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NSEventBatchDetails (Transact-SQL)

Returns detailed information about an event batch in a Microsoft SQL Server Notification Services application. One result set contains general information about the event batch, such as the event provider name and the time that the event batch was collected. A second result set displays the events that were submitted in the event batch.

Syntax

[ application_schema_name . ] NSEventBatchDetails 
    [ @EventClassName = ] 'event_class_name' ,
    [ @EventBatchId = ] event_batch_id

Arguments

  • [ @EventClassName = ] 'event_class_name'
    Is the name of an event class. event_class_name is nvarchar(255) and has no default value.
  • [ @EventBatchId = ] event_batch_id
    Is the unique identifier of an event batch. event_batch_id is bigint and has no default value.

Return Code Values

None

Result Sets

NSEventBatchDetails produces two result sets. The first result set contains general information about the event batch.

Column Name Data Type Description

ProviderName

nvarchar(255)

Name of the event provider that submitted the batch of events. This value is NULL if the events were directly inserted into the <EventClassName> view.

EventCount

bigint

Number of events in the event batch.

StartCollectionTime

datetime

Date and time that event batch collection started, in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time or Greenwich Mean Time).

EndCollectionTime

datetime

Date and time, in UTC, that event batch collection ended.

CollectionTimeInMS

int

Total time, in milliseconds, to collect the batch of events.

The second result set contains details about the events submitted in the event batch, ordered by the EventId column.

Column Name Data Type Description

EventId

bigint

ID number used to identify an event.

Event_class_field_name

application-defined

Name of an event class field, as defined in the application definition file (ADF). Each field in the event class is represented by a column in the result set.

Remarks

Notification Services creates the NSEventBatchDetails stored procedure in the application database when you create the instance. When you update the application, Notification Services recompiles the stored procedure.

This stored procedure is in the application's schema, which is specified by the SchemaName element of the application definition file (ADF). If no schema name is provided, the default schema is dbo.

Permissions

Execute permissions default to members of the NSAnalysis database role, the db_owner fixed database role, and the sysadmin fixed server role.

Examples

A. Using the Default Application Schema

The following example shows how to produce the event batch details report. The application uses the default SchemaName settings, which places all application objects in the dbo schema.

The report contains two result sets. The first shows the event provider and event collection information for the event batch, and the second shows the events submitted in the event batch.

EXEC dbo.NSEventBatchDetails 
    @EventClassName = N'StockEvents',
    @EventBatchId = 1;

B. Using a Named Application Schema

The following example shows how to produce the event batch report when the stored procedure (like all other application objects) is in the Stock schema, as specified in the SchemaName element of the ADF.

EXEC Stock.NSEventBatchDetails 
    @EventClassName = N'StockEvents',
    @EventBatchId = 1;

See Also

Reference

Notification Services Stored Procedures (Transact-SQL)

Other Resources

Notification Services Performance Reports
SchemaName Element (ADF)

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance