2019Express Connection property has not been initialized [duplicate]
Afternoon, So I have been at this one issue for hours and can't really get past this last hump. Below is the code for this program that I am writing:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Data;
using System.Data.SqlClient;
using System.Configuration;
namespace Test
{
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
EventLog alog = new EventLog();
alog.Log = "Application";
alog.MachineName = ".";
foreach (EventLogEntry entry in alog.Entries)
{
SqlConnection connection1 = new SqlConnection(@"Data Source=.\sqlexpress;Initial Catalog=syslog2;Integrated Security=True");
SqlDataAdapter cmd = new SqlDataAdapter();
cmd.InsertCommand = new SqlCommand("INSERT INTO Application VALUES (@EventLog, @TimeGenerated, @EventType, @SourceName, @ComputerName, @InstanceId, @Message) ");
cmd.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@EventLog",SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = alog.Log;
cmd.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@TimeGenerated", SqlDbType.DateTime).Value = entry.TimeGenerated;
cmd.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@EventType", SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = entry.EntryType;
cmd.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@SourceName", SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = entry.Source;
cmd.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@ComputerName", SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = entry.MachineName;
cmd.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@InstanceId", SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = entry.InstanceId;
cmd.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@Message", SqlDbType.VarChar).Value = entry.Message;
connection1.Open();
cmd.InsertCommand.ExecuteNonQuery();
connection1.Close();
}
}
}
}
The Code compiles fine without error or warning but when i go to run it, as soon as it gets to cmd.InsertCommand.ExecuteNonQuery(); I get the following error:
ExecuteNonQuery: Connection property has not been initialized.
Any ideas on what I missed?
Solution 1:
You need to assign the connection to the SqlCommand
, you can use the constructor or the property:
cmd.InsertCommand = new SqlCommand("INSERT INTO Application VALUES (@EventLog, @TimeGenerated, @EventType, @SourceName, @ComputerName, @InstanceId, @Message) ");
cmd.InsertCommand.Connection = connection1;
I strongly recommend to use the using-statement
for any type implementing IDisposable
like SqlConnection
, it'll also close the connection:
using(var connection1 = new SqlConnection(@"Data Source=.\sqlexpress;Initial Catalog=syslog2;Integrated Security=True"))
using(var cmd = new SqlDataAdapter())
using(var insertCommand = new SqlCommand("INSERT INTO Application VALUES (@EventLog, @TimeGenerated, @EventType, @SourceName, @ComputerName, @InstanceId, @Message) "))
{
insertCommand.Connection = connection1;
cmd.InsertCommand = insertCommand;
//.....
connection1.Open();
// .... you don't need to close the connection explicitely
}
Apart from that you don't need to create a new connection and DataAdapter
for every entry in the foreach
, even if creating, opening and closing a connection does not mean that ADO.NET will create, open and close a physical connection but just looks into the connection-pool for an available connection. Nevertheless it's an unnecessary overhead.
Solution 2:
You are not initializing connection.That's why this kind of error is coming to you.
Your code:
cmd.InsertCommand = new SqlCommand("INSERT INTO Application VALUES (@EventLog, @TimeGenerated, @EventType, @SourceName, @ComputerName, @InstanceId, @Message) ");
Corrected code:
cmd.InsertCommand = new SqlCommand("INSERT INTO Application VALUES (@EventLog, @TimeGenerated, @EventType, @SourceName, @ComputerName, @InstanceId, @Message) ",connection1);