Oh, and if the type is a DataLayerSavingException, then it will have the exceptions listed within the SavingErrors collection because there might be more than one, but that's only if you set your business object's ErrorSavingMode to ContinueOnError (non default) and wrap the bo.Save() in a try/catch.
Perfect - thank you.
Cheers, Peter
Public Shared Sub CheckTheError(ByVal ex As Exception) '-- Get the reference to the SqlException Dim sqlEx As SqlException Dim checkingEx As Exception = ex '-- Cycle through the InnerExceptions and find the proper exception Do '-- Attempt to get the exception as an SqlException sqlEx = TryCast(checkingEx, SqlException) If sqlEx IsNot Nothing Then Exit Do '-- You have a reference to the exception Else If checkingEx.InnerException IsNot Nothing Then checkingEx = checkingEx.InnerException '-- Let it loop to test this new exception Else '-- The testing exception is not a SqlException and none of the InnerExceptions are either, so ' log the top exception and then bail Exit Sub End If Loop '-- Handle the sqlEx object with its Errors collectionEnd Sub
I want to wrap certain database processing in Try blocks, check any error and retry (within limits) if they are expected, e.g. locking. However, I'm having trouble identifying the native SQL error code within the Exception, e.g.
blTry = TrueWhile blTry Try Me.FillByStoredProcedure(StoredProc) blTry = False Catch ex As Exception blTry = CheckTheError(ex) End TryEnd While
I can see the SQL Error Description but I want to evalute errors using native SQL error codes.