Calling a stored procedure
LLBLGen Pro supports stored procedures by offering the ability to define calls to those stored procedures. There are two types of stored procedures: procedures which do not return a resultset, called Action Stored Procedures, and procedures which return one or more resultsets, which are called Retrieval Stored Procedures.
This section illustrates how call definitions to these stored procedures in your project are generated in code and how you can use them in your code. Classes with stored procedure calls are stored in the database specific Visual Studio project.
To fetch a TypedView mapped onto a resultset of a stored procedure please see using the TypedView classes, Adapter.
Retrieval Stored Procedure Calls
When you add a call definition for a retrieval stored procedure to the project in the LLBLGen Pro designer, a static/shared method that will call that stored procedure will be added to a class called RetrievalProcedures.
If the stored procedure returns a single resultset, the return value of the generated method will be a DataTable. When the stored procedure returns more than one resultset, the return value of the generated method will be a DataSet, containing each resultset in a separate DataTable.
For example, if we add a call definition to our LLBLGen Pro project to
the procedure in Northwind called CustOrderDetail, taking one
parameter, an OrderID, a static method called CustOrderDetail is
created, returning a DataTable (because the procedure returns a single
resultset) and accepting a single parameter, orderID, which is of type
int/Integer because the parameter itself is of type integer. To utilize
this method in your own code, you can call as shown below. For the
orderID, the value 10254
is passed as the parameter value:
DataTable resultSet = RetrievalProcedures.CustOrderDetail(10254);
Because the stored procedure call methods are located in the database specific project, they will create a new DataAccessAdapter object if not such an object is supplied, which is the case in our example above. If you want to use an existing DataAccessAdapter, for example because you want the stored procedure to run inside an existing transaction, you can specify that existing adapter in the method call as an extra parameter.
Output parameters are also supported. When a stored procedure has an
output parameter, a parameter representing the output parameter in the
stored procedure is added to the method heading and is defined as 'ref'
(C#) or ByRef
(VB.NET). Illustrated below is the call to an imaginary
stored procedure which returns a datatable, takes 4 input parameters and
returns a value in an output parameter:
int outputValue;
DataTable resultSet = RetrievalProcedures.MyStoredProcedure(1, 2, 3, 4, ref outputValue);
Dim outputValue as Integer
Dim resultSet As DataTable = RetrievalProcedures.MyStoredProcedure(1, 2, 3, 4, ByRef outputValue)
Action Stored Procedure Calls
If you have added a call to a procedure to your project and the stored procedure doesn't return a resultset, the static/shared method is added to the class ActionProcedures. Instead of returning a DataTable or DataSet, a method in this class returns an int/Integer, which represents the return value of the ExecuteNonQuery() method, which is the number of rows affected if the database has row counting enabled (and the stored procedure doesn't switch it off).
Otherwise the action stored procedure methods work the same as the retrieval stored procedures mentioned above: input parameters are defined as normal parameters for the method and output parameters are defined as ref/ByRef parameters.
Wrap call in IRetrievalQuery object
LLBLGen Pro offers you to get the call to a retrieval stored procedure as an IRetrievalQuery object. An IRetrievalQuery object is the query object generated by a Dynamic Query Engine (DQE) and which is executed by the low level fetch logic of LLBLGen Pro's O/R mapper core. The IRetrievalQuery object allows you to fetch a query as a datareader or to project the results of the stored procedure call onto a data-structure of your choice, for example an entity collection.
You retrieve an IRetrievalQuery object which wraps the call to a given stored procedure by calling the following generated method (each retrieval stored procedure has such a method generated):
IRetrievalQuery procCall = RetrievalProcedures.GetStoredProcedureCallNameCallAsQuery(parameters);
You can then pass the IRetrievalQuery object to the methods for fetching a datareader or fetch a projection. See for more information about fetching a datareader or fetching a projection: Fetching DataReaders and projections.