywhere.v4.5, Version=17.0.8.40434, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=f222fc4333e0d400")
$connectionString = "DSN=My_Source;DBN=My_Database;UID=My_User;PWD=My_Password;"
$conn = New-Object Sap.Data.SQLAnywhere.SAConnection($connectionString)
$conn.Open()
$cmd = New-Object Sap.Data.SQLAnywhere.SACommand('SELECT NOW()', $conn)
$cmd.Transaction = $conn.BeginTransaction([System.Data.IsolationLevel]'ReadCommitted')
$dt = New-Object System.Data.DataTable
0..1 | % {
Start-Sleep $_
$reader = $cmd.ExecuteReader()
$dt.Clear()
$dt.Load($reader)
Write-Host $dt.Rows[0].ItemArray[0]
}
$cmd.Transaction.Rollback()
$cmd.Dispose()
$conn.Close()
And the output:
6/4/2018 11:40:01 AM
6/4/2018 11:40:02 AM
As you can see consecutive calls to NOW() function provides an increasing timestamp.
I did try using "SELECT CURRENT TIME" without success as well.
Any advice?
Related
I'm getting some data from a SQL table, which I then store in a System.Data.DataSet object. I want to pass this data in this DataSet, as an Argument/Parameter, to a workflow, such that I can display all the data in this DataSet in a foreach -parallel style. But I'm at a loss for the correct syntax of passing data from a System.Data.DataSet object to a workflow. Currently I get an Error near the line "param([System.Data.DataSet]$pServiceDataSet)" as shown below.
Function GetSQLData
{
param ($TargetDBServer, $TargetDB, $SQLQuery)
# SQL Connection Object
$sqlConn = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection
$sqlConn.ConnectionString = "Server=$TargetDBServer;Database=$TargetDB;User Id=SomeUser;Password=SomePassword;"
$sqlConn.Open()
# SQL Command
$sqlcmd = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand
$sqlcmd.Connection = $sqlConn
$sqlcmd.CommandText = $SQLQuery
# SQL Adapter
$sqlAdp = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlDataAdapter ($sqlcmd)
# SQL DataSet
$ResultDataSet = New-Object System.Data.DataSet
$sqlAdp.Fill($ResultDataSet) | Out-Null
$sqlConn.Close()
return $ResultDataSet.Tables[0]
}
$CurrentComputerName = $env:COMPUTERNAME
# Export the Windows Services & it's config parameters from the "DatabaseABC..WindowsServicesConfig" Table.
$SQLQueryForService = "
SELECT [ServiceName], [StartUpParameter], [DBServerName], [DBName]
FROM [dbo].[WindowsServicesConfig] WITH (NOLOCK)
WHERE [HostServerName] = '$CurrentComputerName'
AND [ServiceName] LIKE '%MyService%' "
$ServicesDataSet = GetSQLData -TargetDBServer "ServerABC" -TargetDB "DatabaseABC" -SQLQuery $SQLQueryForService
$ServicesDataSet.GetType()
$ServicesDataSet | Format-Table
workflow DisplayAllServices
{
param([System.Data.DataSet]$pServiceDataSet) # <- I get an Error here
foreach -parallel ($Service in $pServiceDataSet)
{
$Service.ServiceName
$Service.StartUpParameter
$Service.DBServerName
$Service.DBName
}
}
DisplayAllServices -pServiceDataSet $ServicesDataSet
My final objective is to use the data in this DataSet to create Windows Services. But this is my most frustrating hurdle. I cannot get past the Error.
Figured out the Solution to my Problem. Replaced the "param([System.Data.DataSet]$pServiceDataSet)" with "param([PSObject]$pServiceDataSet)".
I would like to setup a new PowerShell script that invokes my Database Stored Procedure concurrently. I am currently having a Control table that has a Job_ID column and a Code column. There might be more than one Job_ID for a code value in the Control table. Based on the code value I pass in the PowerShell along with a date, I would like the PowerShell to trigger the Stored Procedure which is expecting "Job_ID" and "MyDate" as input parameters.
FYI, I am using PowerShell and SQL Server 2016.
PS C:\PowerShell> $PSVersionTable.PSVersion
Major Minor Build Revision
----- ----- ----- --------
2 0 -1 -1
Here is some sample data for your reference:
CREATE TABLE control_table(JOB_ID INT, CODE VARCHAR(5));
INSERT INTO control_table(1, 'ABC');
INSERT INTO control_table(2, 'ABC');
INSERT INTO control_table(3, 'ABC');
INSERT INTO control_table(1, 'DEF');
INSERT INTO control_table(1, 'GHI');
CREATE PROCEDURE myschema.run_job (#JOB_ID INT, #MyDate DATE)
AS
BEGIN
-- Do Something
END
When I run the PowerShell script by passing 'ABC" as code, it should execute all the three jobs concurrently by reading the control table.
Something like
.\test.ps1 –MyCode “ABC” –Dt “12/27/2018”
As an alternative to jobs you can use async methods of built-in SQL client. Below is the sample code. I assume you already has some "run_job" procedure that can execute other procedures (jobs) by id.
$code = "ABC"
$date = "2018-12-31"
$jobs = #{} # this will store results of async jobs
$str = "Server = YourServer; Database = YourDB; Integrated Security = True;"
#--------
function Async-Sql { param($connStr, $sql, [switch]$GetDataTable)
$conn = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection $str
$cmd = $conn.CreateCommand()
$conn.Open()
$cmd.CommandText = $sql
if($GetDataTable) {
$dt = New-Object System.Data.DataTable "result"
$r = $cmd.ExecuteReader()
$dt.Load($r)
$conn.Close()
return #(,$dt)
} else {
$w = $cmd.ExecuteNonQueryAsync()
return [PSCustomObject]#{result=$w; conn = $conn} }
}
# ---------------------------------------------
# get a list of jobs from your control table, this will run synchronously
$jobList = Async-Sql -connStr $str -sql "select job_id, code from test.control_table where code = '$code'" -GetDataTable
# main loop. You should call your stored procedure here. Each iteration will create a new connection and execute command asynchronously
foreach($id in $jobList.job_id) {
$command = "EXEC run_job $id, $date"
$r = Async-Sql -connStr $str -sql $command
$jobs.Add( $id, $r )
}
# wait for all jobs to complete
while ($False -in $jobs.Values.result.isCompleted) { sleep -Milliseconds 500 }
# print results / close connections. If you see status as RanToCompletion the job is completed successfuly
foreach($j in $jobs.Keys) {
$res = $jobs[$j].result
[PSCustomObject]#{JobId=$j; isCompleted = $res.isCompleted; Status = $res.Status; result = $res.Result }
$jobs[$j].conn.close()
}
Since you have powershell V2, I'm adding a solution with PS Jobs. Save the code below as sqlExec.ps1:
param($connStr, $sql)
$conn = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection $connStr
$cmd = $conn.CreateCommand()
$conn.Open()
$cmd.CommandText = $sql
$r = $cmd.ExecuteNonQuery()
$conn.Close()
return $r
Then use this code as a master script:
$str = "Server = YourServer; Database = YourDB; Integrated Security = True;"
$code = "ABC"
$date = (get-date).ToString("yyyy-MM-dd")
$execSript = "path\to\sqlExec.ps1"
# get a list of ids for code. You can achive the same with Invoke-sqlcmd or similar cmdlet.
$conn = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection $str
$cmd = $conn.CreateCommand()
$conn.Open()
$cmd.CommandText = "select job_id, code from test.control_table where code = '$code'"
$dt = New-Object System.Data.DataTable "result"
$r = $cmd.ExecuteReader()
$dt.Load($r)
$conn.Close()
# main loop
$jobs = #{}
foreach($id in $dt.job_id) { $top = $id*3
$sql = "EXEC run_job $id, $date"
$jobs.Add($id,(Start-Job -FilePath $execSript -ArgumentList $str, $sql))
}
# Wait for jobs and get result
$jobs.Values | Wait-Job | Receive-Job
If you have Invoke-Sqlcmd module you can use it for sql code execution (instead of creating $conn,$cmd,etc)
I'm using Powershell 4 and attempting to write data into a SQL Server 2012.
Here is the script I am using
Add-Type -AssemblyName System.Data
$conn = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection↵
$conn.ConnectionString = "Data Source=<SQLSERVER>;Initial Catalog=SYSINFO;Integrated Security=true;"
$conn.open()
$cmd = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand
The error I am getting is:
New-Object : Cannot find type [System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection] : verify that the assembly containing this type is loaded.
I assuemd the first line (Add-Type) would load all the required assemblies under System.Data
Am I missing somethign obvious?
You can do it this way:
$Server = 'theServer'
$database = 'theDatabase'
$Connection = New-Object System.Data.SQLClient.SQLConnection
$Connection.ConnectionString = "server=$($Server);database=$($Database);trusted_connection=true;"
$Connection.Open()
$Command = New-Object System.Data.SQLClient.SQLCommand
$Command.Connection = $Connection
$Command.CommandText = 'SELECT TOP 5 * FROM yourTable ORDER BY 1 DESC'
$Reader = $Command.ExecuteReader()
$Datatable = New-Object System.Data.DataTable
$Datatable.Load($Reader)
$Datatable | Export-Csv report.csv -NoTypeInformation
$Connection.Close()
Is there a way to execute an arbitrary query on a SQL Server using Powershell on my local machine?
For others who need to do this with just stock .NET and PowerShell (no additional SQL tools installed) here is the function that I use:
function Invoke-SQL {
param(
[string] $dataSource = ".\SQLEXPRESS",
[string] $database = "MasterData",
[string] $sqlCommand = $(throw "Please specify a query.")
)
$connectionString = "Data Source=$dataSource; " +
"Integrated Security=SSPI; " +
"Initial Catalog=$database"
$connection = new-object system.data.SqlClient.SQLConnection($connectionString)
$command = new-object system.data.sqlclient.sqlcommand($sqlCommand,$connection)
$connection.Open()
$adapter = New-Object System.Data.sqlclient.sqlDataAdapter $command
$dataset = New-Object System.Data.DataSet
$adapter.Fill($dataSet) | Out-Null
$connection.Close()
$dataSet.Tables
}
I have been using this so long I don't know who wrote which parts. This was distilled from others' examples, but simplified to be clear and just what is needed without extra dependencies or features.
I use and share this often enough that I have turned this into a script module on GitHub so that you can now go to your modules directory and execute git clone https://github.com/ChrisMagnuson/InvokeSQL and from that point forward invoke-sql will automatically be loaded when you go to use it (assuming your using PowerShell v3 or later).
You can use the Invoke-Sqlcmd cmdlet
Invoke-Sqlcmd -Query "SELECT GETDATE() AS TimeOfQuery;" -ServerInstance "MyComputer\MyInstance"
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc281720.aspx
This function will return the results of a query as an array of powershell objects so you can use them in filters and access columns easily:
function sql($sqlText, $database = "master", $server = ".")
{
$connection = new-object System.Data.SqlClient.SQLConnection("Data Source=$server;Integrated Security=SSPI;Initial Catalog=$database");
$cmd = new-object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand($sqlText, $connection);
$connection.Open();
$reader = $cmd.ExecuteReader()
$results = #()
while ($reader.Read())
{
$row = #{}
for ($i = 0; $i -lt $reader.FieldCount; $i++)
{
$row[$reader.GetName($i)] = $reader.GetValue($i)
}
$results += new-object psobject -property $row
}
$connection.Close();
$results
}
Here's an example I found on this blog.
$cn2 = new-object system.data.SqlClient.SQLConnection("Data Source=machine1;Integrated Security=SSPI;Initial Catalog=master");
$cmd = new-object system.data.sqlclient.sqlcommand("dbcc freeproccache", $cn2);
$cn2.Open();
if ($cmd.ExecuteNonQuery() -ne -1)
{
echo "Failed";
}
$cn2.Close();
Presumably you could substitute a different TSQL statement where it says dbcc freeproccache.
If you want to do it on your local machine instead of in the context of SQL server then I would use the following. It is what we use at my company.
$ServerName = "_ServerName_"
$DatabaseName = "_DatabaseName_"
$Query = "SELECT * FROM Table WHERE Column = ''"
#Timeout parameters
$QueryTimeout = 120
$ConnectionTimeout = 30
#Action of connecting to the Database and executing the query and returning results if there were any.
$conn=New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SQLConnection
$ConnectionString = "Server={0};Database={1};Integrated Security=True;Connect Timeout={2}" -f $ServerName,$DatabaseName,$ConnectionTimeout
$conn.ConnectionString=$ConnectionString
$conn.Open()
$cmd=New-Object system.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand($Query,$conn)
$cmd.CommandTimeout=$QueryTimeout
$ds=New-Object system.Data.DataSet
$da=New-Object system.Data.SqlClient.SqlDataAdapter($cmd)
[void]$da.fill($ds)
$conn.Close()
$ds.Tables
Just fill in the $ServerName, $DatabaseName and the $Query variables and you should be good to go.
I am not sure how we originally found this out, but there is something very similar here.
There isn't a built-in "PowerShell" way of running a SQL query. If you have the SQL Server tools installed, you'll get an Invoke-SqlCmd cmdlet.
Because PowerShell is built on .NET, you can use the ADO.NET API to run your queries.
Invoke-Sqlcmd -Query "sp_who" -ServerInstance . -QueryTimeout 3
To avoid SQL Injection with varchar parameters you could use
function sqlExecuteRead($connectionString, $sqlCommand, $pars) {
$connection = new-object system.data.SqlClient.SQLConnection($connectionString)
$connection.Open()
$command = new-object system.data.sqlclient.sqlcommand($sqlCommand, $connection)
if ($pars -and $pars.Keys) {
foreach($key in $pars.keys) {
# avoid injection in varchar parameters
$par = $command.Parameters.Add("#$key", [system.data.SqlDbType]::VarChar, 512);
$par.Value = $pars[$key];
}
}
$adapter = New-Object System.Data.sqlclient.sqlDataAdapter $command
$dataset = New-Object System.Data.DataSet
$adapter.Fill($dataset) | Out-Null
$connection.Close()
return $dataset.tables[0].rows
}
$connectionString = "connectionstringHere"
$sql = "select top 10 Message, TimeStamp, Level from dbo.log " +
"where Message = #MSG and Level like #LEVEL"
$pars = #{
MSG = 'this is a test from powershell'
LEVEL = 'aaa%'
};
sqlExecuteRead $connectionString $sql $pars
You can even format string and pass parameters as you want.
case "ADDSQLSERVERUSER":
//0 = coprorateName;
//1 = user password
//2 = servername
command = #"$sqlQuery = Use JazzUWS_'{0}'
Create login UWSUser_'{0}' with password='{1}';
Create user UWSUser_'{0}' for login UWSUser_'{0}';
Grant Execute to UWSUser_'{0}';
Use ReportSvrUWS_'{0}'
Create user UWSUser_'{0}' for login UWSUser_'{0}';
Grant Execute to UWSUser_'{0}';
Invoke-Sqlcmd -Query $sqlQuery -ServerInstance '{2}'";
break;
C# Code for remote execution(you can organize your way)
string script = PowershellDictionary.GetPowershellCommand("ADDSQLSERVERUSER");
script = String.Format(script, this.CorporateName, password, this.SQLServerName)
PowerShellExecution.RunScriptRemote(_credentials.Server, _credentials.Username, _credentials.Password, new List<string> { script });
You could use the best SQL Server module around: DBATOOLS. You would also benefit from running a query to multiple sql instances.
Install-Module dbatools -Scope CurrentUser
$sql = 'SQL1','SQL1\INSTANCE1','SQL2'
$query = "SELECT 'This query would run on all SQL instances'"
Invoke-DbaQuery -SqlInstance $sqlinstances -Query $query -AppendServerInstance
I have been trying to create a ConnnectionString that will allow me to connect to my local database using PowerShell. Below is my code:
$conn = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection
$conn.ConnectionString = "Server=localhost;Database=test;Uid=<username here>;Pwd=<password here>;"
$conn.Open()
$sql = "SELECT EMP_STATUS FROM test_table"
$cmd = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand($sql,$conn)
$rdr = $cmd.ExecuteReader()
while($rdr.Read())
{
$test = $rdr["EMP_STATUS"].ToString()
}
Write-Output $test
However, I have NO CLUE what I am doing wrong and have been pulling my hair out for quite some time. Can anyone help me figure out what I am doing wrong in the ConnectionString?
Thanks everyone!!
I realized that my first problem was that I have MySQL database, not SQL database. As a result, I will have to connect using a different method. This is exactly where I need your help!! So far I have modified my code as follows:
[void][System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName("MySql.Data")
$conn = New-Object MySql.Data.MySqlClient.MySqlConnection
$connString = "server=localhost;port=3306;uid=<username here>;pwd=<password here> ;database=test;"
$conn.ConnectionString = $connString
$conn.Open()
$sql = "SELECT EMP_STATUS FROM test_table"
$cmd = New-Object MySql.Data.MySqlClient.MySqlCommand($sql,$conn)
$rdr = $cmd.ExecuteReader()
$test = #()
while($rdr.Read())
{
$test += ($rdr["EMP_STATUS"].ToString())
}
Write-Output $test
However, here are a few more questions:
1) How do you use the MySQL .NET connection tool to connect to a local MySQL database?
2) Where should this PowerShell script be saved?
3) Are there any additional changes I should make?
Thanks so much
try this:
$conn.ConnectionString = "Server=localhost;Database=test;User ID=<username here>;Password=<password here>;"
then $test give you only the last value found in the select!
To have $test containing all value from select change your code like this:
$conn = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection
$conn.ConnectionString = "Server=localhost;Database=test;User ID=<username here>;Password=<password here>;"
$conn.Open()
$sql = "SELECT EMP_STATUS FROM test_table"
$cmd = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand($sql,$conn)
$rdr = $cmd.ExecuteReader()
$test = #()
while($rdr.Read())
{
$test += ($rdr["EMP_STATUS"].ToString())
}
Write-Output $test